Stephen Coonts - Combat

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Combat: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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As the world moves into the next millennium, the United States finds itself at the forefront of this new age, policing not only its own shores but the rest of the world as well. And spearheading this overwatch are the men and women of America's armed forces, the "troops on the wall," who will go anywhere, anytime, and do whatever it takes to protect not only our nation but the rest of the free world.
Now, for the first time,
brings the best military-fiction authors together to reveal how war will be fought in the twenty-first century. From the down and dirty "ground-pounders" of the U.S. Armored Cavalry to the new frontiers of warfare, including outer space and the Internet, ten authors whose novels define the military-fiction genre have written all-new short stories about the men and women willing to put their lives on the line for freedom:
Larry Bond takes us into the wild frontier of space warfare, where American soldiers fight a dangerous zero-gee battle with a tenacious enemy that threatens every free nation on Earth.
Dale Brown lets us inside a world that few people see, that of a military promotion board, and shows us how the fate of an EB-52 Megafortress pilot's career can depend on a man he's never met, even as the pilot takes on the newest threat to American forces in the Persian Gulf-a Russian stealth bomber.
James Cobb finds a lone U.S. Armored Cavalry scout unit that is the only military force standing between a defenseless African nation and an aggressive Algerian recon division.
Stephen Coonts tells of the unlikely partnership between an ex-Marine sniper and a female military pilot who team up to kill the terrorists who murdered her parents. But, out in the Libyan desert, all is not as it seems, and these two must use their skills just to stay alive.
Harold W. Coyle reports in from the front lines of the information war, where cyberpunks are recruited by the U.S. Army to combat the growing swarm of hackers and their shadowy masters who orchestrate their brand of online terrorism around the world.
David Hagberg brings us another Kirk McGarvey adventure, in which the C.I.A. director becomes entangled in the rising tensions between China and Taiwan. When a revolutionary leader is rescued from a Chinese prison, the Chinese government pushes the United States to the brink of war, and McGarvey has to make a choice with the fate of the world hanging in the balance.
Dean Ing reveals a scenario that could have been torn right from today's headlines. In Oakland, a private investigator teams up with a bounty hunter and F.B.I. agent to find a missing marine engineer. What they uncover is the shadow of terrorism looming over America and a conspiracy that threatens thousands of innocent lives.
Ralph Peters takes us to the war-torn Balkan states, where a U.S. Army observer sent to keep an eye on the civil war is taken on a guided tour of the country at gunpoint. Captured by the very people he is there to monitor, he learns just how far people will go for their idea of freedom.
R.J. Pineiro takes us to the far reaches of space, where a lone terrorist holds the world hostage from a nuclear missle-equipped platform. To stop him, a pilot agrees to a suicidal flight into the path of an orbital laser with enough power to incinerate her space shuttle.
Barrett Tillman takes us to the skies with a group of retired fighter jocks brought back for one last mission-battling enemy jets over the skies of sunny California.

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It was a few minutes after five, but Goldman had said he’d leave the front door unlocked. Following the signs, I moved down a hallway formed by partitioning off a strip from the offices, which I could see through the glassed partition. One man was still in there, wearing a headset and facing a big flat screen. He looked up and waved, and I waved back, and he motioned for me to continue.

The place must have once doubled as a warehouse to judge from the vintage — now trendy again and clean as a cat’s fang — freight elevator. I obeyed its sign, tugging up on a barrier which met its descending twin at breastbone height. It whirred to life on its own, a bit shaky after all those years of service, and a moment later I saw a pair of soft Bally sandals come into view under nicely creased allosuede slacks. A pale yellow dress shirt with open collar followed, and finally I saw a tanned, well-chiseled face looking at mine. Hands on hips, he grinned. I couldn’t blame him; I’d forgotten how I was dressed.

We introduced ourselves before he jerked a thumb toward the glass door of what might have been an office, but turned out to be his digs. “Sorry about the time,” I said, as he ushered me into a big airy room with an eclectic furniture mix: futon, modern couch, inflatable chairs, and a wet bar. And some guy-type pictures, one of which had nothing to do with ships. I thought it would stand a closer look if I got the time. “I tend to forget other people keep regular hours,” I added.

“Couldn’t resist your opening,” he said, with a wave of his hand that suggested I could sit anyplace, and I chose the couch. “Anyone looking for the same crew member I’m looking for, is someone I want to meet. Besides, I’ve never met a real live — ah, is ‘pee-eye’ an acceptable buzz phrase?” He had heavy expressive brows that showed honest concern at the question, and big dark eyes that danced with lively interest. “And if it’s not, would some sour mash repair the damage?” His accent was Northeast, I guessed New York, and in Big Apple tempo.

“Maybe later,” I said. “But P.I. is a term always in vogue.”

“As long as I’m on Goldman time, I’ll have a beer,” he said, and bounced up like a man who played a lot of tennis. He uncapped a Pilsener Urquell from a cooler behind the bar, dipped its neck toward me, then took a swig of the brew before sitting down again. “We’ve about given up on Park, by the way. Do you suppose the dumb slope has gotten himself in some kind of trouble?”

I admitted I didn’t know. “That’s what the client wants us to find out. At this point, we’re hoping his personal effects aboard ship might point us in some direction. With your authorization, of course, Mr. Goldman. That’s what we had in mind.”

He nodded abstractedly. “Don’t know why not. And hey, my father is Mr. Goldman, God forbid you should mix us up.” His grin was quick and infectious. “It’s Norm; okay?”

I’d intended to keep this on a semiformal level but with Norm it was simply not possible. I insisted on “Harve,” and asked him if he ever felt ill at ease dealing with Moslem skippers. He got a kick from that; a ship’s captain might be Allah on the high seas, said Norm, but they knew who signed their checks. “No, it’s the poor ragheads who aren’t all that easy about me.” He laughed. “But Sonmiani’s directors include some pretty canny guys. As long as I keep cargoes coming and going better than the last rep, what’s to kvetch about?

“Actually the skipper probably will anyway. Gent with a beard, named something-Nadwi. A surly lot, Harve, especially when they’re behind schedule.” He stopped himself suddenly, shot a quick glance at me. “I don’t suppose it’s my bosses who put you onto our man’s trail. Nobody’s told me, but they don’t always tell the left hand what its thumb is doing. In a way I hope it is them.”

“Against my charter to identify a client, but let’s just say it’s someone worried about a young guy who’s a long way from home,” I said. A hint that broad was, as Quent had said, bending the rules a bit but that wasn’t why I felt a wisp of guilt. I felt it because I knew our real client wasn’t a deceased Korean.

Norm was understanding. He said he’d seen Park Soon exactly once, and that, while he was making his own inquiries, a couple of the crew who had their papers had claimed they saw the engineer in a bar. “They may have been mistaken. Or — hell, I don’t know. You couldn’t pick a more suspicious mix than we have on the Ras Ormara. Schmucks will lie just for practice. You can’t entirely blame them, you know. Some skippers skim company food allowances intended for the crews, though I don’t believe Nadwi does. I won’t have it, by God, and our skippers know it. There’s a backhander or two that I can’t avoid in half the foreign ports. A lot of their manning agencies are corrupt—”

“Backhander?”

“Kickback, bribe. It’s just part of doing business in some ports, and the poor ragheads know it, but they never get a dime of the action. Same-old, same-old,” he chanted, shook his head, and took another slug of Urquell.

His shirt pocket warbled, and he tapped it without looking. “Goldman,” he said, not bothering to keep the conversation private from me. I was struck by the openness of everything, the offices, Norm’s apartment, his dealings with people.

“I’m about squared away here, guv,” said a voice with a faint Brit flavor. “Thought I’d nip out for a bite.”

“Why not? You’ve been on Kaplan time for,” Norm consulted a very nice Omega on his wrist, “a half hour. Oh! Mike, would you mind running up here a minute first? Gentleman in an unusual business here I want you to meet.”

The voice agreed, sounding slightly put-upon, and after he rang off I realized it must be the man I’d seen in the office. It was obvious that Norm Goldman had the same view of formalities that I did, but something about his decisive manner said he might crack a whip if need be. I decided he was older than I’d first thought; maybe forty, but a very hip forty.

Then I took a closer look at that framed picture on his wall, a colorful numbered print showing one formula car overtaking another as a third slid helplessly toward a tire barrier. It was the Grand Prix of Israel, Norm said, adding that he was a hopeless fan. I said I shared his failing; worse, that I had half the bits and pieces of an off-road single-seater in my workshop awaiting the chassis I’d build. He crossed his arms and sighed and, beaming at me, said he might have known.

A quick two-beat knock, and Mike Kaplan entered without waiting. He was swarthy and slim, with very close-cropped dark hair and a nose old-time cartoonists used to draw as a sort of Jewish I.D. His forearms said he’d done a lot of hard work in his time. I got up. Norm didn’t, waving a hand from one of us to the other as we shook hands. “Mike Kaplan, Harve Rackham. Mike’s my second, and when we’re both out of the office, our young tomcat Ira Meltzer holds down the fort. Ira’s not in his rooms — where the hell is Ira — as if it were any of my effing business,” Norm added with a smile.

Mike said how would he know, and Norm shrugged it off. “Let me guess,” Mike said to me. “Wrestler on the telly?”

“That’s me,” I said, and pulled up my pants. “Harve, the Terrible Tourist.”

“Come on,” Mike said, because Norm was chuckling.

“I didn’t know they existed anymore, Mike, but you are looking at a private eye. In disguise, I hope,” said his boss, enjoying the moment. When Mike didn’t react, he said, “As in, private investigator. You know: Sam Spade.”

Mike Kaplan’s face lit up then, and his second glance at me was more appraising and held a lot more friendly interest. “Personally, I’d be inclined to tell him whatever he wants to know,” he said to Norm. I must have outweighed him by fifty kilos.

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