"Nina Kiriki Hoffman - Here We Come" - читать интересную книгу автора (Hoffman Nina Kiriki)NINA KIRIKI HOFFMAN
HERE WE COME A-WANDERING Matt met the moss man on Christmas Eve. She was sitting on a stone bench in a pioneer cemetery, a wall of ivy-covered brick at her back, and a brown paper bag full of past-their-expiration-date cellophane-wrapped sandwiches beside her. The short cool daylight was fading, mist breeding in the low spots and spreading. The damp in the air smelled like winter, dead leaves, iced water, chill and no comfort. Matt was glad of her thick olive-drab army jacket. She liked the look of the old mossy gravestones, some tilted and some broken, but all mute against the wet grass and vanishing distance. The people who had come here to commune with the dead had all died, too; no fresh dreams troubled the stillness. This was as close to nature as she liked to get, a tamed wilderness only a short walk away from a town where she could go to find warmth and comfort after she had had her supper. She unwrapped one of the sandwiches and sniffed it. Roast beef and yellow cheese. It smelled fine. She took a sample bite, waited to see if her stomach would tell her anything, and then ate the rest of the sandwich. The bread was dry and the edges of the cheese hard, but it was better than a lot of other Her stomach thanked her. She opened another sandwich, ham and swiss, tested it, and ate it. She was sitting and feeling her own comfort when she noticed there was some dreaming going on to her left, a quiet swirl of leafy images emerging from the layers-thick ivy on the wall. She wondered if she were seeing the dream of a plant. She had never seen a plant dream before. This seemed like a strange time to start seeing them. She turned to get a better look at the dream, and it changed. The leaves wove together into green skin, the skin smoothed and formed a man, and then a man all green stepped away from the wall, shaking his head slowly. Some texture in the sound and smell of him told her he was no dream at all. Matt grabbed the loose cellophane on the bench beside her and asked it if it would cover the man's face if she threw it. It said yes. If he came at her . . . she touched the bench she was sitting on. It was too old and sleepy to mobilize. She put her feet on the ground and tensed to run. |
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