Ellina Devyatova – Butterfly Effect (страница 1)
Roman Zharov, Ellina Devyatova
Butterfly Effect
THE BUTTERFLY
An ant was crawling up a long, pale green
K couldn't explain why he dropped the piece of leaf he was carrying and started climbing the blade of grass, not even
Unlike down on the ground, at the top of the grass blade, the weather was excellent! It was still pre-dawn down there beneath the grass cover, and it was a great feeling to emerge from the damp darkness. K exposed his face to the rising sun and enjoyed the flow of fresh air.
Suddenly, he spotted two beautiful butterflies flying nearby. Their wings looked like they were made of blue velvet with two small black dots on them, one on each. Their feelers and the fur on their necks shimmered with mother-of-pearl. They looked so free and happy that he started feeling envious. He couldn’t remember a time when he had ever rested in his life. All ants knew that they lived to work for the sake of their brothers and sisters. And they all had to
In contrast to many others, ants don’t have much to defend themselves against their enemies. No rhinoceros beetle’s horns to fight, no moth’s wings to fly away from danger. Almost any bug around could crush them if they chose to do so. The only power they had was unity. Even though others reconciled themselves to this way of life, K had not. He always dreamed of being something more than just a negligible tiny bug; he wanted to see life beyond his anthill. But he knew it would hardly happen, simply because he was born an ant.
Upset by these thoughts, he decided to descend back to the ground. Just as he started crawling, a sudden gust of wind
THE BOOK
‘Dorothy’s not in Kansas anymore…’ was the first thought that appeared in K’s head as soon as he
K instantly recalled his first summer in this world. The track by which the colony was carrying the food and building materials for the anthill that year went along a relatively small hill with some boulders lying here and there on the hillsides. Some boulders were lying apart, but some formed groups that looked like intriguing castles or statues that caught K’s eye every time he passed them by. The path mostly went along the bottom of the hill, but at one place it twisted towards one of those castles and immediately turned back to the hill’s bottom as if it was willing to shake the minds of those following it. At the beginning of every day, K was eager to go with the crowd to make that twist, take a glance at the valley, and feel the cold calmness of the stones.
One day, passing it by like a thousandth time, he noticed something light among the otherwise dark and gray stones. The boulders formed a sort of a cave here, and something bright and magnificent inside caught his eye. He had never noticed it before and felt like an explorer who discovered an unknown land after months of wandering on the high seas. He couldn’t fall asleep that night. The image of light coming from the cave tingled in his mind, and K decided to get in there no matter what!
The next day, as he was passing by the cave, K pretended he hurt his leg and crawled away from the crowd. Ants never stop and once those who were around him in the column had vanished, he silently moved towards the cave and soon found himself inside. He felt cool and humid air around him and, as soon as his eyes got used to the dark, approached what had been bothering him all the recent days. It was a book, actually an old one which
K didn’t sleep in the anthill that night and many nights after that. Every day when darkness covered the ground, he sneaked away to the boulders and read. It wasn’t easy on cloudy nights, but K
He started recalling everything that had happened to Dorothy the day she and Toto were swept away to Oz by a cyclone. Remembering Dorothy’s adventures, K started believing that when he opened his eyes, he’d see the yellow brick road and hear Toto barking merrily. A quite surreal feeling deepened even more by the fact that whatever held his body wasn’t steady ground. It was like lying on a flying carpet hovering not far from the ground. After a few moments, he finally
K had already grown accustomed to flying and habitually closed his eyes as soon as he felt himself lift off the ground, enjoying the sensation of flight. Scarcely had his body touched the ground when a thought flashed in his mind: “Where in the world am I now?!”. He didn’t hasten to open his eyes, trying to figure out where he was. Nothing felt disturbing, so he finally looked around. K was lying on his back, not far from the pond’s shore, on a small piece of bare ground, probably a footstep left by a small deer that had come to the pond
THE WEB
“Ok!” murmured K to himself, turning over. Things had stopped being as surprising as they had been earlier that morning. His urge for adventures was fully satisfied for the foreseeable future, and the only wish left was to get back home. The only question was, “Where’s home, after all?”. The chances of finding the answer from the height of the poplar were considerably higher, and K immediately moved to the tree. He started climbing, and, following his ant instincts, K didn’t move straight toward the top but rather along a mysterious winding path, the origin of which only God knows. He never