Walter Williams - The Rift
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- Название:The Rift
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- Издательство:Baen Books
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- Год:2013
- ISBN:нет данных
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Another geyser burst out of the cotton field, and then another. And then another geyser burst up from the Huntley house- but this wasn’t water, it was a bubble of fire, blasting up from beneath the broken roof. The Huntley’s propane tank, couplings shattered, had ignited. Jason’s heart leaped into his throat. He tried to shout a warning, but it was lost in the groaning of the earth.
The last of the five houses shattered as the earth gave another wrench. Cracks tore across the surface of the ground. Sulfur tainted the air. Jason’s stomach turned over as he felt a new element enter the earth’s motion- he felt as if two strong men were kicking him at once, and in different directions.
It was this that brought the Adams house down. The old farmhouse swayed back and forth, as if to blows, and then there was a rending and cracking of timber, and the roof spilled into the backyard, taking most of the house with it. Terror roared through Jason like a flame. He screamed and again tried to stand. The earth flung him down, pitched him down the slope. For a whirlwind moment he felt himself falling free. He screamed again and came to an abrupt stop, brought up short as he fell into the limbs of a scrub oak. Branches slashed at his face. He clawed his way through the branches, slid another ten feet down the slope, was caught by more brush.
And suddenly the earth fell silent. Jason’s inner ear spun in a giddy circle and he bit back nausea. He shouted, was surprised to find he could hear himself. “Mom!” he yelled. “Are you okay?” There was no answer. He looked wildly for the path he’d ascended by, but it was buried in broken timber, so instead he ran straight off the edge of the mound. He clung madly to branches to steady himself as he tried to scramble directly down the sides, but the mound was too steep, and there were too many uprooted trees, fallen limbs, and tangled brush for him to make any kind of swift progress.
He heard someone shout below- a male voice calling for help. He shouted in answer as he dove through the trees. And then he came to a clear area, where he could get a good view of what was going below, and stopped to orient himself.
His heart almost failed him, and his knees threatened to give way. He had to clutch at a tree limb to keep from falling.
The broken houses were plain to see. The Huntley place had turned into a torch as a jet of propane consumed the entire property. The dog Batman wailed from amid a cloud of black smoke that roiled into the sky. Another fire was rapidly building in the ruins of another house, the one at the west end of the row. The tumbled, broken mass of his own home had partly fallen toward the Huntley ruin, and was dangerously close to the flames. It was clear that Jason had to get his mother clear of the wreckage before fire consumed the whole street.
In the field beyond the house, a dozen geysers spat water and white sand into the sky. Some had built up cones of sand around their bases. But it wasn’t the geysers, or even his wrecked home, that held Jason’s gaze.
It was the levee to the east.
The long green wall had been breached in at least two places. The water that poured through was not coming gently- it didn’t run through, it wasn’t as if a jug of water had been spilled in the kitchen and was gently emptying itself on the floor. The water jetted through, with the entire great weight of the river behind it. It was as if a thousand high-pressure hoses had been turned on behind each breach. Mist boiled upward from the two breaches as the brown water poured onto the laser-level fields below.
In the midst of all this, between the two breaches, was Eubanks’s cop car, which sat motionless atop the levee as if trying to make up its mind what to do. And below, a tiny figure amid the giant water plumes, Muppet was struggling to right his overturned ATV.
“Run!” Jason screamed. “Run for it!” He didn’t know who he was shouting at- Muppet, his mother, Mr. Regan, maybe even Batman the dog.
Everyone. Everyone run.
Terror launched him down the mound. Branches lashed his face as he fell as much as ran down the mound’s steep face. As he ran he caught brief glimpses of the catastrophe from between the trees … Muppet getting on his ATV and beginning his race with the advancing water … a huge chunk of the levee, tons of stone and concrete, breaking away in the torrent, carried into the field by the powerful flood … Eubanks hesitantly backing his car away from the widening breach …
And then Jason ran head-on into a tree limb and knocked himself sprawling, the air knocked out of his lungs. “Run,” he urged weakly, though he knew no one could hear him.
Over the Niagara roar of the breached levee he could still hear the faint hornet buzz of Muppet’s ATV. He sat up, breath rasping in his throat, and felt his heart sink as the sound of the ATV faltered. His head spun. He batted aside leaves, peered between the wrecked trees, and saw that the little vehicle had run as far as it could, that it was stopped at the edge of a crevasse that lay across its path and was too wide to drive across. Muppet’s green helmet turned to gauge the approaching water, and then he dismounted the vehicle and took a few steps back so as to run at the breach and leap across. His sneakers splashed in water that was already ankle-deep.
“Run,” Jason urged. There was a huge pain in his chest, as if something inside had ripped away.
There was a grating roar as another piece of the levee tore away, and then Muppet ran and launched himself across the fissure. He reached the other side, falling to hands and knees, then picked himself up and began to run. “Run,” Jason advised. He clutched at branches and tried to stand. His head spun. He was whooping for breath. The breach in the levee widened again, the river shifting ten tons of stone as if it were foam packing. The flood burst through, a wall of water twenty feet high, six-foot wavecrests foaming at its top.
Muppet looked over his shoulder at the oncoming wall, and his stride increased.
And then the foaming wall overtook him- Jason caught a brief glimpse of tumbling puppet limbs, a green helmet flashing in the brown water- and then his friend was gone.
Jason reeled down the face of the mound, but he knew it was too late to save Muppet- to save anyone. The flood waters raced on, a mass almost solid in the weight of its onslaught … the wave front gave a glancing blow to the shattered house on the end of the row, and the roof came apart under the impact, the pieces floating onward, piling into the flaming wreck of the Huntley house. Batman the dog gave a last wail, and was silent. The Huntley house came apart as well, turning into a wall of burning wreckage that surged up against Jason’s house.
“No,” Jason said. His Nikes splashed into water and he kept going, wading out into the rising flood. He watched his house dissolve, mingle with the flaming wreckage carried in by the flood. There was a bang as something exploded, and the fires spread. Jason paused as a surge of water lapped to his waist and almost took him off his feet. Tears spilled down his face, blurred his vision. Water tugged at his knees, and more waters were clearly coming.
Jason turned and began to claw his way back up the mound, grabbing handfuls of turf and hauling himself by the branches of tumbled trees. The flood surged up to his waist, lifted him upward, toward a fallen elm that lay athwart his path. Jason reached for it, pulled, got a foot over the bole of the tree, and rolled over the tree onto dry ground.
He wiped tears from his eyes, sat up, and turned to see a clump of burning wreckage, all that remained of the five houses on his road, being carried on the flood toward the highway. Very little of the wreckage was even recognizable as belonging to the house that Jason had lived in.
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