"Stephen Goldin - The Eternity Brigade" - читать интересную книгу автора (Goldin Stephen) Scanned by Highroller.
Proofed by an Unsung Hero. Made prettier by use of EBook Design Group Stylesheet. The Eternity Brigade by Stephen Goldin Prelude Hawker knew war in all its perverse permutations. He knew the killing and the pain. He knew the endless waiting in darkness for the enemy attack to begin, that helpless frustration when his fate was in the hands of others. He knew the swift battles, with quiet death and meaningless destruction flaring all around him. He knew the quiet and the noise, the calm and the panic. He knew the hatred for the enemy, the scorn for his own superiors, the mystical friendship for his comrades-in-arms. He'd faced the paradoxes of combat and hacked his way through the overgrown jungle of its eternal contradictious. He was a master at the fine art of mass killing. His original training in slaughter had been on members of his own race, but he had long ago broadened his education, to the point where he could kill any intelligent creature his superiors told him was an enemy. Numbers were or execute an opposing sentry with his bare hands. Means and motives were immaterial. His superiors had molded him into what they hoped was the best fighting machine possible. Just point him in the right direction and let him do his job. If Hawker had any opinions of this, his superiors had long ago stopped asking him what they were. He was a creature living solely for war; he had no other purpose. No one knew this better than Hawker himself. There might be peace when he closed his eyes, but there would be fighting when he opened them again. This occasion seemed little different from the countless others that had preceded it. There were bright lights and noises; Hawker could tell that even with his eyes closed. The ground shook with the force of explosions, but they were either mild or far away. There was no immediate threat, but the situation could not be good. He prepared himself for the training probe, that sharp mental stab into his mind which, in a fraction of a second, could implant all the background material he'd need to comprehend the current situation. He knew from past experience that the information would flash through his brain in an instant, the mental equivalent of playing a tape recorder back at far greater than normal speed. When the probe was gone, he would be dizzy for a moment, and then anything he needed to know about the |
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