Брайан Гарфилд - The Last Bridge

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The Last Bridge: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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An American Army combat unit in war-torn Vietnam, a prison camp behind enemy lines, a strategically important railroad bridge on the Sang Chu River — these are the ingredients of this gripping suspense novel.
Here, set in bold relief against a background of slashing monsoon rain and upthrust poison pungi stakes of elusive traitors and friendly Montagnard tribesmen, in the timely and dramatic story of Colonel David Tyreen’s eight man suicide mission into North Vietnam.
Of first priority in the rescue, before he talks, of Eddie Kreizler, held for interrogation by torture in a Viet Minh camp in North Vietnam. Second mission — to destroy the railroad bridge on the Sang Chu, protected from air attack by overhanging cliffs and heavily guarded against sabotage.
From the moment they leave their home base in South Vietnam, the unit is plagued by trouble. There is the dangerous parachute drop — in the midst of a raging monsoon — that almost ends in disaster. Then the grim spectre of treachery and internal dissension splits the group as they begin to encounter enemy patrols.
The arresting cast of characters is headlined by Colonel Tyreen, weak from malaria but fanatically intent on carrying out the mission; Captain Saville, who both admires and hates Tyreen and is willing to pay a staggering price for his loyalty; Sergeant Hooker, a tough career soldier and a demolitions expert who distrust the unit’s two Vietnamese members; and McKuen and Shannon, two reckless fliers with a clipped and outdated pale.
The Last Bridge is a swashbuckling adventure tale that brings to vivid life all the raw and brutal emotions of men at war, and the bitter personal conflicts that move them to savagery and sacrifice.

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“Ah,” he said. He fed more fuel to number one and kicked his rudder over to compensate for the uneven pull. He cursed the useless artificial horizon. A loose engine mount on number one threatened to shake the plane to pieces.

It bucked and halted, jerked and faltered, pitched and swung. The wheel trembled violently, bruising his hands. He cursed, and flew into a ragged wide circle of open sky.

When he looked down, he could count the stones on a mountain peak under the left wing.

“No shit?” was all he could think to say.

Sudden sweat ran down his face. The mountainside fell away below him, and he saw a tortured valley running away underneath toward a high cleft peak. The plane chugged and canted over to one side, limping. “Wait a minute, Mister,” said McKuen. His numb hands pawed and fumbled at the chart. “Wait a minute. That’s it, Mister — the bloody Sang Chu gorge. How in hell did I get down here? Must be twenty miles off our course.”

The plane glided forward, one engine turning over, losing altitude slowly. Sunlight splashed the mountains. Six or seven miles to the gorge. At two miles a minute or less, where was he going?

A few hundred feet beneath him, the black jungle top of a hill loomed and swept past. McKuen spoke calmly:

“Hallelujah, Mister. We are going to knock down a bloody bridge.”

The airplane dinned a raucous score of noises against him. He threw the ends of his seat belt aside. “We need a bit of altitude,” he said. He pushed the throttle full forward and twisted the mixture controls. He trimmed his flaps and elevators. The head temperature on number one climbed into the red zone. He laughed at the gauge. “Burn yourself to bloody charcoal. But dear God get me up! Give me three precious beautiful Goddamn minutes of power!”

He needed a few hundred feet more — perhaps five hundred feet. He had to clear the jungle ridge; he had to fly into the gorge. He would be coming up from under. He would be flying past treetops. He had to pull the plane up into the air by the brawn of his arms, four hundred or five hundred feet up from the trees on the sides of the gorge.

Dear, dear God!

He changed the pitch of the propeller. He kicked the rudder over and tacked back and forth as if the gooney bird were a sailboat. The fuel needle bumped its ledge and lay at bottom. Number one roared beautifully through the sunlit sky.

The right wing whipped high. He fought it down with the wheel. He pointed his nose at the cliff ahead and finished the turn, swinging upward into the gorge. He had to stand on the left wing to break past the rock. The airspeed needle wound upward and downward without provocation. McKuen smashed the submachine gun into his port window, breaking the glass out. The full force of the wind hit him in the face. The cliffs rushed toward him. He banked left. The dark green line of the Sang Chu ran forward winding out of sight. He had cliffs on both sides of him; they seemed close enough to brush the wingtips. The top was out of sight overhead. He bolted into a turn, oversteered and executed an S-turn to avoid the far wall; and above him, ahead of him, he saw the glint of sunlight on the ironwork of the great bridge.

The bridge came down toward him, a mile and then less than a mile. “Up — up!” He reached out and yanked Mister Shannon’s coat open; he jerked Shannon’s dogtags off and locked them in his fist. “The very best to you, Mister.”

Flaps whined down. The bridge came closer and closer; number one chugged through the thick air; rock walls leaped crazily past his wings. McKuen pulled the wheel back and draped both of Mister Shannon’s dead arms over the right-hand wheel to hold it back. He kicked the throttles. “Please,” he whispered against the roar of the wind and the pound of the engine. He twisted his shoulders and thrust himself through the smashed-out window.

He had an instant’s glimpse of men on the bridge, turning to face the plane with awe. The bridge rushed down toward the struggling gooney bird. It was tilted far over on the left wing, starting to spin forward. The nose was aimed straight at the center of the bridge span. The wind gripped McKuen. He put one foot on the sill. The wind sucked him out. Out and back into the air: he saw the gooney bird’s rudder flash by. He yanked the ripcord.

The drop — a few hundred feet. He did not know whether his chute would have time. He fell upside-down, turning through the air. The walls, the jungle, and the sky pirouetted. The whole world was filled with the spark and roar of the number one engine. Just beyond the high arc of the bridge was a long bend in the walls; the plane seemed to curve toward the near cliff. McKuen twisted his head to see.

Number one broke and caught, broke again. There was a split second’s absolute silence, cut in half by the scream of a man on the bridge; the airplane, without power, began to nose over. A quarter of a mile from the bridge, falling through space, McKuen saw the plane rush silently against the center span. The plane’s flight was a smooth curve, and abruptly it broke. The nose went down: the tail, flipping up like a marlin’s, ripped into the bridge. McKuen saw one of the tail surfaces, sheared off, fly over the top of the bridge as if catapulted. The sound wave reached him, a tearing of shrieking metal. The amputated fuselage spun hard against the cliff beyond the bridge. He saw the gooney bird break apart, one wing caroming across the chasm. The rudder plane swung from a wire crossbrace on the bridge, banging against the bridge bed.

And the bridge held firm.

There was a racket of falling metal. McKuen’s chute sprang open. He saw jungle rushing upward. There was a sudden jolt. The silk billowed out overhead. He heard a crack of steel — the broken rudder plane fell away from the bridge. He had a distinct image of the bridge, crippled but intact, its span dented and buckled, but unbroken. The rudder plane fell spinning.

McKuen dangled from the shroud lines, swinging from one end of an arc to the other; he swung across once, reached the apex of the swing, and then the black-green jungle whipped up.

Branches and limbs beat against him. His head rocked back; his shins stung. He plummeted through leaves, breaking off branches, bruising every inch of his body. The harness jerked him up, stopping his fall; he hung twenty feet above the ground.

He caught his breath. He heard a continuing distant rattle of crashing metal. The pieces of the airplane were coming down the cliffs, bouncing from rock to rock. He said, “You got to be kidding. How come my neck isn’t broke? You got to be kidding. You got to be.”

He swung himself back and forth like a boy on a swing. He got a grip on the twisted trunk of the big tree and lodged himself there in a groined limb, getting out of the shroud harness. Sharp pains burned in every part of him. His kneecap felt paralyzed by pain. Both hands were bleeding. “Mother of God,” he murmured. He sat in the angle of the tree limb and cried.

He climbed down into the undergrowth. He pulled out his shirttail and cut a long ragged cloth from his undershirt; he tore it in two and wrapped the cloth around his hands. He thought, “What in God’s name came over me? What in hell am I trying to do flying airplanes into bridges? McKuen is off his bloody skull.”

He stood up straight and felt the forty-five automatic in its holster. “They saw me come down,” he said quietly. “All right. So how in the hell am I going to get out of this?”

He pushed into the steam-misty jungle. Shannon’s dogtags were tangled around his left wrist.

Chapter Thirty-six

1300 Hours

David Tyreen slid the garage door shut. “Headlights.” He heard someone climb into the truck; there was a squeak of springs. Switches clicked. No light came on. He stood in the dark and heard Sergeant Khang speak:

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