Читать книгу Satan’s Tail - Dale Brown - Страница 6

I Gimp Boy Dreamland 3 November 1997 0801

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‘Hey, gimp boy!’

Major Mack Smith stared straight ahead at Dreamland’s administrative building, known as the ‘Taj Mahal,’ ignoring the razzing. He’d expected this sort of greeting, and after considerable thought decided there was only one thing to do: ignore it. Still, it wasn’t easy.

Worse, though, was the indignity of being wheeled into the Taj by an airman who’d been detailed euphemistically as his bodyguard.

‘Can’t even push yourself up the ramp, huh? A wimp as well as a gimp.’

The concrete ramp to the entrance of the low-slung Taj had been poured in several sections, and there was about a three-quarter-inch rise between the first and second. It wasn’t the sort of thing someone walking would notice, but for someone in a wheelchair – especially if, like Mack, they weren’t used to it – three-quarters of an inch rattled the teeth. He grimaced as the wheels cleared the curb.

‘Sorry, sir,’ said the airman, so flustered he stopped dead on the ramp.

Mack curled his fingers around the armrests of the chair, pressing out his anger. ‘Not a problem.’

‘Sorry,’ said the poor kid, pushing again.

Mack’s tormentor, sitting by the door to the building, laughed. ‘Bumpy ride, gimp boy?’ he said as Mack neared.

‘Good morning, Zen,’ said Mack.

‘How’s it feel?’

‘It feels good to be back at Dreamland,’ said Mack.

‘How’s the wheelchair feel?’ said Zen.

The automatic doors flew open, but Mack’s airman, thinking that Mack wanted to talk to Major Jeff ‘Zen’ Stockard, remained stationary. Mack glanced back at the airman. Pimples and all, the kid was looking at him with pity.

He felt sorry for him.

Sorry for Major Mack ‘the Knife’ Smith, holder of not one, but two stinking Air Force crosses. Mack Smith, who had shot down more stinking MiGs than any man since the Vietnam War. Mack Smith, who had run a small country’s air force and saved Las Vegas from nuclear catastrophe.

Mack stinking Smith, now in a wheelchair because of some maniac crazy terrorist in Brunei.

A wheelchair that the doctors agreed he’d be getting out of any day now …

The kid felt sorry for him.

Sorry!

Well the hell with that.

‘I can take it from here, airman. Thank you for your time,’ said Mack. He put his hands on the wheels of his chair and pushed himself forward.

Just as he did, the doors started to close. For a moment Mack thought he was going to crash into them, which would perhaps have been the ultimate embarrassment. Fortunately, they slid back and he made it inside without a crash.

‘Don’t tire yourself out,’ called Zen after him. ‘I want to race you later.’

‘That was a bit over the top.’

Zen whirled his head around, surprised by his wife’s voice. Breanna had come out from the building while he was watching Mack make his maiden progression in a wheelchair.

Zen shifted his wheelchair around to face her. ‘Somebody’s got to put him in his place.’

‘You’re being way too cruel, Zen.’

‘Turnaround is fair play.’

‘He never tormented you like that.’

‘No, he just made me a cripple.’

Zen, controlling two robot aircraft as well as his own, had been engaged in a mock dogfight with Mack nearly two years before, when one of the robots clipped his wing at very low altitude. The ensuing crash had cost Zen the use of his legs. Technically, Mack had not caused the crash – but in every other way, he had, egging him on, doing much the same thing that Zen had just done to him, and cheating on the accepted rules for the engagement.

‘I never thought there would be a day when Mack Smith outclassed Zen Stockard,’ said Bree.

‘You going for breakfast?’ Zen asked, changing the subject.

Breanna frowned at him, but then said, ‘I have an hour to kill before prepping for my test flight. I thought I’d get some breakfast over at the Red Room. I haven’t had a good omelet since Brunei.’

‘I’ll walk with you. No, wait.’ He put his hands on the wheels and pulled back for a launch. ‘I’ll race you.’

Satan’s Tail

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