It

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

He looked at the checkout desk, and his heart seemed to stop in his chest for a moment before beginning to race doubletime. The poster was simple, stark . . . and familiar. It said simply:
REMEMBER THE CURFEW.
7 P.M.
DERRY POLICE DEPARTMENT.
In that instant it all seemed to come clear to him — it came in a grisly flash of light, and he realized that the vote they had taken was a joke. There was no turning back, never had been.
They were on a track as preordained as the memory-track which had caused him to look up when he passed under the stairway leading to the stacks. There was an echo here in Derry, a deadly echo, and all they could hope for was that the echo could be changed enough in their favor to allow them to escape with their lives.
‘Christ,’ he muttered, and scrubbed a palm up one cheek, hard.
‘Can I help you, sir?’ a voice at his elbow asked, and he jumped a little. It was a girl of perhaps seventeen, her dark– blonde hair held back from her pretty high– schooler’s face with barrettes. A library assistant, of course; they’d had them in 1958 too, high-school girls and boys who shelved books, showed kids how to use the card catalogue, discussed book reports and school papers, helped bewildered scholars with their footnotes and bibliographies. The pay was a pittance, but there were always kids willing to do it. It was agreeable work.
On the heels of this, reading the girl’s pleasant but questioning look a little more closely, he remembered that he no longer really belonged here — he was a giant in the land of little people. An intruder. In the adults’ library he had felt uneasy about the possibility of being looked at or spoken to, but here it was something of a relief. For one thing, it proved he was still an adult, and the fact that the girl was clearly braless under her thin Western-style shirt was also more relief than turn-on: if proof that this was 1985 and not 1958 was needed, the clearly limned points of her nipples against the cotton of her shirt was it.
‘No thank you,’ he said, and then, for no reason at all that he could understand, he heard himself add: ‘I was looking for my son.’
‘Oh? What’s his name? Maybe I’ve seen him.’ She smiled. ‘I know most of the kids.’
‘His name is Ben Hanscom,’ he said. ‘But I don’t see him here.’
‘Tell me what he looks like and I’ll give him a message, if there is one.’
‘Well,’ Ben said, uncomfortable now and beginning to wish he had never started this, ‘he’s on the stout side, and he looks a little bit like me. But it’s no big deal, miss. If you see him, just tell him his dad popped by on his way home.’
‘I will,’ she said, and smiled, but the smile didn’t reach her eyes, and Ben suddenly realized that she hadn’t come over and spoken to him out of simple politeness and a wish to help. She happened to be a library assistant in the Children’s Library in a town where nine children had been slain over a span of eight months. You see a strange man in this scaled-down world where adults rarely come except to drop their kids off or pick them up. You’re suspicious . . . of course.
‘Thank you,’ he said, gave her a smile he hoped was reassuring, and then got the hell out.
He walked back through the corridor to the adults’ library and went to the desk on an impulse he didn’t understand . . . but of course they were supposed to follow their impulses this afternoon, weren’t they? Follow their impulses and see where they led.
The name plate on the circulation desk identified the pretty young librarian as Carole Banner. Behind her, Ben could see a door with a frosted-glass panel; lettered on this was
MICHAEL HANLON HEAD LIBRARIAN .
‘May I help you?’ Ms Banner asked. ‘I think so,’ Ben said. ‘That is, I hope so. I’d like to get a library card.’ ‘Very good,’ she said, and took out a form. ‘Are you a resident of Berry?’ ‘Not presently.’ ‘Home address, then?’
‘Rural Star Route 2, Hemingford Home, Nebraska.’ He paused for a moment, a little amused by her stare, and then reeled off the Zip Code: ‘59341.’ ‘Is this a joke, Mr Hanscom?’ ‘Not at all.
‘Are you moving to Derry, then?’ ‘I have no plans to, no.’
‘This is a long way to come to borrow books, isn’t it? Don’t they have libraries in Nebraska?’
‘It’s kind of a sentimental thing,’ Ben said. He would have thought telling a stranger this would be embarrassing, but he found it wasn’t. ‘I grew up in Berry, you see. This is the first time I’ve been back since I was a kid. I’ve been walking around, seeing what’s changed and what hasn’t. And all at once it occurred to me that I spent about ten years of my life here between ages three and thirteen, and I don’t have a single thing to remember those years by. Not so much as a postcard. I had some silver dollars, but I lost one of them and gave the rest to a friend. I guess what I want