"Alistair MacLean - Fear is the Key" - читать интересную книгу автора (Maclean Alistair)"Just that."
"Anyone -- anyone hurt?" I dreaded the answer. "Relax, brother. Only the radio." "Thank God for that. Let's hope that's the end of it." "Not to worry. Besides, we have a watchdog now. A U.S. Army Air Force plane has been with us for the past thirty minutes. Barranquilla must have radioed for an escort to see us in." Peter laughed dryly. "After all, the Americans have a fair interest in this cargo we have aboard." "What kind of plane?" I was puzzled, it took a pretty good flier to move two or three hundred miles out into the Gulf of Mexico and pick up an incoming plane without any radio directional bearing. "Were you warned of this?'" "No. But not to worry -- he's genuine, all right. We've just been talking to him. Knows all about us and our cargo. It's an old Mustang, fitted with long-range tanks -- a jet fighter couldn't stay up all this time." "I see." That was me, worrying about nothing, as usual. "What's your course?" "040 dead." "Position?" He said something which I couldn't catch. Reception was deteriorating, static increasing. "Repeat, please?" "Barry's just working it out. He's been too busy repairing the radio to navigate." A pause. "He says two minutes." "Let me talk to Elizabeth." "Wilco." Another pause, then the voice that was more to me than all the world. "Hallo, darling. Sorry we've given you such a fright." That was Elizabeth. Sorry she'd given me a fright: never a word of herself. "Are you all right? I mean, are you sure you're-----" "Of course." Her voice, too, was faint and faraway, but the gaiety and the courage and the laughter would have come through to me had she been ten thousand miles away. "And we're almost there. I can see the lights of land ahead." A moment's silence, then very softly, the faintest whisper of sound. "I love you, darling." "Truly?" "Always, always, always." I leaned back happily in my chair, relaxed and at ease at last, then jerked forward, on my feet, half-crouched over the transmitter as there came a sudden exclamation from Elizabeth and then the harsh, urgent shout from Pete. "He's diving on us! The bastard's diving on us and he's opened fire. All his guns! He's coming straight-----" The voice choked off in a bubbling, choking moan, a moan pierced and shattered by a high-pitched feminine cry of agony and in the same instant of time there came to me the staccato thunderous crash of exploding cannon-shells that jarred the ear-phones on my head. Two seconds it lasted, if that. Then there was no more sound of gunfire, no more moaning, no more crying. Nothing. Two seconds. Only two seconds. Two seconds to take from me all this life held dear for me, two seconds to leave me alone in an empty and desolate and meaningless world. |
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