Matt Hlinak - DoG

Здесь есть возможность читать онлайн «Matt Hlinak - DoG» весь текст электронной книги совершенно бесплатно (целиком полную версию без сокращений). В некоторых случаях можно слушать аудио, скачать через торрент в формате fb2 и присутствует краткое содержание. Город: Portland, OR, Год выпуска: 2012, ISBN: 2012, Издательство: Bizarro Press, Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика, на английском языке. Описание произведения, (предисловие) а так же отзывы посетителей доступны на портале библиотеки ЛибКат.

DoG: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Culann Riordan was a high school English teacher with poor impulse control and a taste for liquor. He fled to Alaska before the state could yank his teaching certificate and possibly toss him in jail. He hires on as a commercial fisherman aboard the Orthrus, a dingy vessel crewed by a colorful assortment of outcasts seeking their fortune beyond the reaches of civilization. As he struggles to learn how to survive the rigors of life at sea and the abuses of the crew, he fishes a mysterious orbout of the depths of the ocean and comes into conflict with the diabolical captain of the Orthrus.
If he is to live long enough to see the sunset, Culann must escape from the Captain, survive on an island in the Bering Sea populated only by a pack of feral dogs, find out how to control the orb’s destructive power, and come to grips with his sizable character flaws.

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“Who are you talking to? Are you talking to that thing?”

“Please, I am begging you, don’t hurt her. Let her live.”

“Are you talking about me?” Nereida rose to her feet. “Are you some kind of fucking psycho?”

“Please,” Culann continued. “You spared me, you spared the dogs. Please, spare her. She is just a child. She has done nothing wrong. She is innocent.”

The electricity returned, stronger this time. It coursed through Culann’s fingers, up his arms, and into his brain. Pain drilled into the base of his skull and radiated through his head. Black amoebae swam through his eyes as if he’d stared too long at the sun. He gritted his teeth so hard pieces of enamel broke off his molars and fell into his dry throat.

The dogs bayed wildly from shore while Nereida’s fearful cries filled his ears.

The pain relented, and Culann hunched over the orb on the brink of unconsciousness. Nereida spun around and ran back to shore. She passed Alphonse midway down the dock. The dog continued towards Culann despite having been previously admonished to remain ashore with the other dogs who dutifully sat at the water’s edge. The dog stared with such intensity that Culann wondered if he was about to be eaten. The rain came down hard, slapping the deck with each drop. Alphonse stopped just before Culann, his eyes glowing like blue lightning, and opened his jaws.

“You would bargain with a god?” Alphonse growled.

“Holy shit.”

Alphonse bared his fangs but said nothing.

“You are the Dog-God?” Culann said after regaining his composure.

“I have many names. To the Egyptians I was Anubis, the jackal-headed king of the underworld. To the Greeks I was Cerberus, the guardian of the dead. The Aztecs called me Xolotl, bringer of lightning and death.”

“I am Culann Riordan, teacher of English.”

“I know who you are,” Alphonse snapped. “You want this child’s life. What have you to offer me in return?”

“Uh, my soul?”

“You must offer me something I do not already possess.”

“What do you want?”

Alphonse drew back his lips into a ferocious smile.

“I will tell you a story.”

4

“One of your philosophers once said ‘If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent Him.’”

“That was Voltaire,” Culann said.

Alphonse growled from deep in his belly. Lightning slashed across the sky behind him.

“Sorry, continue.”

“This Voltaire was right. The gods are a human invention, but that makes us no less real. My power is nevertheless nothing compared to the power of human imagination, which managed to turn matter into energy after all. Even I, whose faintest growl is thunder, whose panting creates hurricanes, whose bite rends the sky with lightning, can only marvel at the awesome displays of death your kind unleashed at Hiroshima, Nagasaki and Chernobyl. It is the power of human imagination that gave rise to me soon after your ancestors dropped from the trees and began stalking the savannah.

Even as they slew the beasts around them, these early hunters observed the remarkable physical abilities of the creatures around them. One day, an ancient hunter saw a pack of wolves in the distance. The pack chased an antelope into a copse of trees where another wolf lay in hiding. The hunter said in a long-forgotten tongue that he wished to be as cunning as that wolf. With this first prayer, I was born.

“With each prayer, I grew stronger. For millennia, I was worshipped by your kind. I birthed the storms, ruled the underworld, guarded the dead.

“And then came Moses and Jesus and Mohammed. The old gods began to fade.

We clung to the last vestiges of our power until Voltaire’s followers convinced the world that there were no gods at all. The flames of my fellows extinguished one by one. I endeavored to control my own destiny. I vested all of my power into an object and dropped it from the heavens. A man was to find it and wield its awesome power. The others would fear this man. They would pray—to me—for protection. My power would grow until I became again as I once was.

“But Fate toys with the destinies of gods as well as men. The orb landed in the middle of the jungle. An old monk found it and carried it back to his temple. The other monks succumbed to its power, but the finder is always spared. I offered him enough power to rule your world. He refused it. He lived alone in the jungle for nearly two centuries, surrounded by the bones of his brethren.

“And then your people brought your fantastic war machines to the wilderness. One came close enough that I was able to reach up and pluck from the sky a man who hungered for power. I drew him towards me. The young alpha overthrew the old. Finally the orb was in possession of one who would use it. He could have marched across the continents, sewing death and fulfilling my plan. But instead he took the orb into one of those machines. The orb contained my power as the Great Growler, Lord of Thunder, and the lightning caused the machine to fall. The orb sank into the sea.

“But this finder had caught the scent. He hunted and hunted until at last I was found by you. As before, the young alpha did battle with the old. Your victory was…surprising. I’d have preferred you to have been defeated.”

“But didn’t you allow me to win?” Culann asked. “You let me control the dogs.”

“You are both finders and you both possessed the power to control my children.

The other held them back, but my children cannot change their very nature. A dog is, above all, loyal. My children could not ignore the command of you who care for them.”

“So you didn’t choose me, and I didn’t choose you either. We’re stuck with each other.”

“For now.”

“What if I decide to row you back out and drop you in the middle of the ocean?

How long will it be until someone finds you then?”

“You threaten a god?”

“I’m not making threats. I’m negotiating.”

“I do not fear you, finder. You must offer me more.”

“Well, you’ve figured out by now that I’m more like the monk than the Captain. I’m not going to walk the Earth allowing you to kill enough people that the survivors start to worship you.”

“You will not be the last finder. My time will come.”

“But what if you don’t have to wait? What if I can get people to worship you now — without having to kill anyone?”

“How would you do this?”

“The girl can do it. She is about to accomplish a great feat. She will become famous. In our world, fame is more important than faith. We can make her your prophet. But only if you let her live.”

Alphonse stared up at Culann for a moment, the dog’s eyes crackling with electricity.

“I accept your terms, finder, but you must understand what is at stake. My powers protect you here. You can use them to keep your people away. If this girl is to live, you will lose those powers. You must face the justice of your people.”

Culann paused to consider this. He’d sought out this Alaskan adventure as a means of avoiding the consequences of his actions. He’d viewed the challenges he’d faced as a sort of substitute punishment, but the law was unlikely to see it that way. He could escape into this life of adventure, but would have to sacrifice Nereida to do it. To save her, he would have to rejoin the world and be held to account for what he’d done.

“It’s a deal,” Culann said. “My freedom for her life.”

5

Culann found Nereida on the western edge of the island, where her boat had grounded. Rain continued to bombard the island. The dogs shivered behind him.

Alphonse, now back to normal, wedged his bulk up against a tree in the vain hope of keeping dry.

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