Майя Лунде - The End of the Ocean

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The End of the Ocean: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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From the author of the number one international bestseller The History of Bees, a captivating new novel about the threat of a worldwide water shortage as seen through the eyes of a father and daughter.
In 2019, seventy-year-old Signe sets out on a hazardous voyage to cross an entire ocean in only a sailboat. She is haunted by the loss of the love of her life, and is driven by a singular and all-consuming mission to make it back to him.
In 2041, David flees with his young daughter, Lou, from a war-torn Southern Europe plagued by drought. They have been separated from their rest of their family and are on a desperate search to reunite with them once again, when they find Signe’s abandoned sailboat in a parched French garden, miles away from the nearest shore.
As David and Lou discover personal effects from Signe’s travels, their journey of survival and hope weaves together with Signe’s, forming a heartbreaking, inspiring story about the power of nature and the human spirit in this second novel from the author of the “spectacular and deeply moving” (New York Times bestselling author Lisa See) The History of Bees.
Maja Lunde is a Norwegian author and screenwriter. Lunde has written ten books for children and young adults. She has also written scripts for Norwegian television, including for the children’s series Barnas supershow (“The Children’s Super Show”), the drama series Hjem (“Home”) and the comedy series Side om Side (“Side by Side”). The History of Bees is her first novel for adults. She lives with her husband and three children in Oslo.

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There were rumors of how no supplies had been delivered for a week. That the camp was depleting its food supply.

And the morale. The piles of garbage, stinking in the heat. More slogans were written on walls all the time.

More and more frequently I saw small groups of people huddled together, speaking in low voices, closing ranks among themselves.

The very sound of the camp had changed. There was a constant, oppressive hum, which threatened to grow louder all the time.

But the worst part was the water. They had cut back the rations even more. We couldn’t shower, couldn’t wash our clothes. We received only exactly as much as we needed to drink.

I woke up and thought about water, drank a few lukewarm drops, saving it for Lou. I slept and thought about water, my tongue parched. I tried breathing through my nose so as to preserve as much saliva as possible.

I hadn’t seen much of Marguerite. I stayed away from her. Or she stayed away from me.

After the brawl, after Marguerite’s hand on my arm, I caught myself walking around looking for her in the camp. All the time I thought I spotted her back in front of me in the line, or heard her voice from around a corner.

I wanted to see her again. And I didn’t want to.

I fantasized about what could happen. What would have happened if she’d continued? If she had moved her hand a little further up my arm. Stroked my neck, my throat. Pulled me close to her…

But I hadn’t spoken with her today either. We had stayed at the boat until dinnertime.

In the evening Lou disappeared with Francis again. They had a game, she said, an appointment to play a game. She was so happy and enthusiastic, it was good to see her like that.

While she was away, I sat with Caleb and Martin outside the hall. I was unable to think of anything but how hungry I was, talked about nothing, about everything, joked.

I didn’t notice that Lou had come back, but suddenly she appeared beside me. She’d smiled. Slyly? Yes, she had smiled slyly. And she’d gone straight inside. Then she’d said she wanted to go to bed. And now she was lying here hiding something.

I tried to move closer, but she didn’t want to make room for me.

“Lou?”

She didn’t reply.

“Lou, what are you up to?”

“Nothing.”

She didn’t dare look me in the eyes.

“Sit up.”

“No.”

The elderly couple spoke more softly, realizing that something was happening.

“Lou.”

“No!”

She shook her head fiercely.

“Get out of bed now.”

She curled up again like a hedgehog in her bed.

I threatened her, but it didn’t help. Now the elderly couple was silent.

“Lou!”

“No!”

Finally I had to lift her entire body out of bed.

She squirmed in my arms. Fought back. But without a word, without making a sound. Just soft, belabored breathing.

“What is going on with you?” I whispered.

I sat her down hard on my own bed. I turned towards hers, pulled off the sheet.

But there was nothing there.

Lou had clearly given up fighting back. She just sat there, a limp heap, with an expression on her face that was so guilty I almost had to laugh.

And now I saw what she was hiding. A lump in the mattress. She’d hidden something under it.

I lifted the mattress.

It was a tin can. A picture of yellow corn shone back at me from the label. It felt heavy in my hand.

At that moment the elderly couple walked past in the hallway.

I quickly hid the can from them behind my back.

“Nothing here,” I said loudly. “That’s good.”

Then I dropped the mattress back in place, took hold of Lou and led her outside with me.

I pulled her with me away from the hall, between the rows of tents and barracks, past clusters of people. Behind the sanitary barracks I finally found a calm spot. We sat down there. I put the can between us.

“Where did you get this from?”

Lou stared down at the ground.

She pressed her lower lip beneath her upper lip, so it almost disappeared, but said nothing.

“Did someone give it to you?”

Still no answer.

“Lou? Did you get it from Francis?”

She shook her head.

“Somebody else? Someone who wanted to do something nice for you?”

I could hear my voice trembling. There were so many single men here, especially among the most recent arrivals. Damaged men. Thick-Neck, I thought suddenly. Men like him. And little Lou. Her lack of shyness, the underpants she just pulled off without thinking about who could see.

“Who did you get that from?”

“I don’t remember.”

“Have you had it long? How long have you had it?”

“I don’t remember, Daddy.”

“I told you not to accept things from people you don’t know. You can never know what they want, I told you that. You mustn’t believe what people say.”

I had a lot more on my mind. I wanted to reprimand her. Because she was so naïve, she trusted anyone. I wanted to shake her until she told me who had given her the food. Who wanted something with her, who wanted something from her? Because nobody gave anything away without wanting something in return. Especially not here. Not now. But she interrupted me.

“But nobody gave it to me.”

And then suddenly I understood.

“…You… you took it?”

“No, I didn’t. No.”

“You took it from somebody.”

I was unable to say stole.

“Daddy…”

And I didn’t need to hear her say it, because her entire little body communicated it.

Her face was bright red. The tears pressed forward between her eyelashes, trickled rapidly down her cheeks. A child’s huge, guilty tears, hard to resist.

I tried to strengthen my resolve.

“Who did you take it from? Who is it that won’t have any dinner today because of you?”

“But there’s tons of them,” she stammered. “In a gigantic room. There are a lot of cans there. You should have seen it, Daddy. Many, many cans. And I just took one.”

A storeroom. The camp’s storeroom, all there was left, now that the supplies were no longer being delivered. And she had stolen from there. We could be thrown out for something like that.

Suddenly, I felt cold.

“Weren’t there any security guards?”

She answered quickly, no longer trying to hide anything: “I got in from the back. Under the canvas. It was just big enough.”

That slender body. She could wriggle her way in anywhere.

“Did anybody see you?”

She shook her head. “Nobody. I’m sure.”

My child stole. How had she learned that? Why?

Everything I should have said. Ought to have said. I ought to have said something that would have ensured that this didn’t happen and wouldn’t happen again. But I was too hungry.

“Don’t do that again,” was all I managed to get out.

Then I took a can opener out of my bag.

It scraped against the metal.

We used our fingers like tweezers, the index and middle finger, picking one piece of corn at a time out of the can. Taking turns.

The sweet, crisp, yellow taste, the crunching sensation of every single kernel of corn, I guided each one into place between my front teeth with my tongue, tried dividing them in two, before I pushed them further back into my mouth and chewed properly.

We emptied the can slowly, in silence.

*

I fell asleep more quickly than usual. The corn stuck to my ribs. The sounds of everyone we shared this hall with disappeared, the hushed talking, the breathing, the beds creaking, the rummaging through bags and suitcases, the snoring. Sleep took me away from all of it. I sank down into the water. It felt as if I would stay there a long time.

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