"Serrano Legacy - 01 - Hunting Party" - читать интересную книгу автора (Moon Elizabeth)Hunting Party by Elizabeth Moon Copyright 1993 Familias Regnant Books by Elizabeth Moon Hunting Party Sporting Chance Winning Colors Once a Hero Rules of Engagement Change of Command Against the Odds PARTY FAVORS They were somewhere inside, dry and safe. He imagined nooks and crannies cushioned with colorful pillows and rugs, rock-walled chambers where naked nymphs bathed in clear subterranean pools or streams.... He crept through the darkness, smugly certain of what he would find. The light strengthened; he felt his way around a corner of the rock, and saw them at last. His first thought was disappointment; the dark-haired girl had her arm around the lucky first-comer. The Prince wondered why he'd preferred her to the more righteous rage. Ronnie! "You unspeakable cad!" he said. "What are you..." His voice trailed away as he noticed that the two black circles facing him were the bores of hunting rifles like his own. Each girl, blonde and dark, held hers steadily. "You're hunters, too?" he asked, with a half-nervous laugh. Ronnie's head came around, and he saw the dark stain of a black eye and bruised face. "My sainted aunt," Ronnie said, in a voice that didn't sound much like his own. "It's the Prince." Chapter One Heris Serrano went from her room in the small but respectable dockside hotel on Rockhouse Station to the berth of her new command convinced that she looked like an idiot. No one laughed aloud, but that only meant the bystanders had chosen to snicker later rather than risk immediate confrontation with an ex-Regular Space Services officer on the beach. Heris kept her eyes away from any of those who might be contemplating humor, the dockside traffic of the commercial district. Her ears burned; she could feel the glances raking her back. She would not have changed her military posture even if she could have walked any other way; she had been R.S.S. from birth or before, daughter of officers, admirals' granddaughter and niece, a service family for all the generations anyone bothered to count. Even that miserable first year at the Academy had seemed familiar, almost homey: she had heard the stories from parents, uncles, aunts, all her life. And here she was, tricked out in enough gold braid and color to satisfy a |
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