"Mikhail Evstafiev. Two Steps From Heaven " - читать интересную книгу автораchance to avenge his brother, his relatives, himself. The roar increased. It
seemed to him that everything around him shook, as though there were an earthquake. The chopper had clearly gone off course, gotten lost, and was searching and circling in the growing darkness. Obviously, the chopper wanted to be saved, just like Sayeed Mohammed. The chopper flew toward him, above him, to his right and to his left. If only it would come closer! Sayeed Mohammed prayed that Allah should send the helicopter right at him! Then he would not die alone, for nothing! He was ready for battle! He had a trusty friend - the Kalashnikov. He would avenge his brother! Sayeed Mohammed laid a frozen finger, like a hook, around the trigger, raised himself a little and when something dark seemed to appear very close, and that dark blob started to crawl over him like a monster wanting to swallow the pitiful, freezing victim and he could see the blur of the pilot's face through the glass canopy, he shuddered as the Kalashnikov released a string of bullets and cried: "Allah akbar!!" rejoicing at his victory over the Russians in the moment before death.... Chapter One. The Paras Planes appeared out of nowhere. They simply swelled like white drops in the sky and slid down, like oblique streaks of rain on a window; and probably because these planes were hurrying to land, afraid of being shot down by an invisible but omnipresent enemy, in their haste they scattered gleaming flares that sparkled like Bengal lights and burned out quickly, The soldiers messing around in the repair park, and those who were cleaning their weapons and enjoying the warm sun bared to the waist or in undershirts, and those who were drilling in the square, and those who were washing down military vehicles looked up from time to time, expecting to see these heavy transport planes, nicknamed "cattle carriers"; they waited for them the way people wait for a ship from the mainland, which they are unlikely to board this time, but catch at least a distant glimpse of the ship docking, and indulge in unlimited dreams. The early morning arrival of the IL-76s had become a daily routine. The passage of these airborne mediators between the USSR and Afghanistan could be seen from practically every Soviet garrison and, if the flights were canceled for some reason , everyone felt sad and deprived, as though maybe, back there in the Motherland, the "limited contingent" sent to Afghanistan had been forgotten. Those who had carried out a long tour of duty watched the planes in anticipation of their imminent demobilization, and dreamed up sweet fantasies of civilian life. Those only half way through their service would sigh, all they could hope for was a letter from home. Those who were new in the service still had vivid memories of the flight in the belly of such a transport aircraft and that awful feeling of impending doom when the plane, packed with people like brainless cattle, exhausted by the night-time flight, indefinite lengthy delays, customs control and border crossing had just begun to catnap when they were snapped back into awareness, barely an hour after takeoff, by the steep plunge of the plane from a height of some |
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