Adam Baker - Impact

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Impact: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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The world is overrun by an unimaginable horror. The few surviving humans are scattered in tiny outposts across the world, hoping for reprieve – or death. Waiting on the runway of the abandoned Las Vegas airport sits the B-52 bomber
, revving up for its last, desperate mission. On board – six crew members and one 10-kiloton nuclear payload. The target is a secret compound in the middle of the world’s most inhospitable desert. All the crew have to do is drop the bomb and head to safety. But when the
crashes, the surviving crew are stranded in the most remote corner of Death Valley. They’re alone in an alien environment, their only shelter the wreckage of their giant aircraft, with no hope of rescue. And death is creeping towards them from the place they sought to destroy – and may already reside beneath their feet in the burning desert sands.
This is the fourth of Adam Baker’s thrillers set in the post-apocalyptic world of OUTPOST, JUGGERNAUT and TERMINUS.

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Noble shook the last drips from the pipe. He licked the bolt-joint dry, grimaced at the metallic taste.

‘Window wash?’ suggested Hancock.

‘Thirty per cent ethanol.’

‘Maybe we could distil it clean.’

‘How?’

‘No idea.’

‘We could take a look at the wing, I guess. Took off with a thousand gallons of water, give or take. Engine boost. If we cut into the injector feeds we might be able to rescue a few cupfuls.’

‘We’ll need a siphon hose and some sort of container.’

Noble looked around.

‘Anyone use the urinal while we were in flight?’

‘Not that I saw.’

‘Then let’s see what we can scavenge.’

Frost went outside. She climbed a dune, sought a little solitude.

She surveyed the dark horizon, the lip of the world, the point where the starfield met the dunes.

She looked north-west. An irregularity on the horizon. Distant mountains. A snag-tooth ridgeline. The peaks had been obscured during the heat of day, but were now visible in outline as they eclipsed low constellations.

Somewhere out there was the target site. The god-forsaken stretch of wasteland they had been dispatched to sear with nuclear fire.

A distant thud. She turned round. The massive, broken airframe lit by moonlight. She watched Noble haul himself up onto the starboard wing. He held a plastic two-gallon piss bottle and a length of hose. He crouched, extended a hand and pulled Hancock up onto the wing beside him.

No doubt they were trying to siphon residual water from the plane’s sub-systems.

Probably ought to help, but she didn’t have the energy.

Noble walked the wing. Popped rivets. Split panels. He knelt, held his breath against the stink of JP8 and shone his flashlight into a fissure.

The interior of the wing. Fuel tanks. Spoiler servos and screw jack actuators.

The main manifold had broken in a dozen places. Every strut and spar greased with leaked aviation fuel.

‘Here,’ called Hancock.

The hydro-feeds.

Water injected into the turbojets on take-off, boosting each engine to seventeen thousand pounds static thrust.

Noble kicked at a buckled wing panel with his boot, hammered the aluminium sheet aside. He crouched and peered into the wing cavity.

‘The waterline is cracked. Might be able to siphon some dregs. Pass me the hose.’

He fed tube into the mouth of a fractured aluminium pipe, sucked until he drew liquid.

He convulsed, choked and spat.

‘Hot damn. Fuel. Tainted with fuel.’ He gagged. ‘Mouth full of freakin’ carbon tetrachloride.’ He bent and wretched. ‘Man, that’s nasty.’

‘Better check the other wing. Maybe the fluid lines are intact.’

‘You be taster. I got a tongue coated in gasoline.’

Frost stood and contemplated the stars. She found an austere consolation in the fact ten thousand years of human civilisation, the slow rise and abrupt fall, had been a fleeting moment of cosmic time, and the universe would continue regardless.

Movement in the periphery of her vision.

A figure, fifty yards away, silhouetted against the stars. It seemed to be watching her.

‘Hey,’ shouted Frost. She fumbled for her flashlight. ‘Early? That you?’

She glanced over her shoulder. Hancock and Noble walking the starboard wing.

She turned back. The figure was gone.

Cupped hands:

‘Early. Early, can you hear me?’

No reply.

‘It’s us, man. You made it.’

No reply.

She stumbled in pursuit, followed footprints down the side of a dune, anxious not to be drawn too far from the crash site in case she became disoriented in the darkness.

‘Wait up, dude. You’re not thinking straight.’

She struggled to climb a steep rise.

‘We got water, we got meds. Come on. Let us help.’

She reached the top of the ridge. She swept the surrounding sands with the beam of her flashlight.

A trail of prints heading out into deep desert.

The lower cabin.

Noble pulled insulation from the back bulkhead.

A simple crank-handle hatch. A pressure door that allowed access to the crawlway that ran the length of the aircraft.

He pulled the door wide, crouched and shone his flashlight inside the tight passage. Sheet metal slick with hydraulic fluid. A rat-run that led through the ECM equipment bay, to the payload compartment.

‘Step aside,’ said Hancock.

‘You don’t looks so great.’

‘Let me do my job.’

Hancock unzipped a tool pouch and took out a compact Geiger handset.

‘Real bag of tricks you got there,’ said Noble.

Hancock scanned the crawlspace interior. Flickering numerals. Steady background crackle.

‘Guess the warhead survived the crash. Otherwise this thing would be singing to high heaven.’

‘You’re sure?’

‘If we were sharing this plane with a bunch of spilt plutonium, we’d be puking blood already.’

Noble climbed inside the crawlway and lay on his back. He held out his hand. Hancock slapped a cross-head screwdriver into his palm. He began to unscrew the panel above his head.

Twelve screws. The panel dropped loose. Hancock helped manhandle it clear.

Noble shone his flashlight into a dense nest of cable and pipe work.

A large water tank bolted to the airframe above his head. Reservoir for the engine injection system.

‘Can you see the tank?’ asked Hancock.

‘Yeah.’

‘Can you reach it?’

‘Yeah.’

‘Is it intact?’

‘Ripped open. But not all the way. Give me the hose.’

Noble reached up and fed siphon hose through the cracked skin of the tank. He squirmed out the crawlway.

‘Give me the bottle.’

Noble sucked the pipe until he drew liquid. He caught a mouthful, then jammed the pipe into the neck of the two-gallon bottle. The bottle began to fill.

‘Drinkable?’ asked Hancock.

Noble swilled the water round his mouth with relish. He gave a thumbs up.

Sudden commotion. Frost threw herself through the rip in the cabin wall, tripped and hit the deck. She crouched beside her survival vest, hurriedly checked the pockets and extracted a flare.

‘What’s up?’ asked Hancock. He clapped for attention. ‘Hey. Lieutenant. What’s going on?’

She didn’t reply.

She gripped the flare and headed outside.

They followed.

Frost hurriedly limped to the peak of a high dune and fired a star shell.

The crash site lit brilliant white.

Noble waded up the gradient and joined her. They looked out over the desert.

‘What can you see?’ called Hancock from the foot of the dune. ‘Is someone out there?’

Frost tracked footprints, pistol drawn and chambered. She followed the trail, flashlight trained on the ground ahead of her.

‘You saw somebody?’ asked Noble, keeping close in case her leg gave out and she fell. ‘Who is it? Early?’

‘Couldn’t say for sure.’

‘You didn’t see a face?’

‘No.’

‘Flight suit?’

‘I think so.’

‘Then it’s got to be Early. Couldn’t be anyone else.’

The prints came to an abrupt halt halfway up a dune, as if whoever made the tracks winked out of existence mid-stride.

‘What the hell?’ murmured Noble. ‘It’s like the fucker grew wings and took off.’

Frost crouched and raked the sand.

The star shell above them fluttered and dimmed.

She peered into the surrounding darkness. Growing apprehension.

‘I think we should get back to the plane.’

18 The lower cabin So what did it look like asked Hancock A silhouette - фото 18

18

The lower cabin.

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