饭饭TXT > 海外名作 > 《Fifteen Hours(科幻战争)》作者:[英]Mitchel Scanlon【完结】 > 《Fifteen Hours(科幻战争)》书香门第.txt

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作者:英-Mitchel Scanlon 当前章节:15437 字 更新时间:2026-6-15 17:35

the taste as he tried to summon enough spittle to clean his throat, before hawking up a greasy wad of

brown phlegm and spitting it towards the fire.

I am getting old, he thought. I’ve only been working my shift three hours now, and already I’m

exhausted. Ten years ago I seem to remember having more staying power than that.

Ten years, he thought again. Has it really been that long? Can it really have been so long since I

came to work on the corpse-pyres?

Weighed down by a sudden sadness, Troil looked around him at the place where he had spent

virtually every waking moment of his life since being press-ganged into service with the militia at

the age of sixty. He was standing on a hillside, the ground beneath his feet barren after so many

fires, surrounded on all sides by tall mounds of burning ork corpses. Through the smoke and ash he

could see other auxiliaries in masks tending to the pyres with long hooks, their figures little more

than silhouettes through the burning haze. Looking at it, he was struck once more by grief. Grief not

for the orks, but for himself. Grief for the life he had lost. Grief for his family and his loved ones

long dead. Grief for his days spent working on the corpse-pyres. Most of all though, he felt grief for

the city of Broucheroc and the horror the war had made of it.

It was a beautiful place once, this city, he thought. Not beautiful as most people think of these

things perhaps. But it was alive and vital with an energy, an industry, a character all its own. All

that is gone now though. Gone and lost for good, taken away by the war. Now it might as well be a

city of the dead.

Sighing, finding his eyes starting to water at the smoke, Troil pulled his mask down back in

place and began to walk towards the corpse-pyres to resume his labours. As he did, he spared a last

glance down the hillside towards the endless lines of other auxiliaries dragging ork bodies up the

slope towards him. He did not linger on the sight though because he expected it.

The flow of bodies for the pyres never stopped. This was Broucheroc. Here, there were always

more corpses.

“You need to put your spade here, new fish,” Bulaven said, standing over the body of a dead ork and

pressing the blade of his entrenching tool against its throat. “Next, you draw the spade head back

and forth a bit to cut through the skin. Then, you put your weight on it. Here, let me show you how

it is done.”

Standing beside him, Larn watched as Bulaven stamped down to push the sharpened spade head

partway through the thick muscles of the ork’s neck. Then, occasionally wriggling the spade around

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to slice through the worst of the tendons and break the spinal vertebrae, the big man stamped down

on the spade several more times until the creature’s head had been completely severed.

“There. You see? Granted, ork skin can be tougher than reptile hide - especially on the big ones.

But if you keep your spade head nice and sharp, and remember to let your body weight do the work,

their heads come off pretty easy. All right, new fish. Now you try one.”

In the aftermath of battle came the clean-up. Around them, while other Guardsmen tended to the

wounded or repaired the shell-damaged emplacements and militia auxiliaries carried in new

ammunition and supplies to replace those expended in the fighting, Larn and Bulaven had been

detailed to the task of beheading fallen orks. Dubiously, Larn picked an ork at random from the

dozens of bodies lying nearby and placed the sharp end of his entrenching tool across its neck.

Following Bulaven’s earlier example he drew the blade back and forth, feeling the resistance as it

cut through the skin and into flesh. Then, raising his foot he stamped down on the spade head,

pushing the blade perhaps a quarter of the way into the ork’s neck. Readjusting his position to put

more force into it he stamped again, harder this time, then again, until at the fourth blow the ork’s

head finally came free to roll away across the frozen ground.

“That’s good, new fish,” Bulaven said. “Try to make sure you are standing right over the spade

though when you stamp on it. That way you will put more of your weight behind it. It makes the

work easier and takes less effort. We have a lot more corpses to do before our job is done.”

“But why do we need to do it?” Larn said to him. “They are dead already, aren’t they?”

“Maybe,” Bulaven said. “But is always better to make sure with an ork, just to be on the safe

side. They are tough bastards. You can shoot one in the head and think he’s dead, only for him to

suddenly get up and start walking about a few hours later. Believe me, I’ve seen it happen.” Then,

noticing Larn casting worried glances at the bodies lying all around them, he smiled. “Ach, you

needn’t worry about these ones, new fish. If any of them were capable of moving, they’d be trying

to kill us by now already. We’ll have their heads off long before any of them that are still alive have

had time to heal. Then, the militia auxiliaries will take the bodies away for burning to get rid of the

spores.”

“Spores?” Larn asked.

“Oh yes, new fish. Orks grow from spores. Like mold. Leastways, that’s what Scholar says. I

can’t say I’ve ever seen it happen myself, mind. But I’m prepared to take his word for it. You should

ask him about it later. He’ll tell you all about it. You know Scholar, he loves telling people about

things.”

Apparently satisfied that Larn now knew what he was doing, Bulaven turned away quietly

whistling a cheerful tune to himself as he began to deprive more dead orks of their heads. In his

wake, Larn set to the same task of decapitation. It was gruesome and tiring work, and Larn quickly

found his boots and the spade head were stained black with viscous alien blood. Soon, he was

sweating under his helmet; the salt of his sweat irritating the head wound he had sustained during

the battle.

In the aftermath, telling him he was lucky and it was only a scalp laceration, Medical Officer

Svenk had bandaged it for him while Corporal Vladek had supplied him with a new helmet —

something for which Davir had been particularly scathing. What is it with you and helmets, new fish,

Davir had said. First, you use one to heat a gretch’s brains in. Then, you go and get yourself shot in

the head. What will you use the next one for? A soup bowl perhaps, or a planting pot for some

flowers? But, much to his own surprise, Larn found he was longer irritated by Davir’s constant

complaints and insults. He owed him a debt now. No matter how much the runtish trooper might

protest to him that it had all been a mistake, even an accident, Davir had saved his life.

Then, pausing in his work to wipe the sweat from his forehead, Larn noticed a gathering redness

in the sky. Turning to face the ork lines in the east, he saw the sun was setting. He saw it, and he

was amazed.

103

It was beautiful. Extraordinary. More breathtaking and vivid even than the sunset he had seen on

his last night at home. The sun that had so often seemed cold and distant above him had at last

grown to become a warm red orb, the sky once grey around it had transformed and given way to a

dazzling symphony in flaming shades of scarlet. Watching it, Larn found himself enraptured by

awe. Moved to the very depths of his soul, he stood there transfixed. Hypnotised. Who knew there

could ever be such a sun, he thought in wonder. Who knew there could be such beauty here? And no

sooner had that thought occurred than it seemed to him it had all been worth it. All the things he had

been through. The fear. The hardship. The danger. The isolation. All the carnage he had seen and all

the horrors he had witnessed. All of them now seemed worthwhile. As though by right of his

passage through hell he had paid the price that had allowed him this brief perfect moment of quiet

and reflection.

“Are you all right, new fish?” he heard Bulaven say beside him. “Is your head wound bothering

you? You have been standing there a long time now, just looking at the sky.”

Turning, Larn saw Bulaven facing him and felt moved to tell him about the sunset. There were

no words for his epiphany, no way to communicate what he was feeling to another. Unable to

express his emotions, for a moment he was silent. Then, seeing Bulaven staring at him in concern

and curiosity, Larn felt he should say something — anything — lest the big man should start to

think he had lost his mind.

“I was just struck by how strange this place is,” he said, forced to retreat to more commonplace

matters. “To have a sun that sets so late in winter.”

“Winter?” Bulaven asked in good-natured confusion, looking around at the frozen corpsecovered

battlefield around them. “But it is summer hereabouts, new fish. Good thing, too. In winter,

life in Broucheroc can really start to get nasty.”

104

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

23:01 hours Central Broucheroc Time

A Visitor from General Headquarters — The Reconnaissance Mission — Expressions of Disquiet

Among the Ranks — Into No-Man’s land — Alone in the Darkness

“You have done well, sergeant.” Lieutenant Karis said. “By holding out against that last assault you

have delivered a crippling blow to the activities of the orks in this sector. And you may be assured

your efforts in that regard have been recognised and will be rewarded. It is not official as yet, of

course, but between you and me I understand you are to be decorated while your unit is to receive a

citation.” In reply, Chelkar was silent. Five minutes ago he had been supervising the repairs to the

company’s defences when Grishen had voxed him with the news an officer had arrived and was

waiting to see him in the command dugout. Hurrying tiredly to meet him, Chelkar had found himself

confronted with a fresh-faced junior lieutenant, all spit-shine boots and folded creases, a swagger

stick poking out at a jaunty angle from beneath his arm. Though Chelkar had at first wondered if

Sector Command had finally got around to sending them a new CO, it quickly became apparent the

lieutenant had come here on behalf of General Headquarters. A situation that, to Chelkar’s

experience, was unlikely to bode anything but ill.

“Did you hear me, sergeant?” the lieutenant said. “They are going to give you a medal.”

“I will have to remember to put it with the other ones, lieutenant.” Chelkar said, feeling so

exhausted and bone-weary he no longer cared if his tone was properly diplomatic. “But I am sure

you didn’t come all this way and dragged me away from my duties just to tell me that.”

Stung by his bluntness, the lieutenant’s face briefly tightened into a look of displeasure. Then,

abruptly, his mood softening and becoming patently false, he adopted a more conciliatory manner.

“You are right, of course, sergeant. And may I say what a pleasure it is to hear some plain

speaking for a change. That is why I was so happy to get this chance to come to the front. Not that I

find my duties at General Headquarters in any way irksome, you understand, but at GHQ one can so

often forget the realities of frontline life in the Guard. We are soldiers, you and I. We don’t do what

we do for honours and medals. We do it selflessly in the name of duty and for the greater glory of

the Imperium.”

I don’t know what is more sickening, Chelkar thought bleakly. The fact that someone has

obviously told him an officer should try to strike up a rapport with the lower ranks, or the fact that

he is so inept and insincere in trying to do it. Why is it whenever you hear one of these rear echelon

heroes talk about selflessness you always know they are desperate to win a medal? This one’s a

glory hound, all right, you can see it in his eyes. He probably heard about some suicide mission at

GHQ and volunteered right away.

“Yes, lieutenant,” Chelkar said, hoping that at last the pipsqueak pedant before him might get to

the point. “And, talking of duty, I am assuming there is some matter with which you need my

company’s assistance?”

“Not the whole company, sergeant,” the lieutenant replied blithely. “I just need some men to

accompany me into no-man’s land on a mission towards the ork lines. A five-man fireteam to be

precise. Of course, I leave it entirely up to you which fireteam to pick. Though I have always

considered three to be a lucky number.”

105

“We will be going into no-man’s land tonight,” the lieutenant said, while Larn heard a sharp intake

of breath from the other members of the fireteam beside him. “General Headquarters wishes to

know whether the orks’ hold on their territory has been at all weakened by their recent losses.

Accordingly, we are ordered to advance by stealth to within sight of their lines and scout out their

defences and dispositions under cover of darkness. Then, we will return to our own lines before the

orks are any the wiser. A simple and straightforward enough mission, I am sure you will all agree.”

Going about their duties as the clean-up proceeded outside, Larn and the others had been

summoned to the command dugout to hear a briefing from a stiff-necked young lieutenant called

Karis. Now, standing before the sector map pinned to the wall behind him, the lieutenant pointed at

something on the map with his swagger stick as the briefing continued.

“Let me make it clear this is strictly a reconnaissance mission,” he said. “And, as such, it relies

entirely on stealth. We are not to engage the enemy unless forced to do it by the direst circumstance.

With that in mind we will maintain total light and noise discipline at all times and follow a route

through no-man’s land designed to aid us in our attempts to stay unseen. If we are spotted by scouts

or lookouts, we will attempt to dispose of them in as quick and quiet a manner as possible — only

withdrawing from no-man’s land if it is clear our mission has become untenable. Now, I think that

about covers everything. Are there any questions?”

No one answered and looking at the faces of the men about him — Davir, Bulaven, Scholar,

Zeebers — Larn saw a subtle disquiet among them. As though they were every bit as uneasy at the

prospect of a mission into no-man’s land as they had been earlier when it seemed The Big Push

might be upon them. Watching them, Larn was gripped by a sudden revelation that he realised

would have seemed quite commonplace to the others. In Broucheroc the danger never ended: there

were always new battles to fight. New ways for a man to get himself killed.

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