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Redemption turned out to be quite a large settlement, and one of the more grown-up ones—the kind with a sawmill boasting a zero-fatality record on a billboard. Maggie was sure the locals would already have registered their township’s existence with the appropriate bureaux, and certainly would never have troubled the likes of the Benjamin Franklin. She happily ordered an R&R break for the crew, but made sure Nathan Boss had the MPs on the watch for trouble.

And then she waited. She even interrogated the cat: “OK, where’s Abrahams?”

The cat said softly, “You don’t find George Abrahams. Dr. Abrahams finds you.”

After a couple of hours there came a ping from the duty officer. A car was waiting for her by the access ramp.

It looked like a British Rolls-Royce, though curls of steam seemed to be seeping from under the hood. A man in black was standing beside an open door, with the air of a driver to the wealthy classes.

And in the car, when she climbed in, was George Abrahams. Somehow he looked bigger than she remembered, more imposing—no, younger, she thought.

He smiled as the car pulled away. “The car’s operated by the restaurant.”

“What restaurant?”

“You’ll see. Nice sense of style, don’t you think? Even if it is a steampunk limousine… Are you all right, Captain?”

“I’m sorry. It’s just that you seem… younger.”

Abrahams smiled, and whispered, “Well, it is all a façade, as we both know very well.”

Maggie found that faintly sinister, and it triggered something of the paranoia she seemed to be developing. Before disembarking, she’d slipped a locator into her uniform pocket, and now she was glad of it. “I can’t believe that you intend anything like a kidnap. I must tell you that my ship—”

“Don’t be melodramatic, Captain. Look, we’re nearly there. It really isn’t a very big town, is it? Well, most Long Earth communities aren’t, yet. Sometimes we forget how new all this is—that Step Day was just a generation ago.”

She was relieved to find they were indeed pulling up at a restaurant. Inside, she was impressed by the decor: heavy on stone and massive timbers in the usual colony-world style, but still elegant. Obviously some budding entrepreneur had realized that even in the reaches of the Long Earth people sometimes wanted a touch of class.

And the Chardonnay was excellent.

As they sat together in a booth for two, she raised a glass, ironically. “So who should I be drinking to? Who are you, Mr. Abrahams? Am I having dinner with the Black Corporation?”

“Actually, Captain Kauffman, the answer to your question is no—essentially. Though I do work with them and through them, I suppose—well, I told you that. I like to think of myself as working on behalf of humanity. And indeed on behalf of the troll nation, two fine species kept apart by stupidity. And that is why, Captain Kauffman, you have come to my attention, mine and that of a few others.”

She felt angry, exposed. “What others? Douglas Black?”

“Certainly Douglas Black. Captain, you must think of yourself as a valued long-term investment. One of several, in fact.”

Fuming, she didn’t reply.

Abrahams said now, “You’ve certainly fulfilled the promise I saw in you.”

“What promise? When?”

“When they gave you command of the snazzy new Benjamin Franklin—despite a rather patchy official career record up to that point. Now, please don’t be offended when I tell you that I had a hidden hand in that. I can tell you now that one of the selection panel disliked your outspokenness over your family’s atheism, another even today has an antiquated view about women in senior positions…”

“I can’t believe you had any influence over Admiral Davidson.”

“Not at all. But he needed support from the panel. Well. All I can say is that, even in the depths of the Pentagon, levers can be pulled. Would you like another drink?”

“So I’ve been manipulated.”

“As for your handling of the trolls—did you know that you are actually featured in the long call now? ‘The woman who let trolls fly’. . .”

“Manipulated,” she repeated. “My whole life, my whole career, it sounds like. How am I supposed to feel about that? Grateful?”

“Oh, not manipulated. Just—moved into the right position. It is up to you to take the opportunity offered, or not. After all, even within the parameters of your military mission, as a twain Captain you have had a great deal of autonomy. Your decisions are your own; your character is your own. You are who you are. Black, and I, and indeed Admiral Davidson, believe in giving the brightest and the best full freedom to operate. Anything else would be a betrayal.

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Десятый век. Рождение Руси. Жестокий и удивительный мир. Мир, где слабый становится рабом, а сильный – жертвой сильнейшего. Мир, где главные дороги – речные и морские пути. За право контролировать их сражаются царства и империи. А еще – небольшие, но воинственные варяжские княжества, поставившие свои города на берегах рек, мимо которых не пройти ни к Дону, ни к Волге. И чтобы удержать свои земли, не дать врагам подмять под себя, разрушить, уничтожить, нужен был вождь, способный объединить и возглавить совсем юный союз варяжских князей и показать всем: хазарам, скандинавам, византийцам, печенегам: в мир пришла новая сила, с которую следует уважать. Великий князь Олег, прозванный Вещим стал этим вождем. Так началась Русь.Соратник великого полководца Святослава, советник первого из государей Руси Владимира, он прожил долгую и славную жизнь, но смерти нет для настоящего воина. И вот – новая жизнь, в которую Сергей Духарев входит не могучим и властным князь-воеводой, а бесправным и слабым мальчишкой без рода и родни. Зато он снова молод, а вокруг мир, в котором наверняка найдется место для славного воина, которым он несомненно станет… Если выживет.

Александр Владимирович Мазин , Андрей Иванович Самойлов , Василий Вялый , Всеволод Олегович Глуховцев , Катя Че

Фантастика / Научная Фантастика / Попаданцы / Фэнтези / Современная проза