"Ahern, Jerry - Survivalist 009 - Earth Fire" - читать интересную книгу автора (Ahern Jerry)John Rourke checked the Gerber fighting knife he had added to his gear before leaving for Chicago. As he sheathed the black handled MkII, he spoke, "Captain Vladov has five men and Lieutenant Daszrozinski has five men, a total of twelve Russians, plus Natalia of course. If there were only thirteen Russians," he smiled, "an assault on the Womb to recover the cryogenic serum or destroy it and knock out the particle beam weapons there might be doomed to failure, I agree. But I'm an American. That'll make the difference." He watched Natalia's eyes grow wider as he spoke, their incredible, surreal blueness brighter somehow in the contrast of the dim light of the mummy room. "And, if as you proposed, General Varakov, I can get the help of U.S. II in this, well," and he laughed, "even just two or three more Americans added into, " and he paused, gesturing toward the Soviet SF-ers around him, knowing they were his allies now against the KGB, but finding it still hard to realize fully, "this assault force, well. You know what they always say. One American can lick any couple dozen people from anywhere else in the world. So, a thousand of Rozhdestvenskiy's Elite KGB Corps, the thousand women he has there to perpetuate the KGB, all the support personnel, the thousands of American small arms stored there, the millions of rounds of ammunition. All of that, well, if mankind survives somehow after the ionization effect begins and ends, well , history will probably show that this, " and he gestured again to the even dozen Soviet Special Forces troops and then to Natalia and himself, "this assault force just took advantage of those poor misguided KGB people."
Natalia Anastasia Tiemerovna began to laugh, hysterically, doubling forward with it, holding the M-16s back on their slings, falling to her knees. And suddenly, Captain Vladov, whom Varakov himself had labeled the best soldier in the Soviet Union, began to laugh, Lieutenant Daszrozinski joining him, the sergeants each man had, the enlisted personnel laughing, too. Catherine, Varakov's secretary with the too-long uniform skirt, smiled. Varakov, his face seaming, began to laugh, a laugh that sounded like a child's dream of Santa Claus as it rolled sonorously from his massive body. John Rourke began to check one, then the other of the twin stainless Detonics Combat Master .45s he wore, it was the first time in his life, he smiled, that he had ever been funny. And in view of what lay before them, he thought, most likely the last time as well. Chapter Four. Dawn came, the world had not perished by fire as it would, perhaps the next sunrise, or the next. It was an indefinite sentence of death , sometime, some sunrise within the next seven days at best, because of the electrically charged particles which had been thrust into the atmosphere during the bombings and missile strikes of The Night of The War, the total ionization of the atmosphere would take place. The atmosphere would catch fire, the fire spreading as the electrically charged particles were acted upon by the sun. It would be the last sunrise for humanity. As the earth rotated and the sun eventually rose throughout the twenty-four hours, there would be twenty-four hours of death, the sky itself aflame, the surface of the earth destroyed, the atmosphere all but completely burned away, much of the ozone layer destroyed. Humanity and all the lower life forms would be obliterated, forever. And General Varakov had held out one chance, that in a hermetically sealed shelter such as Rourke's own survival Retreat in the mountains of northeast Georgia not far from the town of Helen, his wife Sarah, his son Michael and his daughter Annie could survive, and that he, Rourke, could survive as well, and so could Natalia and Paul Ruben-stein and any others the Retreat could accommodate. All through the use of the cryogenic chambers originally developed for deep space travel, in use with the six craft of the Space Shuttle Fleet somewhere on an elliptical voyage to the end of the solar system and back. The cryogenic sleep chambers, coupled with the almost mystical serum which allowed the human brain to be awakened from the life sustaining, unaging sleep, could allow Rourke's family to survive the scorching of the earth and the sky, to survive the centuries while the lower plant forms gradually rebuilt the atmosphere to a level comparable to the highest altitude mountain atmospheres, but liveable. The chambers and the serum without which the chambers would be a perpetual living death from which there could be no awakening would allow his family to awaken five centuries in the future to a world, once again and however marginally, habitable. And to awaken to the hoped for return of the Eden Project survivors, an international corps of deep space astronaut trainees recruited because of their skills and their physical perfection from all the western aligned nations. To return with their microfilm libraries of the accumulated knowledge of mankind, their cryogenically frozen embryonic life forms, domestic animals, livestock, even birds to sing again in the air if indeed there were air. An Ark. But Colonel Nehemiah Rozhdestvenskiy, successor to Vladmir Karamatsov, the husband of Major Natalia Tiemerovna whom John Rourke had killed in a standup gunfight engineered by Natalia's uncle General Varakov, had assembled the one thousand finest of his Elite KGB Corps. With one thousand handpicked perfect Soviet female specimens, with the secret of life sustaining cryogenic sleep stolen with the American cryogenic serum, they would survive the global holocaust to use particle beam weapons already installed at what once had been NORAD Headquarters at Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado, they would survive in what Rozhdestvenskiy had dubbed "The Womb" to destroy the returning Eden Project before the last survivors of the world democracies could land, could reclaim the purged earth. It was this that was his mission, John Rourke realized, sitting in the semi-darkness at the height of the mezzanine steps, but in shadow from the first floor of the museum itself. He could see the two figures of mastodons fighting. Natalia had told him how her uncle watched these without cease. He understood the reason, and like the mastodons, he was now prepared to fight unto extinction because the circumstances of his own life had issued him no choice. It was his mission, above the saving of his wife and children, beyond saving Natalia and Paul and even himself for a world five centuries from now, it was his mission to prevent the KGB Elite Corps from utilizing the cryogenic serum, destroy the particle beam weapons, prevent the ultimate Soviet domination of the entire earth, the ultimate victory for evil. It was an involuntary nerve response, a paroxysm, the shiver which ran along his spine, as a doctor he could think of a multiplicity of medical related reasons for it. But the truest reason was within himself and what he had to do. Chapter Five. Sarah Rourke, wearing a borrowed sweater, Natalia's things fit her almost perfectly, and her own blue denim skirt, the only skirt she owned, sat on one of the high rocks not far from the Retreat entrance, her pistol in its holster on the ground beside her. On the next rock, Paul Rubenstein sat, an M-16 across his lap, some kind of submachinegun slung diagonally across his back, a pistol, she recognized it as a Browning High Power, in a shoulder holster that positioned the pistol half across the left side of his chest. "It was only my left arm, Mrs. Rourke, I shoot with my right, " "I didn't mean that -and it's Sarah, " "Sarah," he nodded, pushing his wire-rimmed glasses up off the bridge of his nose with his right index finger. "Anyway, the fresh air's good for me." "Do you think the children, " "I left a note on the pillow next to Michael, he can read it, know we're just outside, I just, " And he looked at her. "Why'd you come out here? John tell you to keep an eye on me with my arm?" She shook her head, it was such a good feeling to have clean hair, to wash it with seemingly limitless hot water. She suddenly wondered, shivering , what it would be like when all the supplies stored in the shelves and cabinets of her husband's Retreat were depleted. She had looked through the library, there were books which showed how to weave cloth, books which showed how to make soap from animal fat. Would they someday wear rags? Live by the light of homemade candles because the supply of light bulbs and fluorescent tubes had been depleted, she laughed at the irony. Limitless electricity from the hydroelectric generators her husband had installed, but electricity was useless without lights. She laughed , out loud, "I'm sorry, " "What is it?" Paul Rubenstein asked her. "Nothing, I was just thinking, how stupid I'll feel someday running around in rags or animals skins cooking wild rabbit by candlelight on a microwave oven." Paul Rubenstein started to laugh and she laughed with him. It was nice to have something to look forward to, after all, Sarah Rourke thought. Chapter Six. He had taken an M-16 from a soldier killed in the first pass the helicopters had made across the school grounds. As the machines banked, their guns opening up again, plowing waves in the dirt on both sides of the disabled, already burning truck behind which he had taken cover, Reed leveled the assault rifle toward the bubble dome of the nearest of the machines, they were American Bell 209 Huey Cobras, taken over by the Russians, a red Soviet star emblazoned over the American markings. Reed squeezed the trigger, firing, emptying the M-16's magazine, the helicopter's 7.62mm multi-barrel Minigun still firing, the helicopter unswerving, unaffected. "Shit!" He tucked down, the ground on both sides of the truck erupting as another of the machines made a pass, the sound of bullets ricocheting off the metal of the truck body. Screams , not all of the patients had been successfully evacuated from the building and those that were, were still pinned down in the trucks, some at the far end of the road, others still in front of the school. The sound of a missile firing, Reed looked up. The contrail, then one of the two and a half ton trucks at the far edge of the driveway seemed to bounce upward for an instant, then was consumed in a ball of flame. Men, women, their clothes and hair afire, fell from the back of the truck. "Bastards!" Reed screamed at the machines as they finished the pass. They were coming back. For some reason he turned around, he had never believed in a sixth sense beyond the uneasy feeling one sometimes got in combat. But Colonel Rubenstein had left the school building. The man stood there. He screamed, "My wife is dead!" His hands tore at the collar of his shirt, ripping it. Suddenly, Reed was conscious of Rubenstein being a Jew and Reed seemed to remember that the rending of some article of clothing was a tradition for the death of a loved one. Reed started to shout, "I'm sorry." But then the school steps vaporized in a ball of flame and Colonel Rubenstein was gone. Reed stabbed the M-16 skyward, firing it out uselessly, screaming the word again and again, "Bastards!" |
|
|