"David Weber & Steve White - Starfire 5 - The Stars at War" - читать интересную книгу автора (Weber David)

Khardanish allowed himself the snarling purr of a chuckle. It was remarkable how well he and
Johansen had learned to read one another's nuances, particularly since neither had the proper vocal
apparatus to speak the other's language. Khardanish suspected he had drawn the Lorelei Patrol at least
partly because he understood Terran Standard English. There was much talk of new translating software,
but the current generation remained crude and imprecise . . . and used too much memory for a lowly
destroyer, anyway.
The least claw had been less than enthusiastic when he heard about his new post. It was flattering for
a least claw to serve, in effect, as a small claw with his own squadron, but the Tenth Destroyer
Squadron's four old ships hardly constituted the Navy's cutting edge, nor did the Lorelei System qualify
as a critical sector. It was one of the very few systems the Khanate had succeeded in wresting from the
Federation in the First Interstellar War of two Orion centuries before, but the thoroughly useless star was
hopelessly indefensible (as the Terrans had proved in ISW-2), which, he suspected, was probably why
the Federation had permitted his people to keep it. Lorelei had no habitable planets, and only one of its
six warp points led to Orion territory; four led to Terran space, and the sixth led only to death, for no
survey ship had ever returned from its far terminus. His Znamae and her sisters were here purely to
"show the flag," as the Terrans put it.
Yet Khardanish had come to realize his duty held an importance too few of his fellows could
appreciate. Most agreed that when the Federation and Khanate allied against the Rigelians in the Third
Interstellar War, the Treaty of Valkha's assignment of liaison officers to all border patrols had made
sense as a means of defusing potential incidents. Far fewer would admit that the contact those liaison
assignments engendered remained equally desirable as a means of nurturing the still slow-growing mutual
respect of the star nations' warriors.
Khardanish himself was surprised by how genuinely fond of the lieutenant he had become. He would
never find Humans attractive. Their faces were flat; their ears were small, round, and set far too low; they
lacked any hint of a decent pelt; and the absence of the whiskers which were an Orion's pride made it
difficult to take them seriously. Even their males had only a soft, cub-like fuzz, but it was even worse in
the lieutenant's case. She was a female, and the long hair which framed her face only emphasized its total,
disgusting bareness. And if the Human custom of wearing body-shrouding clothing at all times was less
aesthetically objectionable—at least it hid their naked skins!—it still seemed . . . odd.
But Samantha Johansen had many qualities he admired. She was observant, intelligent, and keenly
sensitive to the inevitable differences between their cultures, and her military credentials were impressive.
The lieutenant was only fifty-three—twenty-eight, by her people's reckoning—but she had seen the
zeget. Her mess tunic bore the ribbon of the Federation's Military Cross, the Valkhaanair's equivalent,
which must have been hard to come by in the fifty Terran years of peace since ISW-3. Perhaps, he
speculated idly, she had been chosen for this duty by her superiors just as carefully as he was coming to
believe First Fang Lokarnah had chosen him?
"Ah, Saahmaantha!" he said now. "At times, you are too much like one of my own for comfort."
"I take that as a compliment, Captain," Johansen said, chewing another slice of zeget appreciatively.
In fact, she found it overly gamy, but it was a warrior's dish. The bear-like zeget was four furry meters of
raw fury, the most feared predator of the original Orion homeworld, and Least Claw Khardanish had
done her great honor by ordering it served.
"Do you?" Khardanish poured more wine. The Terran vintage was overly dry for his palate, but it
had been Johansen's gift, and he drank it with the pleasure she deserved of him. He tilted his glass,
admiring the play of light in the ruby liquid. "Then I will tell you something, Lieutenant. Do you know what
we Zheeerlikou'valkhannaieee call our two wars with you?"
"Yes, Captain," Johansen said softly. " 'The Wars of Shame.' "
"Precisely." He sipped delicately. "I find that apt even though we are now allies. We had twice the
systems, ten times the population, and a navy, and you had—what? A few dozen lightly-armed survey
vessels? Should not any warrior feel shame for losing to an enemy so much weaker than he?"
Johansen met his eyes calmly, and the least claw approved. Even among his own people, many