Dean Koontz - Phantoms
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- Название:Phantoms
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Phantoms: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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"There's also a large restaurant divided into two rooms. One part could be a cafeteria, and we could carry mattresses down from the rooms and use the other half of the restaurant as a dorm.”
Bryce said, "Let's have a look at it.”
He put his empty paper plate on the desk and got to his feet.
Jenny glanced at the front windows. She thought of the strange creature that had flown into the glass, and in her mind she heard the soft yet frenzied thunipthumpthumpthunip.
She said, "You mean… have a look at it now?”
"Why not?”
"Wouldn't it be wise to wait for the reinforcements?" she asked.
"They probably won't arrive for a while yet. There's no point in just sitting around, twiddling our thumbs. We'll all feel better if we're doing something constructive; it'll take our minds off… the worst things we've seen.”
Jenny couldn't free herself from the memory of those black insect eyes, so malevolent, so hungry. She stared at the windows, at the night beyond. The town no longer seemed familiar.
It was utterly alien now, a hostile place in which she was an unwelcome stranger.
"We're not one bit safer in here than we would be out there," Bryce said gently.
Jenny nodded, remembering the Oxleys in their barricaded room. As she got up from the desk, she said, "There's no safety anywhere.”
Chapter 16
Out of the Dark Bryce Hammond led the way out of the stationhouse. They crossed the moonlight-mottled cobblestones, stepped through a fall of amber light from a streetlamp, and headed into Skyline Road. Bryce carried a shotgun as did Tal Whitman.
The town was breathless. The trees stood unaspiring, and the buildings were like vapor-thin mirages hanging on walls of air.
Bryce moved out of the light, walked on moon-dappled pavement, crossing the street, finding shadows scattered in the middle of it. Always shadows.
The others came silently behind him.
Something crunched under Bryce's foot, startling him. It was a withered leaf.
He could see the Hilltop Inn farther up Skyline Road. It was a four-story, gray stone building almost a block away, and it was very dark. A few of the fourth-floor windows reflected the nearly full moon, but within the hotel not a single light burned.
They had all reached or passed the middle of the street when something came out of the dark. Bryce was aware, first, of a moon shadow that fluttered across the pavement, like a ripple passing through a pool of water. Instinctively, he ducked. He heard wings. He felt something brush lightly over his head.
Stu Wargle screamed.
Bryce shot up from his crouch and whirled around.
The moth.
It was fixed firmly to Wargle's face, holding on by some means not visible to Bryce. Wargle's entire head was hidden by the thing.
Wargle wasn't the only one screaming. The others cried out and fell back in surprise. The moth was squealing, too, making a high-pitched, keening sound.
In the moon's silvery beams, the impossible insect's huge pale velvety wings flapped and folded and spread with horrible grace and beauty, buffeting Wargle's head and shoulders.
Wargle staggered away, veering downhill, moving blindly, clawing at the outrageous thing that clung to his face. His screams quickly grew muffled; within a couple of seconds, they were silenced altogether.
Bryce, like the others, was paralyzed by disgust and disbelief.
Wargle began to run, but he only went a few yards before coming to an abrupt halt. His hands dropped away from the thing on his face. His knees were buckling.
Snapping out of his brief trance, Bryce dropped his useless shotgun and ran toward Stu.
Wargle didn't crumple to the ground, after all. Instead, his shaky knees locked, and he snapped erect. His shoulders jerked back. His body twitched and shuddered as if an electric current had flashed through him.
Bryce tried to grab the moth and tear it away from Wargle.
But the deputy began to weave and thrash in a St. Virus dance of pain and suffocation, and Bryce's hands closed on empty air. Wargle moved erratically across the cement, jerked this way and that, heaved and writhed and spun, as if he were attached to strings that were being manipulated by a drunken puppeteer.
His hands hung slackly at his sides, which made his frantic and spasmodic capering seem especially eerie. His hands flopped and floundered weakly, but they did not rise to tear at his assailant.
It was almost as if, now, he were in the grip of ecstasy rather than the clutch of pain. Bryce followed him, tried to move in on him, but couldn't get close.
Then Wargle collapsed.
In that same instant, the moth rose and turned, suspended in the air, hovering on rapidly beating wings, night-black and hateful. It swooped at Bryce.
He stumbled backwards and threw his arms across his face.
He fell.
The moth sailed over his head.
Bryce twisted around, looked up.
The kite-size insect glided soundlessly across the street, toward the buildings on the other side.
Tal Whitman raised his shotgun. The blast was like cannon fire in the silent town.
The moth pitched sideways in midair. It tumbled in a loop, dropped almost to the ground, then it swooped up again and flew on, disappearing over a rooftop.
Stu Wargle was sprawled on the pavement, flat on his back.
Unmoving.
Bryce scrambled to his feet and went to Wargle. The deputy lay in the middle of the street, where there was just enough light to see that his face was gone. Jesus. Gone. As if it had been torn off. His hair and ragged ribbons of his scalp bristled over the white bone of his forehead. A skull peered up at Bryce.
Chapter 17
The Hour Before Midnight Tal, Gordy, Frank, and Lisa sat in red leatherette armchairs in a corner of the lobby of the Hilltop Inn. The inn had been closed since the end of the past skiing season, and they had removed the dusty white drop cloths from the chairs before collapsing into them, numb with shock. The oval coffee table was still covered by a dropcloth; they stared at that shrouded object, unable to look at one another.
At the far end of the room, Bryce and Jenny were standing over the body of Stu Wargle, which lay on a long, low sideboard against the wall. No one in the armchairs could bring himself to look over that way.
Staring at the covered coffee table, Tal said, "I shot the damned thing.
I hit it. I know I did.”
" We all saw it take the buckshot," Frank agreed.
"So why wasn't it blown apart?" Tal demanded." Hit dead on by a blast from a 20-gauge. It should've been torn to pieces, damn it.”
"Guns aren't going to save us," Lisa said.
In a distant, haunted voice, Gordy said, "It could've been any of us.
That thing could've gotten me. I was right behind Stu. If he had ducked or jumped out of the way…”
"No," Lisa said." No. It wanted Officer Wargle. Nobody else. Just Officer Wargle.”
Tal stared at the girl." What do you mean?”
Her flesh had taken paleness from her bones." Officer Wargle refused to admit he'd seen it when it was battering against the window. He insisted it was just a bird.”
..So?”
"So it wanted him. Him especially," she said." To teach him a lesson.
But mostly to teach us a lesson.”
"It couldn't have heard what Stu said.”
"It did. It heard.”
"But it couldn't have understood.”
"It did.”
"I think you're crediting it with too much intelligence," Tal said." It was big, yes, and like nothing any of us has ever seen before. But it was still only an insect. A moth. Right?”
The girl said nothing.
"It's not omniscient, Tal said, trying to convince himself more than anyone else." It's not all-seeing, all-hearing, all knowing.”
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