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iv4f3dorov про Дорнбург: Змеелов в СССР (Альтернативная история)

Очередное антисоветское гавно размазанное тонким слоем по всем страницам. Афтырь ты мудак.

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A.Stern про Штерн: Анархопокалипсис (СИ) (Фэнтези: прочее)

Господи)))
Вы когда воруете чужие книги с АТ: https://author.today/work/234524, вы хотя бы жанр указывайте правильный и прологи не удаляйте.
(Заходите к автору оригинала в профиль, раз понравилось!)

Какое же это фентези, или это эпоха возрождения в постапокалиптическом мире? -)
(Спасибо неизвестному за пиар, советую ознакомиться с автором оригинала по ссылке)

Ещё раз спасибо за бесплатный пиар! Жаль вы не всё произведение публикуете х)

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чтун про серию Вселенная Вечности

Все четыре книги за пару дней "ушли". Но, строго любителям ЛитАниме (кароч, любителям фанфиков В0) ). Не подкачал, Антон Романович, с "чувством, толком, расстановкой" сделал. Осталось только проду ждать, да...

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Влад и мир про Лапышев: Наследник (Альтернативная история)

Стиль написания хороший, но бардак у автора в голове на нечитаемо, когда он начинает сочинять за политику. Трояк ставлю, но читать дальше не буду. С чего Ленину, социалистам, эссерам любить монархию и терпеть черносотенцев,убивавших их и устраивающие погромы? Не надо путать с ворьём сейчас с декорациями государства и парламента, где мошенники на доверии изображают партии. Для ликбеза: Партии были придуманы ещё в древнем Риме для

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Влад и мир про Романов: Игра по своим правилам (Альтернативная история)

Оценку не ставлю. Обе книги я не смог читать более 20 минут каждую. Автор балдеет от официальной манерной речи царской дворни и видимо в этом смысл данных трудов. Да и там ГГ перерождается сам в себя для спасения своего поражения в Русско-Японскую. Согласитесь такой выбор ГГ для приключенческой фантастики уже скучноватый. Где я и где душонка царского дворового. Мне проще хлев у своей скотины вычистить, чем служить доверенным лицом царя

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Free Fall [Крис Грабенштайн] (fb2) читать постранично, страница - 2

- Free Fall 604 Кб, 223с. скачать: (fb2)  читать: (полностью) - (постранично) - Крис Грабенштайн

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aren’t quite dark enough to hide her fear.

And, of course, I know her.

It’s Christine Lemonopolous. One of my old girlfriend Katie Landry’s best buds.

“Christine?” I say, arching up an eyebrow, hoping for a good explanation.

Her lips quiver into what she probably hoped might end up as a smile. It doesn’t.

“Can you breathe?” I ask. “Is your airway clear?”

She nods.

“What’s this all about?” I ask.

“I didn’t do anything, Danny.”

“Liar,” snarls the other one.

“I swear on Katie’s grave.” Christine’s voice is raw and raspy. “I didn’t do anything!”

Like I said, there’s nothing worse than hearing that from an old friend.

Especially when she drags the late, great love of your life into it.

2

It’s a good thing the McMansion has so many rooms.

It’s time to separate the combatants.

The lady of the house is fuming in one corner of the sunken living room. Christine stands in the other. The boy with the phone is parked near the blizzard colored sofa, shaking his head.

I know how he feels.

“Ma’am?” I say to the woman in the designer tracksuit. “Your name, please?”

“Shona Blumenfeld Oppenheimer. Widow of Arthur Oppenheimer.”

She puts “Arthur” in italics when she says it. I guess I’m supposed to be impressed. I’m not sure why but, then again, I don’t know that many impressive people.

“Mrs. Oppenheimer,” I say, “I need you to wait in another room.”

“Why?”

“He’s separating the parties involved in the altercation,” snaps Santucci, who, I guess, paid attention in cop class that day. “It’s what we do when attempting to ascertain what happened in a dispute such as this one you two got goin’ on here.”

“You’re going to take her statement before mine?” Mrs. Oppenheimer flaps a well-toned arm toward Christine.

“No, ma’am.” I nod toward the boy. “We need to talk to your son first.”

“I’m his mother. I should be there.”

“No, ma’am. You should not.”

“He’s not well. I’m going to call my lawyer.”

I give her a confused look. “Why?”

“To make sure everything is …” I can tell she’s struggling to find the right word. “Legal!”

Found it.

“Don’t worry, it will be,” says Sal. “Officer Boyle here was trained by John Ceepak.”

“Who?” says Mrs. Oppenheimer as she and Santucci finally move out of the living room.

“Biggest overgrown Boy Scout you could ever meet. Come on, I’ll tell you all about him …”

I grin. Santucci actually handled that pretty well.

“Christine?” I say when they’re out of the room.

“Yes, Danny?”

“Your neck okay?”

“It hurts.”

“Do you want an ambulance?”

“No. I don’t think it will swell up any more.”

“How ’bout you wait in the kitchen? Maybe put some ice on it?”

“Good idea.”

She leaves and I move into the upper living room. Take a seat in a very comfy, very white chair. The boy in the wheelchair is staring at the phone in his lap. Turning it over and over.

“You’re Samuel Oppenheimer?”

“Yes, sir.”

“You feeling good enough to talk?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Great. So, you’re the one who called nine-one-one?”

“Yeah.”

“Good for you. Smart move.”

Samuel looks up. We make eye contact. “Thanks,” he says.

“So,” I say with a shrug. “What happened?”

“They got into a fight, I guess. My mom’s been sort of stressed lately.”

“What do you mean?”

“She and my nurse, Christine, have been getting on each other’s nerves. They used to be friendly. Not anymore.”

“Christine, Ms. Lemonopolous, she’s here a lot?”

“Yes, sir. She lives here.”

Oh-kay. A live-in nurse? Not sure where this is going. Christine is curvy and cute. Don’t know if she’s, you know, dating anybody or even whose team she’s playing on. So I just nod a little. Hope Samuel will give me more to work with. He does.

“Christine is just my home health aide. She doesn’t really have a place of her own, I guess, and can’t afford to find one because she quit her real job, so Mom let her stay here rent-free in exchange for helping me with my feeding tube and, you know, the seizures. She also does housecleaning, the laundry, and I guess you’d call it babysitting if Mom stays out late on a date. Stuff like that.”

“So, how long has Christine been living here with you guys?”

“About a year, maybe. I had somebody else before, but I like Christine better.”

I press on.

“So, what happened tonight?”

“I dunno. They both went totally ballistic. I was in my room. All of a sudden, I heard shouting. Then something crashed and glass shattered.”

I look to the floor. See shards of clear and green glass, not to mention a broken-off wine goblet stem.

“I rolled out here as fast as I could,” says Samuel, “and saw the two of them going at it. Christine was kicking at Mom. Mom was grabbing Christine’s throat. I told Mom to stop. She told me to, you know, ‘eff-off.’”

“That when you called nine-one-one?”

“Yeah. You guys got here fast.”

“We caught a break. We were in the neighborhood. You okay staying here tonight?”

He gives me a look. “What do you mean?”

“You sure you’ll be safe? If not, we’ve got places you could go …”

“Don’t worry. My mom isn’t going to strangle me, if that’s what you mean.”

“Okay. If you feel different, just call nine-one-one. Or, here.” I hand him one of my business cards. “Call me. I’ll come pick you up.”

Samuel cracks a grin.

“Will you turn on those sirens again?”

I grin back. “Roger that.”

Next up is Christine in the Kitchen with the Ice Pack.

We’re not playing “Clue.” She’s administering first aid to her neck wounds.

A pair of purple bruises-what Ceepak would call ligature marks-have blossomed where Mrs. Oppenheimer’s two hands used to be.

“Do you mind if I take a photo?” I say, gesturing toward her neck.

“No.”

I pull out a small digital camera.

“Can you hold your chin up a little?” I say.

Christine does.

I snap some very unflattering photos of her bloated and bruised neck.

“So, what happened?”

“We had … a disagreement.” Her voice sounds like she spent the night screaming at a Bon Jovi concert.

“About what?”

“Some issues. So, I tried to defuse the situation by walking out of the room. That’s when she attacked me.”

I don’t react to that. “So, you live here? Take care of Samuel?”

“Yes. Part-time. He needs help with his G-I tube. And seizures. I’m basically on call all night long. Sleep in the guest room closest to Samuel’s bedroom with a baby monitor. On weekends I clean the house and do the laundry. Stuff like that.”

“You still do weekdays at Mainland Medical?”

Mainland Medical is the hospital on the far side of the causeway that operates our Regional Trauma Center. It’s where the Medevac helicopter took Katie Landry when a sniper who was gunning for me shot her instead. Christine was one of Katie’s emergency room nurses.

“No,” says Christine, kind of softly. “I left Mainland a while ago.”

“Really? What happened?”

“I’d rather not talk about it, Danny. Not right now. Okay?”

“Sure,” I say. “Stay here. I need to talk to Mrs. Oppenheimer.”

“She’ll lie, Danny.”

I nod and grin. “Thanks for the tip.”

Mrs. Shona Oppenheimer and Officer Santucci are waiting for me out on one of the decks hanging off the back of the house.

“Mrs. Oppenheimer?” I say. “What happened here tonight?”

“I wanted to print out a new diet I’d found on line for my sister, but Christine was hogging the printer with paperwork related to her position with Dr. Rosen.”

“Dr. Rosen?”

“Arnold Rosen, DDS. The retired dentist who lives in that big house up in Cedar Knoll Heights. It’s still the nicest piece of shorefront property on the island. It sits atop a bit of a bluff above the dunes, so Sandy’s storm surge didn’t swamp it.”

I nod. The folks in Cedar Knoll Heights were lucky.

“Dr. Rosen is ninety-four,” Mrs. Oppenheimer continues. “Not drilling too many teeth these days.”

Santucci chuckles. Guess these two had hit if off in my absence.

“Christine