The Great and Secret Show. Clive Barker
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Great and Secret Show - Clive Barker страница 16

Название: The Great and Secret Show

Автор: Clive Barker

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика

Серия:

isbn: 9780007382958

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ in the air, and perished aspiring.

      Fear in front and bedlam behind, the conflict ground to a halt in Wyoming, where the armies, too equally matched for anything but a war of attrition, fought each other to a complete standstill. It was the end of the beginning, or near it. The sheer scale of the energies required by Good Man Fletcher and the Jaff to create and lead these armies (no warlords these, by any stretch of the definition; they were merely men in hate with each other) had taken a terrible toll. Weakened to the point of near collapse they punched on like boxers who’d been battered into a stupor, but who fought because they knew no other sport. Neither would be satisfied until the other was dead.

      On the night of July 16th the Jaff broke from the field of battle, shedding the remnants of his army as he made a dash for the south-west. His intended destination was the Baja. Knowing that the war against Fletcher could not be won under present conditions, he wanted access to the third phial of the Nuncio, with which he might re-invest his much diminished power.

      Ravaged as he was, Fletcher gave chase. Two nights later, with a spurt of agility that would have impressed his much-missed Raul, he overtook the Jaff in Utah.

      There they met, in a confrontation as brutal as it was inconclusive. Fuelled by a passion for each other’s destruction which had long ago escalated beyond the issue of the Art and its possessing, and was now as devoted and as intimate as love, they fought for five nights. Again, neither triumphed. They beat and tore at each other, dark matched with bright, until they were barely coherent. When the Wind took them they lacked all power to resist it. What little strength remained they used to prevent one another from making a break for the Mission, and the sustenance there. The Wind carried them over the border into California, dropping them closer to the earth with every mile they covered. South-south-west over Fresno, and towards Bakersfield they travelled, until – on Friday, July 27th, 1971, their powers so depleted they could no longer keep themselves aloft – they fell in Ventura County, on the wooded edge of a town called Palomo Grove, during a minor electrical storm which brought not so much as a flicker to the roving searchlights and illuminated billboards of nearby Hollywood.

PART TWO

       I

      i

      The girls went down to the water twice. The first time was the day after the rain-storm that had broken over Ventura County, shedding more water on the small town of Palomo Grove in a single night than its inhabitants might have reasonably expected in a year. The downpour, however monsoonal, had not mellowed the heat. With what little wind there was coming off the desert, the town baked in the high nineties. Children who’d exhausted themselves playing in the heat through the morning wailed away the afternoon indoors. Dogs cursed their coats; birds declined to make music. Old folks took to their beds. Adulterers did the same, dressed in sweat. Those unfortunates with tasks to perform that couldn’t be delayed until evening, when (God willing) the temperature dropped, went about their labours with their eyes to the shimmering sidewalks, every step a trial, every breath sticky in their lungs.

      But the four girls were used to heat; it was at their age the condition of the blood. Between them, they had seventy years’ life on the planet, though when Arleen turned nineteen the following Tuesday, it would be seventy-one. Today she felt her age; that vital few months that separated her from her closest friend, Joyce, and even further from Carolyn and Trudi, whose mere seventeen was an age away for a mature woman like herself. She had much to tell on the subject of experience that day, as they sauntered through the empty streets of Palomo Grove. It was good to be out on a day like this, without being ogled by the men in the town – they knew them all by name – whose wives had taken to sleeping in the spare room; or their sexual banter being overheard by one of their mothers’ friends. They wandered, like Amazons in shorts, through a town taken by some invisible fire which blistered the air and turned brick into mirage but did not kill. It merely laid the inhabitants stricken beside their open fridges.

      ‘Is it love?’ Joyce asked Arleen.

      The older girl had a swift answer.

      ‘Hell no,’ she said. ‘You are so dumb sometimes.’

      ‘I just thought … with you talking about him that way.’

      ‘What do you mean: that way?’

      ‘Talking about his eyes and stuff.’

      ‘Randy’s got nice eyes,’ Arleen conceded. ‘But so’s Marty, and Jim, and Adam –’

      ‘Oh stop,’ said Trudi, with more than a trace of irritation. ‘You’re such a slut.’

      ‘I am not.’

      ‘So stop it with the names. We all know that boys like you. And we all know why.’

      Arleen threw her a look which went unread given that all but Carolyn were wearing sun-glasses. They walked on a few yards in silence.

      ‘Anyone want a Coke?’ Carolyn said. ‘Or ice-cream?’ They’d come to the bottom of the hill. The Mall was ahead, its air-conditioned stores tempting.

      ‘Sure,’ said Trudi, ‘I’ll come with you.’ She turned to Arleen. ‘You want something?’

      ‘Nope.’

      ‘Are you sulking?’

      ‘Nope.’

      ‘Good,’ said Trudi. ‘’Cause it’s too hot to argue.’ The two girls headed into Marvin’s Food and Drug, leaving Arleen and Joyce on the street corner.

      ‘I’m sorry …,’ Joyce said.

      ‘What about?’

      ‘Asking you about Randy. I thought maybe you … you know … maybe it was serious.’

      ‘There’s no one in the Grove that’s worth two cents,’ Arleen murmured. ‘I can’t wait to get out.’

      ‘Where will you go? Los Angeles?’

      Arleen pulled her sun-glasses down her nose and peered at Joyce.

      ‘Why would I want to do that?’ she said. ‘I’ve got more sense than to join the line there. No. I’m going to New York. It’s better to study there. Then work on Broadway. If they want me they can come and get me.’

      ‘Who can?’

      ‘Joyce,’ Arleen said, mock-exasperated. ‘Hollywood.’

      ‘Oh. Yeah. Hollywood.’

      She nodded appreciatively at the completeness of Arleen’s plan. She had nothing in her own head anywhere near so coherent. But it was easy for Arleen. She was California Beautiful, blonde, blue-eyed and the envied possessor of a smile that brought the opposite sex to their knees. If that weren’t advantage enough she had a mother who’d been an actress, and already treated her daughter like a Star.

      Joyce had no such blessings. No mother to pave the way, no glamour to get her through the bad times. She couldn’t even drink a Coke without coming out in a rash. СКАЧАТЬ