Eagle in the Sky - Smith Wilbur (бесплатные версии книг .txt) 📗
sighed, and looked up slowly. Have you told her? and Edelman could not
hold his gaze. I was rather hoping that you would do that. Yes, the
Brig nodded, it would be best that way. Can I see her now? Is she
awake? She is under light sedation. No pain, only a small amount of
discomfort, the external wound is insignificant, and we shall not
attempt to remove the metal fragment. That would entail major
neurosurgery. He stood up and indicated the door. Yes, you may see her
now. I will take you to her. The corridor outside the row of emergency
theatres was lined along each wall with stretchers, and the Brig
recognized many of his guests laid out upon them. He stopped briefly to
speak with one or two of them, before following Edelman to the recovery
room at the end of the corridor.
Debra lay on the tall bed below the window. She was very pale, dry
blood was still clotted in her hair and a thick cotton wool and bandage
dressing covered both her eyes.
Your father is here, Miss Mordecai, Edelman told I her, and she rolled
her head swiftly towards them.
Daddy? I am here, my child. The Brig took the hand she held out, and
stooped to kiss her. Her lips were cold, and she smelled strongly of
disinfectant and anaesthetic.
Mama? she asked anxiously.
She is out of danger, the Brig assured her, but Hannah Yes. They told
me, Debra stopped him, her voice choking. Is Joe all right?
He is strong, the Brig said. He will be all right David? she asked.
He is here.
Eagerly she struggled up on to one elbow, her face lighting with
expectation, the heavily bound eyes turned blindly seeking.
David, she called, where are you? Damn this bandage. Don't worry,
David, it's just to rest my eyes.
No, the Brig restrained her with a hand on her arm. He is outside,
waiting, and she slumped with disappointment.
Ask him to come to me, please, she whispered.
Yes, said the Brig, in a while, but first there is something we must
talk about, something I have to tell you.
She must have guessed what it was, she must have been warned by the tone
of his voice for she went very still. That peculiar stillness of hers,
like a frightened animal of the veld.
He was a soldier, with a soldier's blunt ways, and although he tried to
soften it, yet even his tone was roughened with his own sorrow, so that
it came out brutally. Her hand in his was the only indication that she
had heard him, it spasmed convulsively like a wounded thing and then lay
still, a small tense hand in the circle of his big bony fist.
She asked no questions and when he had done they sat quietly together
for a long time. He spoke first.
I will send David to you now, he said, and her response was swift and
vehement.
No. She gripped his hand hard. No, I can't meet him now. I have to
think about this first.
The Brig went back to the waiting-room and David stood up expectantly,
the pure lines of his face seemingly carved from pale polished marble,
and the dark blue of his eyes in deep contrast.
The Brig forestalled him harshly. No visitors. He took David's arm.
You will not be allowed to see her until tomorrow.
Is something wrong? What is it? David tried to pull away, but the Brig
held him and steered him towards the door.
Nothing is wrong. She will be all right, but she must have no
excitement now. You'll be able to see her tomorrow.
They buried Hannah that evening in the family plot on the Mountain of
Olives. It was a small funeral party attended by the three men and a
mere handful of relatives, many of whom had others to mourn from the
previous day's slaughter.
There was an official car waiting to take the Brig to a meeting of the
high command, where retaliatory measures would certainly be discussed,
another revolution in the relentless wheel of violence that rolled
across the troubled land.
Joe and David climbed into the Mercedes and sat silently, David making
no effort to start the engine. Joe lit cigarettes for them, and they
both felt drained of purpose and direction.
What are you going to do now? David asked him. We had two weeks, Joe
answered him. We were going down to Ashkelon, his voice trailed off. I
don't know. There isn't anything to do now, is there? Shall we go and
have a drink somewhere? Joe shook his head. I don't feel like
drinking, he said. I think I'll go back to base. They are flying night
interceptions tonight.
Yes, David agreed quickly, I'll come with you. He could not see Debra
until tomorrow, and the house on Malik Street would be lonely and cold.
Suddenly he longed for the peace of the night heavens.
The moon was a brightly curved Saracen blade against the soft darkness
of the sky, and the stars were fat and silver and gemlike in their
clarity.
They flew high above the earth, remote from its grief and sorrow,
wrapped in the isolation of flight and lost in the ritual and
concentration of night interception.
The target was a Mirage of their own squadron, and they picked it up on
the scanner far out over the Negev.
Joe locked on to it and called the track and range while David searched
for and at last spotted the moving star of the target's jet blast,
burning redly against the velvety blackness of the night.
He took them in on a clean interception creeping up under the target's
belly and then pulling steeply up past its wing-tip, the way a barracuda
goes for the lure from below and explodes out through the surface of the
sea.
They shot past so close that the target Mirage broke wildly away to
port, unaware of their presence until that moment.
Joe slept that night, exhausted with grief, but David lay in the bunk
beneath him and listened to him. In the dawn he rose and showered and
left Joe still asleep. He drove into Jerusalem and reached the hospital
just as the sun came up and lit the hills with its rays of soft gold and
pearly pink.
The night sister at the desk was brusque and preoccupied. You shouldn't
be here until visiting hours this afternoon, but David smiled at her
with all the charm he could muster.
I just wanted to know if she is doing well. I have to rejoin my
squadron this morning. The sister was not immune either to his smile or
the airforce uniform, and she went to consult her lists.
You must be mistaken, she said at last. 'The only Mordecai we have is
Mrs. Ruth Mordecai. That's her mother, David told her, and the sister
flipped the sheet on her clipboard.
No wonder I couldn't find it, she muttered irritably. She was
discharged last night Discharged? David stared at her
uncomprehendingly.
Yes, she went home last night. I remember her now.
Her father came to fetch her just as I came on duty.
Pretty girl with eye bandages - Yes, David nodded. Thank you. Thank
you very much, and he ran down the steps to the Mercedes, his feet light
with relief, freed at last from the gnawing doubt and dread.
Debra had gone home. Debra was safe and well.
The Brig opened the door to him, and let him into the silent house. He
was still in his uniform, and it was wilted and rumpled. The Brig's
face was fine-drawn, the lines crudely chiselled around his mouth, and
his eyes were swollen and bloodshot from worry and sorrow and lack of
sleep.
Where is Debra? David demanded eagerly, and the Brig sighed and stood
aside for him to enter.
Where is she? David repeated, and the Brig led him to his study and