Название: The Calling
Автор: James Frey
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Детская проза
isbn: 9780007585212
isbn:
Snap snap snap.
He takes pictures.
Lots of pictures.
Only one person gives him a good image. A girl. Dark-tanned skin. Wearing colorful scarves over a form-fitting jumpsuit. Full black hair peeking out from a head wrap. The glint of brilliant green eyes.
He is tempted to go too. He doesn’t want to admit it, but he is afraid. Of the other Players. Of Endgame. Of—he can hardly believe he is thinking it—the Sky People.
But mostly he is afraid of what Sarah would look like—what she would say, how she would feel—if she were to see him now.
He knows the time isn’t right.
Not yet.
He needs a moment where he can swoop in and help her, where he can prove his worth and his love. He doesn’t want to seem like a stalker, lingering around the pagoda like some kind of Endgame groupie. That would be embarrassing. So he waits. For an hour. Two. Two and a half.
Nothing.
He waits.
His eyes are heavy. His chin is in his hand. His elbow is on his knee.
There’s nothing, no one.
He can’t fight sleep anymore.
He’s been up for over 27 hours.
And just like that, he is out.
35.2980, 25.1632xlvii
Big Wild Goose Pagoda, Xi’an, China
Up, up, up.
Marcus checks his watch.
Keep going up.
12:10 a.m.
He’s late.
Up.
How could he have been so stupid?
Up.
He should have stayed within walking distance, not at a hotel in the walled part of the city.
Up.
Not have-to-take-a-taxi distance.
Up, up.
A taxi that hit another taxi, which plowed into a couple standing on the side of the road eating fried persimmon cakes out of a red plastic bag. Both died on the spot. And Marcus’s driver took the damn cakes to boot.
Up.
His heart beating hard, beating hard.
Going up.
Finally he stops. He faces a low door at the top of the Big Wild Goose Pagoda. Etched on the door is the word ROBO. Is it really this easy? Seems it is.
No one’s seen him, or if someone has, they haven’t called Marcus out. Maybe the guards have been bribed. Maybe they have been bribed by one of Them.
It’s about to begin. Provided he didn’t miss it by being—he looks again—11 minutes late and counting.
How stupid of him to be late.
Marcus puts his hand on the door. The other Players have already arrived. They must have.
He pushes it in.
A narrow wooden staircase is behind the door. Marcus draws his bronze knife from a sheath under his pant leg. He enters and closes the door. It’s dark. The staircase goes up half a flight and makes a turn.
His heart beats harder.
His clothing soaks up sweat.
Marcus is the son of Knossos. A child of the Great Goddess. A Freeborn. An ancestral Witness to the Breath of Fire.
He is the Minoan.
He squeezes the hilt of his knife. It’s adorned with glyphs understood only by him and the man who taught him. All the others who understood are dead.
The old stairs creak. The wind outside whistles over the roof tiles. The smell of smoke, from the crater, wafts over and through the still-standing Big Wild Goose Pagoda. The stairs end.
Marcus is at the edge of a small room. It is shrouded in darkness, and he can barely make out any details. There is no movement.
He breathes.
“Hello?”
Nothing.
“Anyone there?”
Nothing.
He fishes in his pocket for a Bic lighter.
Flick flick flick.
A weak flame ignites.
His heart skips a beat.
Stacked at the far end of the room like logs are the Players. Each is wrapped in a silver shroud and blindfolded with a simple black cloth. Though it is hot and stuffy, he can see their breath on the air, as if it’s winter.
A trap? he wonders.
He takes a tentative step forward.
He can make out features on three of the others. One girl looks Middle Eastern, maybe Persian. She has fine, copper skin; thick black hair; a hooked nose; and high cheeks. A boy—and he is undoubtedly young—is tanned and has round cheeks. His face is locked in a grimace. A tall girl has short-cropped red hair and freckles and lips so thin and pale they are practically nonexistent. She looks like she’s dreaming of rainbows and kittens, not the end of the world.
He takes another step, drawn to the pile of Players like a moth to a flame.
You are late.
The voice is in Marcus’s head, like the voice of his thoughts, only it’s not the voice of his thoughts.
Marcus begins to say he’s sorry, but before the words can pass his lips, the voice comes again.
It is not preferable, but it is acceptable.
The voice is pleasant, deep, neither male nor female.
“You СКАЧАТЬ