Название: The Calling
Автор: James Frey
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Детская проза
isbn: 9780007585212
isbn:
In response, an arrow thuds into the dirt between his legs. Hilal scrambles away, also into the woods.
“Maybe save the sermon for another time, preacher,” says Aisling, before she follows him into the forest.
Another whistle cuts the air. Sarah’s instincts take over, and she reaches toward Jago’s head and with her bare hand snatches an arrow out of the air just before it would have found its mark in Jago’s skull. Jago looks at her. He has never seen someone do that before. He is wide-eyed, grateful. “How did you—”
“We have to get out of here,” Sarah says. She can’t believe she did that either. She practiced it over and over and over, sliced her hands to ribbons trying to catch arrows, but she never succeeded. Not until this moment.
She throws the arrow to the ground and grabs Jago by the hand. “Let’s go.”
They turn toward the forest and begin to run.
An Liu is no longer fishing around for his bottle of pills. He stands, shoulders square, facing what is left of the group. He wears a sinister smile.
A third arrow flies from the woods, striking An square in the chest. An looks down, amused, and flicks the shaft away from the ballistics vest that went unnoticed beneath his fisherman’s pockets. He casually tosses a small, dark sphere the size of a walnut toward the remaining Players. Marcus, who is closest, is taken by surprise. His instincts lead him to reach out and catch An’s offering. But just before it can land in Marcus’s hand, it explodes.
The blast is much bigger than the size of the bomb would suggest. Bodies fly. Sarah loses her hearing, and for a few moments all is chaos. She lifts her head to see the zombielike form of Marcus. Both of his arms are gone at the shoulder, and his jaw hangs dislocated and slack from his skull. Blood covers his face and upper body. The skin on the left side of his head is shredded like cheese, and his ear is hanging low by his neck.
Something falls spinning from the sky and lands at Sarah’s feet. A finger. Pointing 167°49'25".
Sarah’s stomach turns as she is reminded of the meteor strike and her graduation and leaving Christopher.
She is reminded of her best friend, Reena.
And her brother, Tate.
It was only a week ago. A week.
She should be grieving, with her family, sitting in the living room, eating and hugging and holding hands.
Instead, she is here. Alone.
Playing.
She glances at Jago.
Maybe not alone.
Marcus falls to his knees, face-plants into the ground. For Marcus
Loxias Megalos, Minoan Player of the 5th line, Endgame is over.
An spins, and a fire lights behind him as he disappears into the woods. He’s let off another incendiary device. The forest starts to burn. Even though the fire is 59 feet away, the heat stings Sarah’s face.
“Come on!” Jago says. He lifts her to her feet and they stumble away. They have to get out through the pyramid. Through the door that has reappeared, though they don’t know where it will take them. They can’t risk the woods, not with the fire, not with An, Chiyoko, Baitsakhan, and who knows who else lurking there. They reach the pyramid and stop at the door.
Its incandescent surface reflects the light of the fire, the dark of the woods. Sarah reaches out. A series of golden images drift across the doorway. Some are recognizable: the pyramids at Giza; Carahunge; the jumble of geometric stones at Pumapunku; Tchogha Zanbil.
Others are megaliths and signs, idols and statues, numbers and shapes that Sarah doesn’t recognize.
Another explosion rattles the air behind them.
“I think it’s asking where we want to go,” Sarah says.
Jago glances over his shoulder. “Anywhere but here,” Jago says.
He squeezes Sarah’s hand, and together they step forward and pass through the strange portal. They don’t notice that right behind them is Maccabee Adlai, bleeding and angry and hungry for death.
Xi’an Garden Hotel, Dayan District, Xi’an, China
Christopher wakes with a start. He can’t believe he fell asleep. He looks at his watch:
3:13 a.m.
It could all be over by now. Sarah and the others could have finished whatever they were doing in the pagoda and moved on.
He grabs the backpack that contains his passport, money and credit cards, his phone, some food, and a folding knife he bought at the Big Wild Goose Pagoda gift shop. A headlamp, a change of underwear, and a Chinese phrase book. He takes one pair of binoculars and throws it in the bag and leaves the room. He doesn’t bother with the $5,000 worth of equipment, all bought the day before. He knows he’ll never come back.
He’s going to go into the pagoda. He’s going to go find out if Sarah is still there or already gone. He runs down five flights of stairs, into the night, streetlamps casting an orange glow over the city. There are very few cars out, no people. He looks at his watch.
3:18.
He runs as fast as he can, which is fast. His bag bounces on his back. Floodlights on the ground illuminate the pagoda. He hopes there isn’t a guard, but if there is, he’s prepared to do whatever he has to do, knowing in his heart he’s doing it for love. He has to get inside. Find Sarah. Help her win.
He arrives, looks for a guard, doesn’t see one. It’s strangely empty. Whatever was happening here, it was meant to take place in private. He pauses before moving toward the door, looking up and around. He stops dead in his tracks, something catching his eye. His jaw drops. A young woman leaps from a window at the top of the pagoda, 200 feet up. She starts to fall, her colorful scarves flapping and fluttering around her. As she moves toward the ground, she spreads out her arms and legs, and the scarves billow out and catch the wind. Even though she’s falling fast, she also seems to be slowing down. Christopher shakes his head, can’t believe what he’s seeing.
She is not falling at all, not anymore.
She is flying.
Big Wild Goose Pagoda, 6th Floor, Xi’an, China
Kala materializes in the attic of the Big Wild Goose Pagoda, tumbling across the rough wooden СКАЧАТЬ