Midnight Academy. Born at midnight. Edgars Auziņš
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Название: Midnight Academy. Born at midnight

Автор: Edgars Auziņš

Издательство: Автор

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СКАЧАТЬ I clarified, just in case, and, having received a confident nod, continued: – Nirel, you need to go and settle in. And I need to get a pass. Where can I get it?

      – Only with the freshman curator. And for this you need to go to the hostel.

      A mocking smile appeared on his lips. And so I understood its nature. To get the pass, I still have to do what I just tried my best to avoid.

      “I’m sure you’ll like it here,” he softened, motioning for me to go forward.

      – But not me.

      Walking around him in a wide circle, I walked with an independent air to the two-story building closest to the academy. It was also built from gray stone. Under the night sky it seemed dark and gloomy.

      “The freshman building is on the other side,” they politely informed me, but I directly felt that the guy was laughing at that moment.

      Personally, I was not laughing. Time irrevocably slipped through our fingers, and the longer we walked along the paths past benches and lampposts, falling under the shadows of trees with voluminous foliage, the stronger the confidence grew in me that I would not make it in time.

      I won’t be able to get near our rental car before my mom leaves.

      –Are you a freshman too? – I asked, looking sideways at my guide.

      I felt comfortable walking next to him in silence, but my innate curiosity did not allow me to remain silent. Nirel was like those who were called “golden boys” in the schools where I studied. Ideal appearance, ideal manners and enormous pride tied to immense arrogance.

      If these guys didn't have a brain at all, they were incredibly annoying. And if everything was in order with the thought, then they evoked fear on an instinctive level. Because they made wonderful manipulators.

      I didn’t yet understand which nut I got.

      – Freshman? – the student was restrainedly surprised, defiantly raising his right eyebrow. – No, I'm already on the third. There are two and a half years left until graduation.

      – And this one?

      Hinting at Spider-Man, I played with my eyebrows.

      – This? – Nirel asked, frowning. -Are you talking about Percy? He's also in third. He just can’t come to terms with the fact that I have a better gift of premonition than he does.

      A chuckle escaped the expressive lips, and with an effort of will I forced myself to look at his eyes.

      “I thought that I wouldn’t be able to find him in the form of a spider.”

      – Find… Were you playing hide and seek, or what?

      I was horrified. Is there really nothing to do here?

      – You can say so. Only the territory is not limited and there are no rules. Each of us has abilities. So we checked them.

      – Like acute vision or hearing? – I suggested casually, trying not to be seen as being overly interested.

      The guy thought for a moment.

      – Let’s put it this way: what do you know about Midnighters anyway?

      As promised, by this time the guy had escorted me to the freshman building, but I was in no hurry to go inside the gray two-story building.

      I understood that running to the gate, rustling with slippers, no longer made sense. Now you need to act with a cool head, with a clearly defined plan. This technique worked best. At least with mom.

      Sitting down on a bench opposite the high porch, I decided to find out as much information as possible. Moreover, Nirel answered willingly, did not hide anything and tried to add more details, as if he were explaining to a child.

      I was not a child, but my knowledge was characterized by one single word – meager. There was nothing I could do to make the story easier for my interlocutor. I knew almost nothing that was really, in my opinion, important.

      I only learned today that there is a territory hidden from human eyes. After a sleepless night spent on the road, a hectic morning with changing cars, and a not very tasty lunch at an eatery with the telling name “Massacre,” my mother brought me to the central city library in Ashwool.

      This building was very different from its counterparts on the street. The old houses here were demolished one after another due to their unsuitable condition, and in their place two-story townhouses with an attic under the roof were built. Red brick, dark brown roof. The houses with several apartments looked cozy and well-kept, but the library did not correspond at all to their architecture, or to the new look of the area as a whole.

      No, this building also looked clean and tidy. But at the same time, it felt like Her Majesty the Queen in a fluffy crinoline dress was stuck between modern families from an advertisement for toothpaste or mayonnaise. I was even afraid to go inside. No, I wasn’t afraid that the walls would suddenly collapse, but I was sincerely worried whether we could even go there.

      What if, instead of a library, there has long been a museum with the most valuable exhibits from the times of that same queen?

      I was wrong. Inside, the treasury of knowledge resembled the most ordinary library, as I imagined it in my imagination. Not a school one, of course, there were many times more books here, but it was not forced to the point of “impossible to pass through.”

      Along the walls there were neat, identical cabinets made of light wood, up to the ceiling. They stood inside the hall in such a way that they created endlessly stretching rows, at the very end of which only dull darkness could be seen.

      To the right of the entrance, behind the long counter, a dressing room with elongated floor hangers with dozens of hooks was visible through a wide window. And right in front of us there was a narrow table, behind which, under the dim light of a table lamp, a stern older lady was revealed.

      Everything seemed strict: the neat bun of gray hair, the look, and the light gray dress, which I could see only after the woman stood up.

      – A psycho has been chasing us for eighteen years, and we came to the library? – I was puzzled, shivering under the gaze of almost colorless gray eyes. – What do you want to find here, mom? A guide on the topic “how to properly bury the corpse of a maniac”?

      Mom tried to stop me:

      – Don’t be sarcastic and stop being angry.

      – But you don’t explain anything! Although I promised! – I was indignant, raising my voice.

      “It’s not customary to shout here, mademoiselle,” the librarian croaked colorlessly.

      And I had a persistent desire to poke her with a stick from a distance to ask: “Is she even alive?” Because of the echo, the voice seemed otherworldly, as if distant and at the same time three-dimensional.

      Turning to me, the parent hugged me tightly, squeezing my shoulders. And when she pulled away, her gaze found my eyes. She looked carefully, piercingly, directly, as only she could.

      If she now says that we will now live here, I will certainly bite her.

      “Sally, I just don’t have that much time to tell СКАЧАТЬ