饭饭TXT > 海外名作 > 《Gunheads(科幻战争)》作者:[英]Steve Parker【完结】 > 《Gunheads(科幻战争)》书香门第.txt

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作者:英-Steve Parker 当前章节:15444 字 更新时间:2026-6-15 17:35

smell the cruelty within him. Sooner or later, there would be a reckoning between them. It was

inevitable.

95

Wulfe turned his mind to the new gunner, Beans. Was he as good a shot as van Droi said?

Would he fit in with Metzger and Siegler? The lieutenant had a point; they weren’t the most typical

of tank crews.

He walked towards C-barracks, muttering to himself.

“Beans. I hope it doesn’t mean what I think it does.”

Wulfe found Beans waiting for him outside C-barracks with his belongings already packed into a

canvas bag. He was sitting on a concrete step, smoking a lho-stick, and examining the red dust that

had gathered under his fingernails. Wulfe automatically assessed him as he drew closer. Judging by

his smooth, open facial features, Beans was young, no older than twenty standard most probably.

His fatigues hung loose on a skinny frame. He had rolled the sleeves of his red field-tunic up to

reveal heavily tattooed forearms but, if any of the tats were hive-ganger symbols from his life back

on Cadia, Wulfe didn’t recognise them. That didn’t mean much, of course. There were literally tens

of thousands of gangs in the vast, crowded fortress-hives where the men of Exolon had been raised.

“You’ll be Beans,” said Wulfe as he stopped in front of the trooper.

“Are you Wulfe?” Beans’ voice was high and he spoke with the soft, drawling vowels of a Kasr

Feros man.

“I’m Sergeant Wulfe, and you can call me sergeant, or sarge. If you call me anything else, I’ll

break your teeth.”

Beans stood up, dropping his smoke at the side of the step and crushing it under a booted foot.

He was a good head shorter than Wulfe and had to look up at an angle to meet his gaze. “All right,

sergeant. Throne above. I didn’t mean any disrespect, did I? Don’t want to get off on the wrong foot.

I’m nervous enough already, by Throne.”

Wulfe nodded. At least the trooper was frank. “Why do they call you Beans?”

“It’s my name, isn’t it? Mirkos Biehn. Beans. See?” Wulfe let the relief show on his face.

“What?” said Beans. “Thought I was going to stink up the air in your turret? Nah, it’s nothing

like that, sergeant. Then again, I can’t promise I’ll be forest fresh all the time. I’m only human.”

“I’ll make sure the rest of the crew don’t shoot you for your first offence,” said Wulfe. “To be

honest, it stinks so bad in there when we’re on manoeuvres that no one would notice. You’ll learn to

breathe through your mouth pretty quickly.”

Beans looked horrified and Wulfe couldn’t help but laugh.

“As for being nervous, Beans, don’t be. My lot look out for each other. It’s the first rule. You’ll

be seeing proper combat on my crew. Make no mistake about that. But the lieutenant tells me you’re

a good shot, and he thinks you’ll fit in well.”

Beans brightened up on hearing this, as Wulfe had intended. “The lieutenant said that?”

“He hasn’t picked out a bad gunner for me yet. Both of my last two went on to command tanks

of their own. That could be you in a few years if you do right by me. Now, if that’s your bag there,

pick it up and follow. We’ll drop it off at A-barracks on the way.”

Beans hefted his bag over his shoulder and fell into pace at Wulfe’s side.

“On the way where, sarge?” he asked.

“On the way to see some orks,” Wulfe answered.

Quite a crowd had gathered around the cages by the time Wulfe and Beans arrived. Troopers were

jostling each other to get closer to the front where a couple of lieutenants from the 303rd Cadian

Fusiliers were trying to keep order, largely in vain. Wulfe couldn’t see Metzger, Siegler or Holtz

among the crowd, so he and Beans hung back until two other sergeants arrived and began shouting

at their men. “Playtime is over, ladies!”

“Back to the barracks! Double-time it, you lot!”

96

About twenty grumbling men pushed their way to the back of the mob and split off from it. With

their sergeants leading them, they jogged off down dark, sand-filled streets. Now, with fresh gaps

opening in the crowd, Wulfe and Beans pushed forward, using their elbows and shoulders to gain

ground.

What a lot of fuss, thought Wulfe, to see monsters I’ve had more than enough of, but he kept

pushing all the same, moving as if on autopilot.

A few rows from the front, he found himself standing next to Siegler and Holtz.

“There you are,” he said. “Where’s Metzger?”

“Gone for a walk,” Siegler answered. “Said this was bloody stupid.”

Wulfe turned to Beans and said, “Which should tell you that Metzger is the smart one.”

“I resent that,” said Siegler looking genuinely insulted.

“Me, too,” protested Holtz.

“Don’t kid yourselves,” Wulfe told them with a grin.

“Who’s the kid?” Holtz asked, turning a scowl on Beans.

“This is Beans,” said Wulfe. “He farts a lot.”

“Hey!” protested Beans, but he caught a look in Wulfe’s eye and laughed.

“Holtz,” said Wulfe, “you and I need to have a word. Come with me. Beans, stay here with

Siegler.”

“Right, sarge,” said Beans.

Wulfe and Holtz broke from the group around the cages and moved off to stand at the side of an

old storage building. Together, they leaned back against the pitted sandstone bricks. Holtz reached

into his hip pocket, pulled out a smoke and placed it between his lips.

Wulfe decided not to mince words. “You’re getting your own command, Piter. Effective

immediately. Van Droi thought I should tell you myself.”

The lho-stick fell from Holtz’s gaping jaw to the ground at his feet.

“You’re pulling my leg!” he said.

“I’m not.”

“By the Eye,” gasped Holtz. “My own crate? You mean that Beans kid is taking over on the

main gun?”

“Got it in one,” said Wulfe. “The lieutenant rates him. He scored high in the standard tests.

Apparently he’s a good shot. But that’s not the point. This isn’t about Beans. It’s about you.”

Holtz barked out a laugh. “There’s a hell of a difference between being a good shot on the

practice course and being a good shot in combat. What if he gets the jinks?”

It was a legitimate concern. Wulfe had known other crews that had taken on a new man only to

have him suffer the jinks. It was a nervous condition characterised by sever twitches and spasms,

and it seemed to be brought on by the noise of the main gun or the impact of heavy enemy fire on

the tank’s armour. Once a trooper contracted the jinks, he was as good as useless on the battlefield.

It took some men years to recover. Others never did.

“You’re not listening, Holtz. Forget about Beans. I’ll deal with him. He’ll be fine. We’re talking

about you. We’re talking about commanding a tank.”

“What’s to say?” said Holtz. “Show me a man in this regiment who doesn’t want his own crate!”

Something in Holtz’s voice didn’t manage to convince Wulfe.

“Come on, Piter,” he said. “Some men are happier taking orders than giving them out. I

sometimes wish—”

“Which crate?” asked Holtz, talking over him. “And why now?”

“It’s Rhaimes’ tank, Old Smashbones. She’s a good, solid machine. Hell of a service record.

Rhaimes is sick with the fines. It’s serious. Van Droi is treating this as permanent. Says you might

make sergeant if you do your duty.”

97

Holtz bent down, picked up the lho-stick at his feet, blew red dust off it, and popped it back

between his lips.

Talking around it, he said, “Rhaimes. Damn. I’d rather be replacing someone else. His crew

aren’t gonna like this much. Don’t expect I’ll get a very warm welcome.”

“They’re a young crew. New meat. They didn’t have much time with Rhaimes, so you should be

all right. Besides, they need someone with plenty of combat experience and the stones to get them

through whatever’s coming. If not you, then who?”

Holtz had no answer for that. He was too busy processing it all.

“Anyway,” said Wulfe. “Your new crew is in A-barracks, so you won’t need to move your stuff

far. General deViers is supposed to arrive tomorrow. You won’t have much time to get to know

them before we roll out, so you’d best start now.”

Holtz nodded, unable to hide a degree of nerves. The side of his face that looked like hashed

grox barely moved anymore, and showed little emotion, but Wulfe had had enough practice in

reading the other half to know that Holtz saw the announcement for the mixed bag it was.

“Just remember,” Wulfe told him, “you’ve been through much more than they have. You’re in

charge. Tank men live or die by the decisions of their commander.”

“No pressure, then,” Holtz replied with literally half a grin. “Only joking, sarge. I appreciate

your confidence. If it’s all the same to you, though, I’ll head to the motor pool first. Make a bit of a

farewell to Last Rites II and introduce myself to the new girl.”

“Sounds like a plan,” said Wulfe, clapping his friend on the shoulder. He returned Holtz’s brief

salute, and then watched him walk off in the direction of the motor pool, wishing him all the luck in

the galaxy. Command was hard on any man, but far harder on those new to it. The lives of the crew

and the survival of each precious war machine were heavy burdens to bear. Sometimes, Wulfe

envied the men under his command. He remembered the freedom that came with being on the

bottom rung of the ladder, of having someone else make most of your decisions for you. It was a

good place to be when you had good officers. Wulfe trusted van Droi that way, and knew that van

Droi, in turn, trusted Colonel Vinnemann, but the chain of command went much higher than that.

Major General Bergen had a good reputation, but was it justified? It was hard to tell. Officers at

such a senior level were so distant.

All Wulfe could say for sure was that command would be hard on Piter Holtz. At least in the

early days. He would sink, or he would swim. It was as simple as that.

Wulfe walked back over to the soldiers jostling around the cages, noting how the crowd had

thinned further now that others had begun drifting away. It took much less effort to get to the front

of the crowd where he found Siegler and Beans talking animatedly about the creatures in front of

them.

The ferocity of the imprisoned orks was impressive given their pitiful condition. The two

monsters sat in their steel cages, legs reduced to tattered stumps, bellowing and spitting at the

smaller, weaker humans that surrounded them. Beans was stepping in towards the cages to get a

closer look when Wulfe grabbed him by the back of the collar and said, “No you don’t, trooper. This

is close enough.”

The new gunner looked disappointed and perhaps a little angry, but he said nothing, merely

stepping back into line with all the other men. From the same distance, Wulfe eyed the greenskins

coldly. One was larger than the other, though not by much. Its skin was a darker brown, too. Both

had the nightmare features that had been burned into Wulfe’s brain since his first encounter with

their kind: tiny nose, deeply-sunken red eyes, wide jaws rimmed with razor-sharp fangs. Their hides

looked as hard and coarse as an adult carnotaur’s, covered in red dust, lined with cracks. On their

massive shoulders, great patches of dead skin were peeling away. They looked as dry as the desert.

So Golgotha is not being particularly kind to them either, Wulfe thought, though I notice the

blasted ticks don’t bother them. I wonder why.

98

Wulfe’s first deployment as a tanker had been as part of the operation to defend Phaegos II

against ork incursions from the Ghoul Stars. That was more than twenty years ago, a different time,

a different segmentum, and here he was still fighting the same foe, still losing more friends to them

each time they clashed. It sometimes seemed as if all mankind’s efforts, all the blood spilled, all the

battles won, all of it might count for nothing at all. In galactic terms, had anything really changed?

Had anything he had done ever made a blind bit of difference?

Dangerous thoughts, he cautioned himself. If every Guardsman doubted the necessity of his

actions, the Imperium would crumble and die. Of course he had made a difference. He had killed

thousands of mankind’s foes in his time. If every man in the Guard accounted for the same number,

the green tide would surely be overcome someday.

Wulfe wanted to believe that, he really did, but it was a struggle. For every victory in the history

books, how many losses went unpublicised?

As he studied the darker of the two orks, his eyes locked with the creature’s. Immediately

perceiving a challenge, it began roaring at him and hammering its head against the bars of its cage.

It grunted and hissed and bellowed at him in what Wulfe supposed was the orkish language.

Commissar Yarrick, the stories said, could understand this bestial gibberish, but Wulfe had never

met anyone else who could. No one ever admitted as much, anyway. It was a horrible sound,

something wild canids might make as they guzzled meat from a fresh kill, but there was definitely a

syntax in there, however unrefined. Wulfe instinctively knew that he was hearing language.

With the force of its violent motions, the dark-skinned ork’s wounds had begun to bleed again,

but the flow was slow. The blood that oozed out was thick and sticky. Wulfe thought he understood

why. It was the low availability of water here. It changed the blood of those that lived in the desert,

making it clot far more quickly: a water-conservation mechanism, a survival mechanism, and that

wasn’t the only gift the hard desert life had given the greenskins. These two orks were distinctly

different from those he had encountered before. They were leaner, almost wiry by greenskin

standards, though still far larger and more powerful-looking than any human. Somehow, they

seemed faster and all the more deadly because of it.

He was about to turn away, to lead Siegler and Beans off at last, when someone began shouting

from the rear of the crowd.

“Make way! Make way at once, you damned fools.”

There was no mistaking the cold, crisp voice. Wulfe knew that it was Crusher even before he

saw the stiff peak of the man’s black cap moving towards him over the heads of the others.

Crusher violently thrust his way to the front row.

“Commissar Slayte,” said Wulfe with a nod. “Come to view the exhibits?”

“Hardly, sergeant,” hissed the commissar, clocking Wulfe’s stripes. “I’m here to put a bloody

stop to this nonsense.”

The commissar swept back the folds of his long black coat and drew a bolt pistol from the

holster at his thigh. The motion was smooth, well-practiced. Wulfe knew what was coming. He

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