"Bunch, Chris & Cole, Allan - Sten 01 - Sten" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bunch Chris)Scanned by Highroller. Proofed more or less by Highroller.
BOOK ONE VULCAN CHAPTER ONE DEATH CAME QUIETLY to The ROW. The suit stank. The Tech inside it stared out through the scratched port at the pipe that looped around the outside of the recreation dome and muttered a string of curses that would've peeled a deep-space trader. What he wanted more than anything was a tall cool narcobeer to kill the hangover drumrolls in his head. The one thing he didn't want, he knew, was to be hanging outside Vulcan, staring at a one-centimeter alloy pipe that wouldn't hook up. He clamped his waldos on the flange, set the torque rating by feel, and tried another round of obscenities, this time including his supervisor and all the stinking Migs enjoying themselves one meter and a world away from him. Done. He retracted the waldos and slammed the suit's tiny drive unit into life. Not only was his supervisor a clot who was an exjoyboy, but he was also going to get stuck for the first six rounds. The Tech shut down his ground-zeroed brain and rocketed numbly for the lock. Of course, he'd missed the proper torque setting. If the pipe hadn't been carrying fluorine, under high pressure, the error wouldn't have made any difference. The overstressed fitting cracked, and raw fluorine gradually ate its way through, for several shifts spraying harmlessly into space. But, as the fracture widened, the spray boiled directly against the outer skin of The Row, through the insulation and, eventually, the inner skin. At first the hole was pin-size. The initial pressure drop inside the dome wasn't even enough to kick over the monitors high overhead in The Row's roof control capsule. The Row could've been a red-light district on any of a. million pioneer planetsЧCompany joygirls and boys picked their way through the Mig crowds, looking for the Migrant-Unskilled who still had some credits left on his card. Long rows of gambling computers hooted enticements at the passing workers and emitted little machine chuckles when another mark was suckered into a game. The Row was the Company-provided recreational center, set up with the Migs' "best interests" at heart. "A partying Mig is a happy Mig," a Company psychologist had once said. He didn't addЧor need toЧthat a partying Mig was also one who was spending credits, and generally into the red. Each loss meant hours added to the worker's contract Which was why, hi spite of the music and the laughter, The Row felt grim and gray. Two beefy Sociopatrolmen lounged outside The Row's entrance. The older patrolman nodded at three boisterous Migs,as they weaved from one bibshop to another, then turned to his partner. "If ya gonna twitch every time somebody looks at ya, bud, pretty soon one of these Migs is gonna wanna know what you'll do if they get real rowdy." The new probationary touched his stun rod. "And I'd like to show them." The older man sighed, then stared off down the corridor. "Oh-oh. Trouble." His partner nearly jumped out of his uniform. "Where? Where?" The older man pointed. Stepping off the slideway and heading for The Row was Amos Sten. The other man started to laugh at the short, middle-aged Mig, and then noticed the muscles hunching Amos' neck. And the size of his wrists and hammer fists. Then the senior patrolman sighed in relief and leaned back against the I-beam. "It's okay, kid. He's got his family with him." A tired-looking woman and two children hurried off the slideway to Amos. "What the hell," the young man said, "that midget don't look so tough to me." |
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