"inhuman" - читать интересную книгу автора (portable)

THE INHUMAN CONDITION

ARE YOU the one then?" Red demanded, seizing hold of the derelict by the shoulder of his squalid

gabardine.

"What one d'you mean?" the dirt-caked face replied. He was scanning the quartet of young men who'd
cornered him with rodent's eyes. The tunnel where they'd found him relieving himself was far from hope
of help. They all knew it and so, it seemed, did he. "I don't know what you're talking about."

"You've been showing yourself to children," Red said.

The man shook his head, a dribble of spittle running from his lip into the matted bush of his beard.
"I've done nothing," he insisted.

Brendan sauntered across to the man, heavy footsteps hollow in the tunnel. "What's your name?" he
inquired, with deceptive courtesy. Though he lacked Red's height and commanding manner, the scar that
inscribed Brendan's cheek from temple to jaw line suggested he knew suffering, both in the giving and the
receiving. "Name," he demanded. "I'm not going to ask you again."

"Pope," the old man muttered. "Mr. Pope."

Brendan grinned. "Mr. Pope?" he said. "Well, we heard you've been exposing that rancid little prick of
yours to innocent children. What do you say to that?"

"No," Pope replied, again shaking his head. "That's not true. I never done nothing like that." When he
frowned the filth on his face cracked like crazy paving, a second skin of grime which Was the accrual of
many months. Had it not been for the fragrance of alcohol off him, which obscured the worst of his bodily
stench, it would have been nigh on impossible to stand within a yard of him. The man was human refuse,
a shame to his species.

"Why bother with him?" Karney said. "He stinks."

Red glanced over his shoulder to silence the interruption. At seventeen, Karney was the youngest, and
in the quartet's unspoken hierarchy scarcely deserving of an opinion. Recognizing his error, he shut up,
leaving Red to return his attention to the vagrant. He pushed Pope back against the wall of the tunnel. The
old man expelled a cry as he struck the concrete; it echoed back and forth. Karney, knowing from past
experience how the scene would go from here, moved away and studied a gilded cloud of gnats on the
edge of the tunnel. Though he enjoyed being with Red and the other two-the camaraderie, the petty
larceny, the drinking-this particular game had never been much to his taste. He couldn't see the sport in
finding some drunken wreck of a man like Pope and beating what little sense was left in his deranged
head out of him. It made Karney feel dirty, and he wanted no part of it.

Red pulled Pope off the wall and spat a stream of abuse into the man's face, then, when he failed to get
an adequate response, threw him back against the tunnel a second time, more forcibly than the first,
following through by taking the breathless man by both lapels and shaking him until he rattled. Pope
threw a panicky glance up and down the track. A railway had once run along this route through Highgate
and Finsbury Park. The track was long gone, however, and the site was public parkland, popular with
early morning joggers and late-evening lovers Now, in the middle of a clammy afternoon, the track was
deserted in both directions.