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A promise made twenty-eight years ago calls seven adults to reunite in Derry, Maine, where as teenagers they battled an evil creature that preyed on the city’s children. Unsure that their Losers Club had vanquished the creature all those years ago, the seven had vowed to return to Derry if IT should ever reappear. Now, children are being murdered again and their repressed memories of that summer return as they prepare to do battle with the monster lurking in Derry’s sewers once more.

Авторы: King Stephen Edwin

Стоимость: 100.00

where yer split up one an one an one. You all know what’s goin on in this town. All the same, I don’t forbid you to come down here, mostly because ye’d be down here anyway. But for yer own good, here or anywhere around, gang together.’ He looked at Bill. ‘Do you disagree with me, young Master Bill Denbrough?’
‘N-N-No, sir,’ Bill said. ‘W-We’ll stay tuh –tuh –tuh — ‘
‘That’s good enough for me,’ Mr Nell said. ‘Yer hand on it.’
Bill stuck out his hand and Mr Nell shook it.
Richie shook off Stan and stepped forward.
‘Sure an begorrah, Mr Nell, yer a prince among men, y’are! A foine man! A foine, foine man!’ He stuck out his own hand, seized the Irishman’s huge paw, and flagged it furiously,
grinning all the time. To the bemused Mr Nell the boy looked like a hideous parody of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
‘Thank you, boy,’ Mr Nell said, retrieving his hand. ‘Ye want to work on that a bit. As of now, ye sound about as Irish as Groucho Marx.’
The other boys laughed, mostly in relief. Even as he was laughing, Stan shot Richie a reproachful look: Grow up, Richie!
Mr Nell shook hands all around, gripping Ben’s last of all.
‘Ye’ve nothing to be ashamed of but bad judgment, big boy. As for that there . . . did you see how to do it in a book?’
Ben shook his head.
‘Just figured it out?’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘Well if that don’t beat Harry! Ye’Il do great things someday, I’ve no doubt. But the Barrens isn’t the place to do em.’ He looked around thoughtfully. ‘No great thing will ever be done here. Nasty place.’ He sighed. ‘Tear it down, dear boys. Tear it right down. I believe I’ll just sit me down in the shade o this bush here and bide a wee as you do it.’ He looked ironically at Richie as he said this last, as if inviting another manic outburst.
‘Yes, sir,’ Richie said humbly, and that was all. Mr Nell nodded, satisfied, and the boys fell to work, once again turning to Ben — this time to show them the quickest way to tear down what he had shown them how to build. Meanwhile, Mr Nell removed a brown bottle from inside his tunic and helped himself to a large gulp. He coughed, then blew out breath in an explosive sigh and regarded the boys with watery, benign eyes.
‘And what might ye have in yer bottle, sor?’ Richie asked from the place where he was standing knee-deep in the water.
‘Richie, can’t you ever shut up?’ Eddie hissed.
‘This?’ Mr Nell regarded Richie with mild surprise and looked at the bottle again. It had no label of any kind on it. ‘This is the cough medicine of the gods, my boy. Now let’s see if you can bend yer back anywhere near as fast as you can wag yer tongue.’
3
Bill and Richie were walking up Witcham Street together later on. Bill was pushing Silver; after first building and then tearing down the dam, he simply did not have the energy it would have taken to get Silver up to cruising speed. Both boys were dirty, dishevelled, and pretty well used up.
Stan had asked them if they wanted to come over to his house and play Monopoly or Parcheesi or something, but none of them wanted to. It was getting late. Ben, sounding tired and depressed, said he was going to go home and see if anybody had returned his library books. He had some hope of this, since the Derry Library insisted on writing in the borrower’s street address as well as his name on each book’s pocket card. Eddie said he was going to watch The Rock Show on TV because Neil Sedaka was going to be on and he wanted to see if Neil Sedaka was a Negro. Stan told Eddie not to be so stupid, Neil Sedaka was white, you could tell he was white just listening to him. Eddie claimed you couldn’t tell anything by listening to them; until last year he had been positive Chuck Berry was white, but when he was on Bandstand he turned out to be a Negro.
‘My mother still thinks he’s white, so that’s one good thing,’ Eddie said. ‘If she finds out he’s a Negro, she probably won’t let me listen to his songs anymore.’
Stan bet Eddie four funnybooks that Neil Sedaka was white, and the two of them set off together for Eddie’s house to settle the issue.
And here were Bill and Richie, headed in a direction which would bring them to Bill’s house after awhile, neither of them talking much. Richie found himself thinking about Bill’s story of the picture that had turned its head and winked. And in spite of his tiredness, an idea came to him. It was crazy . . . but it also held a certain attraction.
‘Billy me boy,’ he said. ‘Let’s stop for awhile. Take five. I’m dead.’
‘No such l-l-luck,’ Bill said, but he stopped, laid Silver carefully down on the edge of the green Theological Seminary lawn, and the two boys sat on the wide stone steps which led up to the rambling red