The Shining

First published in 1977, The Shining quickly became a benchmark in the literary career of Stephen King.

Авторы: King Stephen Edwin

Стоимость: 100.00

“He’s an active kid. But I remember that day in the park and that night at the supper table. And I wonder if some of our kid’s bumps and bruises come from just keeling over. That Dr. Edmonds said Danny did it right in his office, for Christ’s sake!”
“All right. But those bruises were fingers. I’d swear to it. He didn’t get them falling down.”
“He goes into a trance,” Jack said. “Maybe he sees something that happened in that room. An argument. Maybe a suicide. Violent emotions. It isn’t like watching a movie; he’s in a highly suggestible state. He’s right in the damn thing. His subconscious is maybe visualizing whatever happened in a symbolic way… as a dead woman who’s alive again, zombie, undead, ghoul, you pick your term.”
“You’re giving me goose-bumps,” she said thickly.
“I’m giving myself a few. I’m no psychiatrist, but it seems to fit so well. The walking dead woman as a symbol for dead emotions, dead lives, that just won’t give up and go away… but because she’s a subconscious figure, she’s also him. In the trance state, the conscious Danny is submerged. The subconscious figure is pulling the strings. So Danny put his hands around his own neck and-”
“Stop,” she said. “I get the picture. I think that’s more frightening than having a stranger creeping around the halls, Jack. You can move away from a stranger. You can’t move away from yourself. You’re talking about schizophrenia.”
“Of a very limited type,” he said, but a trifle uneasily. “And of a very special nature. Because he does seem able to read thoughts, and he really does seem to have precognitive flashes from time to time. I can’t think of that as mental illness no matter how hard I try. We all have schizo deposits in us anyway. I think as Danny gets older, he’ll get this under control.”
“If you’re right, then it’s imperative that we get him out. Whatever he has, this hotel is making it worse.”
“I wouldn’t say that,” he objected. “If he’d done as he was told, he never would have gone up to that room in the first place. It never would have happened.”
“My God, Jack! Are you implying that being half-strangled was a… a fitting punishment for being off limits?”
“No… no. Of course not. But-”
“No buts,” she said, shaking her head violently. “The truth is, we’re guessing. We don’t have any idea when he might turn a corner and run into one of those… air pockets, one-reel horror movies, whatever they are. We have to get him away.” She laughed a little in the darkness. “Next thing we’ll be seeing things.”
“Don’t talk nonsense,” he said, and in the darkness of the room he saw the hedge lions bunching around the path, no longer flanking it but guarding it, hungry November lions. Cold sweat sprang out on his brow.
“You didn’t really see anything, did you?” she was asking. “I mean, when you went up to that room. You didn’t see anything?”
The lions were gone. Now he saw a pink pastel shower curtain with a dark shape lounging behind it. The closed door. That muffled, hurried thump, and sounds after it that might have been running footsteps. The horrible, lurching beat of his own heart as he struggled with the passkey.
“Nothing,” he said, and that was true. He had been strung tip, not sure of what was happening. He hadn’t had a chance to sift through his thoughts for a reasonable explanation concerning the bruises on his son’s neck. He had been pretty damn suggestible himself. Hallucinations could sometimes be catching.
“And you haven’t changed your mind? About the snowmobile, I mean?”
His hands clamped into sudden tight fists
(Stop nagging me!)
by his sides. “I said I would, didn’t I? I will. Now go to sleep. It’s been a long hard day.”
“And how,” she said. There was a rustle of bedclothes as she turned toward him and kissed his shoulder. “I love you, Jack.”
“I love you too,” he said, but he was only mouthing the words. His hands were still clenched into fists. They felt like rocks on the ends of his arms. The pulse beat prominently in his forehead. She hadn’t said a word about what was going to happen to them after they got down, when the party was over. Not one word. It had been Danny this and Danny that and Jack I’m so scared. Oh yes, she was scared of a lot of closet boogeymen and jumping shadows, plenty scared. But there was no lack of real ones, either. When they got down to Sidewinder they would arrive with sixty dollars and the clothes they stood up in. Not even a car. Even if Sidewinder bad a pawnshop, which it didn’t, they had nothing to hock but Wendy’s ninety-dollar diamond engagement ring and the Sony AM/FM radio. A pawnbroker might give them twenty bucks. A kind pawnbroker. There would be no job, not even part-time or seasonal, except maybe shoveling out driveways for three dollars a