Читаем Absent Friends полностью

Jimmy's dad takes him to the hospital. He needs twelve stitches in that arm, Jimmy, and he does the damnedest thing. He tells his dad it was the Cooleys' funny black dog from down the street that bit him. Tells him he was throwing sticks for it, and the dog, well, it just got a little carried away. My fault, Jimmy says. Why say this? Because the Cooleys' dog has tags, the Cooleys' dog had its rabies shots. You tell someone a stray dog bit you, they hunt it, they catch it, they kill it to see if it gave you rabies: all the kids know. Jimmy tells the kids, King tore up my arm while I'm trying to help him, now they're gonna kill him, like it's for me? No way.

Tom smiles when Jimmy tells them this, says, Jimmy, that's a lie, you told your dad a lie.

Jimmy says, Yeah, and I sure hope he doesn't ask me anything else about it, because I'm gonna get it all screwed up.

So all the kids wait to see if Jimmy starts to foam at the mouth, but he doesn't, so everything's all right.

And from then to now, Marian's in love.

Marian will wait for Jimmy; Jimmy will ask her when he's ready.

Marian's happy.




MARIAN'S STORY

Chapter 4

The Women in the Tent



October 31, 2001

Marian stepped to the reception desk. She smiled and greeted Elena, careful to ask after her family.

“Mama was supposed to go back to San Juan yesterday, but Aunt Pilar cried and cried,” Elena told her. “So she stayed.” Elena's cousin had been an electrician, working in the south tower.

“Tell your aunt she's in my prayers.”

“Thank you. She'll like that.”

Marian took the message slips Elena handed her and said nothing else. She'd given Elena the names of three grief counselors, two of them Spanish-speaking. She wished Elena's aunt would call someone and get some help: grief was an easier burden if not carried alone. But Marian knew better than to try to push people to do what was best for them. She tried to take lessons from life—how else to keep from despairing?—and she liked to think she had many years ago learned that one.

She walked down the short corridor to her own office thinking of Elena's aunt, Mrs. Padilla, whom she'd met half a dozen years before at Elena's wedding. She thought of all the prayers, her own and others', rising as the smoke rose, climbing toward Heaven on behalf of Elena's cousin, on behalf of so many people. Marian had indeed been praying for Elena's cousin, and for the sons and sisters of the small number of people she knew personally who had lost loved ones. And for all the people she did not know, and especially all the people who might not have anyone to pray for them.

And, yes, for Jimmy.

Marian went to church in Manhattan now, at Holy Innocents, and had for many years; not every week, but often. She had not been to St. Ann's back home since she'd left, except for a few weddings, a few funerals. Until last month, when she had crossed the choppy water back to Staten Island the first Sunday after the attacks to attend mass with her father because he'd asked her to.

In the echoing dimness of St. Ann's, where she had spent each Sunday morning of her childhood (Jimmy sometimes there, more often not, his devoutness being of a different nature), Marian had sat beside her father and waited for comfort: if not the comfort of God, at least the comfort of the familiar. Through the ponderous swells of organ music, through the homily, through the prayers spoken together and those whispered alone, she waited. She did not take communion, having not been to confession. Her father's face showed his disappointment. Watching the patient, shuffling communion line, Marian wondered why she had not been to confession since the attacks. She had, through the years, permitted herself confession and therefore communion: her doubts allowed it. Because she had never been certain that keeping her dark secret was wrong (had never been sure, she reminded herself strictly, that the secret was the truth), she had released herself from the obligation to confess it. But in these times, even to prepare for this morning's mass—even to prepare for coming back here—she had found confession impossible.

Nevertheless, she prayed from the heart, as was required. Faith was a compact, like anything else, and Marian was prepared to uphold her part of the bargain. She prayed and waited.

But the music remained just sound, the smoke clouding from the bronze censers mere fragrance. Father Connor's earnest sermon was nothing but words, and Marian found herself not listening to them, hearing instead the soft weeping of people at the first of what would now be a lifetime of Sunday masses without the husbands, wives, sons and daughters, fathers and friends they were accustomed to have beside them. She saw a tear on her father's cheek. Awkward, she patted his hand. “I miss your mother,” he whispered, though it was nearly four decades since Marian's mother had passed away.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Эскортница
Эскортница

— Адель, милая, у нас тут проблема: другу надо настроение поднять. Невеста укатила без обратного билета, — Михаил отрывается от телефона и обращается к приятелям: — Брюнетку или блондинку?— Брюнетку! - требует Степан. — Или блондинку. А двоих можно?— Ади, у нас глаза разбежались. Что-то бы особенное для лучшего друга. О! А такие бывают?Михаил возвращается к гостям:— У них есть студентка юрфака, отличница. Чиста как слеза, в глазах ум, попа орех. Занималась балетом. Либо она, либо две блондинки. В паре девственница не работает. Стесняется, — ржет громко.— Петь, ты лучше всего Артёма знаешь. Целку или двух?— Студентку, — Петр делает движение рукой, дескать, гори всё огнем.— Мы выбрали девицу, Ади. Там перевяжи ее бантом или в коробку посади, — хохот. — Да-да, подарочек же.

Агата Рат , Арина Теплова , Елена Михайловна Бурунова , Михаил Еремович Погосов , Ольга Вечная

Детективы / Триллер / Современные любовные романы / Прочие Детективы / Эро литература
Чикатило. Явление зверя
Чикатило. Явление зверя

В середине 1980-х годов в Новочеркасске и его окрестностях происходит череда жутких убийств. Местная милиция бессильна. Они ищут опасного преступника, рецидивиста, но никто не хочет даже думать, что убийцей может быть самый обычный человек, их сосед. Удивительная способность к мимикрии делала Чикатило неотличимым от миллионов советских граждан. Он жил в обществе и удовлетворял свои изуверские сексуальные фантазии, уничтожая самое дорогое, что есть у этого общества, детей.Эта книга — история двойной жизни самого известного маньяка Советского Союза Андрея Чикатило и расследование его преступлений, которые легли в основу эксклюзивного сериала «Чикатило» в мультимедийном сервисе Okko.

Алексей Андреевич Гравицкий , Сергей Юрьевич Волков

Триллер / Биографии и Мемуары / Истории из жизни / Документальное