Читаем October skies полностью

The old man sat back in his winged chair. It creaked. ‘The only one of them who did manage to make it out of the mountains was my grandfather. He was young and fit… otherwise he would have died, I’m sure.’

‘Dad told me the story. He emerged starving and in rags, didn’t he?’

Grandfather nodded, stroking his chin thoughtfully. ‘Yes, that’s right. I do believe it was his faith alone that saw him through that nightmare.’

‘Faith in God can get you through anything,’ William replied earnestly.

‘Well, see lad, there’s a little more to that tale than you know.’

William sat forward, his curiosity piqued.

‘Preston led his followers out into the wilderness for a reason. He had with him some very special things.’

‘What things?’

His grandfather’s eyes narrowed. ‘Sacred things.’

<p>CHAPTER 77</p>

Sunday

Sierra Nevada Mountains, California

The words came back to him as his fingers traced the outline of the chest in the peaty soil.

‘Sacred things,’ Shepherd whispered quietly. Scrabbling in the pitch-black dirt by the light of his torch, he imagined himself looking very much like some small forest animal scratching in the earth for its first catch of the day — a pig snuffling for truffles.

A wry smile sloped momentarily across his lips as he tried to imagine what sort of pithy headline Leonard Roth, the Washington Post’s political editor, would come up with if he could see him now. Instinctively, he looked around.

It’s always a possibility.

Some industrious paparazzi might just have managed to successfully track him down out here and be — even now — lining up the crosshairs of a telephoto lens upon him. He quickly dismissed the thought for what it was; unnecessary paranoia. No one knew where he was right now, not even Duncan.

As it needed to be.

‘Sacred things,’ he said again quietly, his breath a plume in the cold morning air. He turned to look at the Day-Glo tents across the clearing; none of the others had risen yet. It was still before seven, and the grey light of pre-dawn was just enough now that he no longer needed his torch. He switched it off, not wanting to attract any unnecessary attention, just yet. He wanted this to be a private moment, to share it with no one else, to perhaps feel that sense of epiphany and revelation that Joseph Smith must have once felt, unearthing these precious things from the Hill Cumorah.

His fingers felt the hard metal surface, pitted, rusted and caked with soil: it was beautiful.

Preston’s chest.

This was the thing he really sought. Getting into the White House, getting his hands on political power to ready everyone for the future — that was all very important. But this… this… putting his hands on the plates, the actual spoken words of God, and interpreting them into modern, American English… this… he thought, looking down at the dark lid of the metal chest, this is destiny.

You seem like a good man.

A voice.

Shepherd froze. It had come from somewhere inside his mind, a gentle whisper at once familiar but also strange; like his own thinking voice, but quieter. He remained still, listening intently for a while, hearing nothing but the gentle ballad of shifting branches.

You seem like a good man.

So quiet, anything but a still mind would miss it. It seemed to come both from within his head and from the chest in the ground.

Open it.

‘Do I hear you?’ he whispered.

There was no reply. He was no stranger to voices. There’d always been voices as long as he could remember. Nasty, spiteful ones, ones that urged him to test his faith and steer into an oncoming truck, ones that teased and mocked him, ones that soothed and encouraged. But this one had a curious cadence to it.

He remained still, emptying his mind, and listened for a while.

But it was gone.

Shepherd craned his neck to look out of the excavated dip. There was still no sign that the others were about to rise. They were all zipped up snugly in their tents, glistening wet with morning dew amidst the lazy tendrils of a cool mist lying in pools across the clearing. Shepherd had risen an hour earlier, with the sky still dark, eager to make a start and unearth those precious things.

He’d had a fair idea where to search; his grandfather’s hand-me-down tale had contained enough detail that he knew the largest shelter was Preston’s temple, and that his people had the larger camp. His eyes had easily picked out the most prominent ridge of humps beneath the moss. It sat almost beneath the twisted form of an old cedar tree, one branch strangled by a creeping vine stretching out over the clearing.

A solitary crow pierced the quiet woods with an impatient caw, as if urging him to get on with his work. He dug his fingers deep into the soil, pulling it away from the sides of the chest. The metal was scarred with corrosion but still robust, still intact.

It’s inside. I can feel it.

His fingers stumbled upon the latch at the front, triggering a tremor of adrenaline-charged exhilaration.

This is it.

Open it.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Пепел и пыль
Пепел и пыль

Неизвестно, существуют ли небеса. Неизвестно, существует ли ад. Наверняка можно сказать лишь одно: после смерти человек попадает в Междумирье, где царствуют пепел и пыль, а у каждого предмета, мысли или чувства из нашей реальности есть свое отражение. Здесь ползают мыслеобразы, парят демоны внезапной смерти, обитает множество жутких существ, которым невозможно подобрать название, а зло стремится завладеть умершими и легко может проникнуть в мир живых, откликнувшись на чужую ненависть. Этот мир существует по своим законам, и лишь проводники, живущие в обеих реальностях, могут помочь душам уйти в иное пространство, вознестись в столбе ослепительного света. Здесь стоит крест, и на нем висит распятый монах, пронзенный терновником и обреченный на вечные муки. Монах узнал тайну действительности, а потому должен был умереть, но успел оставить завещание своему другу-проводнику, которому теперь придется узнать, как на самом деле устроено Междумирье и что находится за его пределами, ведь от этого зависят судьбы живых и мертвых.

Ярослав Гжендович

Триллер
Враг
Враг

Канун 1990 года. Военного полицейского Джека Ричера неожиданно переводят из Панамы, где он участвовал в операции по поимке диктатора Норьеги, в тишину кабинета американской военной базы в Северной Каролине. Ричер откровенно мается от безделья, пока в новогоднюю ночь ему не поступает сообщение, что в местном мотеле найден мертвый генерал. Смерть от сердечного приступа помешала ему исполнить какую-то сверхсекретную миссию. Когда Ричер прибывает в дом генерала, чтобы сообщить его жене о трагедии, он обнаруживает, что женщина убита. Портфель генерала исчез, и Ричер подозревает, что именно содержащиеся в нем бумаги стали причиной убийства.

Александр Валерьевич Аралкин , Джулиан Мэй , Калина Гор , Ли Чайлд , Максим Викторович Гунькин

Фантастика / Крутой детектив / Триллер / Журналы, газеты / Триллеры / Любовно-фантастические романы / Детективы