"Bc12" - читать интересную книгу автора (Niven Larry & Pournelle)Beowulf's Children
Chapter 12 PARADISE LOST Nature is usually wrong. -JAMES ABBOTT MCNEILL WHISTLER, Ten O'clock Jessica snuggled next to Aaron in their sleeping bag. She was only half awake until the whitter of skeeter blades roused her from her reverie. She had barely wedged her eyes open in time to see it thump to ground, landing too damn fast. Justin leapt out, and ran toward them. "Emergency, dammit!" he screamed. He was bare-chested, wearing only briefs. A surge of adrenaline whiplashed her into wakefulness. Aaron was already scrambling to his feet. All right, so Camelot had gotten nervous. This wasn't the first time the Star Born had taken themselves off line. She knew that they'd catch hell for that one day, and just maybe that day had come . . . She struggled her clothes on, and hopped out toward the skeeter. Sprawled around the dead fire, the other Pranksters were hauling themselves toward consciousness. "What's the problem?" Justin looked pale. "Edgar rang through. He was on-line with Linda and Joe. They got cut off. Move it!" The piled into the skeeter. Aaron had time to yell "Trouble at Deadwood!" to Toshiro, who was up and pulling on a knit shirt. "We're going up. Get back to camp and watch the Scouts. Set a defensive perimeter. Keep them back in the cave. Interlocking fields of fire and no mistakes." "Got it." Jessica buckled in. "Any sounds, messages, images at all?" she asked. "Screams," Justin said tightly. "Just screams." "Anything on the motion sensors? The thermals?" Unbidden, Edgar's voice came over the radio. "Nothing. We've got Sat Twelve locked on, and I don't see anything. I think they're dead." They rose up out of the glade, in toward Heorot. There they dropped down for a moment. Jessica and Aaron took the other skeeter, and she had them airborne in fifteen seconds. Their ascending spiral twisted the glade, the valley, and the surrounding mountains into a dizzying whirl. No one spoke as the skeeters leveled out and dove, crossing the two kilometers to the camp in about ninety seconds. Robor's Chinese-dragon shape leered up at them, its red fringes rippling slowly in the wind. There was nothing. Nothing . . . And then Jessica whispered, "Oh dear God." Bones. Human bones. Animal bones. Aaron said, "I see three skeletons. Two human. One canine." His voice still held a machine precision. He was speaking for Cassandra, for Edgar back at Camelot. For whoever might have tapped into the line, and was now sick with concern. Her mind reeled. Grief and fear and raw hatred boiled within her like lava. Her vision clouded. She gripped the handbar in front of her as if a moment's loss of concentration would tumble her off the edge of the world. "Nothing." "Nothing," Aaron agreed. Justin's voice was labored. He sounded like some kind of animal straining in a trap. "I don't see any sign of the baby. Of Cadzie." A trapdoor opened in the back of her mind. She felt herself slide a little ways down, then clawed her way back up. What waited at the bottom of that pit bore fangs and claws, and was ravenously hungry. "No sign. Not yet." And what she didn't say, what she couldn't say, was Cadzie is barely a mouthful for a grendel. They hovered almost directly over the glade. Skeletons. The mining dome. A dozen yards distant, the refinery shack. The dirigible. And that was all. Aaron snapped out the trance first. "Cassandra, replay Sat Twelve, during or just prior to the incident." Jessica slipped on a pair of goggles, and watched while the images played. Running, struggling. A dusty windstorm. Death. Bones. "Oh, sweet Jesus," Jessica muttered. "That was no grendel." "It wasn't anything." Aaron was shaken. "It was invisible." Camelot was awake, and gathering in the main hall. Carlos tore at a scrap of ragged flesh at the corner of his thumb. The satellite feed kept playing it over and over again, enhanced with thermals, to full magnification, giving the illusion that the couple was no more than a hundred meters away. Impossibly far away. A world away. Justin's voice came over the speaker. "This is Skeeter Two. We are holding at seventy feet. We see skeletons. There's nothing alive down there that we can see. Nothing we can do to help them. Need instructions." Zack touched his collar. "Moskowitz. Did you say skeletons?" "Yes, sir. Two human skeletons. One canine," Aaron said. Zack was unnaturally calm. "We copy that. Skeletons. Satellite inspection detects nothing." "Motion sensors detect nothing," Aaron said. "And we see nothing--wait one. There is a small skeleton in the rocks about twenty meters above the camp." "Human?" "No, sir, too small. Now I see another. There are two small skeletons. I would say Joeys from the size." "You say there's nothing to be done for Joe and Linda?" "That's my best judgment," Aaron said. "And there's no sign of the baby. " |
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