饭饭TXT > 海外名作 > 《Double Eagle(科幻战争)》作者:[英]Dan Abnett【完结】 > 《Double Eagle》书香门第.txt

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作者:英-Dan Abnett 当前章节:15367 字 更新时间:2026-6-15 18:51

“Major Scalter. So where does this leave us?”

Eads sat forward, his hands on his knees. “Enric’s not the one you’re looking for, commander,”

he said.

“Why not?” Darrow asked sharply. “I’m sorry, sir,” he added, adjusting his tone. “Why not,

sir?”

Eads addressed his answer to Jagdea. “He’s barely a cadet, Jagdea! His combat hours are

minimal. Oh, he’s got talent. But that one dogfight? It was luck. He got very lucky indeed. If you

send him into combat now, he will die. He’s not ready. My recommendation would be an act of

murder.”

Darrow rose to his feet. “I disagree, sir.”

“It’s not up to you, Enric,” Eads said.

“Isn’t it?” Jagdea asked.

“How will I ever be ready if I don’t get the experience?” Darrow said.

“This is not the time,” said Eads.

“Oh, I think there’s no time like it,” said Jagdea. “Enothis needs all her pilots for this war,

Commander Eads. If men like Darrow don’t try, then there may not be a future available for other

chances.”

“I won’t have his blood on my conscience,” said Eads emphatically. “I will not recommend

him.”

Jagdea looked at Darrow. “I think it’s up to an individual wing leader to decide if she needs a

man to be recommended before she takes him. Your objection is noted, commander, and your

loyalty in trying to protect him is admirable. Cadet Darrow, I’m offering you that place. Will you

take it?”

“Yes, commander. Gladly.” Darrow looked over at Eads. “I’m sorry, sir.”

Jagdea got to her feet and collected her folder. “You’ll have to report immediately, Darrow. You

can come with me now.”

171

They walked to the hatch. In the doorway, Darrow turned and saluted crisply. “Call that a

salute?” Eads said.

“Yes, sir.”

Eads rose to his feet stiffly, and then saluted back. “That’s a salute,” he said, and sat down again.

“Good luck, son. Prove me wrong.”

Darrow followed Jagdea down the passageways to one of the main staircases. They clattered up

the stone steps, side by side. “You alright?” she asked him.

“Yes, mamzel. I’m very fond of the commander. It’s sad to see him upset like that.”

“You know he was only trying to protect you, don’t you?” Jagdea said.

“Yes, but I think there was something more,” said Darrow. “These last few weeks, he’s lost

everything. His command, many of his men and his friends, then the base itself, and all his

possessions with it. I think my company was the last thing he had to hold onto.”

“This is war,” said Jagdea. “War calls for sacrifices.”

172

DAY 269

Lucerna AB, 06.30

“This way, gentlemen,” Jagdea called, walking out into the middle of the hangar three deckway. The

four aviators followed her, wearing their flight armour, carrying their helmets. Viltry, Kaminsky,

Scalter and Darrow. The latter looked especially nervous. “Relax,” Scalter whispered.

Jagdea stopped beside the ranks of parked planes. “We have no time for proper induction.

Apparently, there’s a war on or something.”

The crew laughed.

“This is an orientation flight, a shake-down. It’s the best we can do to get you used to the feel of

the real thing before we start hitting combat. When I say you, I mean Mr Darrow, Mr Scalter and Mr

Kaminsky. Mr Viltry has already been on one sortie. But I figure the more flying time he can get in

a Bolt, the better. Zemmic and I will be flying chaperone. Follow my lead. Any questions?”

“Commander?” said Scalter. “What with the pink feathers you all wear?”

“Lucky feathers!” Cordiale called out. The rest of the Umbra pilots were waiting by the birds.

He came forward, stuffed a hand in the pocket of his flight pants and produced several more which

he handed out to the newbies. They put them on their lapels dubiously.

“Right,” said Jagdea. “Lucky feathers. That’s got the important stuff out of the way. Let’s mount

up.”

“Are we scraping the barrel or what?” Marquall whispered to Ranfre. “Two Commonwealth nohopers,

one of them a kid, that poisonous cripple, and a Marauder pilot who’s been through the

ringer. I mean, he’s got that look in his eyes.”

“Viltry did pretty damn well yesterday,” Ranfre said.

“Even so,” said Marquall. Viltry’s score from the previous day still irked him.

Primers began to crackle and fire the engines on the six planes. Scalter settled into his cockpit

and ran his hands around the edges of it with a grin on his face. Kaminsky allowed the fitter to

fasten his harness, then used his good hand to fix his prosthetic around the stick.

“Okay, sir?” said Racklae.

“The usual nerves.”

Racklae leaned into the cockpit, strapped the speaker phone for the voice system around

Kaminsky’s neck, then plugged its trailing leads into the instrument panel on his left.

“Comfortable?”

Kaminsky settled his mask and nodded. Racklae closed the canopy.

Darrow’s heart was bearing fast. He kept licking his lips. Nothing was how he had imagined it.

The weight of the kit on his body, the sound of the Lightning engines, the smell of the cockpit as he

lowered himself in.

One of the fitters patted his own ears and Darrow nodded, switching on the vox and testing it.

“This is Umbra Leader, let me know you’re ready.”

“Lead, this is Ten, ready.”

“Thank you, Zemmic. I assumed you were.”

“Leader, this is Umbra Four. I’m all set,” voxed Viltry.

“Umbra Five, Leader,” called Kaminsky. “Ready to lift.”

“Umbra Seven, check, Leader,” Scalter said.

173

“This is Umbra Nine, Umbra Lead,” Darrow said. “Systems clear. I am ready.”

The deck officers waved them go, and ducked down.

“Flight, go to lift,” Jagdea voxed.

The Thunderbolts’ engine pitch increased sharply as they rose into the air.

“Launch to forward flight,” Jagdea instructed.

The flight rushed up and away out of the hangar mouth and into the sky, lifting their landing

gear.

Jagdea turned them right, across the atolls, and they spent a while practising formation flying

and basic manoeuvres.

Then she started to push them a little harder. Fast ascents, rolls and power dives.

“Keep looking around you, flight,” Jagdea voxed. “Get in the habit of checking both auspex and

visual on a regular basis. And get used to what you can’t see from your canopy as much as what you

can. Learn how to compensate, how to pitch your plane to get a better view.”

After ninety minutes, she chose a small, uninhabited atoll near the edge of the island chain.

“Line up, flight,” she said. “I want each one of you to test his weapons. To feel how they affect

the airframe. Zemmic and Viltry can sit this one out.”

Scalter went in first: a long, low dive, and raked the rock, both las and then quad.

“Good aim,” said Jagdea.

“Throne, it really shakes the plane,” Scalter observed, banking away.

“You next, Umbra Nine.”

“Copy that, Lead,” Darrow responded. He switched on his gunsight and armed his weapons with

quick, assured flicks. Then he pushed the stick and swung down into a dive. Water and rocky

outcrops flashed by under him. He set the sight reticule on the rock, closed to range, then fired his

las. The shots streaked ahead of him and he saw the fluff of impacts. He toggled to cannons and

chattered off a burst, then brought his bird up.

“Excellent, Nine. Little high with las, but the cannon was good. You might want to calibrate

your gunsight down a few points.”

“Copy that, Leader.”

“Umbra Five? You’re up.”

Kaminsky acknowledged and began his run on the target atoll. With his left hand, he threw the

arming switch and turned the weapon system on, then returned his grip to the throttle. The sight was

in.

“Fire!” he said.

The lascannons blasted.

“Select! Fire! Fire!”

Now the quads blasted, twitching the machine’s track. Kaminsky rolled off the target and started

to climb out, disarming his gun system. “Racklae’s little toy seems to work,” he said.

“Very nice,” Jagdea voxed.

She let all three of them do it again a few times, then pulled the whole flight up to five thousand.

“We’ll swing wide on three-three-two and then turn for home,” she voxed.

They’d been going for ten minutes, and Jagdea was about to call the turn, when Zemmic called.

“Auspex contact,” he reported.

“I’m watching it,” Jagdea said.

In another ten seconds, they could make out the flash and smoke of a dogfight ten or fifteen

kilometres to the north-west, out over the sea.

“Operations, Operations,” Jagdea called. “This is Umbra training. What are you showing in our

vicinity?”

174

“Umbra Leader, mass intercept underway on a bomber stream. Suspected escort cover. Advise

you push it home and clear the area.”

“Acknowledged, Operations,” said Jagdea. “Umbra Flight, what you can see has nothing to do

with us today. We’re turning for home. Come about, bearing—”

“Break! Break!” Viltry was shouting.

Jagdea and Zemmic broke at once, Viltry and Kaminsky going the other way. Scalter and

Darrow were taken by surprise, but began to turn out the moment they saw the formation scatter.

Jagdea looped up in time to see three Razors run clean through the parted formation. Escort

cover no doubt, taking a pop at them.

She engaged. “Zemmic, stick with me. Guns live. The rest of you, pick up Lucerna beacon and

follow it home now!”

Jagdea and Zemmic burned after the bats, but they were already breaking. She scanned her

auspex frantically, and saw one of the Razors descending through the light cloud. She stooped after

it.

It dropped to under a thousand metres, then turned up again sharply. Jagdea saw passing shots

slip by her wing and realised she’d picked up another of them.

“On him!” Zemmic voxed.

Umbra Ten rolled in on the second bat’s tail and fired three bursts of quad. The Razor caught

fire and went into a screaming climb that ended three thousand metres above them in an expanding

fireball.

Jagdea was chasing the other bat when she heard Scalter on the vox.

“He just went right over us! Break! Break!” The third bat must have found the trainees.

The four Thunderbolts had split, and now Darrow couldn’t see the hostile at all. The only

aircraft in sight was Viltry’s, three hundred metres down to his right.

Darrow’s skin crawled. Eads was right. He wasn’t ready and now, as soon as he’d got into the

air, he was going to be killed.

He saw a flash and looked left. Scalter’s bird was climbing and trying to evade. The Razor was

on his tail, firing.

“Break! Break!” he heard Viltry shouting.

Kaminsky’s Thunderbolt swept in out of the clouds, guns crackling. His shots went wide, but

they were enough to check the bat and allow Scalter to break and dive out. The bat went over

Kaminsky, then managed to viff round. Within seconds, Kaminsky had got the bat on his six.

Two shots crashed into Kaminsky’s wing.

“Dammit!” he cursed, imagining the disappointment on Blansher’s face.

Instinctively, feeling it now, he eased the vector thrust, and to his delight, the bat overshot him

and started to turn.

Darrow saw it. He’d already turned his gunsight and weapons on.

It was trying to extend, its sport denied by the four pilots. Darrow opened the throttle and gave

chase, following its attempts to evade. He let the sights roll through it…

Lock.

He fired.

The bat blew up. Just like that. A vivid backdraft of flame and flying scrap.

Jagdea saw an aerial explosion underlight the clouds ahead and screamed in rage. She let the bat

she was chasing pull out and flee, and raced towards the flash.

“Flight? Flight? What was that?” she voxed.

“Hello, Leader,” she heard Viltry respond. “That was Darrow making his first kill.”

Lucerna AB, 10.20

175

They’d all made a big fuss, which had made Darrow blush. All of them, that is, except the young

pilot called Marquall, who just looked sick or something.

Darrow stood by his Thunderbolt in the hangar for a long while, just staring at it.

He could do this. Starting tomorrow, he was going to be flying and killing for Enothis and the

Emperor.

He felt certain that after a day or two, he’d begin to get a real feel for it.

Natrab Echelon Aerie, Theda, 19.10

The Imperial city was burning.

From the deck of the giant carrier which now occupied a headland above the sea, a site that had

once been an enemy air-base, Flight Warrior Khrel Kas Obarkon gazed upon what the forces of the

Anarch had wrought.

The sky had turned black, and the flames from the burning habs were stark and red. The sea

itself glowed amber with their reflection.

Overhead, the echelons of war machines flew past, gleaming in the firelight. He listened to the

lusty purr of their engines and smiled. As much as his woven face would allow him to, anyway.

His litter carriage awaited. The slaves abased themselves as he stepped into it, then earned him

down into the deck space of the giant aerie.

In their hundreds, the other senior echelon leaders and flight warriors had gathered. The bronze

horns were sounding and the kettle drums beating. Obarkon drew back the silk drapes of his litter

and greeted the nearest of his fellows. Sacolther, his armour engraved like alabaster. Coruz Shang,

clad in chrome, his fingers sheathed in golden claws. Nazarike Komesh, echelon ace, impassive

behind his green visor.

The drums and horns fell silent, and there was only the expectant murmur of the company. In the

centre of the great chamber, the giant hololith projector rippled into life, projecting a translucent

blue image ten metres into the air. The flight warriors howled in adoration, their augmetic voices

shaking the hangar’s rune-scribed walls.

The image was of a face. Obarkon thought the face quite beautiful, though it also terrified him.

He knew it was appearing simultaneously on every other mass carrier and command base in the

conquered southlands. Hundreds of thousands of warriors, echelon chieftains, Blood Pact officerlords

and death-priests were all seeing it, and worshipping it.

But as usual, Obarkon felt it was looking directly and only at him.

The face of Anakwaner Sek, Magister Warlord, great and awesome Anarch, sworn lieutenant of

the mighty Urlock Gaur himself, began to speak.

“Tomorrow,” it boomed. “The day of days. Who will find blood in the air?”

“We will!” they howled as one.

“Prepare! And let the enemy fall in flames!”

176

GOOD FLYING

THE BATTLE OF THE

ZOPHONIAN SEA

Imperial year 773.M41, day 270

177

DAY 270

Lucerna AB, 05.01

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