"Tanya Huff - Keeper's Chronicles 1 - Summon the Keeper" - читать интересную книгу автора (Huff Tanya)

When the storm broke, rain pounding down in great sheets out of a black and
unforgiving sky, Claire Hansen had to admit she wasn't surprised; it had been that
kind of evening. Although her ticket took her to Colburg, three stops farther along the
line, she'd stepped off the train and into the Kingston station certain that she'd found
the source of the summons. It was the last thing she'd been certain of all day.
By the time it started to rain, her feet hurt, her luggage had about pulled her
arms from their sockets, her traveling companion was sulking, and she was more than
ready to pack it in. She'd search again in the morning, after a good night's sleep.
Unfortunately, it wasn't going to be that easy.
A Great Lakes Hydroecology convention had filled two of the downtown
hotels, the third didn't allow pets, and the fourth was hosting the Beer Can Collectors
of America, South Eastern Ontario Division. Claire had professed indignant disbelief
about the latter until the desk clerk had pointed out the sign in the lobby welcoming
the collectors to Kingston.
Some people have too much spare time, she thought as she shifted her suitcase
into her left hand, the lighter, wicker cat carrier into her right, and headed back out
into the night. Way too much spare time.
Pulling her coat collar out from under the weight of her backpack and
hunkering down into its dubious shelter, she followed her feet along King Street
toward the university, where a vague memory suggested there were guest houses and
B&Bs hollowed out of the huge old mansions along the lake. Logically, she should
have caught a cab out to the parade of hotels and budget motels lining Highway 2
between Kingston and Cataraqui, but, as logical solutions were rare in her line of
work, Claire kept walking.
Thunder cracked, lightning lit up the sky, and it started to rain harder. Down
the center of the street, where the reaching leaves of the huge, old trees didn't quite
touch, grape-sized drops of water hit the pavement so hard they bounced. On the
sidewalk, under the trees, it was…
A gust of wind tipped branches almost vertical, dumping a stream of icy water
off the canopy and straight down the back of Claire's neck.
… not significantly drier.
There were times when profanity offered the only satisfactory response.
Denied that outlet, Claire gritted her teeth and continued walking through
increasingly deeper puddles toward City Park. Surely there'd be some kind of shelter
near such a prominent tourist area even though September had emptied it of fairs and
festivals. Tired, wet, and just generally cranky, she'd settle for anything that involved
a roof and a bed.
At the corner of Lower Union and King, the lightning flashed again, throwing
trees and houses into sharp-edged relief. On the third house up from the corner, a
signboard affixed to a wrought iron fence reflected the light with such intensity, it left
afterimages on the inside of Claire's lids.
"Shall we check it out?" She had to yell to make herself heard over the storm.
There was no answer from the cat carrier, but then she hadn't actually
expected one.
In this, one of the oldest parts of the city, the houses were three- and four-
story, red-brick Victorians. Too large to remain single-family dwellings in a time of
rising energy prices, most had been hacked up into flats. The first two houses up from
the corner were of this type. The third, past a narrow driveway, was larger still.
Squinting in the dark, water pouring off her hair and into her eyes, Claire
struggled to make out the words on the sign. She was fairly certain there were words;