"Chalker, Jack L. - Dancing Gods 01 - The River of the Dancing Gods" - читать интересную книгу автора (Chalker Jack L)Something just sorta said to me, 'If this is the rest of your life,
then why bother to be alive at all?'" He thought, but could find little else to say right then. What was the right thing to say to somebody like this, anyway? Flecks of rain struck his windshield, and he flipped on the wipers, the sound adding an eerie, hypnotic background to the Page 8 Chalker, Jack L - The River of the Dancing Gods sudden roar of a midsummer thunderstorm on a truck cab. Peering out, he thought for a moment he saw two Interstate 10 roadways—an impossible sort of fork he knew just couldn't be there. He kicked on the brights and the fog lights, and the image seemed to resolve itself a bit, the right-hand one looking more solid. He decided that keeping to the white stripe down the side of the road separating road and shoulder was the safest course. At the illusory intersection, there seemed for a moment to be two trucks, one coming out of the other, going right, while the other, its ghostly twin, went left. The image of the second truck, apparently passing his and vanishing quickly in the distance to his left, startled him for a moment. He could have sworn there wasn't anything behind him for a couple of miles, and the CB was totally silent. The rain stopped as suddenly as it had begun, and things took on a more normal appearance in minutes. He glanced over he decided. Ahead loomed a green exit sign, and, still a little unnerved, he badly wanted to get his bearings. The sign said, "Ruddygore, 5 miles." That didn't help him much. Ruddygore? Where in hell was that? The next exit should be Sheffield. A mile marker approached, and he decided to check things out. The little green number said, "4." He frowned again, beginning to become a little unglued. Four? That couldn't be right. Not if he was still on I-10. Uneasily, he began to think of that split back there. Maybe it was a split—that other truck had seemed to curve off to the left when he went right. If so, he was on some cockeyed interstate spur to God knew where. God knew, indeed. As far as he knew or could remember, there were no exits, let alone splits, between Ozona and Sheffield. He flicked on his interior light and looked down at his road atlas, held open by clips to the west Texas map. According to it, he was right—and no sign of any Ruddygore. He sighed and snapped off the light. Well, the thing was wrong in a hundred places, anyway. Luckily he was still ahead of schedule, so a five-mile detour shouldn't be much of a problem. He glanced over to his left again for no particular reason. Funny. The landscaping made it look as if there weren't any lane going back. |
|
|