"Niven, Larry - Nova Weather" - читать интересную книгу автора (Niven Larry)"Strange. I'm buzzed," I said.
Buzzed! I hadn't even heard the word in fifteen years. In high school we'd smoked to get that buzz, that quasi-drunkenness produced by capillaries constricting in the brain. The buzz had stopped coming after the first few times, but we'd kept smoking, most of us . . . I put it out. The waitress was picking up our sundaes. Hot and cold, sweet and bitter: there is no taste quite like that of a hot fudge sundae. To die without tasting it again would have been a crying shame. But with Leslie it was a thing, a symbol of all rich living. Watching her eat was more fun than eating myself. Besides . . . I'd killed the cigarette to taste the ice cream. Now, instead of savoring the ice cream, I was anticipating Irish coffee. Too little time. Leslie's dish was empty. She stage-whispered, "Aahh!" and patted herself over the navel. A customer at one of the small tables began to go mad. I'd noticed him coming in. A lean scholarly type wearing sideburns and steel-rimmed glasses, he had been continually twisting around to look out at the moon. Like others at other tables, he seemed high on a rare and lovely natural phenomenon. Then he got it. I saw his face changing, showing suspicion, then disbelief, then horror, horror and helplessness. "Let's go," I told Leslie. I dropped quarters on the counter and stood up. "Don't you want to finish yours?" "Nope. We've got things to do. How about some Irish coffee?" "And a Pink Lady for me? Oh, look!" She turned full around. The scholar was climbing up on a table. He balanced, spread wide his arms and bellowed, "Look out your windows!" "You get down from there!" a waitress demanded, jerking emphatically at his pants leg. "The world is coming to an end! Far away on the other side of the sea, death and hellfire --" But we were out the door, laughing as we ran. Leslie panted, "We may have -- escaped a religious -- riot in there!" I thought of the ten I'd left under my plate. Now it would please nobody. Inside, a prophet was shouting his message of doom to all who would hear. The gray-haired woman with the glowing eyes would find the money and think: They knew it too. [+ + +] Buildings blocked the moon from the Red Barn's parking lot. The street lights and the indirect moonglare were pretty much the same color. The night only seemed a bit brighter than usual. I didn't understand why Leslie stopped suddenly in the driveway. But I followed her gaze, straight up to where a star burned very brightly just south of the zenith. "Pretty," I said. She gave me a very odd look. There were no windows in the Red Barn. Dim artificial lighting, far dimmer than the queer cold light outside, showed on dark wood and quietly cheerful customers. Nobody seemed aware that tonight was different from other nights. |
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