667中文网 > 恐怖悬疑电子书 > Death World(科幻战争) >

第38章

Death World(科幻战争)-第38章

小说: Death World(科幻战争) 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



path strewn with crushed ork bodies; and had to squeeze their way around more than one partial
cave…in。
It was Braxton who first voiced the feeling that they were being followed; though when Lorenzo
shone his light behind them they could see nothing。 Greiss urged them on; and eventually he
directed them into an upward…leading passageway that was smoother and straighter than the others;
obviously worked; like the one they had followed down from the clearing。
The first set of wooden struts they came across had slipped and buckled but; miraculously; held;
they climbed past them gingerly。 The second had broken into splinters; but fortunately the roof was
staying up by itself。
It was just past the third that their luck ran out。
Lorenzo heard the orks ahead of them before he saw them。 There were a half…dozen of them;
jabbering in panic as they tried to dig through a pile of rubble that had completely blocked the
tunnel。 They were succeeding mostly in getting in each other’s way: as the Jungle Fighters watched;
one ork accidentally embedded its pickaxe in the skull of another。
They were sitting ducks for a volley of las…fire; the narrow confines ensuring that even through
the quake most of the Jungle Fighters’ shots found a target。 The orks; in turn; didn’t seem to be
106
armed—and; taken by surprise; they jostled with each other in their haste to close with their
attackers; more than one of them stumbling in the melee and being manhandled aside。 A single
greenskin made it within knife range—and this; Lorenzo made short work of with his Catachan
fang。
As he yanked his blade out of the ork’s chest; he stumbled; brushed the tunnel wall with his bare
arm and recoiled from its unexpected heat。 Greiss had felt it too; and he gave Lorenzo a quizzical
look。 “Lava;” he confirmed。 “It’s alright—it hasn’t built up enough pressure yet to cause a burst。
We’ve got a few minutes。”
Greiss nodded; and asked; “How far to the surface?”
“Almost there。 Just the other side of that cave…in。”
“Guess the orks had the right idea; then;” said Greiss—and the Jungle Fighters rummaged amid
the corpses of their enemies to retrieve their pickaxes and spades; and set about the blockage with
gusto and a great deal more efficiency and teamwork than the greenskins had demonstrated。
Lorenzo was worried about Greiss。 He had retied his bandana like a bandage over his head
wound—but the bleeding showed no sign of abating; red rivulets rolling down his cheek。 None of
this seemed to lessen the zeal with which he swung his pickaxe; but then Lorenzo had learned to
expect no less from him。
“Looks like you were right; Braxton;” Greiss murmured—and Lorenzo swung around; and this
time his light beam did pick out something。 A lot of somethings; no longer bothering to hide。
Ork zombies; shuffling up the tunnel behind them。 They could only fit two abreast with their
broad shoulders; but their ranks extended further back than Lorenzo could see—and; at their heart:
the chilling sight of an even bulkier creature that could only have been the warboss himself; his skull
half…caked with mud but stripped to the bone beneath this。
There was still too far to dig; no way they could escape in time。 There were too many sources of
fresh corpses for Rogar to use against them; even discounting those orks that had been melted in
lava or whose bones had been shattered。 Lorenzo found himself averting his gaze from the
oncoming army—not through fear of their strength and numbers; but lest he glimpse the familiar
shape of a lost comrade among them。
“Looks like this is it;” growled Greiss。
“No; sergeant;” protested Lorenzo—though he knew it was hopeless too。 “Not now。 Not when
we’re so close!”
“I didn’t mean the end for all of us。 Just me。 About damn time!”
“What… what are you…?” Lorenzo began—but Greiss hefted his pickaxe; and Lorenzo saw that
gleam in his eyes; saw where it was focused; and suddenly he knew what the sergeant was planning。
And; impulsively; he laid a restraining hand on his shoulder and he said; “Let me。”
“What’s wrong with you; trooper?” snapped Greiss。 “That’s ty orders;
and I’m telling you; I don’t like it!”
“You’ve taken worse hits than this; sergeant。 I know you have。 You aren’t going to let some
dumb ork get the better of you; are you?”
“Too damn old;” grumbled Greiss。 “This was always going to be my last outing。 And you;
Lorenzo; you got a job to do。 You’re the only one who can tell Patch’s story。 I’m only sorry I won’t
be around to hear it。”
“I… I’m dying too; sergeant。 Poisoned。”
Greiss looked Lorenzo up and down; and said curtly; “You look alright to me。” Lorenzo couldn’t
argue; because Greiss was right—because; exhausted and hurt though he was; he realised only now
that the effects of the effigy’s venom; the nausea and the dizziness; had receded。
Then Greiss clapped him on the arm and smiled grimly。 “Live for me。 Tell everyone I did it; got
my blaze of glory。 And don’t be so damn impatient for yours。 Way I see it; you got a lot of stories in
you yet; you only just earned your name。”
107
He turned and; before Lorenzo could say anything else—before he could think what to say—he
was charging at the front rank of zombies with a bloodcurdling scream。 As he reached them; as they
grabbed and clawed at him; he smashed his pickaxe into the wall beside them; again and again; until
the first crack began to show… and to widen… and explode。
A deluge of lava crashed into the passageway; and surged downhill。 It subsumed Sergeant Greiss
and the zombies; swept them away; and Lorenzo knew that this time there wouldn’t be enough left
of any of them for Rogar to reanimate。 He turned away; couldn’t watch; concentrated on the
blockage in front of him; swinging his pickaxe in time with Braxton’s; driving himself on; ignoring
the pain in his fractured wrist; not letting himself think about anything but the task at hand because
if he did think about it; what had happened to Greiss and Armstrong and Myers and Storm and all
the others; if he really thought about it; he might have been overwhelmed by the unfairness of it all。
Why them? Why them and not him?
Lorenzo thought about their sacrifices; and his greatest fear was that they would all be for
nothing。
His pickaxe rose and fell; and he could feel the heat from the lava at his back and the rock walls
closed in around him; and his pickaxe rose and fell; and there were tears in his eyes but that might
have been the dirt。 He remembered the ship; out in warp space; so long ago now; and that feeling of
being trapped; surrounded by hostile forces; helpless to influence his own fate; and he longed for the
open air but feared he would never breathe it again。
Lorenzo’s pickaxe rose and fell; and he felt as if he had been doing this forever; getting
nowhere。 He could sense the planet; his enemy; a living presence in his thoughts; and he knew it had
won; defeated him; that he would never find his way out from inside it—that Rogar III would bury
him as it had buried the rest of his squad。 Just swallowed them up; left no trace of them。 No one to
tell their stories。
No one to remember…
108
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Daylight。
Lorenzo hardly registered it at first; couldn’t bring himself to believe in what might have been a
cruel trick on the planet’s part。 It was only a pinprick; after all; not enough to make out any details
of what might be out there。 But it was daylight; nonetheless; and its touch invigorated him。
His right wrist was bruise…blackened; stiffening; and he couldn’t wield the pickaxe anymore
without suffering a lance of pain up his arm。 But he and Braxton had chipped most of the bigger
pieces of rock away; and Lorenzo’s knife was now sufficient to whittle at the packed soil that
remained。 To make that pinprick wider。
Finally; thankfully; after what seemed like an age in the dark; they pushed their way through a
curtain of loose earth and emerged; stumbling and choking; into the dew…pregnant morning。 Only a
few hours; Lorenzo calculated from the height of the sun; since they had entered the ork mine—but
what a difference those few hours had made。
The earth had stopped shaking; Lorenzo didn’t know when。 Maybe Rogar III had expended its
energy—or maybe it was just content with its fresh kills; for now。 Nothing stirred in the jungle—
and; after so much noise; the silence felt eerie。 It heightened Lorenzo’s creeping sense of loneliness。
There was a shape in the undergrowth。 An ork; lying face…down。 He thought it was sleeping at
first; but on closer inspection it proved to be dead。 He recognised the multiple scorched entrance
wounds of las…rounds on its green skin。 A short way from it; he discovered another two greenskin
corpses; and a gretchin that had evidently tried to run and had been cut down from behind。 They
must have escaped the mine before the tunnel collapse; he thought; to find a greater peril waiting
outside。 He was grateful。 In his current condition; even a trio of orks; if they had taken him by
surprise; might have proved too much。
Lorenzo sensed; rather than heard; movement behind him; and he knew it could only be one
man。 He turned to greet Sly Marbo with a cool nod。
The legendary Catachan stood just a few metres away; but Lorenzo could hardly make him out
against the greens and browns of his background。 He recognised his dead; white eyes; though; and
his deep voice; empty of emotion。
“Did you get him?” asked Sly Marbo。
“Big Green?” said Lorenzo。 “Yes; yes; we got him。”
Marbo nodded。 He had heard what he needed to know。 He left without a footstep or a rustle;
seeming to melt into the jungle without moving at all。 For a moment; Lorenzo fought the
discomfiting feeling that he hadn’t moved; that he was still there; watching with his white eyes。 But
that was just paranoia; he knew。 Marbo was gone—and it was unlikely Lorenzo would see him
again。
Braxton; meanwhile; had sagged to the ground; and was sitting with his back to a tree; knees up
to his chest。 “I could sleep for a week;” he moaned。
“Go ahead;” said Lorenzo; checking for jungle lizards in the grass before he sat down beside
him。 “For an hour or two; anyway。 I’ll keep watch

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 2 2

你可能喜欢的