The Dying of the Light. Derek Landy
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Название: The Dying of the Light

Автор: Derek Landy

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Учебная литература

Серия: Skulduggery Pleasant

isbn: 9780007489299

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ start their work.”

      “I can do that,” said Finbar.

      “It won’t be easy,” said Cassandra.

      “Dammit,” said Finbar.

      “You’ll feel your thoughts splitting,” Cassandra said. “You’ll find it difficult to concentrate, difficult to remember. But you must. You have to focus on something, a word, a phrase, something to latch on to while we’re pulling Darquesse away from you.”

      “The sparrow flies south for winter,” Finbar said immediately.

      Stephanie heard the amusement in Skulduggery’s voice. He was talking a little faster now, with a little more life to his words. “Yes. Good. When Cassandra and the other Sensitives are doing their thing, I’ll be with you, and that phrase will bind us together. The moment you hear me say it, you focus on it, repeat it, pour everything you’ve got into those six words.”

      “I don’t know how long the process will take,” said Cassandra. “It might be minutes. It might be days. You have to be ready for anything.”

      “So when do we do it?” Finbar asked.

      “Soon,” said Skulduggery. “I don’t want to tell you exactly when. I don’t want Darquesse to pick up on anything unusual. But be ready.”

      “OK,” said Finbar. “I can do this. OK. I mean, it’s risky, though. What if she figures out what I’m up to?”

      “You just have to hope she doesn’t,” said Skulduggery.

      “And we just have to hope that you’re really Valkyrie,” said Stephanie. “Otherwise we’re the ones who’ll be walking into a trap.”

      Finbar paused, then said, “I really don’t like you.” He frowned. “I have to go. I’ve talked to you for too long.”

      Skulduggery squeezed Finbar’s hand. “I’ll see you soon, Valkyrie.”

      Finbar managed a smile, and then his face went blank. A moment later, he snorted, raised his head and opened his eyes, looked around. “Well? Did it work?”

      Stephanie pulled her hands back, and folded her arms.

      “Oh, it worked,” said Skulduggery.

      He was insufferable. Stephanie walked beside him as they made their way through the Sanctuary’s corridors, and Skulduggery would not shut up. He cracked jokes, he told stories, he was by turns smug, arrogant and whimsical and, worst of all, he was paying attention to her.

      “I thought you wanted me to talk more,” he said when he noticed her silence. “Can’t have it both ways, Stephanie. I can’t be quiet when you want to sulk and chatty when you want to chat. That’s not how it works. That’s not how I work.”

      “I’m not sulking.”

      “Well, you’re doing something with your face that resembles sulking. Are you glowering? You might be glowering. Glowering is like sulking only scarier.”

      They stepped into the elevator, and Skulduggery thumbed the button for the top floor. The doors slid closed.

      “You’re definitely frowning, though,” he continued as they started to move. “Do you know how many muscles it takes to frown, as opposed to the muscles it takes to smile? I don’t. I doubt anyone does. What constitutes a smile anyway? Is it just the movement of the mouth, or are the eyes involved? And to what extent is each muscle utilised? The old homily about how frowning uses more muscles than smiling is entirely redundant unless, of course, you’re talking about the underlying message, and as a message, it’s a wonderful, life-affirming thing that bypasses anything so pedantic as actual, provable facts.”

      “Could we go back to the awkward silences, please?”

      “We’ve moved beyond the silences, Stephanie. We’re on new ground now.”

      “I hate new ground.”

      “Do you want a hug?” asked Skulduggery.

      “God, no.”

      “You’re probably right. I should probably save my hugs for later.”

      The elevator stopped and they got out. They approached a set of double doors guarded by the Black Cleaver.

      Skulduggery knocked, then nodded to the Cleaver. “Hi.”

      The Black Cleaver didn’t acknowledge him.

      “I meant to say, I like the new look,” Skulduggery continued. “It’s moody. It’s edgy. It doesn’t really leave a whole lot of scope for anything further down the line, though. That would be my only criticism. You’ve gone from grey to white and now to black and, really, what’s left? You could go multicoloured, I suppose. You could show your support for the gay, lesbian and transgender communities. The Rainbow Cleaver, perhaps? No? Too much? That’s not your thing? Ah, that’s a pity.”

      Skulduggery stopped talking. The Black Cleaver didn’t move a millimetre.

      Skulduggery resumed talking. “I don’t know if you know this, you probably do, but people here have been around for a few hundred years and, well, things happen. You stop being so fixated on things that don’t matter. The pursuit of happiness, that’s what it’s all about. That’s all I’m saying on the subject. It’s OK to be different, because we’re all different in our own ways. There. Sermon over. Would you like a hug?”

      The doors opened. “Are you giving out hugs?” China asked.

      “Only to those who need them,” Skulduggery said, leading the way in.

      China raised an eyebrow. “Someone’s in a good mood.”

      “He won’t shut up,” Stephanie muttered.

      China’s apartment was on the top floor of the highest tower in the Sanctuary. White walls and high ceilings. It was a celebration of taste – of art, of culture, of history, of magic. Of power.

      China closed the doors behind them. “Should I take it that this good mood means you were successful in communicating with Valkyrie?”

      Skulduggery walked up to the floor-to-ceiling windows and looked out over Roarhaven. “You should,” he said.

      “And she agreed to Cassandra’s plan?”

      “She did.”

      China smiled. “Well, that is good news.”

      For some reason, seeing recent events brighten China’s mood was even more annoying than Skulduggery’s chirpiness. At least Stephanie had expected Skulduggery’s chirpiness. Some of it anyway.

      “In order for the Sensitives to do their part,” Stephanie said, “we’ll need to hold Darquesse in one place for a period of time, right? Have we figured out just how we’re going to do this, or are we simply hoping she trips over and knocks herself out?”

      “Such attitude,” said China. “I dare say this СКАЧАТЬ