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Автор Джейн Остин

STEVE HOCKENSMITH

PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND ZOMBIES

DAWN OF THE DREADFULS

    For Jane. We kid because we love.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

It was a cry that hadn’t been heard in Hertfordshire for years. page 15

Their father was obviously unhappy with their limp grips and hesitant movements. page 37

As Elizabeth brought back the sword to try again, the zombie reached out and grabbed it. page 63

Side by side, Jane and Elizabeth stepped forward, weapons at the ready. page 85

By the time the unmentionable had helped Elizabeth to her feet, it was obvious he wasn’t an unmentionable at all. page 97

“Oh, Cuthbert! It is you! After all these years!” page 113

The thing flailed at her, wailing, yet it could come no closer. page 170

He hefted the blacksmith’s hammer and brought it down on the unmentionable’s crown. page 178

It humped its way toward Mary like a massive, rabid inchworm. page 191

“Grrrrruh!” Mr. Smith barked. “Grrrrrrruh!” page 233

Scattered here and there over the grounds were dozens of ragged, staggering figures—easily two hundred in all, if not three. page 255

By nightfall, however, the onslaught was once again relentless. page 263

Mr. Bennet gave each of his daughters a long look. “You will die warriors, all of you. ” page 283

CHAPTER 1

WALKING OUT in the middle of a funeral would be, of course, bad form. So attempting to walk out on one’s own was beyond the pale.

When the service began, Mr. Ford was as well behaved as any corpse could be expected to be. In fact, he lay stretched out on the bier looking almost as stiff and expressionless in death as he had in life, and Oscar Bennet, gazing upon his not-so-dearly departed neighbor, could but think to himself, You lucky sod.

It was Mr. Bennet who longed to escape the church then, and the black oblivion of death seemed infinitely preferable to the torments he was suffering. At the pulpit, the Reverend Mr. Cummings was reading (and reading and reading and reading) from the Book of Common Prayer with all the verve and passion of a man mumbling in his sleep, while the pews were filled with statues—the good people of Meryton, Hertfordshire, competing to see who could remain motionless the longest while wearing the most somber look of solemnity.

This contest had long since been forfeited by one party in particular: Mr. Bennet’s. Mrs. Bennet couldn’t resist sharing her (insufficiently) whispered appraisal of the casket’s handles and plaque. (“Brass? For shame! Why, Mrs. Morrison had gold last week, and her people don’t have two guineas to rub together. ”) Lydia and Kitty, the youngest of the Bennets’ five daughters, were ever erupting into titters for reasons known only to themselves. Meanwhile, the middle daughter, fourteen-year-old Mary, insisted on loudly shushing her giggling sisters no matter how many times her reproaches were ignored, for she considered herself second only to the Reverend Mr. Cummings—and perhaps Christ Himself—as Meryton’s foremost arbiter of virtue.

At least the Bennets’ eldest, Jane, was as serene and sweet countenanced as ever, even if her dress was a trifle heavy on décolletage for a funeral. (“Display, my dear, display!” Mrs. Bennet had harped at her that morning. “Lord Lumpley might be there!”) And, of course, Mr. Bennet knew he need fear no embarrassment from Elizabeth, second to Jane in age and beauty but first in spirit and wit. He leaned forward to look down the pew at her, his favorite—and found her gaping at the front of the church, a look of horror on her face.