Graham Masterton - The Doorkeepers

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The Doorkeepers: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Julia Winward, a young American woman, has been missing in England for nearly a year. When her mutilated body is discovered in the Thames, her brother Josh is determined to find out what happened to her during that lost time. But nothing Josh discovers makes any sense and he soon unearths a terrible secret. Julia had been working for a company that shut down 60 years ago, and living at an address that hadn't existed since World War II... From Publishers Weekly Occult rituals encoded in a nursery rhyme provide a passport to a topsy-turvy realm of terror in this lively but ragged weave of supernatural horror and alternate-world fantasy. While in London to identify the remains of his murdered expatriate sister, Julia, American Josh Winward notices peculiarities in her case, among them the fact that no one had seen her for nearly a year before her eviscerated corpse was found floating in the Thames. A fortuitous meeting with a mystic acquaintance of Julia's gives Josh and his lover, Nancy, the magic formula they need to travel into an alternate London where Julia was lured. This "other London" accessible through hidden interdimensional doorways is a pale reflection of our own, where Oliver Cromwell is the patron saint and religious zealots lie in wait for heretical "Purgatorials" like Josh, who wander in uninvited. Worse, it's home to Julia's murderous ex-employer, who is determined to snuff out Josh and Nancy before they can blow the whistle on him. Though Masterton (The Chosen Child) provides his usual interesting characters, they can only carry the animated plot so far, at which point he resorts to noticeable filler (Josh's accidental sojourn for several chapters in yet another alternate London) and contrivances (Josh's psychological rapport with animals at the most coincidentally advantageous times). The novel has one of those improbable climaxes in which the helpless victim gets the upper hand on the unsuspecting villains, and enough loose ends to suggest that Masterton is planning a sequel.

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She took another pinch of salt and threw it in a crisscross pattern over the candle flames, which flared up bright blue. “Three maidens once going on a verdant highway. One brought bread. One brought wood. The third brought the spirit we seek.”

Now she took hold of Nancy’s hand again, and closed her eyes. “Julia Winward, Julia Winward, Julia Winward. Thrice the candles burn by me. Thrice our hearts shall broken be. Pchagerav monely, pchagerav tre vodyi.”

Josh took a deep breath, and this time he could smell Julia’s perfume quite distinctly. The air in the flat began to grow cold, and somehow everything seemed blurry, as if they were being shaken by a distant temblor.

“Julia Winward, Julia Winward, Julia Winward,” Ella chanted, her voice rising every time she called Julia’s name.

The temperature dropped and dropped, and the smell of perfume grew so strong that it was almost overwhelming. They heard a creaking sound, too – very faint at first, but gradually growing more distinct. Creak, pause. Creak, pause. It reminded Josh of Julia sitting on their grandfather’s rocker, on the porch in Sausalito. Her hands covering her eyes, to shield them from the setting sun, her bare toes swinging, her blonde hair alight. Creak, pause. Creak, pause. Creak, pause.

Suddenly, they heard a soft, desperate tumbling noise. Something appeared right in front of them, in the air. A pale, flickering shape, like the images seen in an old-fashioned zoetrope. The movement was frantic, but the creaking continued at the same measured pace as before.

Creak, pause. Creak, pause.

Ella dug her nails so deeply into the palms of Josh’s hand that he almost expected blood to come dripping out. “Julia Winward!” she called, her West Indian accent very strong now. “Juli-a Win-ward!”

The tension in the flat was almost unbearable. Josh felt as if the air pressure were increasing as the temperature plummeted, and his eardrums popped. The flickering shape in front of them became brighter and brighter, and at last Josh realized that it was two legs – two bare legs – pedaling like a cyclist in mid-air.

“Julia?” he whispered. Then, much louder, “Julia?”

Gradually, the image brightened even more, and grew, and Josh looked up at it in growing horror. Nancy said, “Josh – what is it? Josh, speak to me, for God’s sake – what is it?”

Ella babbled, “Save us. Name of the Father, name of the Son, name of the Holy Duppy, amen.”

They only saw her clearly for a split second, but that split second was more than enough. Julia was hanging naked from the ceiling, her hands clutching at the noose around her neck, her legs wildly kicking. The rope was swinging slowly from side to side. Creak, pause. Creak, pause. Julia’s eyes were bulging and her tongue was lolling over her chin, but there was nothing that she could do to claw it free.

Nine

Josh shouted, “Ella!” but Ella was ahead of him. She picked up the bowl of salt and threw it at the struggling vision of Julia in the air. With a sharp crackle-crackle-crackle every grain of salt flared into a tiny pinprick of sparkling blue light. The vision vanished immediately, leaving nothing but a thin swirl of bitter-smelling smoke. Abraxas let out a defiant bark, but still didn’t venture out of his basket.

“God, that was scary,” said Nancy, her eyes wide and her voice shaking. “That was so, so scary. My grandfather raised the spirits. Shadows, invisible finger-writing in the sand. But nothing like that.” She pulled out one of Ella’s chairs and sat down, while Ella herself leaned against the table, dabbing her forehead and neck with her scarf.

Josh stayed where he was. He still felt freezing cold, unbalanced, and nauseous, as if he were standing on the afterdeck of an Arctic fishing boat. He reached out for the back of the nearest chair to steady himself but he couldn’t move his legs. Ice-cold perspiration was trickling down the sides of his face into his collar, and coursing down his spine. He tried to take some deep, steadying breaths but he couldn’t. His throat felt congested and his stomach kept flinching in sickening spasms.

“Josh, what’s the matter? Are you all right?” Ella asked him, with a frown.

“I’m just … I’m just … sick,” he choked.

He had never felt so bad in his life. His body temperature felt as if it had dropped to zero, and every joint ached. His stomach made a disgusting gurgling noise, and his mouth was flooded with sour-tasting saliva.

“Here,” said Ella, taking his arm. “I’ll take you to the toilet.”

“That was Julia,” Josh gasped. “That was Julia, hanging.”

His stomach contracted as tight as a fist, and he felt a swelling in his throat that he couldn’t keep down. He tried to take another step forward, but he couldn’t. He doubled up over the table and something huge and slippery filled his mouth. It felt like an oyster, only twenty times larger. He tried to breathe but bile sprayed out of his nostrils and stung his sinuses. The thing inside his mouth was so large that he didn’t think he would be able to open his mouth wide enough to regurgitate it. He reached out for Nancy, desperate for breath, his eyes bulging, his whole body wracked with gut-wrenching heaves.

“Ella – call for an ambulance!” snapped Nancy.

“He has to bring it up,” Ella insisted. “It’s stuck in his throat. He has to bring it up.”

“Call for a fucking ambulance! He’s dying!”

“No, no, no! He has to bring it up.”

Nancy went to the phone herself and dialed 911. All she heard was a piercing high-pitched tone, and a polite woman’s voice saying, “The number you have dialed has not been recognized …”

“What’s the emergency number?” she shouted. “Ella – what do I dial for an ambulance?”

Josh bent so far over the table that his forehead pressed against the velvet cloth. He clutched his stomach with both hands, trying to stop the heaving. The only sound he could make was a tight, supressed cackle, like a man being pressed under tons of concrete.

“Tell me the number!” screamed Nancy.

At that moment, however, a greasy, blood-streaked balloon began to emerge from Josh’s wide-stretched mouth. He heaved, and heaved again, and more of it slid out. He felt so sick that all he wanted was a huge rush of vomit, but he could only force this thing out of his mouth an inch at a time, and it seemed to take for ever to slide between his lips.

“Oh God,” said Nancy. “Oh God, what’s happening to him?”

Ella leaned over Josh and rubbed his back. “Come on, now, Josh. You bring it all up. You bring it all up, man.”

Josh’s face was gray. But slowly the big slippery bulge came out of his mouth, further and further. It hesitated for a while, drooping, and then it dropped silently on to the table, like a monstrous grub. It was immediately followed by a sharp splatter of half-digested pizza.

Josh collapsed on to his knees, almost screaming for breath. He puked up a little more lunch, and some of it came out of his nose. Ella brought over a large box of Kleenex and gently wiped his face.

“What is that?” asked Nancy in horror, staring at the bloody yellow bladder on the table. “Is he sick? He’s not going to die, is he?”

Ella stood up, her bracelets and her necklace jingling. “No, girl, he’s not going to die. But I never saw that happen before, not like that. I’ve had ectoplasm, just a small blob, enough to fill an eggcup. I’ve had locks of hair. But I’ve never had the whole flesh.”

Josh tugged out another handful of tissues and wiped his shirt. He was still sweaty and shaking, but his color was coming back and his nausea was beginning to recede. All the same, he looked at the thing on the table and then back at Ella, and he couldn’t stop himself from retching.

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