Richard Mayhew is a young man with a good heart and an ordinary life, which is changed forever when he stops to help a girl he finds bleeding on a London sidewalk. His small act of kindness propels him into a world he never dreamed existed. There are people who fall through the cracks, and Richard has become one of them. And he must learn to survive in this city of shadows and darkness, monsters and saints, murderers and angels, if he is ever to return to the London that he knew.
Авторы: Нил Гейман, Terry Pratchett & Neil Gaiman, Mike Carey, Glenn Fabry
a crocodile head, at de Carabas. «It was okay,» gurned Old Bailey with a grin that was most terrible to behold. «He had another.»
The marquis sniffed, uncertain whether or not Old Bailey was pulling his leg. He made the statue of the Beast vanish inside his coat once more.
«Hang on,» said Old Bailey. He went back inside his brown tent and returned holding the ornate silver box the marquis had given him on their previous meeting. He held it out to the marquis. «How about this then?» he asked. «Are you ready to take it back? It fair gives me the creepy shivers, having it around.»
The marquis walked to the edge of the roof, dropped the eight feet to the next building. «I’ll take it back, when all this is over,» he called. «Let us hope that you don’t have to use it.»
Old Bailey leaned over. «How will I know if I do?»
«You’ll know,» called the marquis. «And the rats will tell you what to do with it.» And with that he was over the side of the building, slipping down, using drainpipes and ledges as handholds.
«Hope I never finds out, that’s all I can say,» said Old Bailey to himself. Then a thought struck him. «Hoy,» he called out to the night and the City. «Don’t forget the shoeses and the gloveses!»
The advertisements on the walls were for refreshing and health-giving malted drinks, for two-shilling day excursions by train to the seaside, for kippered herrings, moustache wax and bootblack. They were smoke-blackened relics of the late twenties or the early thirties. Richard stared at them in disbelief. It seemed completely abandoned: a forgotten place. «It is British Museum Station,» admitted Richard. «But . . . but there never was a British Museum Station. This is all wrong.»
«It was closed down in about 1933, and sealed off,» said Door.
«How bizarre ,» said Richard. It was like walking through history. He could hear trains echoing through tunnels nearby, felt the push of air as they passed. «Are there many stations like this?»
«About fifty,» said Hunter. «They aren’t all accessible, though. Not even to us.»
There was a movement in the shadows at the edge of the platform. «Hello,» said Door. «How are you?» She went down into a crouch. A brown rat stepped out into the light. It sniffed at Door’s hand.
«Thank you!» said Door, cheerfully. «I’m glad you aren’t dead, too.»
Richard edged over. «Um, Door. Could you tell the rat something for me?»
The rat turned its head toward him. «Miss Whiskers says that if there’s anything you’ve got to say to her, you can tell it to her yourself,» said Door.
«Miss Whiskers?»
Door shrugged. «It’s a literal translation,» she said. «It sounds better in rat.»
Richard did not doubt it. «Um. Hello . . . Miss Whiskers . . . Look, there was one of your rat-speaker people, a girl named Anaesthesia. She was taking me to the market. We were crossing this bridge in the dark, and she just never made it across.»
The rat interrupted him, with a sharp squee. Door began to talk, hesitantly, like a simultaneous translator. «She says . . . that the rats do not blame you for the loss. Your guide was . . . mm . . . taken by the night . . . as tribute.»
«But—»
The rat squeaked again. «Sometimes they come back . . . » said Door. «She has taken note of your concern . . . and thanks you for it.» The rat nodded to Richard, blinked her bead-black eyes, then leapt to the floor and scurried back into the dark. «Nice rat,» said Door. Her disposition seemed to have improved remarkably, now that she had the scroll. «Up there,» she said, indicating an archway effectively blocked by an iron door.
They walked over to it. Richard pushed against the metal, but it was locked from the other side. «Looks like it’s been sealed up,» said Richard. «We’ll need special tools.»
Door smiled, suddenly; her face seemed to be illuminated. For a moment, her elfin face became beautiful. «Richard,» she said. «My family. We’re openers. It’s, our Talent. Look . . . » She reached out a grubby hand, touched the door. For a long moment nothing happened, then there was a loud crash from the other side of the door, and a chunk from their side. Door pushed against the door and, with a fierce squeal from the rusted hinges, it opened. Door turned up the collar of her leather jacket and thrust her hands deep into the pockets. Hunter shone her flashlight into the blackness beyond the doorway: a flight of stone steps, going up, into the dark. «Hunter. Can you take the rear?» asked Door. «I’ll go on in front. Richard can take the middle.»
She walked up a couple of steps. Hunter stayed where she was. «Lady?» said Hunter. «You are going to London Above?»
«That’s right,» said