"Michael Swanwick - Lord Weary's Empire" - читать интересную книгу автора (Swanwick Michael) Lord Weary's Empire
by Michael Swanwick Michael Swanwick assures us that he would update his biographical information for the following story if it were it not for the fact that my frequent requests for this data have reduced him in size to two and a quarter inches. He says he is being held captive in a terrarium on the desk of Gregor Samsa in a demented research institution. (Of course, this obviously isn’t true, since if it were, we’d have to look for Robert Reed with a microscope.) Much as we may sympathize with Michael’s plight, this predicament has nothing to do with his latest story. Consequently, Will, a continuing character from “The Word that Sings the Scythe” (Asimov’s, October/ November 2004), must explore, without preamble, the treacherous subterranean reaches of . . . Like a leaf before a storm, Will fled. The basement corridors of Babel careened and reeled nightmarishly by and still he could not lose his pursuers. Three times the lancers had a clear line of sight and fired, each shot a blow to Will’s ringing ears. But then, just beyond a row of overflowing garbage cans, Will saw a steel access door, chained shut but slightly ajar in its frame. He stooped and, grabbing the lower edge of the door, yanked with all his might. A bullet burned through the air over his head. The door lurched open, wrenched out of true. Frantically, Will squeezed through the triangular space and tumbled down a short flight of metal steps. As he stumbled to his feet, he heard the lancers, too large to squeeze through themselves, trying to break down the door. Blindly, he ran. Rats scurried away at his approach. Roaches crunched underfoot. He was in a great dark space punctuated by massive I-beams and lit only by infrequent bare bulbs whose light struggled to reach the floor. Somehow, he had made his way into the network of train tunnels that spiraled up through Babel Tower. Careful to avoid the third rail, Will followed one curving set of tracks into darkness, listening for approaching trains. Sometimes he heard their thunder in the distance, and once a train slammed past, mere inches from where he pressed himself, shivering, against the wall, and left him temporarily blinded. When he could see again, the tunnels were silent. He had lost his pursuers. He was safe now. And hopelessly lost. He’d been plodding along for some time when he saw a sewer worker—a haint—in the tunnel ahead, in hip waders and hard hat. “What you doing here, white boy?” the haint asked when Will hailed him. “I’m lost.” “Well, you best get yourself unlost. They’s trouble brewing.” “I can’t,” Will began. “I don’t know—” |
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