"Castro, Adam Troy - Locusts" - читать интересную книгу автора (Castro Adam Troy)ADAM TROY CASTRO LOCUSTS 1. One got in just before dawn. That's when they always got in. That's when the skies just opened up with billions of them, and the thumpthumpthump of their tiny forms smashing against the house became the only sound in the known universe. That's when the few of us still left alive huddled together in Sharon's basement under an old canvas tarpaulin, spending the night as we always did, breathing each others' breath, smelling each others' sweat, feeling each others' sanity wither beneath the constant tattoo of little bodies smashing against brick walls. Then the pounding meant nothing, because all of a sudden there was a Locust flying around in the room with us, her gossamer wings making soft whispery sounds as they feather-dusted the soot from the ceiling. She made a low pass over our heads, chittering in the high-pitched rhythmic tones I'd always imagined a form of sonar, showing no sign that she sensed us as anything other than a shapeless mound below her. We might have been able to hide from her forever, had my poor deaf, blind, and mad wife Jane not chosen that moment to start screaming again, with all five of her mouths at once. "Stu!" Claudette hissed. "Stop her --" She didn't get to say anything else. The Locust strafed us, her glittering rainbow-trail neatly slicing the tarpaulin, and Claudette's neck, like tissue paper. Her blood geysered against the underside of the canvas, splattering the rest of us like hot rain. Jane just went on screaming. But by then her multiple voices were just a small part of the choir, because we were all screaming. Peter was screaming because Claudette had been his wife, and Sharon was screaming for everybody to stay calm dammit, and Bob was screaming because his shellshocked brain wasn't capable of anything else, and Nancy was screaming because she wanted everybody to know it was all Jane's fault, and I was screaming because I was scrabbling out from under the mined tarpaulin, aerosol bug spray in hand, to face the Locust before it killed the rest of us. It wasn't as dark in the basement as it should have been. The lights weren't working anymore; they hadn't worked in weeks, because nothing electrical worked anymore, not even flashlights -- but the Locust emitted a soft white halo that lit up the whole room. Her rainbow trail was already fading into intangibility where it had sliced through Claudette, but the freshest sections, immediately behind her, shimmered and sparkled like a symphony of color, lending the room around us the trippy lighting of a fever dream. It was magical and ageless and Disneyesque and deadly. |
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