BZRK. Майкл Грант
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Название: BZRK

Автор: Майкл Грант

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Учебная литература

Серия: BZRK

isbn: 9781780310787

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ Not even the new one, what was it she called herself? One-Up. Yeah. Not her, either. All of them could run five nanobots as individuals, rather than two platoons.

      Vincent tasted the curry. Very hot.

      He chewed carefully. It was important to chew thoroughly. It helped digestion, and digestion was often a problem during these long trips across multiple time zones.

      And at the same time Vincent spun V2 toward the two nanobots he wasn’t supposed to have noticed.

      Vincent took no pleasure in the food, but he came as close to pleasure as he ever did when he stabbed a cutter claw into the nearest nanobot, right into its comm link, and spilled nanowire.

      Vincent’s phone pulsed.

      Only one person could ring him and always get through.

      He pulled his phone out and looked at the text. His concentration wavered, and he very nearly lost two of V2’s legs to a low scythe cut from a nanobot.

      Grey and Stone confirmed dead. Sadie injured/OK.

      Vincent was not good at experiencing pleasure. Unfortunately he was perfectly able to experience grief, loss, and rage.

      He had set aside the first news of the crash. He had stuck it in a compartment. He was on a mission, he had to focus, and from long experience he knew not to trust news reports. Maybe Grey McLure had not been on the plane. Maybe.

      This, however, came from Lear. If Lear said it, it was true.

      Vincent texted back, missing a couple of letters as he jammed a sharp leg into the vulnerable leg joint of the second nanobot and watched it crumple.

      But more nanobots were coming. A new platoon of six.

      Tgt LO infst. Engaged. Withdrfing.

      If he had two biots in this, he might fight this battle and win. With three he’d be confident. But this was a losing fight.

      A follow-up text from Lear: Carthage.

      Vincent stared at the word. No, no, no. This was not his thing. This was not what he did.

      A beam weapon cut one of his six legs. The cut didn’t go all the way through, but it snapped off. It wouldn’t slow him much, but it would throw off the biot’s equilibrium.

      This was not the time to stay and play smack-the-nanobot and maybe lose. It was time for extraction, and as quickly as possible.

      Carthage. The Roman Empire’s great enemy. Until the Romans conquered it; murdered or enslaved every man, woman, and child; burned every building to the ground; then sowed the earth with salt so that nothing would ever grow there again.

      Carthago delenda est. It had been a slogan in Rome: Carthage must be destroyed.

      Vincent wiped his mouth with his napkin.

      He pushed back his chair.

      V2 turned and ran from the four near and many farther-off nanobots. More were scurrying down the optic nerve. They weren’t a problem: using their four legs, the nanobots were slower than a biot. Only when they had a fairly smooth surface could the nanobots switch to their single wheel and outrun a biot.

      Unfortunately the eyeball was perhaps the ultimate smooth surface.

      V2 motored its legs at full speed. Back around the eyeball.

      Vincent made his way slowly across the room toward Liselotte Osborne.

      V2 waited until two of the nanobots were close enough to open fire. Their fléchettes ate a second leg away.

      Vincent felt the echo of the pain in his own leg.

      V2 sprayed sulfuric acid to left and right simultaneously. It wouldn’t kill the nanobots, but it would slow them, bog them down in puddles of melting flesh. And even on just four legs and dragging stumps he could maybe outrun the remaining nanobots.

      Liselotte Osborne cried out suddenly.

      “Oh! Oh!”

      She pressed fingers over her eye.

      “What is it?” one of the men asked, alarmed.

      V2 was nearly crushed by the pressure, but Osborne’s fingers were to the north of it now, blocking the nanobots, and V2 had a clear path ahead.

      “My eye! Something is in my eye. It’s rather painful.”

      Vincent moved smoothly forward. “I’m a doctor; it could be a stroke. We need to lay this woman down.”

      Funny how effective the phrase “I’m a doctor” can be.

      Vincent eased Osborne from her chair and laid her flat on her back. He crouched over her, pushed her hand gently away from her face, and touched the surface of her eye with his finger.

      Through V2’s optics he saw the massive wall of ridged flesh descending from the sky and ran to meet it.

      Vincent’s free hand went into his pocket and came out, unnoticed, holding something black that might have been an expensive pen. He pressed the end of it against the base of Osborne’s skull.

      V2 leapt onto the finger just as two nanobots emerged in the clear from the acid cloud.

      Vincent pressed the clip on the pen and springs pushed three inches of tungsten-steel blade into Osborne’s medulla.

      Vincent gave the blade a half-twist then pressed the clip again and withdrew what looked for all the world exactly like a nice Mont Blanc.

      “This woman needs help,” Vincent said.

      V2 ran up the length of his finger and dug barbs into his flesh.

      Vincent stood up abruptly. “I’m going to summon an ambulance.” He turned and walked toward the exit.

      It would be ten minutes before Liselotte Osborne’s friends and coworkers realized the doctor had not summoned anyone or anything at all. And by then the pool of blood beneath her head had grown quite large, and she was no longer complaining of pain in her eye.

       SIX

      Vincent was already in the air on his way back to the States, Nijinsky was relaxing with a drink at his London hotel and betting that Noah would show up for testing the next day, and Burnofsky was halfway through a bottle of vodka and thinking about his pipe, by the time Bug Man arrived home and found Jessica waiting for him.

      She was standing three steps up on the stoop, bouncing a little to keep warm. She was two years older than he was, eighteen, from one of those North African countries, Ethiopia or Somalia, he could never remember which.

      She had possibly the longest legs he had ever seen. She was taller than he was. And all parts of her were perfect. Crazy full lips and big, light brown eyes, and skin like warm silk, and hair in sort of loose, curly dreads that dangled down over her forehead and tickled Bug Man’s face when СКАЧАТЬ