Читаем Sunshine полностью

“I got that doing chin-ups on the top oven,” I said. “Let’s get on with this, can we? I want to go home and go to bed. Four in the morning is already soon.”

Pat’s combox was on, and the saved cosmail winked at us as soon as he touched the screen. Even before plugging in to the live connection it looked evil to me; the flickering print seemed to have a kind of bulgy red edge, so that it looked like tiny scarlet mouths howling behind every letter of every word. “Ready?” said Pat.

I sat down and put my hands on the keyboard, like I was going to do some perfectly ordinary com thing, tap a few keys, see what the headlines were on the Darkline. “Ready,” I said. He pressed the globenet button and the mail went live.

I was almost sucked in after all. Hey, I didn’t know what I was doing. Was there an apprenticeship for this? The globenet hasn’t been around all that long, but magic handlers adapt pretty fast—they have to. If I’d been apprenticed, could I have learned how to trace a cosmail? No. If this was something magic handlers now routinely did, SOF would have a division of magic handlers that did it. And they wouldn’t be all over me like a cheap suit. I was going where no one had gone before. And I wasn’t having a good time.

It was my talismans that held me together, and in this world. I felt them heat up, wow, like zero to a hundred in nothing flat with the throttle all the way open, like a cold inert vampire being brought back to undeadness by a surprise drop-in guest. I guessed there was a red hoop around my neck and over my breast now, and a red oval on each thigh. I hoped they wouldn’t set my clothes on fire, which might be hard to explain as well as embarrassing.

It was pretty excruciating. It was like being dragged forward and hauled backward simultaneously: as if I was living the moment when my divided loyalties ripped me apart and took off with their riven halves. Other-space yawned, and while last night, with Con at the far end of the back-country-lane version, it had merely been remote and unearthly and nowhere I had any business being, tonight it was the bad one again, the shrieking maelstrom. If I went headfirst into this one I wouldn’t come out, except in small messy pieces.

But I was frisking on the boundary of dangerous territory for a purpose. Dimly through the inaudible din, I thought, perhaps this is Bo’s defense system. Okay, if I can find where the defense system is, presumably I can find where what it’s defending is. Or is that too human a logic? I tried to orient myself, carefully, carefully, staying firmly seated on the chair in Pat’s office, feeling my talismans burning their variously shaped holes into my flesh. I wasn’t the compass needle myself this time—that would have been too far in—I was trying to angle for a view so I could see where the compass needle pointed…

There.

And I was flung over backward, with the chair, and landed on the floor so hard the breath was knocked out of me. This was just as well, because Pat’s combox exploded; droplets of superheated flying goo rained down on me as well as tiny fragments of gods-know-what, and larger pieces of plastic housing. There were a few half-muffled shouts of surprise and pain, and then there were a lot of alarm bells ringing. I was still struggling to get some breath back in my lungs when people started arriving. I had thought those were real alarm bells. They were.

What looked like everybody at SOF headquarters poured into Pat’s room, and there were more of them than you’d think for ten-thirty at night. Once I could breathe again I could tell the medic I wasn’t hurt. (There are medics on duty twenty-four-seven at SOF HQ: our tax blinks at work. Well, okay, lots of big corps have medics on duty, but few of them have combat patches. This one did.) My shirt had got a little torn, somehow, and the chain and the mark it made were visible; he gave me some burn cream for the latter, while he muttered something about the weird effects of a combox blowout. Fortunately it didn’t seem to occur to him to suggest that there was something funny about my necklace and I shouldn’t wear it. I didn’t mention the hot spots I could feel on my thighs. I was glad still to have thighs.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

"Фантастика 2923-134". Компиляция. Книги 1-23 (СИ)
"Фантастика 2923-134". Компиляция. Книги 1-23 (СИ)

Очередной, 124-й томик "Фантастика 2023", содержит в себе законченные циклы фантастических романов российских авторов. Приятного чтения, уважаемый читатель!   Содержание:   ПРИЗЫВАТЕЛЬ ДЕМОНОВ: 1. Михаил Ежов: Агентство 'ЭКЗОРЦИСТ': NIGREDO 2. Михаил Ежов: Агентство 'ЭКЗОРЦИСТ': ALBEDO 3. Михаил Ежов: Агентство 'ЭКЗОРЦИСТ': CRYPTIDIS 4. Михаил Ежов: Агентство 'ЭКЗОРЦИСТ': CITRINITAS 5.Михаил Ежов. Виктор Глебов: Агентство «Экзорцист»: RUBEDO   НЕ ЧИТАЙТЕ СОВЕТСКИХ ГАЗЕТ: 1. Евгений Капба: Акула пера в СССР 2. Евгений Капба: Гонзо-журналистика в СССР 3. Евгений Капба: Эффект бабочки в СССР 4. Евгений Капба: Закон Мерфи в СССР 5. Евгений Капба: Бритва Оккама в СССР 6. Евгений Капба: Сорок лет спустя в СССР   ЧЕСТНОЕ ПИОНЕРСКОЕ: 1. Андрей Федин: Честное пионерское! Часть 1 2. Андрей Федин: Честное пионерское! Часть 2 3. Андрей Федин: Честное пионерское! Часть 3 4. Андрей Федин: Честное пионерское! Часть 4   МАГИЯ НЕ ДЛЯ ОБОРОТНЕЙ: 16. Андрей Анатольевич Федин: Боевой маг 17. Андрей Анатольевич Федин: Одиночка 18. Андрей Анатольевич Федин: Клановый   НОВАЯ ЖИЗНЬ ЧЕРНОГО ВЛАСТЕЛИНА: 1. Андрей Федин: Новая жизнь темного властелина. Часть 1 2. Андрей Федин: Новая жизнь темного властелина. Часть 2   ПОПАДАНЕЦ  ДВА В ОДНОМ: 1. Андрей Анатольевич Федин: Пупсик 2. Андрей Анатольевич Федин: Студентка Пупсик 3. Андрей Анатольевич Федин: Я вам не Пупсик                                                                               

Андрей Анатольевич Федин , Виктор Глебов , Евгений Адгурович Капба , Михаил Ежов

Фантастика / Боевая фантастика / Городское фэнтези / ЛитРПГ / Бояръ-Аниме