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The Marine sergeant was back with his men on the deck below and Gareth was glancing at his watch for the third or fourth time. The brass nozzle of a fire hose hit the ship’s side with a clang, then a sudden shout and a flurry of movement on the quay, the crowd pouring through the gap between the east wall of the shed and the neighbouring building. A horn blared, shouts and yells, and a small red car appeared in the gap, almost totally submerged in a flood of people. The noise increased, the sound of fists pounding on roof and bonnet, the horn now blaring continuously.

Gareth raised the megaphone. ‘Searchlight.’ The white glare of it was so brilliant and so sudden that all movement ceased abruptly. For an instant there was silence. Then the car’s engine revved, nosing into the crowd, spearheading a path for the men following in its wake.

There was a shout, one word, not a Maltese word, but French — Attaquez, and on the instant the scene changed, a rush of movement, the car was picked up bodily from one side, the engine screaming as it was pitched on to its side and the wheels came free of the ground. Screams and shouts, and the two fire hoses, run out now across half the width of the quay, bulged, their nozzles hissing like snakes, water bursting out in a broad arc. But the car and the crowd were too far away. The jets of water barely reached them. I heard Mault’s voice, but before he had even given the order, the Marine sergeant and his men, all in uniform and with bayonets fixed to their self-loading rifles, came thundering down the gangway.

If they had moved in before the shore party had reached the quay, if they had broken up the crowd, grabbed the ringleaders and the other agitators … But that would have meant taking the initiative with the Navy blamed for everything that followed. As it was, the men forming up in a compact body at the foot of the gangway and then advancing might still have been sufficient intimidation to get the sailors back on board. Instead, the sergeant ordered them to charge, and that was just the catalyst needed to turn an ugly little incident into a political bombshell.

The crowd round the car were already opening out. In a moment they would have run. But then it happened, a spurt of flame, the sound of a shot, and Lieutenant Kent, climbing out of the car, all of his torso reared up in the open window on the driver’s side, threw up his hands and began to scream. And as he lost consciousness, his body sagging to lie crumpled across the side of the vehicle, I saw the man who had fired the shot drop his pistol, turn and slide away to the rear of the crowd.

I saw him, but I don’t think the others did, for their attention had switched to the armed party. They had suddenly stopped, the sergeant’s voice ringing out as he gave the order to fire over the heads of the crowd. The volley was ragged, but the noise of it and the sight of those men in blue with their rifles raised and the bayonets glinting in the glare of the searchlight was enough. The crowd broke and ran, melting away so quickly that for an instant the only figure left on the scene was the motor cyclist trying to kick-start his bike into life. Finally he threw it down and ran.

I think the enormity of what had happened was immediately apparent to Gareth, for he stood there on the bridge wing, his face white with shock, too stunned, it seemed, to take command. It was Mault who ordered the armed party back on board, sent for the medical orderly and a stretcher party to get the young lieutenant to the sick bay, and had the shore party drawn up at the foot of the gangway and checked against a list of names to make certain nobody was missing. They were coming back on board and the damage control men were rolling up their hoses before Gareth finally came out of his state of shock. ‘Lieutenant Commander Mault.’

Mault turned, an interrogatory lift of his straight, very black eyebrows.

‘Time we got out of here. Come to immediate notice for sea and go to harbour stations as soon as you’re ready. We’ll move out into the open harbour and anchor seaward of that Russian cruiser. After that we’ll see.’ He turned abruptly, going back into the bridge housing. ‘Find Chief Petty Officer Gordon and tell him to have a word with me,’ he said to one of the seamen. ‘I’ll be in my cabin.’ And he disappeared hurriedly through the door at the back.

I realised then that he had understood more than any of the officers around him, including his First Lieutenant, the full implications of what had happened — an armed party had landed from a Royal Navy ship and had opened fire on a crowd of Maltese. Never mind that they had fired in the air, that their action had been provoked and an officer had been shot, it had been done on Maltese soil. An invasive and hostile act, that’s how it would be presented, to the Maltese and throughout the Third World and the non-aligned states. He had forgotten all about my presence on the ship, and I couldn’t blame him.

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Тысячелетний покой древнего города пирамид на периферийной планете Конфин нарушен. Сюда за артефактами, хранящимися во чреве черных гигантов, устремляются многочисленные «грабители» — от любящих риск одиночек до частных исследовательских компаний. Толькопо самым скромным подсчетам, ворованные технологии артефактов дают империи прибыль в триллионы кредитов. Так на древние захоронения началась самая настоящая охота… Давая согласие на экспедицию, опытный старый вояка полковник Вильямс понимал, что его ждет очень опасная и страшная работа. Ведь он, да и все люди вверенного ему охранного корпуса имперских вооруженных сил прекрасно знали о тихих и внезапных исчезновениях на Конфине отдельных людей, групп и даже крупных подразделений вместе с вооружением и техникой… Но, несмотря ни на что, вскрытие гробниц началось. И вот уже курьерские ракеты уносят в космос первую партию артефактов.

Алекс Орлов , Збигнев Сафьян , Йен Лоуренс , Ричард Старк , Эдуард Вениаминович Лимонов

Фантастика / Детективы / Крутой детектив / Морские приключения / Боевая фантастика