"Niven, Larry - Nova Weather" - читать интересную книгу автора (Niven Larry)The sparse Tuesday night crowd was gathered mostly around the piano bar. A customer had the mike. He was singing some half-familiar song in a wavering weak voice, while the black pianist grinned and played a schmaltzy background.
I ordered two Irish coffees and a Pink Lady. At Leslie's questioning look I only smiled mysteriously. How ordinary the Red Barn felt. How relaxed; how happy. We held hands across the table, and I smiled and was afraid to speak. If I broke the spell, if I said the wrong thing . . . The drinks arrived. I raised an Irish coffee glass by the stem. Sugar, Irish whiskey, and strong black coffee, with thick whipped cream floating on top. It coursed through me like a magical potion of strength, dark and hot and powerful. The waitress waved back my money. "See that man in the turtleneck, there at the end of the piano bar? He's buying, "she said with relish. "He came in two hours ago and handed the bartender a hundred-dollar bill." So that was where all the happiness was coming from. Free drinks! I looked over, wondering what the guy celebrating. A thick-necked, wide-shouldered man in a turtleneck he sat hunched over into himself, with a wide bar glass clutched tight in one hand. The pianist offered him the mike, and he waved it by, the gesture giving me a good look at his face. A square, strong face, now drunk and miserable and scared. He was ready to cry from fear. So I knew what he was celebrating. Leslie made a face. "They didn't make the Pink Lady right." There's one bar in the world that makes a Pink Lady the way Leslie likes it, and it isn't in Los Angeles. I passed her the other Irish coffee, grinning an I-told-you-so grin. Forcing it: The other man's fear was contagious. She smiled back lifted her glass and said, "To the blue moonlight." I lifted my glass to her, and drank. But it wasn't the toast I would have chosen. The man in the turtleneck slid down from his stool. He moved carefully toward the door, his course slow and straight as an ocean liner cruising into dock. He pulled the door wide, and turned around, holding it open, so that the weird blue-white light streamed past his broad black silhouette. Bastard. He was waiting for someone to figure it out, to shout out the truth to the rest. Fire and doom -- "Shut the door!" someone bellowed. "Time to go," I said softly. "What's the hurry?" The hurry? He might speak! But I couldn't say that . . . Leslie put her hand over mine. "I know. I know. But we can't run away from it, can we?" A fist closed hard on my heart. She'd known, and I hadn't noticed? The door closed, leaving the Red Barn in reddish dusk. The man who had been buying drinks was gone. "Oh, God. When did you figure it out?" "Before you came over," she said. "But when I tried to check it out, it didn't work." "Check it out?" "I went out on the balcony and turned the telescope on Jupiter. Mars is below the horizon these nights. If the sun's gone nova, all the planets ought to be lit up like the moon, right?" "Right. Damn." I should have thought of that myself. But Leslie was the stargazer. I knew some astrophysics, but I couldn't have found Jupiter to save my life. |
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