"HARRISON, Harry - 04 - The Stainless Steel Rat Wants You(V1.0)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Harrison Harry)"That was fast," Angelina said. "Too fast. If something got the spyeye I think they, have some pretty good detection equipment. Let us see what it found out." I speeded up the recording until we got to the busy part. The star in the center of the screen rushed at us and became a burning sun in an instant. The figures on the second screen revealed that the system had four planets and that radiation consistent with communication and industrial activity was coming from four of them. Ile spyeye headed for the nearest world and skimmed low. "My, oh my," Angelina whispered, and I could only nod agreement. The entire planet appeared to be a single fortress. Mouths of great guns gaped upward from thick-walled fortresses; row after row of spaceships were lined up in apparently endless ranks. As the spyeye skimmed along countless war machines rolled up over the horizon. No bit of the planet's natural surface seemed visible, just more and More machines of war. "There, look," I said. "That looks just like the spacewhale that swallowed up the admirals and their satellite. And another of the same--and another." "I wonder if they're friendly?" Angelina said, and was barely able to smile at her own joke. The boys were goggleeyed and silent. The end came quickly. Four sudden blips on the radar, closing at headlong speed--and the screen went blank. "Not too friendly," I said, and poured myself a drink with a none-too-steady hand. "Make a recording of what we discovered and get it started on a relay back to base. Route it by the nearest base with a psiman so a condensed report can get back soonest. Then I would like someone to suggest a next step for us. Once we have made the report of what we have discovered we are on our own again." "And expendable?" Bolivar asked. "You're catching on, son." I don't know how much he meant it, but I was proud of my sons right then and there. "Any suggestions?" I asked. "Because if not I have the glimmerings of a plan." "You're the captain, dear," Angelina said, and I think she meant it. "Right. I don't know if you noticed it on the readout, but that star system is filled with spatial debris. I Suggest we find the right-sized hunk of rock and hollow it out and slip one of the patrol boats inside. If we shield it correctly there will be nothing to show that is different from the rest of the boulders floating around that system. Then ease it into orbit, check out the other planets, see if there are any satellites we can slip-up on, generally get more information so we can plot out a plan of attack. There must be someplace we can get closer to that isn't armed to the teeth like that first planet. Agreed?" After some discussion---since no one could come up with a better plan--it was. We moved out in space drive, radar blipping, and within an hour had found a cloud of rocks and stone, meteoric iron and interstellar mountains, apparently in elliptic orbit about the nearest star. I eased up slowly to the mass, matching velocities and picking out the one we wanted. "There," I announced. "Right shape, right size, almost pure iron so it will shield the ship within. Angelina, take the helm and bring us in close. Bolivar, you and I will suit up and slip over there in the patrol boat. We can use its guns to drill the hole we need. James will do communications at this end. Keep in touch with us and send over any special equipment we might need. It should be an easy job." It was. At minimum output the nose cannon on the patrol boat drilled neatly into the iron, sending out clouds of monatomic gas. When the hole looked deep enough I sealed my suit and went out to examine it for myself, drifting down the length of the silvery drill hole. "Looks good," I said when I emerged. "Bolivar, do you think you can ease her in, nose first, without breaking off too many pieces of that ship?" "A piece of cake, Dad!" He was as good as his word, and I stood to one side as the patrol boat slid silently by and vanished from si t. Now we could plant instrumentation on the surface, connect it through to the ship, cut another hunk of asteroid to plug the hole when we went in, arrange braces for the boat ... I was facing the Gnasher as I floated there, and she was clearly visible as she stood by two kilometers away at the edge of the spatial debris field. Her ports glowed cheerfully in the interstellar darkness and I looked forward to getting back and getting my feet up after a good day's work. Then the black form appeared, blotting out the stars. It was big and fast, very fast, and the mouthlike glowing opening appeared even as it rushed forward. Opening and engulfing the Gnasher and closing again, then vanishing. All in an instant while I could only stay mute in paralyzed silence. Then it was gone. The ship, Angelina, James. Gone. |
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