"Dafydd ab Hugh, Brad Linaweawer DOOM: Endgame (english)" - читать интересную книгу автораrushed back into my vision. I hadn't even realized I
was seeing in black and white until the view colorized again. Every muscle in my body ached, like two mornings after the world's toughest workout. My stomach lurched; we were at zero-g again. What the hell? 1 looked to my side, where I could just see a portal: the planet loomed below us, barely moving, drifting slowly up to greet us. I didn't hear the engines humming. Were we in freefall? What gave? Arlene and Sears and Roebuck started thrashing around, finally coming around to consciousness again. I had no idea what had happened or how we appeared to be landing without enginesЧthe only ones who might have known were the Klave, and they weren't talking. Arlene started looking around, com- ing to the same conclusions I had a couple of minutes earlier; we looked questions at each other, then I shrugged and she narrowed her eyes. I didn't care, so long as we made dirtsideЧbut Arlene would stew over how we had landed for days and days until she figured it out, unless Sears and Roebuck decided to get a whole hell of a lot more garrulous than they had been to date. Unless her serene contemplation were cut short by Fred rays and machine guns. silently and at peace, probably our last moment of calm before the firestorm of combat. Then, with a groaning thump that sounded as if the entire Fred ship were tearing in half along the major axis, we jerked to a stop on some sort of runway. We had arrived on Fredworld, shaken but not stirred. Quickly, I got my troops unstrapped, and we hus- tled along to our stations, just in case the Fred fooled us by cutting their way inside without waiting for the doors to open. Nothing happened, and we waited out the landing sequencer. Then, seventy-five minutes after landing and right on schedule, the cargo door began to roll open, excruciatingly slowly, making a noise like all the Fred monsters in the world scream- ing in unison. We braced for the impact of the first shock troops. We waited; we waited; nothing came; nothing pounded, rattled, or thumped up the gangway. We sat alone, each in our assigned spots, ready for action that never came, the war never fought. I held my breath as long as I could. Then, about fifteen after we should have seen the first swarms of Freds up the gangway, overrunning our first "defen- sive" position (designed to be overridden, I add), I |
|
|