"Robert Reed - Five Thrillers" - читать интересную книгу автора (Reed Robert) Five Thrillers by Robert Reed
If anyone ever questioned whether F&SF readers are a thoughtful bunch, they'd need only look at our email correspondence from the last six weeks. тАЬYou've gone three months without a new Robert Reed story,тАЭ writes K. V. from Seattle. тАЬDid he fall during one of his running competitions and break his writing hand?тАЭ M. L. from Toronto more bluntly said, тАЬI want more Reed!тАЭ while a joker we shall not name said, тАЬDid you finally get your hands on those photos Bob Reed was using to blackmail you into publishing his stories?тАЭ Worry not, you thoughtful readersтАФrather than spending his days polishing his new Hugo Award, Mr. Reed has been filling our inventory with several new tales, of which we now bring you five of the most thrilling of тАШem. **** I. The Ill-Fated Mission Their situation was dire. A chunk of primordial iron had slashed its way through the Demon Dandy, crippling the engines and pushing life support to the brink of failure. Even worse, a shotgun blast of shrapnel had shredded one of the ship's two life-pods. The mission engineer, a glum little man who had spent twenty years mining Earth-grazing asteroids, studied the wreckage with an expert eye. There was no sane reason to hope that repairs could be made in time. But on the principle of keeping his staff busy, he ordered the robots and his new assistant to continue their work on the useless pod. Then after investing a few moments cursing God and Luck, the engineer dragged himself to the remnants of the bridge to meet with the Dandy's beleaguered captain. His assistant was a young fellow named Joseph Carroway. Handsome as a digital hero, with green eyes and an abundance of curly blond hair, Joe was in his early twenties, born to wealthy parents who had endowed their only child with the earliest crop of synthetic human genes. He was a tall, tidy fellow, and he was a gifted athlete as graceful as any dancer, on the impressed shake of the head, the company psychiatrist had confided that his bountiful talents made him suitable for many kinds of work. But by the same token, that supercharged brain carried certain inherent risks. Dipping his head in the most charming fashion, he said, тАЬRisks?" "And I think you know what I'm talking about,тАЭ she remarked, showing a wary, somewhat flirtatious smile. "But I don't know,тАЭ Joe lied. "And I believe you do,тАЭ she countered. тАЬWithout exception, Mr. Carroway, you have been telling me exactly what I want to hear. And you're very believable, I should add. If I hadn't run the T-scan during our interview, I might have come away believing that you are the most kind, most decent gentleman in the world." "But I am decent,тАЭ he argued. Joe sounded, and looked, exceptionally earnest. The psychiatrist laughed. A woman in her early fifties, she was an overqualified professional doing routine tasks for a corporation larger and more powerful than most nations. The solar system was being opened to humanityтАФhumanity in all of its forms, old and new. Her only task was to find qualified bodies to do exceptionally dangerous work. The vagaries of this young man's psyche were factors in her assessment. |
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