"Smith, Wilber - Hungry as the Sea" - читать интересную книгу автора (Smith Wilbur)gates with a photograph of Nicholas Berg and a five-cent piece for the
telephone call box beside the gate, and the whole ship was alerted now. David Allen stood with the Chief Engineer in the glassed wing of the main navigation bridge and they watched the solitary figure pick his way across the shadowy dock, carrying his own case. So that's him/ David's voice was husky with awe and respect. He looked like a schoolboy under his shaggy bush of sun-bleached hair. He's a bloody film star, Vinny Baker, the Chief Engineer, hitched up his sagging trousers with both elbows, and his spectacles slid down the long thin nose, as he snorted. A bloody film star/ he repeated the term with utmost scorn. He was first to Jules Levoisin/ David pointed out, and in the note of awe as he intoned that name, and he is a tug man from way back. 'That was fifteen years ago. Vinny Baker released his elbow grip on his trousers and pushed his spectacles up on to the bridge of his nose. Immediately his trousers began their slow but inexorable slide deckwards. Since then he's become a bloody glamour boy - and an owner. Yes, David Allen agreed, and his baby face crumpled a little at the thought of those two legendary animals, master and owner, combined in gangway to the deck of Warlock. You'd better go down and kiss him on the soft spot/ vinny grunted comfortably, and drifted away. Two decks down was the sanctuary of his control room where neither masters nor owners could touch him. He was going there now. David Allen was breathless and flushed when he reached the entry port. The new Master was halfway up the gangway, and he lifted his head and looked steadily at the mate as he stepped aboard. Though he was only a little above average, Nicholas Berg gave the impression of towering height, and the shoulders beneath the blue cashmere of his jacket were wide and powerful. He wore no hat and his hair was very dark, very thick and brushed back from a wide unlined forehead. The head was big-nosed and punt-boned, with a heavy jaw, blue now with new beard, and the eyes were set deep in the cages of their bony sockets, underlined with dark plumcoloured smears, as though they were bruised. But what shocked David Allen was the man's pallor. His face was drained, as though he had been bled from the jugular. it was the pallor of mortal illness or of exhaustion close to death itself, and it was emphasized by the dark eye-sockets. This was not what David had |
|
|