"Thomas M. Disch - The Shadow" - читать интересную книгу автора (Disch Thomas M)for eighteen years ever since her husband RoyтАЩs freak accident on
I-95. HeтАЩd taken the exit ramp too fast, there was ice, and the car went over the shoulder. Roy, who never used his safety belt, was catapulted forty feet and had his head laid open by the sign that set the speed limit on the ramp at 30. The Buick wasnтАЩt scratched. Angie had never learned to drive a car, so after the accident she was pretty much at a loss for how to do all those ordinary things like shopping that sheтАЩd depended on Roy for. There wasnтАЩt a grocery or convenience store anywhere within walking distance. Not that Angie ever did that much walking or would have. She got the exercise she needed out in the gardenтАФor she used to, before the accident. The neighbors joked that she was getting to be just as planted as the old Buick inside the garage. Mrs. Deaver, two houses down the street, offered to teach her to drive, but AngieтАЩs reply was a flat no thank you. She relied on her son Tom to chauffeur her anywhere she needed to go, or else a taxi. And the Shop-Rite manager, who lived at the very end of Wythe Lane, delivered her groceries to her door as a special favor, even though Shop-Rite as a general rule didnтАЩt do deliveries. So that was how sheтАЩd got along for years, eating frozen dinners and getting out of the house less and less, especially after Tom and his family moved to Tacoma. His company was leaving the area, and it was either that, Tom said, or food stamps. Once he was settled, he promised to look for a city apartment for her nearby where he lived, but that was out of the question. Angie wasnтАЩt Tacoma wasnтАЩt dangerous, but how would he know? That was ten years ago, since when Tom had managed to get back for a visit almost every year, and twice, for Christmas, heтАЩd brought his family along. She never complained. She didnтАЩt even have complaining thoughts. But her shadow did. Her shadow got to be one big knot of gloom and hungers, like a pot-bound house-plant with its roots all sickly and tangled together. Shadows are like plants. They need sunlight simply to exist. They need to feel the air stir around them. They need to feel something physicalтАФa bug will doтАФlight down from time to time and rub against them. Plants like a nice squirt of birdshit thatтАЩll leach down into their dirt, and our shadows have equivalent needs. They have hungers and daydreams and vague longings for what they think would be freedom. Usually, those daydreams come to nothing, like most peopleтАЩs, but that doesnтАЩt matter, so long as there is some kind of input. They can get along on next to nothing. TV will serve their purpose most of the time, just like for people. Shadows may not have much of a life of their own, but what they can see on TV supplies that basic lack. But Angie didnтАЩt watch much TV. Wythe Lane wasnтАЩt wired for cable, and the channels she could receive didnтАЩt show anything but foul language and violence. That would have suited her shadow fine, of course, but it was Angie who was in control of on and off. Shadows are usually helpless in that regard. |
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