Читаем When the Devil Dances полностью

“Hey!” Cally said. “My dad resembles that remark! What do you call a Crab on a sugar high? Flubber. It just bounces and bounces… You know what they call a Crab studying Marine Biology? Speaker to shellfish.”

“How do two hungry Posleen greet each other?” Papa O’Neal asked, not to be outdone. “With salt and pepper of course.”

“Why did the Posleen leave an honor stick at the McDonald’s?” Cally asked. “They saw the sign ‘6 billion served.’ ”

“You barely remember McDonald’s,” Papa O’Neal said suspiciously. “Who told you that?”

“Just… a guy,” Cally said with a twinkle in her eye.

“Oh, shit,” Mueller muttered. “Hey! How did the bus full of lawyers escape from behind the Posleen lines? Professional courtesy.”

“What guy?” Papa O’Neal asked.

“What did the Posleen say when they took Auschwitz?” she asked, ignoring the question. “ ‘I prefer Sushi.’ ”

“What guy, Cally?” Papa O’Neal asked again.

“Just a soldier,” she answered. “At the Piggly Wiggly. He told a joke and so did I and I left. It was no big deal…”

“What do you call Posleen in the open and a Fuel Air Explosion?” Mueller asked desperately. “A Whopper and fries.”

“What do you mean, no big deal?” Papa O’Neal said dangerously. “I don’t want them changing the song to ‘Cally went down to town.’ ”

“Okay,” Shari sighed. “Look at me, Michael O’Neal.”

“Yes?” he said grumpily.

“What do the Posleen call call Carl Lewis?”

“I dunno,” Papa O’Neal said, shaking his head. “You’re not going to let me pursue this, are you?”

“No. Fast Food.”

He snorted. “Okay.”

“What did the Posleen say when confronted by an Ethiopian?”

“I dunno,” he said smiling at her. “What?”

“ ‘Nouvelle Cuisine AGAIN?’ I gotta million of ’em. What do the Posleen call a doctor?”

“What?”

“Lunch. What do the Posleen call a construction worker?”

“I dunno.”

“Lunch. What do the Posleen call a politician? Competition. What do the Posleen call a lawyer? Trouble. Do you know why they substituted lawyers for Posleen in their chemical warfare experiments? Lawyers bred faster. There are things a Posleen won’t do. And the researchers were taking pity on the Posleen.

“And last, but not least: Why did the Posleen take less than a month to go through China? Well, you know how it is, you eat Chinese and an hour later…”

“Jeeze, you’re something,” O’Neal said with a laugh.

“You got any Van Morrison in this dump?” she asked.

“I think I’ve got his ‘Best of,’ why?”

“Because I want to dance,” she answered, taking his hand and standing up. “Come on.”

“I’ve got two left feet,” he protested.

“You put your arms around me and shuffle around,” she said with a twinkle in her eye. “How hard’s it gonna be?”

“You might want to rephrase that,” Mueller muttered.

“Oh, shut up.”

As the music changed in the background, Elgars poured a small sip of the better moonshine. She swirled it in her cup and looked at Mosovich. “I think now is a good time.”

“Now’s a good time for what?” Cally asked.

“I told Mosovich about a flashback while we were walking,” Elgars answered. “There was something about it he really didn’t like.”

“Yeah,” Mosovich said. “You’re right.” He poured himself some of the moonshine and leaned back. “What I didn’t like about it is that the person who had that experience is real, and she’s really dead. I saw her die.”

“Where?” Cally asked.

“Barwhon,” Mueller interjected. “We were both on a recon team that was sent out before the expeditionary force even got there. We were guinea pigs to see how dangerous the Posleen really were.”

“You can’t remember that time,” Mosovich said. “But… there was a lot of disbelief. ‘Alien invasion? Right, pull the other one.’ That got dispelled pretty quick when a high-level delegation on Barwhon got eaten, and the tape got back to the World. Anyway, we were on a recon of Barwhon doing an order of battle and analysis of the terrain and fighting conditions…”

“Bad and bad,” Mueller said.

“I guess we did our job too well,” the sergeant major continued. “We got a call to capture a Posleen and return it. I figured that we could capture one of the nestlings easier than an adult so we attacked a camp that was also holding some Crabs as a walking larder. When we did, the Posleen turned out to be a bit better at fighting than we had given them credit for. All the stuff we know now; the sniper detection system and the way they just swarm to the sound of fighting. Anyway, we lost a bunch of real legends in the special operations community, including our sniper, Staff Sergeant Sandra Ellsworthy. The description of your flashback correlates exactly to her death.”

“Yep,” Mueller said. “I thought the same thing. It’s like listening to Sandra tell it, complete with the southern accent.”

“You know,” Wendy said. “That’s hardly coming out at all anymore. The accent I mean.”

“Anyway, that’s why we freaked,” Mosovich said.

“What do you think?” Elgars asked quietly. “Do you think that the Crabs put your friend’s head in mine? Am I Anne Elgars or this Ellsworthy person? Similar name, both snipers? You think that’s it?”

Перейти на страницу:

Все книги серии Legacy of the Aldenata

Похожие книги