Студопедия — Opening Gambits
Студопедия Главная Случайная страница Обратная связь

Разделы: Автомобили Астрономия Биология География Дом и сад Другие языки Другое Информатика История Культура Литература Логика Математика Медицина Металлургия Механика Образование Охрана труда Педагогика Политика Право Психология Религия Риторика Социология Спорт Строительство Технология Туризм Физика Философия Финансы Химия Черчение Экология Экономика Электроника

Opening Gambits






Tanya stood and braced her shoulder against the wooden slats of the prison wagon so that she could see out through the bars above the driver's head. Sitting on the bench opposite, both Guards from the Intelligence Corps sneered but made no move to stop her. For additional support, she rested her knee on the bench and clung to the iron ring that was riveted to the wagon frame. The short length of chain between the ring and the manacles on her wrists swung against the wooden side with each pothole-induced lurch.

However, the shaking was getting less. The sound of the wheels had also changed. The road was improving and had gone from rutted earth to cobblestones. At the moment, these were poorly maintained, chipped, and cracked, but it marked the change from country to town. They had reached the city of Landfall. This would undoubtedly be Tanya's only chance to see the place where her birth mother had been born and had grown up. Relatives still lived here. It would most likely also be her last chance to see the open sky. She did not want to miss it.

After her capture, Major Kaur had needed ten days of increasingly desperate meandering to get her troops out of the Wildlands and to the Homelands town of Longhill. As far as she could judge, Tanya had spent a month in an underground cell at the Guards' fort on the outskirts of town, waiting for the Intelligence Corps to take charge of her. The four corps members who had turned up with the enclosed prison wagon had then taken the best part of another month to cover the 800 kilometers between Longhill and Landfall.

Loke Stevenson had turned her over to the Guards at the beginning of May. It was now mid-July and the wagon was arriving at Landfall at the end of a long, hot afternoon. The enclosed caboose was a meter and a half wide and two meters long. The temperature inside was baking, and unlike the Guards, Tanya did not get to take turns sitting outside with the driver. As she stood looking out, the breeze through the bars was wonderfully cool, drying the sweat on her face, although her clothes still stuck to her. Tanya tried not to remind herself that her conditions of imprisonment were about to get far worse. Since the moment of her capture, she had known what awaited her in Landfall. Giving in to fear would do no good.

Landfall was the biggest city in the world. Seeing the great capital was a dream that Tanya had never expected to realize. She had been born at Westernfort, and had no more than touched the borders of the Homelands while on patrol, but she had heard stories from her mothers and from other heretics. The current circumstances were material for nightmares rather than dreams, but she should not let panic ruin her chance to fulfill this one last wish.

Landfall was home to the Coppellis, one of the most powerful merchant families. According to her mother, they owned a third of the city and controlled the rest. An unwillingness to be drawn into the corrupt political maneuvering had driven a young Chip Coppelli to run away from home and enlist with the militia. She had then advanced to the Rangers, the branch of the Homelands military who patrolled the borders of the Sisters' territory, battling wild animals and bandits. Chip had been a member of the elite force for over ten years before her entire squadron had deserted to join the heretics at Westernfort.

Through the bars, Tanya could see down the length of a long, empty street. On either side were single-story huts. The roofs were red tiles, although many were cracked or missing. Plaster on the walls was flaking so that the timber frames beneath were exposed in places. Weeds grew along the edges of the road and the breeze carried the stench of decaying waste.

At first, Tanya assumed these buildings were abandoned, or animal shelters. The sounds of squabbling chickens aided this impression, but then she saw girls playing in the alleys between, and old women sitting in doorways. A few able-bodied adults were working on vegetable plots to the rear. Tanya was shocked to realize that these were family homes. Nobody at Westernfort lived in such squalor.

At the end of the street, the wagon turned onto another road. The buildings here were bigger and in better repair. The weeds had gone. A steady drone of voices had been rising for a while. Tanya did not know when she had first noticed it, but now the occasional shout caught her attention. The road turned a bend and a bridge stood before them.

On her journey across the Homelands, Tanya had seen longer bridges but never one so wide. Four wagons abreast could have crossed it, were it not for the crowds packing it out. The road had joined another busier one, and the cobbles were overflowing with horses, wagons, and pedestrians.

Tanya felt herself flinch at the hubbub. Fewer than one thousand people lived at Westernfort, and maybe nine-tenths would congregate in the town square for big events. This was the most Tanya had ever seen gathered together. Yet there looked to be at least as many people trying to cross the river at once on an ordinary Landfall afternoon.

The wagon fought its way onto the bridge, to the accompaniment of the driver shouting threats to clear the way. Tanya tore her eyes from the surrounding mob. The clear view over the river allowed her to gauge the scale of the city. On the other side, roofs filled the skyline, rising even higher and higher, in rank upon rank.

Hanging above them all was a huge dome—the great temple of Celaeno. In the ideology of the Sisters it stood on the exact point where the Blessed Himoti, greatest of the Elder-Ones, had been sent into the world by the Goddess. In the understanding of the heretics, it was somewhere close to the spot chosen for landfall by a group of stranded colonists from a malfunctioning spaceship.

Once the wagon reached the opposite bank, the press of bodies eased as people dispersed through the network of streets, but if anything, the noise got louder. Women, girls, and crones were everywhere, talking, calling, even singing. Wheels and hooves pounded the cobblestones. The clanks, rattles, and thumps of tradeswomen echoed from shop doorways. Above it all were the cries of street traders, hawking their wares. The traditional words were familiar—traders in Westernfort used the same patters, but never had Tanya heard so many competing for attention at the same time. The buildings were now three stories high or more. Tanya pressed her face against the grill, trying to see the tops. The street was wide enough for six wagons.

A hint of panic coiled in Tanya's gut. All these faces, and not a single one she recognized. She had not known every woman in Westernfort by name, but few were not familiar by sight. She knew their families, their jobs, their friends. They had been there since the day she was born. But here were strangers—thousands and thousands of strangers.

The fear grew. The crowds were pressing in. Tanya heard them banging against the side of the wagon and rubbing against it as they squeezed by. She wanted to shrink away from the bars, to hide, but she forced herself to stay in place. Yes, it was frightening. It was also something she had wanted to see. She would not run from this last experience before she was taken into the Intelligence Corps prison.

The wagon halted briefly before swinging sharply to the left. Tanya caught a glimpse of a wide gateway as they went through, with Guards standing sentry in their bright red uniforms. Immediately, the noise began to fade. This was a military compound. Tanya recognized barracks and stables. The only women in view were Guards, marching silently about their business.

The wagon crossed an open parade ground, passed under a low arch into a small courtyard, and stopped. The whole frame shook as the driver and other Guard jumped down. A low murmur of voices was followed by the key in the lock and then the caboose door at the rear swung open. The two Guards opposite left and another entered, with a key to release Tanya from her manacles.

Tanya stood surrounded by Guards in the courtyard. Celaeno's temple was so close that she was literally in its shadow—the temple built in honor of a Goddess in whose name she was about to be tortured and killed. Tanya turned her eyes away and instead studied the sky overhead, which was clear and blue. It might be the last beautiful thing she ever saw. She had only a few seconds before the Guards pulled her away.

Once inside, they immediately turned through another door and down a spiral staircase. The Guard in the lead had a lantern. Shadows surged over the rough-cut stonework as they descended. At the bottom a corridor led away left and right. A firm hand in her back propelled Tanya along, past a row of heavy doors. Tanya thought she heard sobbing from behind one. Eventually the Guard ahead pulled a door open and those behind shoved her through. The door slammed shut and the familiar clank of a key turning in a lock sounded. The faint light under the door faded with the departing footsteps, leaving only darkness and silence.

Tanya felt her way around. The cell was about two meters square with a pisspot in the corner and a bunk on one wall. She sat and leaned back against the cold stone. It was very peaceful after the heat, noise, and chaos of the Landfall streets, but Tanya knew her feeling of relief was misplaced. She was in the worst place that any heretic could be— the Intelligence Corps dungeon.

 

"How many armed fighters are there in Westernfort?"

Tanya said nothing.

The Intelligence Corps captain paced slowly around the chair. Tanya resisted the urge to turn her head to follow. With her hands tied to the armrests, she could have had only limited success. Instead she kept focused on the wall in front. The footsteps paused behind her. Tanya felt the back of her neck prickling, imagining the captain's eyes on her. Apart from the captain, two other Guards were in the room, but so far they had said and done nothing, other than escort Tanya from her cell and bind her to the chair.

The room was underground and lit by oil lamps. Was it part of the game not to let the prisoners see the sky? Was it intended to disorientate or demoralize? Tanya tried not to let it affect her, yet she could not stop herself from wondering what was going on in the world above. Was it day or night, raining or dry? Was anyone thinking about her?

She was sure that she had been in the dungeon for a few days. In that time, she had been interrogated three times, twice in her cell and once in another room. On all occasions the questioning had been routine and dull, devoid of threat. This time was different. The eyes of the Guards held an expectant tension. The room was different too, empty apart from the chair that Tanya was on and a bench against one wall with a long wooden crate on top. The flagstones of the floor were stained brown—a color Tanya recognized as dried blood.

Eventually, the captain continued pacing and returned to her position in front of Tanya. She leaned back and rested against the wall, looking casual and relaxed, apart from the coldness in her eyes.

Unlike the rest of the Guards, the Intelligence Corps were not zealous about their appearance. The captain's hair was unkempt and shoulder length. Of course, much of their work was carried out undercover. A proper short military cut would be too conspicuous.

Equally, their uniforms were something they put on only when in their headquarters. It was not the defining mark of their calling. The captain's red tunic was stained along the cuffs and the lacing was loose at her neck.

"How many armed fighters are there in Westernfort?" The captain repeated her question. After a minute of silence, she continued. "I know your mother styles herself as Captain Coppelli and is the bandit chief for the thugs in your heretic strongholds. I know you claim the rank of corporal for yourself, trying to pretend that you can be considered a Ranger. I also know you are going to tell me everything you know, or have seen, or have overheard your mother say. And though you may not believe it, I really would prefer if you told me what I want to know now, without forcing me to hurt you."

Tanya pressed her lips together.

The captain stood up straighter, nodded to her two subordinates, and then clasped her hands together and bowed her head:

Devine Celaeno, we implore that you look down upon us and guide us. We ask for your blessing and your absolution. Keep all malice and base cruelty from our hearts. Know that ever we seek only to follow your will. Give us the resolve not to flinch from what we must do in your name. We ask your forgiveness for this lost daughter...

Tanya closed her eyes, wishing that she could also close her ears and cut out the insane prayers as the Guards wrapped their justification for what they were about to do in their warped piety.

The captain fell silent. Tanya opened her eyes, fighting to control her breathing and not to start whimpering in fear. One of the Guards went to the crate on the table and released the catches on the top. The side folded down to reveal an interior lined with knives, spikes, pliers, and clamps. Tanya looked away, but it would not help. Nothing was going to help her now.

The Guard who had opened the crate walked around the chair and knelt at the side. The other one stood behind Tanya. She felt the woman's knuckles in her back as the Guard braced the chair steady. The kneeling Guard pressed a hand down on the back of Tanya's, forcing her fingers out flat against the armrest. Tanya looked down. The Guard was holding a fine spike, the size of a needle. She touched the point to Tanya's index finger, just beneath the nail.

"How many armed fighters are there in Westernfort?"

Tanya looked back and met the captain's eyes. She could feel her pulse racing. Her stomach was clamped in knots. Her throat was taut and dry, but she managed to rasp out, "Fifty-seven."

The captain smiled.

"Or was it seventy-five?" Tanya went on. "No, it was fifty...or fifteen. Maybe it was one hundred and fifteen." Tanya pressed back in the chair, forcing her voice to remain steady, forcing her lungs to obey her, forcing her eyes to hold the captain's, unblinking. "You can make me talk. I know you can. But you can't make me stick to the truth. More fool you, if you believe a word I say."

The captain's smile changed to a scowl. She snapped out, "Go ahead, Sergeant."

A sharp tearing pain ripped up Tanya's hand as, millimeter by millimeter, the Guard pushed the needle under her fingernail. Tanya clamped her jaw shut, holding back the urge to scream. She would give in, sooner or later, she knew, but it was important to her self-respect to hold out for as long as possible. Her ankles were bound to the chair legs, but her heels rammed against the ground. The Guard behind her grunted, holding the chair from tipping.

At last the pain stopped getting worse and the pressure on her hand relaxed a little. Tanya's eyes were scrunched shut. She did not want to look down and see. The pain shot up her arm, flaring at knuckle and wrist. Lightning rippled through her palm. Her finger was on fire. Despite all her effort, high-pitched cries were escaping through the fence of her teeth.

"Another, ma'am? Or shall I continue with this one?" the kneeling Guard asked.

"Another."

Tanya felt the tip of a second needle touch her middle finger. Again pain exploded in her hand.

A knock sounded on the door.

"What is it?" the captain shouted impatiently.

The sound of the door opening was followed by whispering. Tanya opened her eyes. The world swam before her. Focusing was impossible, beyond noting that a new Guard had entered and was whispering urgently in the captain's ear.

"What? Now?" The captain's tone held frustration.

The Guard leaned forward and whispered some more.

"But I..." The captain's shoulders slumped and she sighed. "Oh well. If that's it." She looked at the other Guards. "We're finishing for now. Take her back."

It's a game they're playing with me. The words shot through Tanya's head even as she screamed when the needles were plucked from beneath her fingernails. The captain gave a final scowl and stomped out of the room, followed by the messenger.

Without another word, the two remaining Guards untied Tanya's wrists and ankles and hauled her to her feet. They marched her down the corridor and back to her cell, where they locked her in and left.

Tanya sat alone in the darkness, cradling her hand and fighting with herself. She must not relax. She must not feel reprieved, because they would come back again—in three days, or three hours, or three seconds. The Guards could take as much time as they wanted. It was all a game, but Tanya knew, with absolute certainty, they would come for her again.

 

All too soon, Tanya heard the key turn again in the lock. The pointless urge to hide in a corner almost overwhelmed her, followed by the dread that, before long, any self-control would desert her. She would pathetically try to hide and be dragged from the cell screaming like an infant. She pressed her uninjured hand against her forehead, holding back tears. Whether she broke today, or in a year's time, nobody who might care would ever get to hear. It was no longer about living up to her mother's reputation or impressing her friends. Only enemies were here and all that was left to keep her going was her pride.

Light streamed in from a lantern in the corridor, dazzling after the dark. Two Guards in silhouette entered the cell. "On your feet and turn around."

Tanya obeyed, standing beside her bunk. She felt the cold metal of manacles snap around her wrists, and then a hand on her shoulder steered her from the room. With every step, the panic knotting her guts grew worse. Halfway down the corridor, the Guard ahead ducked through a doorway. The unmistakable sound of feet climbing stairs followed.

Tanya stumbled after, bewildered. Were they really taking her back to the surface? Would she see the sky again? Was this some new trick? Tanya dared not let herself hope. However, they emerged into the open air. Tanya rolled her head back, staring up. Overhead were soft strands of pink—sunset. The world smelled clean, free of the stench of blood, piss, and fear. A shove sent her staggering forward, forcing her to look where she was going.

A small group of Guards stood waiting in the courtyard. Presumably, they were Intelligence Corps, yet unlike the rest, their uniforms were immaculate. The one in the center had so many gold stars on her badge that she had to be the colonel. She was in her fifties, of average height, average weight, average looks. Her overall appearance was so unremarkable that she might easily go unnoticed, except for her contemptuous expression, belonging to someone who clearly expected everyone else to jump at her command.

The colonel's eyes ran over Tanya disapprovingly. She scowled. "You could have cleaned her up a bit."

"I'm sorry, ma'am. My orders didn't say."

"Well, there isn't time now. We'll have to take her as she is."

Two Guards from the colonel's escort positioned themselves at Tanya's shoulders. Two more stood behind her. A touch set her again marching forward, under the archway and across the parade ground. On three sides lay the barrack blocks that Tanya had seen on her arrival. The bulk of Celaeno's temple was directly ahead, on the other side of a high wall. By the time they were halfway across the parade ground, Tanya realized that they were heading for a small gate into the temple grounds.

The moment they had passed through, Tanya was aware of a change in atmosphere. The air felt heavier and stiller. A rich spicy scent wafted around. Incense, Tanya guessed it to be. The party climbed a flight of stairs and entered the temple itself. Tanya had a brief impression of a huge dim cavern, lit by hundreds of candles, and then they turned off, through hanging drapes, where six uniformed Guards stood sentry.

At last they entered an audience chamber. Only the colonel and one other senior Guard accompanied Tanya. Awaiting them were three white-robed and masked figures. These were Sisters, the priestesses of the Goddess. The fine gauze masks over their lower face made them indistinguishable, or should have, but it was clear that the Colonel and her comrade recognized the one in the middle. They snapped to attention with a crisp deference that left no doubt of the Sister's importance.

Just one other person was present, an elderly civilian of eighty or more years. Her hair was pulled back in a white bun at the back of her head. Her clothes were clearly expensive, with bold colors and satin sheen. Rings on her fingers glittered in the candlelight. Her face was set in an expression of calm authority, as if she was used to giving orders and having them obeyed. Her eyes fixed curiously on Tanya.

"This is her?" the central Sister asked.

"Yes, my lady," the colonel replied.

The Sister turned to the civilian. "Is there anything you wish to ask her?"

"I'd like to have her identity confirmed first."

"Of course."

One Sister walked sedately to a rear doorway and left. Nothing was said until she returned a few minutes later, leading a woman dressed in plain blue tunic and leggings. Even though Tanya had never seen the clothing before, she had heard it described often enough to recognize. The woman was an Imprinter, someone so talented with the healer sense that she could step inside a cell, read the DNA, and imprint new patterns on it. They were the ones who created new life in women's wombs, blending the birth mothers' genes with that of their partners.

In the Homelands, Imprinters were revered as the chosen of the Goddess, the conduits through which the Goddess's blessing was given in each new daughter. They were kept sequestered from all harm in the temple, cared for by the Sisterhood and their holy warriors, the Guards.

In Westernfort, there was Lynn, a friend of her parents, who spoke of life in the temple as a form of slavery, from which she had been rescued, who denied any sort of divinity in herself and lived a normal life, with partner and children—something forbidden to Imprinters in the Homelands. Around the room, the faces not hidden behind masks revealed awe as they watched the woman in blue, but Tanya, remembering all she had heard from Lynn, could view the Imprinter with nothing but pity.

The senior Sister spoke. "Imprinter, I wonder if you could confirm the degree of relatedness between the prisoner and Madam Coppelli."

In reflex, Tanya's head jerked toward the elderly civilian, clearly the other person referred to. Coppelli? Before Tanya could consider the implications, a light tap on her arm claimed her attention.

The Imprinter was a middle-aged woman with a tired, worn expression. "May I take your hand?"

"Um..." Tanya half turned, indicating her wrists.

"Take them off," the senior sister ordered.

The colonel's subordinate darted forward, and after a moment of fumbling, removed the manacles. The Imprinter lay her hand over Tanya's and closed her eyes for several minutes, then she moved to the elderly civilian and repeated the process. At last, she turned back to the senior Sister.

"They are close blood kin."

"How close?"

"Most likely granddaughter and grandmother. Aunt and niece is possible, although the age gap makes it unlikely. Certainly no relationship more distant."

"Thank you."

The senior Sister gave a nod of dismissal and the Imprinter left the room.

Once the door had closed, the colonel cleared her throat. "We're grateful for the confirmation of the prisoner's identity. But this is delaying her interrogation. I'd ask that we be allowed to return her to the prison forthwith."

The elderly civilian—Tanya's grandmother, if the Imprinter was to be believed—frowned sharply. "I don't think one of your cells is an appropriate place for her."

"I would remind you, Madam Coppelli, that she's a heretic."

"And I would remind you, Colonel Zelenski, that she's my granddaughter."

Tanya watched the colonel exchange angry looks with the other officer before returning to the attack.

"I'd have thought you'd rather have your family shame hidden from the eyes of the pious. It's not something you've trumpeted in the past."

"Just because I chose not to announce on the streets that my youngest daughter's a heretic doesn't mean I'm happy for my granddaughter to rot in an underground cell."

Colonel Zelenski appealed to the senior Sister. "Chief Consultant, surely you're not prepared to allow this?"

The Sister's title came as no surprise to Tanya. Who else could summon the Intelligence Corps Colonel to appear with a prisoner? Chief Consultant Bakara was the thirty-third to hold the title, in line from Himoti, the first Chief Consultant. Even in Westernfort Bakara's name was known. She was the leader of the Sisterhood, and thus ruler of the Homelands. All Guards were sworn to uphold her authority, both in matters of religion and government.

"I'd like to hear what Madam Coppelli is proposing before I make up my mind."

Tanya's grandmother smiled in gratitude. "Thank you. Of course, I'm not suggesting that she's set free, but I think she should be held here, in the temple, under the care of the Sisterhood. I'd point out that, though she's a heretic, it's not by her choice. She was born in the wilderness and has never had the benefit of proper instruction. She should be given the chance to embrace the true faith."

"That's ridiculous," Zelenski said. "She has valuable information, and only the Corps are trained in suitable interrogation techniques."

"You mean torture," Tanya's grandmother countered.

"Call it what you will. It's necessary."

"I'd dispute that. From what I've heard, your techniques are very good at getting confessions and very poor at anything else. You can make someone say whatever you want. Which means they end up telling you exactly what you want to hear, regardless of whether it's the truth. How many times have you got into a mess because you've forced someone to tell you a reassuring lie?"

"I don't thi—"

"Please." The Chief Consultant held up her hand, cutting off Zelenski. She turned to Tanya's grandmother. "Bringing an innocent to the worship of the Goddess is a virtuous goal, but we have standard procedures and I'm not sure we should make an exception in her case."

"I'd remind you of the services I've performed for you in the past. Is this so much to ask?"

The words were delivered in a calm, even tone, but Tanya could feel the nuances underlying them. Her grandmother was clearly exerting pressure. Threat was too strong a word, but it was obvious to her, and anyone with ears, that her grandmother and Chief Consultant Bakara had shared history and shared secrets.

"I..." Bakara hesitated. "Maybe you're right."

"My lady, I protest." Zelenski was losing the debate and her tone revealed that she knew it. "You don't have the resources."

"We have secure rooms in the temple."

"But—"

"If you're so concerned, I'll keep her under constant surveillance. Guards will be on duty outside her room and I'll have a Sister watch over her."

The final exchanges were lost on Tanya as she scrambled to adjust to the idea that she would not be returning to the dungeon. Before she knew it, she was being led from the audience chamber, in the company of two Sisters and four Guards.

It's a trick. The words jumped into her head. It's to make you think you're safe, so you'll crack when they get the needles out again. Don't believe it. Don't trust anyone.

Tanya was still repeating the mantra to herself when they arrived in a long room, high in a tower. Sunset was over, but the sky was still light enough to see the bars across the window. The furniture was austere, a narrow bed and a table with two chairs. The walls and floor were bare, but compared to the underground cell, it was bliss.

The Guards remained outside, but one Sister followed Tanya in and took up position on a seat just inside the door. Her grandmother also entered the room. She placed a hand on Tanya's arm and led her to the table under the window. They sat on opposite sides. If they spoke softly, the Sister was now too far away to overhear what was said, but quite able to see should anything be passed over.

"You'd have to be an exceptionally dense member of my family if you haven't worked out that I'm Piety's mother." The old woman's lips twitched in a smile. "Except I doubt she ever uses the name. I believe she prefers to be called Chip."

Tanya nodded, thinking rapidly. Her mother's real name was common knowledge in Westernfort, although only the suicidal would dare use it. The name Piety was probably in the official enlistment records with the Homelands Militia, but how widely known in Landfall would the nickname be? That the woman across the table knew it was more convincing than the scene with the Imprinter, although this did not mean Tanya dare let herself think she was truly safe.

"Yes, she does. I'm her oldest daughter, Tanya."

"I'm pleased to meet you. I'm Isabel Coppelli." Again she smiled. "You can call me Grandma Izzy if you wish."

"Oh, right. Thank you for, um...rescuing me from the Corps."

"I acted as soon as I found out they had you. I hope it was in time to spare you too much unpleasantness."

"Things were just starting to get nasty." Tanya kept her hands under the table, but she got the feeling that her grandmother had already seen the blood under her nails. "How did you know I was here?"

"The Corps is not the only organization in Landfall with spies. And I like to think that mine are all the more effective for not being hampered by dogma."

"Why did you help me?" Tanya glanced at the Sister by the door and dropped her voice still lower. "You're not a heretic too, are you?"

"I'm a faithful daughter of the Goddess, as long as it doesn't impact on my profit or my family. I think this makes me a pragmatist." Isabel smiled. "How much do you know of your mother's history here in Landfall?"

"I know the two of you didn't get on. She ran away to join the Militia when she was seventeen."

"I see diplomacy still runs in the family. Didn't get on is a tactful way to put it. I tried to force her to be what I wanted her to be, and she insisted on being herself. She was my youngest daughter and the only one who dared defy me. I'm now old and wise enough to know this makes her the only one who could possibly take my place. And someone has to. I'm eighty-eight and I won't live forever."

"I don't think..." Tanya was unsure where the conversation was going.

"Oh, I know I've lost my chance with your mother. I'm trying not to make the same mistake with the next generation." Isabel's expression became earnest, with a hint of sadness. "I drove Piety...Chip out, and I've had thirty-five years to regret it. I'm going to do everything in my power to help you, partly because I owe it to your mother, but mainly because you're a Coppelli. And nobody pushes a Coppelli around."

 







Дата добавления: 2015-09-04; просмотров: 497. Нарушение авторских прав; Мы поможем в написании вашей работы!



Картограммы и картодиаграммы Картограммы и картодиаграммы применяются для изображения географической характеристики изучаемых явлений...

Практические расчеты на срез и смятие При изучении темы обратите внимание на основные расчетные предпосылки и условности расчета...

Функция спроса населения на данный товар Функция спроса населения на данный товар: Qd=7-Р. Функция предложения: Qs= -5+2Р,где...

Аальтернативная стоимость. Кривая производственных возможностей В экономике Буридании есть 100 ед. труда с производительностью 4 м ткани или 2 кг мяса...

Вопрос 1. Коллективные средства защиты: вентиляция, освещение, защита от шума и вибрации Коллективные средства защиты: вентиляция, освещение, защита от шума и вибрации К коллективным средствам защиты относятся: вентиляция, отопление, освещение, защита от шума и вибрации...

Задержки и неисправности пистолета Макарова 1.Что может произойти при стрельбе из пистолета, если загрязнятся пазы на рамке...

Вопрос. Отличие деятельности человека от поведения животных главные отличия деятельности человека от активности животных сводятся к следующему: 1...

Различия в философии античности, средневековья и Возрождения ♦Венцом античной философии было: Единое Благо, Мировой Ум, Мировая Душа, Космос...

Характерные черты немецкой классической философии 1. Особое понимание роли философии в истории человечества, в развитии мировой культуры. Классические немецкие философы полагали, что философия призвана быть критической совестью культуры, «душой» культуры. 2. Исследовались не только человеческая...

Обзор компонентов Multisim Компоненты – это основа любой схемы, это все элементы, из которых она состоит...

Studopedia.info - Студопедия - 2014-2024 год . (0.01 сек.) русская версия | украинская версия