"Robert McCammon - Doom City" - читать интересную книгу автора (McCammon Robert R) DOOM CITY
by Robert R. McCammon He awakened with the memory of thunder in his bones. The house was quiet. The alarm clock hadnтАЩt gone off. Late for work! he realised, struck by a bolt of desperate terror. But no, no ... wait a minute; he blinked the fog from his eyes and his mind gradually cleared too. He could still taste the onions in last nightтАЩs meatloaf. Friday night was meatloaf night. Today was Saturday. No office work today, thank God. Ah, he thought, settle down ... settle down ... Lord, what a nightmare heтАЩd had! It was fading now, all jumbled up and incoherent but leaving its weird essence behind like a snakeskin. ThereтАЩd been a thunderstorm last night тАУ Brad was sure of that, because heтАЩd awakened to see the garish white flash of it and to hear the gut-wrenching growl of a real boomer pounding at the bedroom wall. But whatever the nightmare had been, he couldnтАЩt recall it now; he felt dizzy and disorientated, like heтАЩd just stepped off a carnival ride gone crazy. He did recall that heтАЩd sat up and seen that lightning, so bright it had made his eyes buzz blue in the dark. And he remembered Sarah saying something too, but now he didnтАЩt know what it was ... looked down on Baylor Street. Damn, that light looks strange. Not like June at all. More like a white, winter light. Ghostly. Kind of made his eyes hurt a little. Brad got out of bed and walked across the room. He pushed aside the white curtain and peered out, squinting. What appeared to be a grey, faintly luminous fog hung in the trees and over the roofs of the houses on Baylor Street. It looked like the colour had been sucked out of everything, and the fog lay motionless for as far as he could see up and down the street. He looked up, trying to find the sun. It was up there somewhere, burning like a dim bulb behind dirty cotton. Thunder rumbled in the distance, and Brad Forbes said, тАЬSarah? Honey? Take a look at this.тАЭ She didnтАЩt reply, nor did she stir. He glanced at her, saw the wave of her brown hair above the sheet that was pulled up over her like a shroud. тАЬSarah?тАЭ he said again, and took a step towards the bed. And suddenly Brad remembered what sheтАЩd said last night, when heтАЩd sat up in a sleepy daze to watch the lightning crackle. IтАЩm cold, IтАЩm cold. He grasped the edge of the sheet and pulled it back. A skeleton with tendrils of brittle brown hair attached to its skull lay where his wife had been sleeping last night. The skeleton was wearing SarahтАЩs pale blue night-gown, and what looked like dried-up pieces of tree bark тАУ skin, he realised, yes ... her ... skin тАУ lay all around, on and between the white bones. The teeth grinned, |
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