"Christopher Moore - The Lust Lizard of Melancholy Cove" - читать интересную книгу автора (Moore Christopher)

THE LUST LIZARD OF MELANCHOLY COVE
by CHRISTOPHER MOORE (1999)


[VERSION 1.1 (Apr 29 04). If you find and correct errors in the text, please
update the version number by 0.1 and redistribute.]


Prolog

September in Pine Cove is a sigh of relief, a nightcap, a long-deserved
nap. Soft autumn light filters through the trees, the tourists go back to Los
Angeles and San Francisco, and Pine Cove's five thousand residents wake up to
discover that they can once again find a parking place, get a table in a
restaurant, and walk the beaches without being conked by an errant Frisbee.
September is a promise. Rain will come at last and turn the golden
pastures around Pine Cove green, the tall Monterey pines that cover the hills
will stop dropping their needles, the forests of Big Stir will stop burning,
the grim smile developed over the summer by the waitresses and clerks will
bloom into something resembling real human expression, children will return to
school and the joy of old friends, drugs, and weapons that they missed over
the summer, and everyone, at last, will get some rest.
Come September, Theophilus Crowe, the town constable, lovingly dips the
sticky purple buds from his sensimilla plants. Mavis, down at the Head of the
Slug Saloon, funnels her top-shelf liquors back into the well from whence they
came. The tree service guys, with their chain saws, take down the dead and
dying pines lest they crash through someone's roof with the winter storms.
Woodpiles grow tall and wide around Pine Cove homes and the chimney sweep goes
to a twelve-hour workday. The sunscreen and needless souvenir shit shelf at
Brine's Bait, Tackle, and Fine Wines is cleared and restocked with candles,
flashlight batteries, and lamp oil. (Monterey pine trees have notoriously
shallow root systems and an affinity for falling on power lines.) At the Pine
Cove Boutique, the hideous reindeer sweater is marked up for winter to await
being marked back down for the tenth consecutive spring.
In Pine Cove, where nothing happens (or at least nothing has happened for
a long time), September is an event: a quiet celebration. The people like
their events quiet. The reason they came here from the cities in the first
place was to get away from things happening. September is a celebration of
sameness. Each September is like the last. Except for this year.
This year three things happened. Not big things, by city standards, but
three things that coldcocked the beloved status quo nonetheless: forty miles
to the south, a tiny and not very dangerous leak opened in a cooling pipe at
the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant; Mavis Sand advertised in Songwriter
magazine for a Blues singer to play through the winter at the Head of the Slug
Saloon; and Bess Leander, wife and mother of two, hung herself.
Three things, omens if you will. September is a promise of what is to
come.


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