Читаем Portnoy’s Complaint полностью

Desperately now his body comes lurching across my mother's- just as I slam shut the door- oy, not on his fingers, please! Jesus, this father! Whom I have had forever! Whom I used to find in the morning fast asleep on the toilet bowl, his pajamas around his knees and his chin hanging onto his chest. Up at quarter to six in the morning, so as to give himself a full uninterrupted hour on the can, in the fervent hope that if he is so kind and thoughtful as this to his bowels, they will relent, they will give in, they will say finally, "Okay, Jack, you win," and make a present to the poor bastard of five or six measly lumps of shit. "Jesus Christ!" he groans, when I awaken him so as to wash up for school, and he realizes that it is nearly seven-thirty and down in the bowl over which he has been sleeping for an hour, there is, if he's lucky, one brown angry little pellet such as you expect from the rectum of a rabbit maybe- but not from the rear-end of a man who now has to go out all clogged up to put in a twelve-hour day. "Seven- thirty? Why didn't you say something!" Zoom, he's dressed, and in his hat and coat, and with his big black collection book in one hand he bolts his stewed prunes and his bran flakes standing up, and fills a pocket with a handful of dried fruits that would bring on in an ordinary human being something resembling dysentery. "I ought to stick a hand grenade up my ass, if you want the truth," he whispers privately to me, while my mother occupies the bathroom and my sister dresses for school in her 'room," the sun parlor- "I got enough All-Bran in me to launch a battleship. It's backed up to my throat, for Christ's sake." Here, because he has got me snickering, and is amusing himself too in his own mordant way, he opens his mouth and points downward inside himself with a thumb. "Take a look. See where it starts to get dark? That ain't just dark-that's all those prunes rising up where my tonsils used to be. Thank God I had those things out, otherwise there wouldn't be room."

"Very nice talk," my mother calls from the bathroom. "Very nice talk to a child."

"Talk?" he cries. "It's the truth," and in the very next instant is thomping angrily around the house hollering, "My hat. I'm late, where's my hat? who saw my hat?" and my mother comes into the kitchen and gives me her patient, eternal, all-knowing sphinx-look… and waits… and soon he is back in the hallway, apoplectic and moaning, practically in grief, "Where is my hat? Where is that hat!" until softly, from the depths of her omniscient soul, she answers him, "Dummy, it's on your head." Momentarily his eyes seem to empty of all signs of human experience and understanding; he stands there, a blank, a thing, a body full of shit and no more. Then consciousness returns- yes, he will have to go out into the world after all, for his hat has been found, on his head of all places. "Oh yeah," he says, reaching up in wonderment-and then out of the house and into the Kaiser, and Superman is gone until dark.

The Kaiser, time for my story about the Kaiser: how he proudly took me with him when he went after the war to trade in the '39 Dodge for a new automobile, new make, new model, new everything-what a perfect way for an American dad to impress his American son!- and how the fast-talking salesman acted as though he just couldn't believe his ears, was simply incredulous, each time my father said "No" to one after another of the thousand little accessories the cock-sucker wanted to sell us to hang on the car. "Well, I'll tell you my opinion for whatever it's worth," says that worthless son of a bitch, "she'd look two hun-erd percent better with the whitewalls-don't you think so, young fella? Wouldn't you like your dad to get the whitewalls, at least?" At least. Ah, you slimy prick, you! Turning to me like that, to stick it into my old man- you miserable lowlife thieving son of a bitch! Just who the fuck are you, I wonder, to lord it over us-a God damn Kaiser-Fraser salesman! Where are you now, you intimidating bastard? "No, no whitewalls," mumbles my humbled father, and I simply shrug my shoulders in embarassment over his inability to provide me and my family with the beautiful things in life.

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