"Brian Thomsen - Descent- FreeSpace - A Veteran of the Great War" - читать интересную книгу автора (Thomsen Brian M) A VETERAN OF THE GREAT WAR
by Brian M. Thomsen A Descent: FreeSpace Story Archer had stopped wondering what his father, the hero of the Great War, would have done in a given situation while he was still back in boot camp. The answer had always been simple, his duty. Somehow doubt not, delay not had lost it's luster as a battle- hymn mantra after the treaty with the Vasudans had been announced. He always had a problem with unquestioningly following orders from those who now supported alliance with the inhuman bastards who had killed his father, even if every fiber of his conditioned body and implant-enhanced reflexes reminded him that such doubts and delays were in direct contradiction to his duty. "Yo, Archer!" Athans hailed from the cockpit of his fighter that was subspacially moored on Archer's flank. "You awake?" "That's an affirmative," Archer mentally v-mailed back to his comrade-in-arms of three months via the subspace communication implants, adding, "not that it's any of your business, lard-ass." "Oooh, I love it when you v-mail dirty to me." V-mail was one of the great blessings and curses of the life of subspace fighters. Talking interrupted breathing thus wasting mils of nano-liters of oxygen. Cerebral implants with senders and receivers made intra-thought communication at close proximity as easy as e-mail. It wasn't really practical in populated areas, but out here in understatements, everything worked just fine. "How's it hanging with the friggin' new guys?" "Pretty quiet, a bit v-shy if you know what I mean, but you know how it is being a FNG." Archer and Athans were old friends and comrades-in-arms having served together for over two weeks now, though they had never met face-to-face to shake hands. All of the other members of the squadron had only logged in within the past forty-eight hours, having converged on this spot from all directions. "Any idea when this party is supposed to start?" "Whenever they get here," Archer replied, and in the back of his mind out of v-mail range, privately added, and they shall not pass. Archer closed his eyes and retreated back into internal solitude and amused himself with the revelation that he was actually wondering what his father would be thinking about in this situation...what did he think about as he prepared himself to meet death ... did he know it was coming the way Archer knew now? Archer had just arrived home from school for his yearly three week academic-free period and was greeted by the sounds of his normally stoic mother's uncontrollable sobs. He rushed to her room in barely enough time to see the holo-gram from his father fade into the ether. "He's not coming back," she cried. "He's dead! They send a stinking hologram of him to me to say that he is dead, with details to follow later." Archer had heard rumors that some of his classmates knew about the holo-grams from first-hand experience since the Galactic Terran Alliance had decided that bad news was best conveyed to loved ones by a loved one and had thus adopted the absurd |
|
© 2026 Библиотека RealLib.org
(support [a t] reallib.org) |