Читаем Thrust: A Novel полностью

He gets up off the floor in a quicksilver snap, the way teen boys are able to do. Now he can see it: he is taller than she is, but she’s a little older than he is.

But that’s not what matters in the moment. What matters is that her face is flushed.

What matters is that her right hand is furious with her own desire. He’s never seen a girl’s desire before, only held and ravaged his own in his hand, his ejaculations captured in his own sheets or wiped up with socks.

What matters is that his cock is so hard, and his rage is ramping up, and this girl is so naked that it feels like a crack in the world is about open up.

The impulse to bite is so strong.

“Kneel,” she says.

What?

“Hold as still as a statue,” she says, and without knowing why, he does it. There in front of her. His face close enough to her hand and sex that he can smell the salt of her. “It’s not wrong to want to be loved,” she says.

His mouth lolls open.

Something is emerging between her legs, behind her hand. He stares so hard that he shivers.

An apple.

An apple blooms from between her legs, and she pushes her hips toward his head until the apple touches his mouth, and finally, the bite of him can come.

Then the apple is blood, or his mouth is blood — blood gushes between her body and his head. He pulls back. If they find a dead girl in his room, a bloody scene, his life is over — if he even has a life left to be over.

“My god, are you okay?” he screams.

Blood covers the floor. A tide of it rises in the room. The blood comes in waves, impossible waves, until they are both near drowning. He is terrified, but when he looks up at her face, she is smiling. Then laughing.

“We have to leave this place,” she says, cradling his head. “The waves are rising. Your drawings will come to life where we are going. You are not dangerous. You are not violent. Your drawings are not wrong. They are just in the wrong time and place.”

She smiles again as she treads the bloodwater. Though he knew no such thing was possible, he watched as the blood bored a hole into the wall of his room, like a mouth opening, like a portal, and they slid out of the hole together.

The Butcher’s Daughter at Dawn

Had she lost him forever? Another boy falling away? What happened?

Back in the heart of her city, Lilly walked the network of streets leading to her own apartment, but she kept turning away from home. You had one job, she chided herself, hating herself even more for the stupid fucking cliché.

Was she helping or hurting?

Who takes the side of boys who don’t belong to anyone?

Who steps inside male violence in some small hope of rerouting the story?

Who should?

How many boys had she failed? How many had she lost?

Mikael was gone. There was a hole in the wall of his detention room, as if a bomb had gone off, but there was no record of any bomb, except the news about Oklahoma, the homegrown terrorist loner, too many dead people to fathom.

The only thing left of Mikael was found later, scrawled underneath the shitty-ass carpet of his former room. A complex layering of drawings and carvings and scratches and clawings, full of shapes and buildings and strange forms no one understood. Like a landscape of chaos inside his mind.

She turned it over in her head as she listened to the pattern of her heels on the pavement. She hated the rhythm of her own feet, wished something would drop out of the sky and land on her, get it over with. She stopped. She looked up at the sky, the high-rises on either side of her stretching upward, constructed, unshaken. A pigeon flew by. Nothing fell from the sky to touch her. Not even pigeon shit.

She looked down at the ground, because that’s what a stupid woman whose guilt is eating her alive does after looking up at the sky, right? There on the ground near her foot was some kind of stain, dirty and brown and ugly. Or, maybe, a coin.

She squatted. Picked it up. Yeah, that’s it, a coin.

Rubbed it between her thumb and forefinger. An old weird coin. Some kind of penny. A fucking penny. Probably worthless. It figures.

She dropped the coin back on the ground.

But there she was, alone on a city street, hunkered down on the sidewalk. She closed her eyes and took a breath, inhaling so deeply that her bra nearly cut off her circulation. When she opened her eyes and looked up, she realized she was in front of an old favorite bar: the Tabard Inn.

“Well, let’s give the old girl a drink,” Lilly muttered. She stood up and pushed her way through the door.

Nostalgia is a funny thing. At certain moments in life, it can hit you so hard that your whole body vibrates with it, almost like you’re on the verge of time travel. Lilly’s skin began to tingle — with the history of the place, and with her own memory of the last time she’d been there.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Женский хор
Женский хор

«Какое мне дело до женщин и их несчастий? Я создана для того, чтобы рассекать, извлекать, отрезать, зашивать. Чтобы лечить настоящие болезни, а не держать кого-то за руку» — с такой установкой прибывает в «женское» Отделение 77 интерн Джинн Этвуд. Она была лучшей студенткой на курсе и планировала занять должность хирурга в престижной больнице, но… Для начала ей придется пройти полугодовую стажировку в отделении Франца Кармы.Этот доктор руководствуется принципом «Врач — тот, кого пациент берет за руку», и высокомерие нового интерна его не слишком впечатляет. Они заключают договор: Джинн должна продержаться в «женском» отделении неделю. Неделю она будет следовать за ним как тень, чтобы научиться слушать и уважать своих пациентов. А на восьмой день примет решение — продолжать стажировку или переводиться в другую больницу.

Мартин Винклер

Проза / Современная русская и зарубежная проза / Современная проза
Год Дракона
Год Дракона

«Год Дракона» Вадима Давыдова – интригующий сплав политического памфлета с элементами фантастики и детектива, и любовного романа, не оставляющий никого равнодушным. Гневные инвективы героев и автора способны вызвать нешуточные споры и спровоцировать все мыслимые обвинения, кроме одного – обвинения в неискренности. Очередная «альтернатива»? Нет, не только! Обнаженный нерв повествования, страстные диалоги и стремительно разворачивающаяся развязка со счастливым – или почти счастливым – финалом не дадут скучать, заставят ненавидеть – и любить. Да-да, вы не ослышались. «Год Дракона» – книга о Любви. А Любовь, если она настоящая, всегда похожа на Сказку.

Андрей Грязнов , Вадим Давыдов , Валентина Михайловна Пахомова , Ли Леви , Мария Нил , Юлия Радошкевич

Фантастика / Детективы / Проза / Современная русская и зарубежная проза / Научная Фантастика / Современная проза