"Steve Perry - Battle Surgeons" - читать интересную книгу автора (Perry Steven)

A long time ago in a galaxy
far, far away. . . .




For my son Dashiell
"Never tell me the odds"--- M.R.

For Diane, and for Cyrus, the new kid in town .--- S.P.




RMSU-7
The Jasserak Lowlands of Tanlassa, Near the Kondrus Sea Planet Drongar Year 2 a.b.o.g.




1
Blood geysered, looking almost black in the antisepsis field's glow. It splattered hot against Jos's
skin-gloved hand. He cursed.
"Hey, here's an ideaтАФwould somebody with nothing better to do mind putting a pressor field on that
bleeder?"
"Pressor generator is broken again, Doc."
Republic battle surgeon Jos Vondar looked away from the bloody operating field that was the clone
trooper's open chest, at Tolk, his scrub nurse. "Of course it is," he said. "What, is our mech droid on
va-cation? How am I supposed to patch up these rankweed suckers without working medical gear?"
Tolk le Trene, a Lorrdian who could read his mood as easily as most sentients could read a chart, said
nothing aloud, but her pointed look was plain enough: Hey, I didn't break it.
With an effort, Jos throttled back his temper. "All right. Put a clamp on it. We still have hemostats, don't
we?"
But she was ahead of him, already locking the steel pincer on the torn blood vessel and using a
hemosponge
to soak and clear the field. The troopers of this unit had been too close to a grenade when it exploded, and
this one's chest had been peppered full of shrapnel. The recent battle in the Poptree Forest had been a bad
oneтАФthe medlifters would surely be hauling in more wounded before nightfall to go with those they already
had.
"Is it just me, or is it hot in here?"
One of the circulating nurses wiped Jos's forehead to keep the sweat from running into his eyes. "Air
cooler's malfunctioning again," she said. Jos didn't reply. On a civilized world, he would have sprayed
sweat-stop on his face before he scrubbed, but that, like everything elseтАФincluding tempersтАФwas in short
supply here on Drongar. The temperature outside, even now, near mid-night, was that of human body heat;
tomorrow it would be hotter than a H'nemthe in love. The air would be wetter. And smellier. This was a
nasty, nasty world at the best of times; it was far worse with a war going on. Jos wondered, not for the first
time, what high-ranking Republic official had casually decided to ruin his life by cutting orders shipping him
to a planet that seemed to be all mold and mildew and mushroomlike vegetation as far as the eye could see.
"Is everything broken around here?" he demanded of the room at large.
"Everything except your mouth, sounds like," Zan said pleasantly, without looking up from the trooper he