Читать книгу Worlds Explode - Shane Hegarty, Shane Hegarty - Страница 14
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The next morning, sun crept into Darkmouth and an early summer breeze travelled across the sea, tickling the low waves that ran up to the raggedy shoreline and warming the fat rocks that littered the small crescent of beach at the town’s southern edge. Reaching the wide mangled cliffs that separated Darkmouth from the rest of the world, the breeze rose up until it ruffled the grass lining the top.
A basset hound scampered across the stony beach, stopping briefly to sniff a pebble, pee on it, then move on again.
“Yappy!”
The animal’s owner, Mrs Bright, scrambled after it, struggling to keep her footing on the shifting layer of stones.
“Yappy! Come back, Yappy, you stupid animal.”
She stopped for a moment and looked back along the beach. It curved away into the early morning haze, its stones kissed by the sun-sparkled sea that lapped at the long sweep of the bay. Inland, the houses of Darkmouth huddled together, as if cowering from some unseen danger, but, in this clear morning light, it looked like a normal town. You couldn’t see the shimmer of broken glass on walls, the dull glint of bars on windows, the tight squeeze of the town’s mazy alleyways. You could only see the painted house fronts, the wooden shop signs, the little playground of swings and slides. It was almost, in fact, a thing of beauty.
I really hate Darkmouth, thought Mrs Bright.
Mrs Bright wasn’t supposed to be living here at all. She had made the mistake of marrying a man from Darkmouth who had come not only with a dog she couldn’t stand, but a promise that they would live in the town for exactly one year, and no more, before moving on to any place of her choosing.
He died suddenly eleven months later.
She was left with a house she couldn’t sell and a dog she didn’t want.
“Yappy!” she shouted. “Where did you go, you useless mutt?”
She scanned the beach for the dog again. No sign. She moved towards the corner of the cliff, where rock jutted towards the water and the shore narrowed. Squeezing herself carefully round the base of the looming cliff to the beach on the other side, she could still see nothing of her tiresome pet.
“Yappy! I’ll leave you here, don’t think I won’t.”
From somewhere she heard a muffled yap.
She stopped. Listened. Heard it again.
Squinting at the black stone of the cliff, its layers of rock turned in on itself as if it might collapse at any moment, Mrs Bright realised there was an opening. It was small, a fissure not much taller than herself, and bent over as if buckling under the weight of the land above it.
She had walked this part of the beach many times and never noticed a cave before. Loose soil and stones were scattered at the entrance, apparently freshly fallen. There must, she thought, have been a rock fall, maybe caused by the heavy rains that accompanied the recent invasion of those things. Another reason why she wanted out of Darkmouth at the earliest opportunity.
There was another bark from inside the cliff.
Mrs Bright sighed, stepped carefully over the rubble at the opening, manoeuvred round a large rock and carefully made her way inside.
It was a cave, its walls narrowing as she moved deeper into it, the roof sloping down so that she needed to stoop as she called again for the dog.
“Yappy!”
Her shout echoed back at her just as she squeezed through a gap and into a chamber that stretched high into the blackness above her. The cave was so dark that Mrs Bright could hardly see the ground at her feet.
She gave one final call for the dog and heard nothing but her own breathing and the sound of trickling water.
As Mrs Bright turned to leave, she realised she could see now. A flickering crimson light crept across the hollowed-out rock. Then something else occurred to her: the light was coming from inside the cave.
From somewhere in the direction of that light, Yappy yapped.
Mrs Bright peered towards it. She made out a smudge of deep red, the soft edge of a light obscured by a fold in the cave wall. Cautiously, she edged towards it.
“Is that you, Yappy?”
It most definitely was not.
Mrs Bright’s strangled scream echoed through the high cavern.
Many dogs are intelligent, perceptive beasts with an almost supernatural sense of danger.
Yappy was not one of those dogs.
A couple of minutes later, he emerged from the cave, stopped at a large stone at its entrance, sniffed it, peed on it, sniffed again. He dropped something from his mouth, a curved pink and white object, sniffed around a bit, licked between his legs, sniffed around some more, picked up the object again and scuttled away down the beach. The sun climbed above the horizon into a sky of near unbroken blue. But, if anyone had been looking up at that moment, they would have seen the merest hint of a cloud cross the sun, dimming it almost imperceptibly before burning away again.
And they would have presumed it was just a trick of the light that the cloud briefly appeared to change, solidify and form the shape of a howling face.