265 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
265 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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BUMMERS
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by Thomas Nevin Huber
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I hate the city. Twenty-five million people and I'm livin' in
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The Pits. The pits of despair, the pits of poverty, the pits of the
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worst of the worst. It can't get any worse.
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Al-Zed is the biggest city on the most populated planet in the
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Alliance. It houses the headquarters of the Alliance, the most advanced
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medical center, and the collected works of civilization. If you want
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somethin', you can find it here. If you don't want somethin' --
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you'll still find it.
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Years ago, cities used to have slums. Ghettos, they called them. They
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used to be out in the open -- eye sores of trash-filled lots, half-burned
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buildings, and boarded-up windows and doors. Al-zed was like that . . .
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for a while. Until they decided to make it the show case of the Alliance.
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But do you think they'd make it a decent place to live? Not as long
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as Ragnoruk remains the prison planet and death world to us Dracs. Make a
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mistake, get caught, and bang! Off they send you to an early grave. Not
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that we can't survive in a double-gravity environment -- we can. It's
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just that we can't live very long in that situation. But then, you know
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all that -- DON'T YOU?
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Enough of this chatter. My story is an oddity, I suppose. First, I'm
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a barmaid down in The Pits. That's what they call this place. When they
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built the so-called model of the universe above us, they didn't bother
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tearin' down where we lived and worked and made love. Instead, they
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just drove the massive pillars right down through our places -- down to
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bedrock, where nothin' could shake them loose.
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Then they built the city on top and left us down here -- in The Pits.
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Where the sun don't shine, and it stinks like I need a shower. That's
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because I really do -- need a shower. No water, at least, not for things
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like that. And the stuff we drink is enough to give a normal Drac a bad
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case of the runs for a month.
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Bad? You bet. But it could be a lot worse. Hell, it is a lot worse.
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I'll tell you about it.
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One night, I was workin' the night shift. Heh! There is no day shift,
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but this was the night, night shift. A little man sat at the end of the
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bar and I'm watchin' him. He's been nursing that drink all night. Causin'
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me no trouble, but he ain't doing much of nothin' either.
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Finally, I decide that he's been alone long enough, so I go up to him
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and nod.
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He glances at me and then stares back at the drink.
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"Need a refill?" I ask.
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"Nope."
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"Need some company?"
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He sighs one of those sighs. Something that sounds like the night
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wind on Ragnoruk's High Plains. You know, kind of ragged and sad. I
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swallow at the sound and stay put. I know for certain that if I move,
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he'll let me wander away. Then there'll be two of us -- lonely and alone.
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It ain't supposed to be that way, but that's the way it is.
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He stares ahead and finally shrugs. "'Spose so," he says. Just like
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that. Nothin' to say yes and nothin' to say no.
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I slide into the seat across from him and wipe away an imaginary spot
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with my bar rag. Not that it does any good. There are plenty of real
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spots on that table.
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"Ever been in love?" he asks, all of a sudden, like.
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I stare at him, but he doesn't return my look. Just sittin' there,
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that little man with his half-finished drink.
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Well, I'm not very good at talkin' or maybe you hadn't noticed how
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I can't stay on a subject very good and I know that my grammar could
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use some help. So I shrug and he nods.
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"I know whatcha mean," he replies.
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I scratch at an itch on the side of my nose and stare at one of the
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beams they drove through this place. Just part of it made its way into
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the room, so one wall is mostly beam. And crushed furniture. We sawed
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the ends off, 'cause that's all we could do.
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The stuff's the beam's made out of is inpreg . . . heck, it's damned
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tough. As tough as some of the animals on Ragnoruk. And so it looks out
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of place here, where everything needs cleanin' and paintin' and . . . .
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"I was in love once."
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The little man's words surprise me. After a while, I shrug and say,
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"Tell me about it." I'm a sucker for a good story.
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"It was late and I'd just gotten off'n my shift. I'm the night
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watchman over at the Bell Tower . . . ."
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I grunt because I know that place. It used to be a bell tower, until
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they took the top off when they put in the first elevated. But it still
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needs watchin' and I guess that's what he does.
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"I'd stopped in a tav much like this place," he continues, "for my
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usual drink afore goin' on home." He swishes his glass a little and
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stares at the liquid goin' round 'n' round. I watch it, too.
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"Then I saw her." A far-away look creeps into his eyes. "She coulda
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stepped outter one of them beauty rags," he says, something glinting
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in his eyes.
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"Blonde, clean as the air in the Heritage District. She looked like
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she needed a friend, so I sat down across from her. She smiled at me."
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For the first time, the little man looks at me! As if I'm the girl of
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his dreams. I don't know what he's seeing, but it ain't me. Not now, not
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with the look he's giving me. I smile a little, back at him.
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"Yeah, like that," he says. "She pulls out a weed and offers me one.
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I don't usually smoke, but I figger one can't hurt. She puffs on hers and
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I take a drag on mine. It'd been years, but I still remembered how not to
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breathe it in. I let it out slowly and she blows a circle with hers.
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"Funny . . ." he says, drifting off. I look at him as he seems to slip
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somewhere out of time. Like it doesn't have any meaning for him. We sit
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there a minute, maybe two, I don't know. Time doesn't flow normally
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when it's like this.
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"We both enjoyed a drink and then I asked her if she's got any place
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to stay. She says she don't, so I offered my place."
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I raise an eyebrow at him.
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"She didn't say why, just that she'd like that. I don't know why."
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The little man looks at his drink and then takes a slow sip. Nice
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and easy, and I notice his hands. Gentle and kind. I think I understand
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what's goin' on. The girl's on the rocks. Sometimes we see them here in
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The Pits. And I guess that's kinda what he experienced.
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He puts down his drink and rubs his head. Wrinkles come and go as he
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rubs like he's rubbin' a headache away. He looks at me and shakes his
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head. "It was like a dream come true," he says, gettin' that far-away
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look again.
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"We walked from the tav to my place, 'bout a block and a half. It
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ain't much but it's all I have. I keep it clean and neat, no messy
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dishes or anything like that." He pauses, starin' off into space, like
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there's no tomorrow.
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He takes a deep breath. "I let her in ahead of me, and she turned to
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face me as I followed." A look of sadness crosses his eyes.
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"`Come here,' she told me. I didn't know quite what to do. She was
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beautiful, and she reached out for my hand. I took it and she pulled me
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gently to her."
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There's somethin' in his eye -- I can't tell what -- and he rubs it
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away before I can see it plainly.
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"God, what a body," he whispers. "So kind, so lovely, so wonderful.
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We kissed, then. Deep and long. Passionate like I've never been kissed
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or kissed since."
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"As we broke apart, I asked her if she wanted anything, like
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something to drink or eat. She told me that would be nice, so I got out
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some cheese and crackers. It's about the only thing I kept around. We
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shared and made a bunch of small talk."
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A bitterness crosses his lips. "She'd been battered, she had, by
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some sonofabitchin' spacer. I couldn't see nothin' until she raised
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her skirt and I got a good look at her legs. Bruises like you wouldn't
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believe."
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He takes another drink. "You ever been battered?" he asks.
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A chill runs down my back. Sure I have. What girl hasn't been, down
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here in The Pits? We get it and we see it. Nothin' new. Except maybe for
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him. His eyes tell me that he ain't one of them. There's a pain there
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that you can see but can't describe.
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The best I can do is shrug my answer and he nods. "I don't like it
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when a man beats a woman. It don't make him no man, it makes him a
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nothin' -- a Ragnorukian antworm."
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I know what he's talkin' about. A bug that is built like an ant, but
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drags its body behind it, oozin' out slime behind it, all along its
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trail. That's what he was talkin' about. A man that's got so low that
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he's an antworm -- someone that beats women.
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He continues, "I laid my hand over hers and she smiled at me. I don't
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know why she did that, but it made me feel whole. I wasn't empty no more."
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I just sit there and look at him.
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"Later that night I turned down the lights and undressed for bed. I
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could see her moving against the darkness. Graceful, like an angel.
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Maybe she was." His eyes look like their gettin' heavy, so I clear my
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throat and swallow. He nods a knowing nod.
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"I watched her," he confesses to me. "I watched her get undressed
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in the dark. She did it at the end of the bed, knowin' that I was
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watching her."
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I watch his eyes. They're deep and green. Gentle and kind -- no
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malice, no hatred -- no lust. He glances at me and I hastily look down.
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"She crawled into bed next to me all naked and warm. I could feel
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her warmth next to me. Dry and clean, like a newborn babe. I felt for
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her hand and found it. We held hands for a long time."
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I watch him as he swirls his drink again. His hands -- no callouses
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-- are just gentle hands, like his eyes.
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"Pretty soon, she drew my hand to her and asked me to rub her softly.
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I did, rubbing her back as she cuddled next to me, purring like some
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kitten in ecstasy. It didn't take her long before we really got together."
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He shakes his head and murmurs the words to an old, old song. "Her
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kisses were sweeter'n wine..."
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He's sittin' there for a long time, just starin' into emptiness.
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My heart goes out to him as he finishes his story.
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"I never felt so whole," he repeats. He's gentle and decent and
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don't go into the details of their love, but I know they did it. All
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natural and gentle as you please. You can see it in his face.
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He finishes his drink in one gulp, then sets down the glass. "The
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next morning, the sun was shinin'. That was before they built the city
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on top o' us. It had been rainin' the night afore, but now it was
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shinin' like nothing was wrong with the world.
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"I turned to her and found her gone. In her place was a six-word
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letter: `I've got to be movin' on.'"
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That's all he says. "I've got to be movin' on."
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His gentle eyes fill the room before me and his hands lay there
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empty. He's never felt so whole. What I would give to be like that.
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I've never been much of a looker, and I ain't had no men like him in
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a long, long time. I reach over and take his hand in mine, and slowly
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bring it to my lips. "I know I ain't much to look at," I tell him, "and
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I'm twenty years too old, but damn! I sure wish I was that girl."
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"Well that's okay," he replies, taking my other hand in his. "I don't
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mind at all. I'll wait around 'till you get off, then if you don't mind
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an old bachelor, why don't you come over and sit a spell."
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"I'd like that," I tell him and then give him a little smile -- just
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like I did some twenty years ago.
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# # #
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Copyright 1994 Thomas Nevin Huber
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Tom Huber is rapidly approaching middle age (50). Involved with computers
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since the early '60's and has been employed as a technical writer for a major
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computer manufacturer for over 12 years. Previous works include numerous user,
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installation, service, & tech manuals, and magazine articles. Hobbies include
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genealogy and running his bbs. Look for his major series of SF novels, soon.
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=============================================================================
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