"Takeshi Kovacs - 02 - Broken Angels" - читать интересную книгу автора (Morgan Richard)"Or a shuttle." I nodded at the tattoo on his arm. "What were you flying?"
He grimaced. "Piece of shit Mowai suborbital. Size of a fucking house. It wouldn't fit through the portal space." "What?" I coughed up an unexpected laugh that hurt my chest. "Wouldn't fit?" "Yeah, you go ahead and laugh," said Schneider morosely. "Wasn't for that particular little logistic, I wouldn't be in this fucking war now. I'd be wearing out a custom-built sleeve in Latimer City. Clones on ice, remote storage, fucking immortal, man. The whole programme." "No one had a spacesuit?" "What for?" Schneider spread his hands. "It was a suborbital. No one was expecting to go offworld. Fact, no one was allowed offworld 'cept via the IP ports at Landfall. Everything you found on site had to be checked through Export Quarantine. And that was something else no one was real keen to do. Remember that expropriation clause?" "Yeah. Any findings judged to be of vital importance to Protectorate interests. You didn't fancy the suitable compensation? Or you didn't figure it'd be suitable?" "Come on, Kovacs. What's suitable compensation for finding something like this?" I shrugged. "Depends. In the private sector it depends very much on who you talk to. A bullet through the stack, maybe." Schneider skinned me a tight grin. "You don't think we could have handled selling to the corporates?" "I think you would have handled it very badly. Whether you lived or not would have depended on who you were dealing with." "So who would you have gone to?" I shook out a fresh cigarette, letting the question hang a little before I said anything. "That's not under discussion here, Schneider. My rates as a consultant are a little out of your reach. As a partner, on the other hand, well," I offered him a small smile of my own. "I'm still listening. What happened next?" Schneider's laugh was a bitter explosion, loud enough to hook even the holoporn audience momentarily away from the lurid airbrushed bodies that twisted in full-scale 3-D reproduction at the other end of the ward. "What happened?" He brought his voice down again, and waited until the flesh fans' gazes were snagged back to the performance. "What happened? This war is what fucking happened." CHAPTER THREE Somewhere, a baby was crying. For a long moment I hung by my hands from the hatch coaming and let the equatorial climate come aboard. I'd been discharged from the hospital as fit for duty, but my lungs still weren't functioning as well as I would have liked, and the soggy air made for hard breathing. "Hot here." Schneider had shut down the shuttle's drive and was crowding my shoulder. I dropped from the hatch to let him out and shaded my eyes against the glare of the sun. From the air, the internment camp had looked as innocuous as most scheme-built housing, but close up the uniform tidiness went down under assault from reality. The hastily-blown bubblefabs were cracking in the heat and liquid refuse ran in the alleys between them. A stench of burning polymer waited to me on the scant breeze; the shuttle's landing field had blown sheets of waste paper and plastic up against the nearest stretch of perimeter fence, and now the power was frying them to fragments. Beyond the fence, robot sentry systems grew from the baked earth like iron weeds. The drowsy hum of capacitors formed a constant backdrop to the human noises of the internees. A small squad of local militia slouched up behind a sergeant who reminded me vaguely of my father on one of his better days. They saw the Wedge uniforms and pulled up short. The sergeant gave me a grudging salute. "Lieutenant Takeshi Kovacs, Carrera's Wedge," I said briskly. "This is Corporal Schneider. We're here to appropriate Tanya Wardani, one of your internees, for interrogation." The sergeant frowned. "I wasn't informed of this." "I'm informing you now, sergeant." In situations like this, the uniform was usually enough. It was widely known on Sanction IV that the Wedge were the Protectorate's unofficial hard men, and generally they got what they wanted. Even the other mercenary units tended to back down when it came tussles over requisitioning. But something seemed to be sticking in this sergeant's throat. Some dimly remembered worship of regulations, instilled on parade grounds back when it all meant something, back before the war cut loose. That, or maybe just the sight of his own countrymen and women starving in their bubblefabs. "I'll have to see some authorisation." |
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