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Martha grew to be a big girl, strong and healthy. Harry started to give her jobs around the farm, which Fern objected to, but it seemed to put color in her cheeks, and Fern finally gave in and helped Martha understand the tasks at hand. She was good at chopping wood and painting. Fern gave her all the chickens and made her understand the responsibility for feeding them and gathering the eggs.

By the time Martha was twenty, she could cook a stew, fry eggs and bake bread and can peaches. She worked with the chickens and did the wood chopping.

She still retreated to her room when visitors came to call, knowing somehow intuitively that she was not up to it.

Fern was afraid to leave the farm. She’d arrange for someone to stay with Martha whenever she had to go to town or out on a call to help someone. She would never leave her daughter at home alone again. It was a terrible burden, living with her retarded girl and her resentful husband, but Fern accepted it with as much grace as she could. She delighted in visiting with the townsfolk, who carefully skirted the subject of her family except in passing, and talked instead of funny things and unusual occurrences, which helped to lighten Fern’s load. The town mourned with this wonderful woman, and they were powerless to help.

At the end of each healing session, when Fern sat with a cup of tea, resting, the people invariably wanted to give her bread or cakes or a roast or a chicken, but Fern would smile at them very gently, pat the generous hand, and say, “The only way you can repay me is to take care of my little girl when we’re gone.” This brought a tear to more than one eye in Morgan and solemn oaths were made. Each time, Fern felt a little better.

Sam Smith’s heart had been going bad on him for some time, and Fern became a regular visitor. She’d sit with Sam, her hand on his chest, and slowly the pains would disappear, his breathing would come easier, and a slow smile would come to his face as the perspiration dried on his forehead. He’d given up all the farm work, hired young school kids to do most of it for him, so he just sat around and gave Addie a hard time as she went about her chores. He never could figure out how he had the bad heart while Addie was so fat. They teased each other mercilessly, but it was all in a loving way. The first time the pains came, Addie was terrified, riding at full gallop to Fern’s, and Fern had to bring Martha with them, but they reached the Smiths’ in time.

Since then, Fern had come regularly, and sometimes Addie fetched her, but Addie had resigned herself to the idea that Sam wouldn’t be around for long. She’d written to her son in North Dakota and had plans to go live there when Sam had gone. She told all this to Fern one day after one of Fern’s healings, while Sam slept. She also told Fern that she had already sold the farm, unbeknownst to Sam, but that they could live on it until he died. Half the money she’d sent to North Dakota already, and the other half was to live on, to bury Sam, and for the train ticket to Dakota. Whatever was left over, she said, belonged to Martha.

Fern cried, and so did Addie, the two of them sobbing and holding hands at the kitchen table. It hadn’t been an easy life for either of them, but they saw in each other the epitome of the strength of womanhood, and they loved and respected each other as much as any two women ever could.

It was at Sam Smith’s funeral that the next strange thing happened to Martha. Fern insisted that Martha accompany her and Harry to the funeral, and Harry complained, but he saw there was no changing her mind, so he agreed. They sat quietly all through the service, Harry noting with intense embarrassment the hundreds of curious glances their way. He reacted by staring them down with a glare.

When the preacher sprinkled dirt on the flowers and the casket, Martha started to squirm around a bit in the chair, then settled back again. Then when the service was over, and they were all standing around not knowing what to say to the widow, Martha looked at her mother, eyes focusing clearly on her face, and said, “I want to talk to Addie.” Fern was astounded. She led her daughter through the crowd, and Martha pushed forward urgently, wrapped her arms around Addie in a huge bear hug, then pulled back and said intensely, directly to her, “Sam was good. And now he’s better. And you. You . . . you . . .” Her eyes unfocused, her face went slack, the mouth listing again to one side, as she put her head down and walked slowly back to her parents, amid stares and exclamations. Addie just stood there, mouth open, with fresh tears making tracks on her heavily powdered face.

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Эллен Датлоу, лучший редактор и эксперт жанра хоррор, собрала для вас потрясающую коллекцию историй, каждая из которых пронизана тонким психологизмом, неподражаемой иронией и вместе с тем беспощадно правдива.Особенность этой антологии состоит в том, что помимо рассказов современных писателей в ней собраны и произведения, признанные классикой жанра, такие как «Щелкун» Стивена Кинга, «Можжевельник» Питера Страуба и «Человек-в-форме-груши» Джорджа Мартина.Если вы являетесь поклонником «Книг Крови» Клайва Баркера, творчества Джойс Кэрол Оутс, «Песочною человека» Нила Геймана или произведений «открытия последних лет» Джо Хилла, то эта книга займет почетное место на вашей книжной полке Впервые на русском языке!

Джин Родман Вулф , Джо Лансдейл , Джордж Р. Р. Мартин , Джо Хилл , Дэн Симмонс , Поппи Брайт , Поппи З. Брайт , Томас Лиготти

Фантастика / Ужасы / Ужасы и мистика