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.The doctor said:one shoulder higher than the other, one leg shorter than the other - prettymuch of a mess.And later Ifound out about his grandfather, and found it out from the woman's mind - sheknew, and had the kid in spite of it, to use for blackmail.Big problems! What bigger problem could there possibly be? AndI so wanted to help, and my whole life has been like that because there are somany people sick and sad and I can help.could help.DAMN THIS LUMP IN MY BRAIN! No bigger than a bullet, and like a bulletit's killing me before I'm ready to die.That was when Howson forgot himself.At first she didn't understand the power that had suddenly come to her.It waslike becoming a torrential river, vast and deep and terrible.It was rawbecause it was as new as a baby, but it blazed.Life force ? ? ? No such - but: life force!Defeat? DEFEAT?There was no room left for ideas of death and defeat !Slowly, calmly as she had considered the prospect of dying, she began to takecharge of what she had been given.There was no resistance, and she neverquestioned the source of the power - she was too accustomed to meetingstrangers in her own mind to waste effort in finding out.The fatal imagesforced on her by Phranakis receded, becoming ghostly-faint;she sensed his terror and immediately postponed consideration of it.She was alittle frightened herself, but calm yet.Seeking levers with which to direct the force, she found almost at once afamiliar concept, and it related so strongly to her recent consciouspreoccupations that she was shaken.Mother-child: images of parturition, nourishment, support, warmth, love.Child-mother: images of reflected pride, hope, gratitude, love.The forms wereill defined, as though from a source which knew little about such matters inreal life.A faint puzzlement crossed her mind, and she dismissed it.With herdetached consciousness she knew she had to make use of the power before sheexhausted herself and lost her grip on it, and the first - the only -necessity was to struggle free of the hatePhranakis felt for her.'She's breaking loose!' someone exclaimed.'I saw her eyelids flutter,' Singh whispered.There was a tightness in hischest he could not account for.His eyes were aching with the intentness ofhis staring; all his will was summed into the hope that his old, dear,marvellous friend should live.By what means she was rescued, he didn't care.Later -later!'But she's only breaking loose!' muttered the technician by thePage 43ABC Amber Palm Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.htmlencephalograph.'She isn't bringing Phranakis with her -no, wait a second!' Hebent close to the Phranakis tape, as if he could see through the present andread what had not yet been recorded.'Something's happening, but heaven knowswhat!'Cowed, bewildered, at a loss, the hero felt his satisfaction turn to ashes.Amoment ago he was secure and confident; he had thwarted an attack on - well,his life, which sounded better than the truth, which was fearful to him.Thelast treacherous attempt of the barbarians to square accounts with him hadbeen beaten off.The greatest city of all time, Athens the flower ofcivilization, was his, and its citizens were at his beck and call.Through thecenturies they would remember him, Pericles the Great!Yet now he felt unreasoned terror.It seemed to him that he was darting aboutlike a frightened rabbit, with a sword in his hand, looking for his enemies,hysterically defying them to come into the open.Out from the marble hall, outunder the blue arch of the sky where he would roar defiance to the godsthemselves if need be!He threw back his head, filled his lungs, and could not speak.To histerror-stricken gaze it appeared that the sky rolled back, like a slashedtent, and the gods were manifest.He wanted to fall on his face, bury his head in dirt, deny this as he haddenied - what ? Something terrible but not as fearful as this! He wasparalysed
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