"Barker, Clive - The Thief of Always" - читать интересную книгу автора (Barker Clive)

"It has to be something he'll never think of," Harvey said.
"That shouldn't be difficult," said Jive. "Tell me, what's your favorite monster?"
Harvey didn't have to think hard about that. "A vampire," he said with a grin. "I found this great mask-"
"Masks are a good beginning," Jive said, "but vampires need to swoop out of the mist " he spread his arms, curling his long fingers like the claws of some eye-gouging beast "-swoop down, snatch up their prey, then rise up again, up against the moon. I can see it now."
"So can I," said Harvey. "But I'm not a bat."
"So?"
"So how do I swoop?"
"Ah," said Jive. "We'll have Marr work on that for us. After all, what's a Halloween without a transformation or two?" He consulted the grandfather clock on the landing. "We've still got time to do it tonight. You go down and tell Wendell you'll meet him outside. I'll go up on to the roof and find Marr. You meet us up there."
"I've never been up on the roof."
"There's a door on the top landing. I'll see you up there in a few minutes."
"I'll have to get my mask an' coat an' stuff."
"You won't need a mask tonight," Jive said, "trust me. Now you hurry up. Time's a-wastin'."
It took Harvey only a minute or two to tell Wendell to go on ahead. He was sure Wendell suspected something, and was probably preparing some counterattack, but Harvey knew he and Jive had something up their sleeves even Wendell-expert on shock tactics though he was-couldn't anticipate. With the first part of the plan laid he hurried upstairs again, found the door Jive had mentioned, and climbed up onto the roof.
Heights had never bothered him; he liked to be up above the world looking down on it.
"Over here!" Jive called to him, and Harvey took off along the narrow walkways and up the steep roofs to where his fellow conspirator stood.
"Sure-footed!" Jive observed.
"No problem."
"How 'bout flyin'?" said a third voice, as its owner stepped from the shadows of a chimney.
"This is Marr," Jive said. "Another of our little family."
Unlike Jive who looked nimble enough to walk on the eaves if the whim took him, Marr seemed to have slug blood in her somewhere. Harvey almost expected to see her fingers leave silver trails on the brick she touched, or see soft horns appear from her balding head. She was grossly fat, her flesh barely clinging to her bones. Wherever it could-around her mouth and eyes, at her neck and wrists-it collapsed in clammy folds. She reached out and poked Harvey.
"I said: what 'bout flyin'?"
"What about it?" Harvey said, pushing her hand away.
"Done much?"
"I flew to Florida once."
"She doesn't mean in a plane," Jive told him.
"Oh..."
"In dreams maybe?" said Mart.
"Oh yeah, I dream about flying."
"That's good," Marr replied, grinning with satisfaction. She had not a single tooth in her mouth.
Harvey stared at the empty maw in disgust.
"You're wondering where they've gone, aren't you?" she said to Harvey. "Go on. Admit it."
Harvey shrugged. "Well yes. I am."
"Carna took them, the thieving brute. I had fine teeth. Beautiful teeth."
"Who's Carna?" Harvey wanted to know.
"Never mind," Jive said, hushing Marr before she could reply. "Get to it or he'll miss the moment."
Marr muttered something beneath her breath, then said: "Come to me, boy," extending her arms in Harvey's direction. Her touch was icy.
"Feels weird, huh?" said Jive, as Mares fingers floated over his face, brushing it here and there. "Don't worry. She knows what she's doin'."
"And what's that?"
"Changin' you."
"Into what?"
"You tell her," Jive said. "It won't last long, so enjoy it. Go on, tell her about being a vampire."
"That's what I want Wendell to see," Harvey said.
"A vampire..." Marr said softly, her fingers pressing harder against his skin.
"Yeah, I want to have fangs, like a wolf, and a red throat, and white skin, like I've been dead for a thousand years."
"Two thousand!" said Jive.
"Ten thousand!" said Harvey, beginning to enjoy the game. "And crazy eyes, that can see in the dark, and pointy ears, like a bat's ears-"
"Wait up!" Marr said. "I've got to get all this right."
Her fingers were working hard upon him now, as though his flesh was clay, and she was molding it. His face was tingling, and he wanted to reach up and touch it, but he was afraid of spoiling her handiwork.
"And there's got to be fur," Jive observed. "Sleek, black fur on his neck-"
Mares hands dabbled at his throat, and he felt fur sprouting where she'd touched him.