Читаем Early Warning полностью

Michael had picked up a piece of a branch, rather thick, and was bending over the edge of the pond, smashing the end of the branch into the rim of the ice, breaking it into little pieces. Richie scrambled to the top of the hill and ran down as fast as he could, and when he passed Michael, he smacked his brother and knocked him down. He then slid a long ways without even trying. He could almost, he thought, have spread his arms and taken off. When he came back to the hill, Michael punched him in the stomach, and then they both ran down the hill and slid. Michael slid two feet farther than Richie. They slid four more times.

Richie said, “We should learn to skate.”

“Nedra said you can go to a rink in Englewood and take lessons.”

They both sighed. They had been kicked out of swimming lessons and out of tennis lessons for fighting. The tennis coach had even given them a second chance, but they had then been kicked out again when Michael smacked Richie with the rim of his racket, and not just the strings.

“Dad said you just put the skates on and skate. The faster you go, the less you fall down.”

Michael punched him in the stomach again, but he could hardly feel it with his heavy coat. He pulled Michael’s hat down over his eyes, and then pushed both of his shoulders until he sat in the snow, got around behind him, and pushed his face in the snow. Michael came up gasping, his face all red and icy, grabbed Richie’s mittens right off his hands, jumped to his feet, and ran. Richie laughed and fell backward, then lay on his back in the middle of the pond, looking up at the clouds; Michael returned and dropped the mittens on his face. Michael was laughing, too.

At the edge of the pond, a little hidden under a wooden box, were Donna Fitzgerald’s galoshes. They were large and black, with buckles. Inside them were some thick wool socks. They removed the socks, then filled the boots with snow and a few pebbles that were lying around, and some sticks. The socks were red. Michael picked them up and headed down to the tear-shaped part of the pond, where the water came in. Donna was practicing spinning around or something, and he ran past her, waving her socks, to where the ice was pretty thin. He got down on his knees. When he started soaking her socks in the cold water, she shouted, “Hey, you little brat!” and skated at him as fast as she could. He stepped gingerly toward the even thinner ice and stood there, waving the socks.

She got closer and closer, and then she went right through the ice. Michael shouted, “Fatso, fatso, fatso!” and ran past her, throwing the wet socks at her. He turned around once and saw that she had dropped into the pond up to her thighs. She started screaming and waving her arms. Michael kept running.

Michael passed Richie and said, “Come on, let’s go home,” and Richie followed him. He did not stop or turn around to look at Donna. They came to the edge of the pond, ran up the hill, got out to the road, and ran home. When they got there, Nedra was making a meatloaf. She said that Mommy and Daddy were going out for dinner, and they would be eating early. Michael followed Richie into his room and said, “There are two of us and one of her, and if you ever say that we were even at the pond, I will break your arm.”

“What did you do to her?”

“I think I killed her.”

Richie didn’t answer, and Michael went back into his own room.

Richie thought it was interesting, a few days later, to discover that Donna was fine and Michael hadn’t killed her. Life wasn’t like in the movies, then.

ARTHUR HAD ALREADY ACCEPTED the Grumman job, and Lillian had gone around Bethpage and a few other towns on Long Island with Andy, and Andy had helped her put a bid on a house — much smaller than the one they had in McLean, but big enough. Tim had persuaded her to let him stay with the Sloans for the rest of the school year, and Dean had found a hockey team not far from Bethpage that looked pretty good. Debbie wasn’t saying anything, and all Tina wanted to know was whether she would have a bigger room in the new house. The day before the Realtor came and went over the McLean place, she got a cleaning crew in and made it look as good as she could. The Realtor hummed here and smiled there and stared at the pool and admired the view from Arthur’s office, and all in all, Lillian decided that getting Arthur out of the agency was the less evil alternative.

Перейти на страницу:

Все книги серии Last Hundred Years

Early Warning
Early Warning

From the Pulitzer Prize winner: a journey through mid-century America, as lived by the extraordinary Langdon family we first met in Some Luck, a national best seller published to rave reviews from coast to coast.Early Warning opens in 1953 with the Langdons at a crossroads. Their stalwart patriarch Walter, who with his wife had sustained their Iowa farm for three decades, has suddenly died, leaving their five children looking to the future. Only one will remain to work the land, while the others scatter to Washington, DC, California, and everywhere in between. As the country moves out of postwar optimism through the Cold War, the social and sexual revolutions of the 1960s and '70s, and then into the unprecedented wealth — for some — of the early '80s, the Langdon children will have children of their own: twin boys who are best friends and vicious rivals; a girl whose rebellious spirit takes her to the notorious Peoples Temple in San Francisco; and a golden boy who drops out of college to fight in Vietnam — leaving behind a secret legacy that will send shockwaves through the Langdon family into the next generation. Capturing an indelible period in America through the lens of richly drawn characters we come to know and love, Early Warning is an engrossing, beautifully told story of the challenges — and rich rewards — of family and home, even in the most turbulent of times.

Джейн Смайли

Современная русская и зарубежная проза

Похожие книги

Зулейха открывает глаза
Зулейха открывает глаза

Гузель Яхина родилась и выросла в Казани, окончила факультет иностранных языков, учится на сценарном факультете Московской школы кино. Публиковалась в журналах «Нева», «Сибирские огни», «Октябрь».Роман «Зулейха открывает глаза» начинается зимой 1930 года в глухой татарской деревне. Крестьянку Зулейху вместе с сотнями других переселенцев отправляют в вагоне-теплушке по извечному каторжному маршруту в Сибирь.Дремучие крестьяне и ленинградские интеллигенты, деклассированный элемент и уголовники, мусульмане и христиане, язычники и атеисты, русские, татары, немцы, чуваши – все встретятся на берегах Ангары, ежедневно отстаивая у тайги и безжалостного государства свое право на жизнь.Всем раскулаченным и переселенным посвящается.

Гузель Шамилевна Яхина

Современная русская и зарубежная проза
Жизнь за жильё. Книга вторая
Жизнь за жильё. Книга вторая

Холодное лето 1994 года. Засекреченный сотрудник уголовного розыска внедряется в бокситогорскую преступную группировку. Лейтенант милиции решает захватить с помощью бандитов новые торговые точки в Питере, а затем кинуть братву под жернова правосудия и вместе с друзьями занять освободившееся место под солнцем.Возникает конфликт интересов, в который втягивается тамбовская группировка. Вскоре в городе появляется мощное охранное предприятие, которое станет известным, как «ментовская крыша»…События и имена придуманы автором, некоторые вещи приукрашены, некоторые преувеличены. Бокситогорск — прекрасный тихий городок Ленинградской области.И многое хорошее из воспоминаний детства и юности «лихих 90-х» поможет нам сегодня найти опору в свалившейся вдруг социальной депрессии экономического кризиса эпохи коронавируса…

Роман Тагиров

Современная русская и зарубежная проза
Дегустатор
Дегустатор

«Это — книга о вине, а потом уже всё остальное: роман про любовь, детектив и прочее» — говорит о своем новом романе востоковед, путешественник и писатель Дмитрий Косырев, создавший за несколько лет литературную легенду под именем «Мастер Чэнь».«Дегустатор» — первый роман «самого иностранного российского автора», действие которого происходит в наши дни, и это первая книга Мастера Чэня, события которой разворачиваются в Европе и России. В одном только Косырев остается верен себе: доскональное изучение всего, о чем он пишет.В старинном замке Германии отравлен винный дегустатор. Его коллега — винный аналитик Сергей Рокотов — оказывается вовлеченным в расследование этого немыслимого убийства. Что это: старинное проклятье или попытка срывов важных политических переговоров? Найти разгадку для Рокотова, в биографии которого и так немало тайн, — не только дело чести, но и вопрос личного характера…

Мастер Чэнь

Современная русская и зарубежная проза / Современная проза / Проза