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Dinosaur Carnage. Dinosaur Apocalypse, #11
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- FormatePub
- ISBN978-1-393-08768-7
- EAN9781393087687
- Date de parution06/07/2020
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurRelay Publishing
Résumé
By the time I'd established a camp in the covered breezeway of the Luxor obelisk-"Cleopatra's Needle" it was called, at least according to a bronze placard on its wall-and bound her hands and feet, the sun had set and a slight rain had started to fall; something I fully welcomed after so much time in the desert. As to whether the girl welcomed it also, who could say. For even though I set her near the opening (as well as the fire) and provided her my own bedroll to sit on, she only continued to glare-probably due to us eating in front of her; for I had decided, though you might think it cruel, that I would starve her into speaking, if necessary.
Which, of course, she finally did-speak, that is-although only after a considerable time, saying, hoarsely, yet clearly, assertively, "Is this some kind of torture? I mean, don't you have to feed prisoners before killing them? Isn't that what the Geneva Convention says?" I looked at her through the flames, saying nothing, even as Kesabe snarled. At length I carved a piece of meat from the spit and dropped it on a paper plate, which I carried around to her-but didn't hand over.
Instead, I knelt and sliced off a single bite-sized morsel-then held it close to her nose. "Trade, " I said, matter-of-factly. "One bite per something about you. It can be your name. Where you're from. How you've survived ... Just talk."
Which, of course, she finally did-speak, that is-although only after a considerable time, saying, hoarsely, yet clearly, assertively, "Is this some kind of torture? I mean, don't you have to feed prisoners before killing them? Isn't that what the Geneva Convention says?" I looked at her through the flames, saying nothing, even as Kesabe snarled. At length I carved a piece of meat from the spit and dropped it on a paper plate, which I carried around to her-but didn't hand over.
Instead, I knelt and sliced off a single bite-sized morsel-then held it close to her nose. "Trade, " I said, matter-of-factly. "One bite per something about you. It can be your name. Where you're from. How you've survived ... Just talk."























