"Dafydd ab Hugh, Brad Linaweawer DOOM: Endgame (english)" - читать интересную книгу автораwith me; when I entered, she left by another portal, so
I ate alone. Then when I left to return to duty (staring out the forward video screen, wondering when some- thing would happen), Arlene snuck in and hid away from me. I barely saw her any more often than I had before . . . but I felt a thousand percent relieved, because now she was angry rather than desolate and apathetic. Anger. Now that I have a good handle on. I'm a Marine, for Christ's sake! What I couldn't understand was despair. Angry Marines don't stay angry for long, especially not at their NCOs. Sergeants are buttheads; we'd both known that since Parris Island! After a while, Arlene took to haunting the mess hall when I was there, sitting far away; then she sat at my too-tall table, but at the other end; then she got around to eating across from me ... but she glared a hell of a lot. I waited, patiently and quietly. Eventually, her need for human company battered down her fury at me for risking my life like I did, and she started making snippy comments. I knew I'd won when she sat down four days after the shooting incident and demanded, "All right, Ser- geant, now tell me again why you had to do something "To piss you off," I answered, truthfully. Arlene stared, her mouth hanging open. She had shaved her hair into a high-and-tight again, and it was so short on top, it was almost iridescent orange. Her uniform was freshly launderedЧSears and Roebuck had showed us how to use the Fred washing machines when we first took over the ship, two weeks earlierЧ and I swear to God she had ironed everything. She had been working out, too; she looked harder, tighter than she had just a few days earlier, and it wasn't just her haircut. Now I was the only one getting soft and flabby. "To piss me off? For God's sake, why?" "A.S.," I said, leaning so close we were breathing each other's O2, "I don't think you realize how close I came to losing you. Despair is a terrible, terrible mental illness; apathy is a freaking disease. I had to do something so shocking, something to give you such a burst of adrenaline, that it would jerk you out of your feedback loop and drag you, kicking and screaming, back to the here and now." I scratched my stubbly chin, feeling myself flush. "All right, maybe it was pretty bone-sick stupid. But I was desperate! What should I have done? I don't think |
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