"Dafydd ab Hugh, Brad Linaweawer DOOM: Endgame (english)" - читать интересную книгу автораcompeted to see who could spin the most depressing
tale of woe, me or Arlene . . . listing in endlessly expanding detail all the different reasons to just open a hatch and be blown into the interstellar void. I always won—not that I had that many more reasons to despair than Arlene, but because I had more practice complaining about things. "I left my true love behind," she would pine. "At least you had one!" I retorted. "All I ever had was a fiancйe, and I'm not sure I even knew her middle name." Sears and Roebuck, our normally jovial binary Klave pair, were no help; they locked themselves in their cabin and wouldn't come out. They couldn't even be coaxed out for a game of Woe Is Me! But lately Arlene was winning by default: she was too depressed to play. She just sat and stared out the rear window. The Fred ship was roughly cylindrical, spinning for a kind of artificial gravity about 0.8 g at the outer skin; in addition, during the first days, we had a heavy acceleration pulling us backward as the ship got up to speed. This was a Godsend; I always hated zero-g, always. I always blew; I always got vertigo; I never knew which way was up, because there was no up. It was 3.7 kilometers long and about 0.375 kilome- ness from the spin—my inner ear never really ad- justed to that sort of crap—but it was a damned sight better than the "float 'n' pukes" we rode from Earth to Mars, or up to Phobos. For the last twenty-four hours, I had followed Arlene up and down the ship when she went wander- ing, through blackness and flickering light. The whole place tasted vile; most of taste is smell, and the stench got on the back of my tongue and stayed there. Arlene probably knew I was there, but she made no attempt to talk to me. Occasionally, I heard weapons fire; I thought she might be shooting up the "dead" bodies of the Fred aliens. I couldn't believe it; she knew they could still feel the pain of the bullets! Then I caught her discharging her shotgun into a man- shaped chalk outline she'd drawn on a bulkhead in a stateroom that once belonged to the ship's engineer, a Fred who was deactivated up on the bridge. "What the hell are you doing, A.S.?" I demanded. "Shooting," she said, staring dully at me. She slid her hands up and down the barrel of her piece, getting gun grease on her palms, but she didn't notice. "You're shooting into a steel bulkhead, you brain- dead dweeb! Where do you think the bullets are going |
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