To Your Scattered Bodies Go/The Fabulous Riverboat

To Your Scattered Bodies Go/The Fabulous Riverboat Read Free Page B

Book: To Your Scattered Bodies Go/The Fabulous Riverboat Read Free
Author: Philip José Farmer
Tags: Retail, Personal, 060 Top 100 Sci-Fi
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Burton was sure that this Resurrection Day was not the one which any religion had stated would occur. Burton had not believed in the God portrayed by the Christians, Moslems, Hindus, or any faith. In fact, he was not sure that he believed in any Creator whatsoever. He had believed in Richard Francis Burton and a few friends. He was sure that when he died, the world would cease to exist.

4
    W aking up after death, in this valley by this river, he had been powerless to defend himself against the doubts that existed in every man exposed to an early religious conditioning and to an adult society which preached its convictions at every chance.
    Now, seeing the alien approach, he was sure that there was some other explanation for this event than a supernatural one. There was a physical, a scientific, reason for his being here; he did not have to resort to Judeo-Christian-Moslem myths for cause.
    The creature, it, he—it undoubtedly was a male—was a biped about six feet eight inches tall. The pink-skinned body was very thin; there were three fingers and a thumb on each hand and four very long and thin toes on each foot. There were two dark red spots below the male nipples on the chest. The face was semihuman. Thick black eyebrows swept down to the protruding cheekbones and flared out to cover them with a brownish down. The sides of his nostrils were fringed with a thin membrane about a sixteenth of an inch long. The thick pad of cartilage on the end of his nose was deeply cleft. The lips were thin, leathery, and black. The ears were lobeless and the convolutions within were nonhuman. His scrotum looked as if it contained many small testes.
    He had seen this creature floating in the ranks a few rows away in that nightmare place.
    The creature stopped a few feet away, smiled, and revealed quite human teeth. He said, “I hope you speak English. However, I can speak with some fluency in Russian, Mandarin Chinese, or Hindustani.”
    Burton felt a slight shock, as if a dog or an ape had spoken to him.
    “You speak Midwestern American English,” he replied. “Quite well, too. Although too precisely.”
    “Thank you,” the creature said. “I followed you because you seemed the only person with enough sense to get away from that chaos.Perhaps you have some explanation for this…what do you call it?…resurrection?”
    “No more than you,” Burton said. “In fact, I don’t have any explanation for your existence, before or after resurrection.”
    The thick eyebrows of the alien twitched, a gesture which Burton was to find indicated surprise or puzzlement.
    “No? That is strange. I would have sworn that not one of the six billion of Earth’s inhabitants had not heard of or seen me on TV.”
    “TV?”
    The creature’s brows twitched again.
    “You don’t know what TV….”
    His voice trailed, then he smiled again.
    “Of course, how stupid of me! You must have died before I came to Earth!”
    “When was that?”
    The alien’s eyebrows rose (equivalent to a human frown as Burton would find), and he said slowly, “Let’s see. I believe it was, in your chronology, A.D. 2002. When did you die?”
    “It must have been in A.D. 1890,” Burton said. The creature had brought back his sense that all this was not real. He ran his tongue around his mouth; the back teeth he had lost when the Somali spear ran through his cheeks were now replaced. But he was still circumcised, and the men on the riverbank—most of whom had been crying out in the Austrian-German, Italian, or the Slovenian of Trieste—were also circumcised. Yet, in his time, most of the males in that area would have been uncircumcised.
    “At least,” Burton added, “I remember nothing after October 20, 1890.”
    “Aab!” the creature said. “So, I left my native planet approximately 200 years before you died. My planet? It was a satellite of that star you Terrestrials call Tau Ceti. We placed ourselves in suspended animation, and, when our ship approached your

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