"Bunch, Chris & Cole, Allan - Sten 01 - Sten" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bunch Chris)"You don't know Amos. If you did, you would've soaked your jockЧspecially if Amos was on the prowl for a little fight to cheer him up some."
The four Migs each touched small white rectangles against a pickup and Vulcan's central computer logged the movement of MIG STEN, AMOS; MIG STEN, FREED; MIG-DEPENDENT STEN, AHDJ MIG-DEPENDENT STEN, JOHS into The Row. As the Sten family passed the two patrolmen, the older man smiled and tipped Amos a nod. His partner just glared. Amos ignored them and hustled his family toward the livee entrance. "Mig likes to fight, huh? That ain't whatcha call Company-approved social mannerisms." "Son, we busted the head of every Mig who beefed one on The Row, there'd be a labor shortage." "Maybe we ought to take him down some." "You think you're the man who could do it?" The young patrolman nodded. "Why not? Catch him back of a narco joint and thump him some." The older man smiled, and touched a long and livid scar on his right arm. "It's been tried. By some better. But maybe I'm wrong. Maybe you're the one who can do something. But you best remember. Amos isn't any old Mig." "What's so different about him?" The patrolman suddenly tired of his new partner and the whole conversation. "Where he comes from, they eat little boys like you for breakfast." The young man bristled and started to glower. Then he remembered that even without the potgut his senior still had about twenty kilos and fifteen years on him. He spun and turned the glower on an old lady who was weaving happily out of The Row. She looked at him, gummed a grin and spat neatly between the probationary's legs, onto the deck. "Clot Migs!" Amos slid his card through the livee's pickup, and the computer automatically added an hour to Amos' work contract. The four of them walked into the lobby, and Amos looked around. "Don't see the boy." "Karl said school had him on an extra shift," his wife, Freed, reminded him. Amos shrugged. "He ain't missin' much. Guy down the line was here last offshift. Says the first show's some clot about how some Exec falls for a joygirl an' takes her to live in The Eye with him." Music blared from inside the theater. "C'mon, dad, let's go." Amos followed his family into the showroom. Sten hurriedly tapped computer keys, then hit the JOB INPUT tab. The screen blared, then went gray-blank. Sten winced. He'd never finish in time to meet his family. The school's ancient computer system just wasn't up to the number of students carded hi for his class shift. Sten glanced around the room. No one was watching. He hit BASIC FUNCTION, then a quick sequence of keys. Sten had found a way to tap into one reasoning bank of the central computer. Against school procedure, for sure. But Sten, like any other seventeen-year-old, was willing to let tomorrow's hassles hassle tomorrow. With the patch complete, he fed hi his task card. And groaned, as his assignment swam up onto the screen. It was a cybrolathe exercise, making L-beams. It would take forever to make the welds, and he figured that the mandated technique, obsolete even by the school's standards, created a stressline three microns off the joining. Then Sten grinned. He was already In Violation . . . |
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