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Фольклор
Военное дело
The Seventh Scroll - Smith Wilbur - Страница 98
but on the lid too. Clearly the artist was the same as the one who had
executed the murals. The upper portrait was in excellent condition. It
depicted a man in the prime of life with a strong, proud face, that of a
farmer or a soldier with a calm and unruffled gaze. He was a handsome
man, with thick blond tresses, skilfully painted as if by someone who
had known him'well and loved him.
The artist seemed to have captured his character, and then eulogized his
salient virtues.
Nahoot looked up from the portrait to the inscription on the wall of the
tomb above it. He read it aloud, and then, with tears still backing up
behind his eyelids, he looked down again at the coffin and read the
cartouche that was painted below the portrait of the blond general.
Tanus, Lord Harrab." His voice choked up with emotion, and he swallowed
noisily and cleared his throat.
This follows exactly the description in the seventh scroll.
We have the stele and the coffin. They are , great and priceless
treasures. Herr von Schiller will be delighted."
"I wish I could believe what you say," Nogo told him dubiously. "Herr
von Schiller is a dangerous man."
"You have done well so far," Nahoot assured him. "It remains only for
you to move the stele and the coffin out of this monastery to where the
helicopter can fly them to the Pegasus camp. If you can do that, you
will be a very rich man. Richer than you ever believed was possible."
This spur was enough for Nogo. He stood over his men as they laboured
around the base of the stele, digging in clouds of dust, levering the
paving slabs out of their mooring. Finally they freed the foundation of
the stele and between them lifted the stone out of the position in which
it had stood for nearly four thousand years.
Only once it was free did they realize the weight of the stone. Although
slender, it was a solid half-ton weight.
Nahoot went back into the qiddist and, ignoring the rows of squatting
monks, pulled down a dozen of the thick woollen tapestries from the
walls and had the troopers carry them back into the maqdas.
He wrapped both the stele and the coffin in the heavy folds of
coarse-spun wool. It was tough as canvas, and afforded the men who were
to carry it a secure handhold.
Ten of the burly troopers were able to lift and carry the stele, while
three men were able to handle the wooden coffin and its desiccated
contents. This left seven armed men free to provide an escort. Then the
heavily burdened procession moved out through the ruined doorway of the
Holy of Holies into the crowded central qiddist, As soon as the
assembled monks realized what they were carrying away with them, a
shocked babble Of voices, of lamentations and exhortations, rose from
the squatting ranks of holy men.
"Quied' Nogo roared. "Silence! Keep these fools quiet."
The guards waded forward into the mass of humanity, clearing a passage
for the treasures they were plundering, laying about them with boot and
rifle butt, shouting at the monks to give way and to let the staggering
porters through.
The hubbub rose louder, the monks encouraging each other with their
howls of protest, whipping themselves into a frenzy of religious
outrage. Some of them leaped to their feet, defying the commands
bellowed at them to remain seated. They crowded closer and closer to the
armed troopers, clutching at their uniforms, chanting and whirling about
them in a challenging display of mounting hostility.
In the midst of this uproar, suddenly the spectral figure of Jali Hora
reappeared. His beard and robes were stained with blood, his eyes were
crazy, bloodshot and staring.
>From his battered lips and ruined mouth issued a long, sustained
shriek. The ranks of dancing monks opened to let him through, and he
rushed like an animated scarecrow with his skirts flapping around his
thin legs straight at Colonel Nogo.
"Get back, you old maniac!" Nogo warned him, and lifted the muzzle of
his assault rifle to fend him away.
Jali Hora was far past any earthly restraint. He did not even check, but
ran straight on to the point of the bayonet that Nogo was aiming at his
belly.
The needle'pointed steel stabbed through his gaudy robes and ran into
the flesh beneath them as easily as a gaff into the body of a struggling
fish. The point of the bayonet emerged from the middle of his back,
pricking through the velvet cloak, all pinkly smeared with the old man's
blood.
Spitted upon the steel, Jali Hora wriggled and contorted, a dreadful
squeal bursting from his bloody lips.
Nogo tried to pull the bayonet free, but the wet clinging suction of the
abbot's guts held the steel fast, and when Nogo jerked harder, Jah Hora
was tossed about like a puppet, his arms flapping and his legs kicking
and. dancing comically.
There was only one way to free the blade of a bayonet that was trapped
like this., Nogo slipped the rate-of-fire selector on the AK-47 to
"Single Shot'. He fired once.
The detonation of the shot was muffled by Jali Hora's body, but was yet
so thunderous that for a moment it stilled the outcry of the monks. The
high-velocity bullet tore down the entry track of the blade. It was
moving at three times the speed of sound, creating a wave of hydrostatic
shock behind it that turned the old man's bowels to jelly and liquidized
his flesh. The suction that had held the bayonet was broken, and the
blast of shot hurled Jah Hora's carcass off the point of the blade,
flinging it into the arms of the monks who were crowding close behind
him."
For a moment longer the strained, unnatural silence persisted, and then
it was shattered by a higher, more angry chorus of horror from the
monks. It was as though they were compelled by a single mind, a single
instinct. Like a flock of white birds they flew at the band of armed men
in their midst and descended upon them, intent on retribution for
murder. They counted no cost to themselves, but with their bare hands
they tore at them, hooked fingers clawing for their eyes, seizing the
barrels of the levelled rifles. Some of them even grasped the blades of
the bayonets with their naked hands, and the razor steel sliced through
-flesh and tendons.
For a short while it seemed that the soldiers would be overwhelmed and
smothered by the sheer weight of numbers, but then those troopers
carrying the stele and the coffin dropped their loads and unslung their
weapons, The monks crowded them too closely for them to swing the
rifles, and they were forced to hack and stab with the bayonets to clear
a space around them in which to do their work. They did not need much
room, for the AK47 has a short barrel and compact action. Their first
burst of fully automatic fire, aimed into the monks at belly height and
point-blank range, scythed a windrow- through them.
Every bullet told, and the full metal jacket ball whipped through one
man's torso with almost no check, going on to kill the man behind him.
By now all the troopers were firing from the hip, traversing back and
forth, spraying the packed ranks of monks like gardeners hosing a bed of
white pansies. As one magazine of twenty-eight rounds emptied they
snapped it off and replaced it with another, fully loaded.
Nahoot cowered behind the fallen pillar, using it as a shield. The roar
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