Unknown - The_Growing_589064
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- Название:The_Growing_589064
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Then they are gone, and she is standing under a tree with a disappointed dog and a raccoon who stares disdainfully down at them both , calmly eating his dinner.
Kirsten whistles, and this time Asimov obeys. They trudge back to the house through the gathering dark, as the eastern sky deepens to ultramarine and a flush of scarlet and purple still colors the west. The cold deepens as the sun slips finally beneath the horizon and the first stars appear. As Kirsten makes the final turn into Maggie’s street, Asimov breaks from her side and goes pelting down the block, baying like the hound of the Baskervilles.
A long-bedded, heavy blue truck is pulled up in the driveway, a blue truck with the insignia of the veterinarian’s V and caduceus just visible in the failing light.
Koda is back.
Without volition, Kirsten’s feet carry her forward at a pace just short of a jog. Her heart picks up its rhythm to match, her mouth suddenly dry. She watches as Koda slides out of the driver’s side of the pickup and is joined by a second figure, taller and broader shouldered, but with much the same erect carriage and proud tilt of the head. With a deliberate effort, Kirsten slows her pace and joins the two new arrivals just as Koda unlocks the kitchen door. Under the carport light, Kirsten can see the striking likeness of their features, and a small unacknowledged fear shrinks in upon itself and dies.
“Hi,” she says, as Koda turns to her with a smile. “Welcome back.”
“Well, look who the dog dragged in,” Koda teases gently, returning the smile as she reaches down to give Asi’s ears a good scratch. Asimov all but turns into jelly, and for the first time, Kirsten finds herself not minding so much that her dog has obviously fallen head over heels in love with this woman.
Much to Asi’s dismay, Koda all too soon retires her hand from scratching duty and lifts it to the doorknob instead. “Let’s get in out of the cold, shall we?”
A blast of warmth and light hits them all as the door swings open and the group steps inside. Asi immediately claims his place in front of the fireplace and begins to attack the large soupbone Maggie had left for him earlier. With a sigh of satisfaction, Koda places her heavy pack on the kitchen table and gestures for her brother to do the same. Then she turns her smile back to the young scientist. “Doctor King, this is my brother, Tacoma. Tacoma, this is Doctor Kirsten King.”
With a grin so identical to his sister’s that they could be—and should be—twins, Tacoma holds out a massive hand that gently engulfs Kirsten’s much smaller one. “A pleasure to meet you, Ma’am.”
Kirsten utters a sardonic chuckle. “I’d like to think I’m a little young for the ‘Ma’am’ stage, Mr. Rivers, but it’s a pleasure to meet you as well.”
“Tell you what. You call me Tacoma, and I’ll drop the Ma’am, alright? Ma’am?”
Charmed, Kirsten’s grin flashes just briefly as she releases Tacoma’s hand. “It’s a deal. Tacoma.”
With a respectful incline of his head, Tacoma takes a short step back and looks around. “Nice digs.”
“Colonel’s quarters.” Koda’s succinct response tells it all. “And don’t get too used to them. You’ll be bunking with Manny.”
“Figures,” Tacoma replies, smirking. “The regs say that canon fodder like me isn’t adapted to the rarified air of this place.” The twinkle in his deep, black eyes lets Kirsten know the joke is old and well loved.
Rummaging through the litter on the table, Koda pulls the food sack her mother had given her. “Let me just split this stuff up.”
Tacoma holds up a hand. “No, it’s alright, tanski. I’m gonna have to get re-used to military chow sooner or later. For the sake of my belly, it’s just as well that it be sooner. You keep it.”
Unheeding, she pulls out two thick slices of frybread wrapped in wax paper, a packet of meat filling, and hands both over to her brother. “Give one of them to Manny. I’m sure he’ll appreciate it.”
“Appreciate it?” Tacoma exclaims, grinning. “He’ll just about have an….” His face turning an even deeper reddish hue, he nearly bites his tongue and gives Kirsten a positively hangdog look. “Um…sorry, Ma’am.”
Frozen to the spot, Kirsten shoots her gaze from Tacoma’s mortified look to Dakota. The mirth swimming in those striking eyes almost causes her to lose it and she bites down on the inside of her cheeks hard enough to draw blood just to keep herself from braying laughter like some demented donkey. The slight pain clears her head, and she manages what she hopes passes for a dignified nod. “It’s quite alright, Tacoma. If that food tastes as good as it looks, I can understand the reaction.”
Tacoma’s sense of relief is almost palpable as he humbly receives his sister’s food offering and stuffs it into his military pack.
Unable to help herself, Dakota laughs, grabs her brother’s arm and, with the barest ghost of a wink to the onlooking Kirsten, drags Tacoma out of the house and into the dark of the South Dakota night.
3
An hour or so later, Koda slips quietly into the house. The interior is perfectly dark, save for the sliver of light that slices through the partially opened door to the room Kirsten is using as her office. Silent as a shadow, Koda tracks the light, and peers into the office. Kirsten is sitting at the desk, her head propped up on one closed fist. Her glasses reflect the light from her computer; a light that washes over her face in a seasickness victim’s greenish pallor.
As if sensing Dakota’s presence, Kirsten blinks, then slowly turns her head away from the scrolling lines of formula painting themselves across the display before her. Her welcoming smile is wan and, drawn by that, Koda crosses the threshold and into the room, coming to stand beside the desk.
“Hey.”
“Hey. Did you get your brother settled in?”
Dakota smirks. “Oh yeah, he’s settled in alright. When I left, he was busy regaling them with a bunch of ‘flyboy’ jokes he learned in the army.”
Kirsten winces.
“Nah. He served with a bunch of them in the wars. It’s like old home week there right about now.”
“He’s a nice man.”
“Tacoma? He’s alright.” Dakota’s smile is fond, and it warms something deep inside Kirsten upon seeing it.
“Is he your only sibling?”
“If only,” Dakota replies, laughing softly. “No, I’m one of ten. Tacoma’s the oldest. I’m third in line. I also have an older sister, Virginia.”
“Tacoma, Virginia, Dakota….”
“…Washington, Houston, Phoenix, Montana, Carolina, Dallas, and Orlando. My mother’s a geography nut.”
“You don’t say.” Kirsten’s tone is dry as dust, but her eyes twinkle in a way that is quite attractive to Dakota.
“Oh, I do. Very much so.” There is a brief pause. “What about you? Any brothers or sisters?”
A veil drops down over Kirsten’s eyes, leaching out the vibrant green and leaving a muddy brown behind. Koda holds up a hand, even as she takes a step back, fully intending to end the conversation. “No, it’s alright. I’ll…see you tomorrow. Good night.”
“I was an only child,” Kirsten spits out rapidly, her words as staccato as machine gun fire. She looks on, feeling what can only be relief as Dakota stops her retreat and levels her an unreadable, but not unfriendly, look. “They wanted a big family, but my father had a run-in with an Iraqi landmine and, well….”
“Damn,” Koda softly replies.
“Yeah. He was in the hospital for awhile, but things were basically okay after that. I was pretty much spoiled rotten.” She gives up a wry smile. “As if you didn’t know that already.”
Koda manages, by the skin of her teeth, to remain silent and stone-faced.
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Ну что сказать по поводу сей книги? Половина нудная и неинтересная. Чересчур растянутый сюжет.
Убила на неё 33 дня (с учётом перевода на русский).
Первые 150 страниц интереса не вызвали. Потом более менее были интересные моменты. В Дакоте есть нечто от Зены, а в Кирстен от Габриэль. Хотя эти персы там и не упоминаются. Думаю, не кажлый осилит данную книгу. Тут надо терпение иметь, чтобы её прочесть. И кстати вначе я подумала, что книга про зомби или оживших мертвецов. Только позже поняла, что она про роботов.