Dancing Jax. Robin Jarvis
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Название: Dancing Jax

Автор: Robin Jarvis

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Детская проза

Серия:

isbn: 9780007342389

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ or land registries,” Jezza answered. “It don’t make sense. It must belong to someone.”

      “If it does, they can’t care about it,” Tommo said. “Look at the state of it. Mr Muscle, where are you now?”

      “We could squat in it,” Miller announced. “Get everyone over and fix it up a bit. Be a palace this would.”

      “No!” the girl interrupted, rubbing her arms. “This is a sad house. It’s sad and depressing and I don’t like it.”

      “All the more reason to pull it to pieces,” Jezza stated. “Nice, sellable, chopped-up pieces, and who’s going to complain? Perfect job this one, couldn’t be tastier!”

      “I’ll start unloading the van,” Tommo said. “Come with me, Gasguts.”

      “There you go again!” Miller cried. “You’re obsessed!”

      “Wait!” Jezza barked suddenly. “Leave the tools for now.”

      He was looking at the girl. She had risen and was staring into space, the expression drained from her features.

      “Shee,” he said. “Shee!”

      The girl started.

      “How did you know about this place?” he asked.

      The question nettled her and she moved towards the door.

      “I just did,” she answered evasively. “I need a smoke and my lighter’s in the van.”

      She hurried from the room, through the hall and out into the bright sunlight. The large, forbidding bulk of the house reared high behind her and she shivered as she fled back to the shabby camper van, parked up the overgrown drive. It was a horrible house. She hated it. She couldn’t wait to get out of it.

      The VW’s familiar orange and cream colours reassured her and she let out a great breath of relief as she leaned against the dented passenger door.

      “Stupid beggar,” she rebuked herself, pulling a cigarette out of her pocket and letting it hang in her lips as she lifted her eyes to gaze back at the imposing building.

      It was a drab, ugly edifice, built of dull, grey stone in the heavy-handed, Victorian Gothic style, with a corner tower and too many gables. Planks and boards obscured the ground-floor windows, but higher up they were mostly uncovered and shaped like they belonged in a church.

      Shiela hissed through her teeth at it. “Don’t you look at me like that,” she whispered.

      Tall, misshapen trees crowded around it; there was even a tree growing in the middle of the drive, which was why they had to park the van so far away.

      A rook or a crow cawed somewhere above and the lonely, unpleasant croaking made her shiver.

      “Like a graveyard,” she murmured. “A graveyard for dead houses. There’s no life in that place, no life and never no love.”

      Then a jangling rattle dragged her attention back to the front porch, where Jezza was standing, shaking the van keys.

      “What freaked you out in there?” he asked as he sauntered over.

      “I wasn’t freaked out. The air was bad. Stuffy and stale.”

      “You put up with worse, with Miller in the back seat.”

      “OK, I just don’t like that place. Give me them keys, I’m gasping.”

      He snatched his hand away from her, dangling them just out of reach.

      “That’s two questions you’ve avoided now,” he said, beginning to sound irritated. “Do you want me to force the answers out of you?”

      “No, Jezza!” she said. “Just let me light up – for God’s sake!”

      He threw the keys at her and a minute later she was dragging on the cigarette. Her fingers were trembling.

      “It’s just a place I’ve heard about,” she explained, blowing out a stream of pale blue smoke. “Every town has one – the deserted old house. A place other kids dare you to go to, knock on the door, break in and spend the night.”

      “What is this?” Jezza sounded annoyed. “Scooby sodding Doo? Don’t give me that crap.”

      “It’s bloody true!” Shiela swore. “If you were from round here, you’d know, you’d have heard about it. Only in this case it’s not made up. That’s a… I dunno – a sick place. Not even kids dare each other to come here any more.”

      “They’re too busy stuck in front of their Xboxes or glued to the Net to do anything real these days,” the man said.

      “Good for them,” she muttered.

      “The Web’s for rejects,” he pronounced. “All them misfits hiding in their rooms yakking away to other people they’ll never meet, using fake pictures and pretending to be someone else. No one knows who they are any more and those who do aren’t satisfied with it. You never know who you’re really talking to on there.”

      She understood it was no use arguing with him. Jezza liked to make sweeping, preaching statements and wouldn’t listen to anyone who disagreed with him. He certainly hadn’t listened to her for a long time now. As for “misfits”, what else were they?

      “It’s good for finding out stuff,” she said half-heartedly.

      Jezza smirked sarcastically. “Yeah,” he said. “All that information, branching out from here and there. It’s the tree of knowledge of good and evil, Shee – and how mad is it that people are accessing it via their Apples! Ha – it’s Genesis all over again and we’re cocking it up a second time.”

      “I wouldn’t call this Eden,” Shiela said.

      “And you’re not Eve,” he told her bluntly, before considering the house again. “And you’re not blonde enough to be Yvette ruddy Fielding either. Got ghosts, has it?”

      She shrugged and flicked some ash on the ground.

      “No such thing,” he stated. “Only real things matter in this life, and there’s enough nasty realness to keep you worried and scared without inventing other mad stuff. The things to be frightened of in this world are just round the corner, hiding in your beans-on-toast existence. That’s where true evil breeds best. Under your noses, in plain sight: it’s the domestic abuse of the terrified wife three doors down and her neighbours who turn the telly up to drown out the noise; it’s the nurse in the care home who hates herself and takes it out on the patients; it’s the kids too scared to speak out; it’s the man kicking his dog in the ribs because it doesn’t bite back… it’s everywhere around us. Society, that’s the Petri dish where evil flourishes, not in empty old houses like this beauty.”

      Shiela looked at him, at the sharp features that she had once found attractive: the sly, crafty shape of his narrow eyes and the unhealthy pallor that had marked him out as different and interesting. Then, unexpectedly, he turned his crooked smile on her and she was surprised to find that she still fancied him. She was always surprised. Jezza possessed СКАЧАТЬ