Читаем Stories: All-New Tales полностью

at first


were of old


white stone, but


as I continued along


they grew sooty and dark.


Other staircases merged with


them here and there, descending


from other points on the mountain.


I couldn’t see how that was possible.


I thought I had walked all the flights of


stairs in the hills, except for the steps I


was on and I couldn’t think for the life of me


where those other staircases might be coming from.

The


forest


around me


had been purged


by fire at some time


in the not so far-off past,


and I made my descent through


stands of scorched, shattered pines,


the hillside all blackened and charred.


Only there had been no fire on that part of


the hill, not for as long as I could remember.


The breeze carried on it an unmistakable warmth.


I began to feel unpleasantly overheated in my clothes.

I


followed


the staircase


round a switchback


and saw below me a boy


sitting on a stone landing.

He


had a


collection


of curious wares


spread on a blanket.


There was a wind-up tin


bird in a cage, a basket of


white apples, a dented gold lighter.


There was a jar and in the jar was light.


This light would increase in brightness until


the landing was lit as if by the rising sun, and


then it would collapse into darkness, shrinking to a


single point like some impossibly brilliant lightning bug.

He


smiled


to see me.


He had golden


hair and the most


beautiful smile I have


ever seen on a child’s face


and I was afraid of him—even


before he called out to me by name.


I pretended I didn’t hear him, pretended


he wasn’t there, that I didn’t see him, walked


right past him. He laughed to see me hurrying by.

The


farther


I went the


steeper it got.


There seemed to be


a light below, as if


somewhere beyond a ledge,


through the trees, there was


a great city, on the scale of Roma,


a bowl of lights like a bed of embers.


I could smell food cooking on the breeze.

if


it was


food—that


hungry-making


perfume of meat


charring over flame.

Voices


ahead of me:


a man speaking


wearily, perhaps


to himself, a long


and joyless discourse;


someone else laughing, bad


laughter, unhinged and angry.


A third man was asking questions.

“Is


a plum


sweeter after


it has been pushed


in the mouth of a virgin


to silence her as she is taken?


And who will claim the baby child


sleeping in the cradle made from the


rotten carcass of the lamb that laid with


the lion only to be eviscerated?” And so on.

At


the


next


turn in


the steps


they finally


came into sight.


They lined the stairs:


half a dozen men nailed on


to crosses of blackened pine.


I couldn’t go on and for a time


I couldn’t go back; it was the cats.


One of the men had a wound in his side,


a red seeping wound that made a puddle on


the stairs, and kittens lapped at it as if it


were cream and he was talking to them in his tired


voice, telling all the good kitties to drink their fill.

I


did


not go


close enough


to see his face.

At


last


I returned


the way I had


come on shaky legs.


The boy awaited me with


his collection of oddities.

“Why


not sit


and rest your


sore feet, Quirinus


Calvino?” he asked me.


And I sat down across from


him, not because I wanted to but


because that was where my legs gave out.

Neither of us spoke at first. He smiled across the blanket spread with his goods, and I pretended an interest in the stone wall that overhung the landing there. That light in the jar built and built until our shadows lunged against the rock like deformed giants, before the brightness winked out and plunged us back into our shared darkness. He offered me a skin of water but I knew better than to take anything from that child. Or thought I knew better. The light in the jar began to grow again, a single floating point of perfect whiteness, swelling like a balloon. I tried to look at it, but felt a pinch of pain in the back of my eyeballs and glanced away.

“What is that? It burns my eyes,” I asked.

“A little spark stolen from the sun. You can do all sorts of wonderful things with it. You could make a furnace with it, a giant furnace, powerful enough to warm a whole city, and light a thousand Edison lights. Look how bright it gets. You have to be careful though. If you were to smash this jar and let the spark escape, that same city would disappear in a clap of brightness. You can have it if you want.”

“No, I don’t want it,” I said.

“No. Of course not. That isn’t your sort of thing. No matter. Someone will be along later for this. But take something. Anything you want,” he said.

“Are you Lucifer?” I asked in a rough voice.

“Lucifer is an awful old goat who has a pitchfork and hooves and makes people suffer. I hate suffering. I only want to help people. I give gifts. That’s why I’m here. Everyone who walks these stairs before their time gets a gift to welcome them. You look thirsty. Would you like an apple?” Holding up the basket of white apples as he spoke.

I was thirsty—my throat felt not just sore, but singed, as if I had inhaled smoke recently, and I began to reach for the offered fruit, almost reflexively, but then drew my hand back for I knew the lessons of at least one book. He grinned at me.

“Are those—” I asked.

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