Mary Miller - The Last Days of California

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The Last Days of California: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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With The Last Days of California Miller’s revelatory protagonist, Jess, is fourteen years old and waiting for the world to end. Her evangelical father has packed up the family and left their Montgomery home to drive west to California, hoping to save as many souls as possible before the Second Coming. With her long-suffering mother and rebellious (and secretly pregnant) sister, Jess hands out tracts to nonbelievers at every rest stop, waffle house, and gas station along the way. As Jess’s belief frays, her teenage myopia evolves into awareness about her fracturing family.
Using deadpan humor and savage charm belying deep empathy for her characters, Miller’s debut captures the angst, sexual rivalry, and escalating self-doubt of teenage life in America while announcing Miller as a fierce new voice

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She let me in and sat on the floor, pressed her knees to her chest. “I think I’m having a miscarriage,” she said.

“How come?”

“Because I’m bleeding a lot and it hurts really bad.” She looked at me like I’d know what to do, but I didn’t know what to do. I caught my eye in the mirror.

“Maybe we should go to the hospital,” I said.

“No.”

“Maybe you’re just spotting. I’ve heard that happens.”

Our father raised his voice. “‘ Then the man said, This at last is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man. ’”

“It hurts so bad,” she said. “Do you think you could go get me some ibuprofen?”

“Did you check to see if she has any?” I asked, sorting through our mother’s makeup bag: POND’S Cold Cream, Q-tips, thick pads wrapped in pink and green, a tube of brownish lipstick in the shade she’d worn forever.

“I saw it,” she said, “it was a big clot of blood. Clottier than the usual clots.”

I stood there for a moment, looking down at her, and said I’d be back. Then I closed the door and slipped on my flip-flops, thinking about the baby in the toilet, a big clot of blood.

“Elise is sick,” I said, interrupting my father, who was coming to the part where the woman screws everything up, bringing curses upon the ground, turning everybody to dirt.

“What’s wrong?”

“She has a stomachache.”

He took out his wallet and handed me a bunch of ones, said he thought we’d already bought Pepto-Bismol.

At the sundries shop, the only medicine came in envelopes with two to a package. I counted the money my father had given me—seven dollars—and then counted my own—thirteen. I wanted to spend it all, felt the need to get down to zero. There was no one else in the store so I started setting things on the counter: three packages of Advil, a Diet Coke, a big bag of peanut M&M’s, which were Elise’s favorite, and an OK! magazine with Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson on the cover. I took the elevator back up, walking faster as I neared our room. I didn’t know how to feel about what was happening. On the one hand, it would be over, everything fixed. On the other hand—I wasn’t sure, exactly, what was on the other hand, but I knew there was something. And maybe she wasn’t having a miscarriage at all. What did she know about having a miscarriage?

I knocked and my mother answered. “Is everything okay?” she asked, leaning in. I wondered if she could smell alcohol on me. “Elise said she only wanted you.”

“She just has cramps.”

“Oh,” she said, her eyes searching my face. She stepped back and opened the door wider. She knew Elise didn’t have her period; she was the one who was always running out to buy tampons and pads and panty liners, Midol and ibuprofen. Among the three of us, we couldn’t keep these things in the house. My period came at the tail end of my mother’s, would be starting any day now, at any moment, but Elise’s wasn’t due for another two weeks. I wasn’t sure why I had said this and wished I hadn’t.

Elise opened the door to the bathroom and I handed her the medicine; she ripped open a couple of packets and swallowed the pills. “It knew I didn’t want it,” she said. “It could feel it.”

“It’s not your fault,” I said, though I didn’t know if it was her fault or not. Maybe the baby had known, maybe it had felt everything she felt. I thought of Rachel, with her half-hideous, half-normal face, and fingered my ring, running it back and forth along the chain so it made a nice zip noise.

We sat on the floor and watched TV. It was nighttime and the women were in a circle, sewing by candlelight. One woman was talking about dropping out of the project, saying she didn’t know why she’d signed up for it in the first place, what the point of it was, while the others tried to talk her out of it. The more they tried to explain the purpose of the experiment, though, the less sure they sounded. And then they were all talking themselves out of it—they were hungry and hot and might even go blind. Didn’t the girl from Little House on the Prairie go blind, like for real, in real life?

“Are you okay?” I asked.

“I’m fine,” she said, looking at me so miserably I felt like I’d lost something, too. It could be terrible having a family—you had to suffer their pains and disappointments along with your own—but the good stuff couldn’t be shared, at least not in the same way.

“Maybe it’s not a miscarriage. Maybe it’s just a little blood.”

“I know my body,” she said.

I know my body , I thought. I know my body. I wanted to know my body. We ate M&M’s and watched commercials for cleaning products and lunch meat, and then it was morning and the women were back at work, feeding the animals and washing clothes and there was no more talk of abandoning the project. Elise sorted the M&Ms by color; she ate the red ones and the brown ones and the blue ones in twos and threes. I bit into one that didn’t have a peanut, which was lucky, like finding a four-leaf clover in a field.

When we’d finished the bag, I took her hand and held it. I held it until both of our hands were sweaty and I wanted to let go but didn’t. I wanted her to know I would always be there for her, that I would never leave her.

“I have to change this pad,” she said finally, and I stood and closed the door behind me.

As soon as Elise came out, the food arrived—plates of scrambled eggs and bacon, fruit salad, pancakes, a carafe of coffee.

“Are you feeling better?” our mother asked.

“A little,” she said. She sat on the bed with us and I reached out and touched her hair. She smiled at me and poured herself a cup of coffee, stirred in cream and a packet of sugar. She put a spoonful of eggs on her plate, a scoop of fruit salad.

Our father popped the needle out of his case and pinched his belly, but stopped before shoving it in. “I think I’m going to go on that hospital diet Woo’s been trying to get me on,” he said.

“That’s a great idea,” our mother said, handing me a roll of silverware.

“I could do it,” he said.

“Of course you could.”

“You don’t think I could do it,” he said.

“You can do anything you put your mind to,” she said in a cheerful voice that confirmed his suspicions.

“I think you can do it,” I said.

“I do, too,” Elise said. “You’re the most stubborn man we know.”

He chuckled and pushed the needle in, saying perhaps it would be one of the last times he’d have to stick himself. Then he bowed his head. “Thank you, Lord,” he said. “These are simple words but they come from simple hearts that overflow with the realization of your goodness. We ask you to bless us as we eat, bless this food and bless the hands that prepared it. May the words of our lips spring forth from hearts of gratitude and may we bless others as we fellowship today.” He paused and we waited for him to say something else, something more. “Thank you for our family,” he said. There was another pause and he said, “Amen.”

“Thank you for our family,” our mother repeated.

I put a single pancake on my plate, a piece of bacon.

Elise turned it to The Price Is Right and we watched while we ate. In the Showcase Showdown, a woman won a trip around the world. Her friends rushed the stage and they ran around looking at the pictures of the places she would go. It was better when they all got to pile in a car and wave through the windows. They might actually get to cruise around in that car but they weren’t going around the world. I thought about the dusty flea market with the saddest lady I’d ever seen, the camel in the parking lot of the dollar store, the old man pushing his lawnmower across the highway. They were all things I wouldn’t have seen in Montgomery. I wondered if the Las Vegas girl made it to Las Vegas. I hoped she had and that her life would be better there. I imagined she’d kept the dog, calling to him at the last minute.

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