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Felix Taylor Adventures 2-Book Bundle. Nicholas Maes
Читать онлайн.Название Felix Taylor Adventures 2-Book Bundle
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781459721845
Автор произведения Nicholas Maes
Жанр Учебная литература
Серия A Felix Taylor Adventure
Издательство Ingram
“Are you okay?” Felix asked with a note of concern, “You look tired.”
“I am tired, but there’s work to do.”
“You saw mom’s hologram? She’ll be home in six weeks.”
“Yes I saw it. It’s wonderful news.”
“What’s that?” Felix asked, pointing to a book his dad was carrying. It was small and bound in bright blue leather.
“It’s nothing really,” his father said vaguely. “A work of history, that’s all.”
“By whom?”
“Sextus Pullius Aceticus.”
“Aceticus? The vinegary one? I’ve never heard of him.”
“He’s not well known,” his father agreed. “And this edition in my pocket is particularly rare. Still, he’s … interesting.”
“What period does he cover?”
“We’ll discuss it later,” Mr. Taylor said dismissively. “Let’s start and read about Spartacus’s struggle. His story is why I assigned the Life of Crassus. Over the last few days this era has come to obsess me.”
“Okay,” Felix agreed. While his dad took a seat, he selected the right chapter and translated from the Latin into Common Speak.
He read how Spartacus had been a gladiator in the town of Capua. His owner Batiatus had treated his slaves badly, confining them and beating them often. Spartacus and others were determined to escape. Using a mix of kitchen utensils, they stormed their guards, fled the school, and armed themselves with swords and spears before venturing due south. When the praetor Clodius led three thousand troops against them, Spartacus and his companions crushed this army, gained a cache of weapons for themselves, and attracted many more slaves to their cause.
“The Romans don’t come off well,” Felix said.
“They most certainly don’t,” his father agreed.
“They had slaves and encouraged gladiatorial games ….”
“They have their better aspects, too. It’s strange how civilization can contain such savage elements.”
Felix continued. A second Roman army arrived — it consisted of six thousand soldiers — and Spartacus promptly routed it, too. By this time twenty thousand slaves had joined him. Aware he couldn’t beat the Romans forever, he led his troops as far as the Alps and advised them to leave Italy and return to their homelands. They refused, preferring to plunder instead. As they roamed the countryside and attracted more slaves, they killed Rome’s soldiers by the tens of thousands.
“There’s so much death,” Felix lamented.
“It isn’t pretty,” his father sighed, “But it’s important to know the truth about ourselves. If we want to grasp humanity in all its dimensions, we have to see ourselves as we are, and not as we would like ourselves to be.”
“I suppose,” Felix said, with a lack of conviction. “I’m just glad I haven’t experienced this bloodshed for myself.”
He read how a fourth Roman army was mustered, a huge one under the command of Crassus. The slaves marched to the toe of Italy where they planned to hire boats and sail to Sicily. Unfortunately, these ships failed to appear and Crassus boxed them in with a wall that was eight feet tall and twelve miles long. Heavy fighting followed. While the slaves smashed the wall and forced their way north, thirty thousand souls were lost in the process. In a final battle by the Silarus River, Spartacus took a gamble and charged the Roman army: the odds were stacked against him, however, and the Romans cut his troops to pieces. The gladiator himself died in combat. The surviving slaves, six thousand men, were crucified by Crassus along the Appian Way, as a warning to all slaves that their attempts to revolt would be ruthlessly dealt with. And so ended the famous slave rebellion.
Felix paused. He was going to ask his father what he thought of Spartacus but, as he looked up from his book, his mouth dropped open. His father was … sleeping! What on earth …? Through all their many lessons together, not once had his father nodded off on the job. In fact, when Felix himself had been tempted to nap, how many times had he been told that their lessons were too precious to waste a single moment snoozing?
Felix blushed. His father was snoring. Closing his book, he climbed to his feet and tiptoed toward the start of the garden. His initial impulse had been to wake his father, but his face was pale and he looked exhausted and it seemed a good idea to let him sleep until supper.
He retreated to the staircase. As he climbed its steps, he thought about the people who had collapsed that day and how their prostrate forms resembled his father’s. Not that he was worried: if his father were sick, Mentor would have caught it.
A loud, raucous cawing broke in on his thoughts. Spinning about, he looked around him. What was that racket …? Oh!
A crow had alighted on the tree’s top branch. Its plumage was black as pitch and its beak looked sharp and menacing. Felix was amazed. Crows were rarely seen in the city — they had left when humans had started controlling the weather.
But there was something else. For a moment, he thought the air about his father had split in half, revealing a figure who looked … exactly like himself. He shook himself vigorously: no, the apparition was gone.
But the crow was still there. As if aware of Felix’s stare, it perched itself beside his father. “Aagh, aagh, aagh,” it cried, as if addressing him directly. A shiver ran down Felix’s spine. The crow was poised to his father’s right: according to Roman traditions, a sighting like this was a terrible sign.
“Go away!” Felix yelled.
“Aagh, aagh, aagh!” the crow continued.
“Go away!” he repeated, “Leave my father alone!”
“Aagh, aagh, aagh!” the crow called, more insistently than ever. Abandoning the bough, he alighted on his dad’s right shoulder. And still his father continued to sleep.
This was more than Felix could bear. Hurrying down the staircase, he rushed toward the tree. Observing his approach, the crow finally took wing. It circled the tree and cawed once or twice, as if deliberately insulting Felix further … unless it was warning him of trouble ahead. Tracing one last circle, the bird shot into the sky and, seconds later, was a point in the distance.
Although he didn’t believe in ghosts or superstitions, Felix had to concentrate to keep his legs from shaking.
Chapter Three
When Felix awoke the next morning, his nervousness was gone. He’d slept like a log, it was beautiful outside, and the headlines on the news communicator spoke of sports, off-world projects, and upgrades to the weather template. There was no mention of people collapsing at random and that meant yesterday’s crisis had passed. He would have joked with Mentor had they not been studying physics together.
“Explain the importance of Johann Clavius.”
“He discovered the unified field equation in 2165.”
“Good. What else?”
“By using principles of hyper-spatial geometry, he proved three particles exist that can travel faster than the speed of light.”
“And what does this imply, theoretically, at least?”
“If these particles have the same magnetic spin, and are aligned along a certain vector path, their time coefficient can be transposed.”
“And?”
“Theoretically,