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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I wondered what, if anything, Kaplan might be able to tell me about what had happened in that office building early on the previous night. He had left before Norm and I did, but how did I know when he had come back? The third guy — Seltzer? Meltzer! — was one I hadn’t met, but without any positive evidence I had already made a tentative reservation for him on my shit list.

It was only a short drive back to the gate that served the Ras Ormara. This time the gate was manned, but Norm Goldman, in a ritzy black-leather jacket, leaned with a skinny frizzle-haired guy against the fender of his Turbo Porsche, just outside the fencing. Norm recognized me with a wave and called something to the two guys at the gate as I parked beside the swoopy coupe.

The skinny guy with Norm turned out to be Ira Meltzer, who spoke very softly and had a handshake that was too passive for his workhardened hands, and wore a denim jacket that exaggerated his shoulders. When Meltzer asked where my partner was, I said he hadn’t answered my calls, so I figured he wasn’t coming.

Neither of them seemed to find anything odd about that. If Meltzer knew why Quent wasn’t coming, it was possible that Norm might know. I didn’t like that train of thought; if true, it made me the prize patsy of all time. And if they had learned from Quent who it was that had been giving him orders, they would assume I already knew what had happened to him. While I thought about these things, the three of us stood there and smiled at one another.

Then Meltzer said, “By the way, aboard ship it’s the captain’s little kingdom — except for government agencies. And you’re private, am I right?”

I agreed.

“Then if I were you, I wouldn’t try to go aboard with a concealed weapon.” His smile broadened. “Or any other kind.”

He didn’t actually say I was carrying, and it took a practiced eye to spot the slight bulge of my Glock, but I didn’t need an argument with the honcho on board. “Glad you told me,” I said, and popped the little black convincer from its holster. I unlocked the Toyota and shut my main weapon in the glove box. “I carry my GPS mapper; it’s a Loc-8. And I’ve got a StudyGirl for notes. That a problem?”

Meltzer looked at Norm, who made a wry grimace. “Shit, Ira, why would it be? In fact, you might carry one of ’em openly in your hand, Harve. I’ll do the same with the other, and I’ll give it back once we’re aboard. I don’t think al-Nadwi will get his shorts in a wad. I’m supposed to carry a little weight around here, even with these ragheads.”

Meltzer said he supposed so, and I handed over StudySkirt, carrying the Loc-8 in one hand. We left our vehicles near the gate and walked in side by side toward the Ras Ormara.

The commercial cleanup outfit I had previously seen on the wharf was finally leaving, a bright yellow hazmat suit visibly untenanted in a niche near the truck’s external console. I recognized two of the three guys in the truck’s cab, and Consoleman, now the driver, waved. When Sweatman, the guy who had worn the suit, pretended he didn’t notice us I knew which of them the Feds had co-opted on the job. I would’ve given a lot to talk with him alone right then.

Norm waved back, his good spirits irksome to me though I couldn’t very well bitch about it. He kept looking around at the skyline and the wheeling gulls, taking big breaths of mud-flavored waterfront air that I didn’t find all that enticing. Wonderful day, he said, and I nodded.

As we walked up the broad metal-surfaced ramp leading to the ship, Norm made a casual half salute toward the men who stood high above on deck to meet us. Other men in work clothes were shouting words I couldn’t understand as they routed flexible metal-clad hoses around forward of the bridge. A couple of them wore white head wraps.

The skipper took Norm’s hand in his in a handshake that seemed clumsily forced, but he shook mine readily enough, unsmiling, as Norm made formal introductions.

Captain Hassan al-Nadwi had a full beard and an old sailor’s rawhide skin, bald forward of his ears, but with chest hairs curling up from the throat of his work shirt. He wore no socks, and the soles of his sandals must have been an inch thick.

He spoke fair English. “You want see engineer quarters? Go. Much much work now,” he said, friendly enough though shooing me with gestures. He gave an order to one of the two men, evidently officers, who stood behind him, then turned away to watch his work crew.

“You come, okay. I show where Park, eh, sleep,” said the Asian, a hard-looking sort whose age I couldn’t guess. He led us quickly through a portal, Norm giving me an “after you” wave, and down a passageway sunlit by sealed portholes. Another doorway took us through a room dominated by a long table surrounded by swiveling chairs that seemed bolted in place. Finally, we negotiated another passage with several closed doors, and as the crewman opened the last door I had a view of the skyline through the room’s portholes.

The Asian stood back to let us in, pointing to one of three bunks in the room. “Park, okay,” he said, and paused, with a sideways tilt of his head. Somewhere in the ship a low thrumm had started, and I could feel a hum through the soles of my shoes. He seemed to talk a bit faster now as he stepped quickly to a bunk with a half-filled sea bag on it. “Park, okay,” he said, then moved to a table secured to the metal. Wall? Bulkhead? Whatever. “Park, okay,” he said again. I recalled Quent saying once that all Korean kids took English courses. I figured maybe this guy had cheated on his exams.

I pulled out the table’s single drawer, which was so completely empty in a room shared by three guys that it fairly screamed “total cleanout job.” “Okay,” I said. At my reply the crewman turned on his heel, obviously in a hurry to be off. “Wait,” I said. The crewman kept going.

Ira Meltzer said something singsong. The crewman stopped in the doorway, not pleased about it. Meltzer looked at me.

“Ask him if there was any other place Park kept any of his personal effects,” I suggested.

“I’ll try,” he said, and then said something longer. The crewman said something else. Meltzer said, “ Nae ,” which was damn near all the Korean I knew, meaning “yes.”

The man said something else; glanced at Norm as if fearing eye contact; then, when Meltzer nodded, left hurriedly. “He doesn’t know of any. I guess this is all,” he said, and nodded at the bunk.

As I unlatched the hasp that closed the sea bag, I could hear quick footfalls of a running man in the corridor. Norm laughed. “Skipper keeps the crew on a tight leash,” he commented.

* * *

“I don’t doubt it,” I said. I knew he was explaining the Korean crewman’s hellacious hurry to me. And I wasn’t sure if that was the best explanation. In fact, I sat down on the bunk so that I wouldn’t have my back to my trusty guides while I carefully pulled out the contents of the bag to inspect them, one by one.

A small cheap zippered bag held toilet articles, soap, and a prescription bottle of pills with instructions in Spanish. After that, a pair of worn Avia cross-trainers; socks; a set of tan work clothes, and a stained nylon windbreaker. A heavy hooded rainproof coat; a couple of girlie mags; two pairs of work gloves, one pair well worn. A small, pre-palmtop book full of engineering tables, which I flipped through without finding any handwritten notes.

I saw Meltzer take a peek at his watch, so I decided to use up some more time. “Norm, you have that StudyGirl of mine?”

He handed it over. “You find something?” In answer I shook my head. He squatted for a closer look and, I figured, to see what notes I might make.

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