Phoenix - Ted White; Marion Zimmer Bradley

Phoenix

By TED WHITE and MARION ZIMMER BRADLEY
Illustrated by FINLAY
From nowhere had come the flames ... giving him life and death together. Now he summoned them again, not knowing the depths—or heights—of his power.
... he relaxed and gave himself up to the heady luxury of the roaring fire which clothed his body. He basked in flames.
He lived. He was aware. He was everything in his world. He was....
Flames wrapped themselves around his body, pouring sinuously around him. For a few seconds, as he stood in the center of the floor, he writhed; pure reflex; then he relaxed and gave himself up to the heady luxury of the roaring fire which clothed his body. He basked in flames.
His mind was afire, too. It feels like ... like satin ice! No, it's different. It's ... it was something new; his senses were still adjusting themselves to the new reality, and his mind contained no images with which to compare it. He didn't see or hear Fran open the door.
MAX!
He shook his flaming body and a few brief cinders fell away in sparks. Then, suddenly, he had snuffed out the aura of flames; he was standing nude on a smoking carpet, grinning tentatively at the girl. He swallowed and said Hell of a time for you to show up, Fran.
She seemed to stare at him without seeing him, her face taut, without expression. He blinked, slowly coming down or up to reality again. Good God, yes, she thought he'd been burning up. The odor of the carpet—it smelled like scorching hair.
I forgot about the carpet. He watched her glance down at it. Acrid smoke still curled away from two singed-bare patches where he'd been standing.
Slowly, Fran raised her eyes back to his. She said Max—!

Ted White
Marion Zimmer Bradley
Содержание

Страница

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2023-12-13

Темы

Science fiction; Short stories; Man-woman relationships -- Fiction; Psychic ability -- Fiction

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