Alison Lurie - Last Resort

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Last Resort: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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At the end of his tether, a writer travels to Key West with his wife. She's hoping to cheer him up, but he's hoping for something more fatal . . .
Every schoolboy in America knows the work of Wilkie Walker. A pioneering naturalist, he won fame and fortune with his accessible nature books. But by the time he turns seventy, his renown is nearly gone. Late at night, he sits up torturing himself with fears that his career was a waste, his talent is gone, and his body is shot through with cancer. His wife, Jenny, twenty-five years younger than Wilkie, can tell only that he is out of sorts. She has no idea her husband is on the verge of giving up on life.
When Jenny suggests spending the winter in Key West, Wilkie goes along with it. After all, if you need to plan a fatal "accident," Florida is a perfectly good place to do so. And when they touch down in the sunshine state, the Walkers find it's not too late to live life—or end it—however they damn well please.

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There was something wrong, Jenny told Lee; something serious. Wilkie had never brooded over a book like this before, never shut himself away from her like this. His new editor had inquired about the progress of the manuscript again only yesterday, addressing his note to Jenny rather than her husband—of whom, she suspected, he was a bit afraid, as many people were.

Jenny, who knew now what it was like to be slightly afraid of Wilkie Walker, had tactfully delayed passing on this query until after supper, when he was usually in a more relaxed mood. But her tact had not been successful. A deep crease had appeared between his eyebrows, and he had used the phrase “damned interference.” The interference referred to, nominally, was that of the editor; but as Wilkie growled the words out, the dark thought came to Jenny that they were meant for her. Somehow, her presence had become unpleasant to him, her speech unwelcome. Maybe it was because she’d suggested that they come to Key West, she told Lee. Maybe he hated it here, and blamed her.

Or perhaps it was something else she’d done, something she couldn’t even remember. Or something that she was, that she couldn’t help. And now the little fear that had haunted Jenny years ago returned: the fear that she was not worthy of a man like Wilkie Walker. Like his first wife, she was not really an intelligent person: she had never been more than a B+ student in college. Dishonestly, knowing it was wrong, giving herself the false excuse that it didn’t matter, because Wilkie Walker would soon disappear from her life as magically as he had come into it, Jenny had concealed the weakness of her mind and her grades from him. And then he had asked her to marry him, and it was too late.

During their engagement, and for a while after the wedding, Jenny had dreaded that somehow Wilkie would realize how ordinary she really was. Now, in this ugly expensive house in Florida, this ugly fear had returned. In her anxiety, two days ago, Jenny had confided it to Lee. Suppose Wilkie had somehow discovered belatedly how ordinary and unworthy of him she was, she said. Because they had been together so long, he would probably say nothing about it. He would just slowly withdraw from her, as he had in fact done over the past few months. Perhaps also, in his deep disappointment, he might withdraw from their children, and even, eventually, from other people.

Lee had listened to all this attentively, seriously, as she always did. But when Jenny finished, instead of making some mild or reassuring comment, as usual, she had exploded.

“You’re out of your mind,” she said. “What the hell do you mean, you’re not worthy of Wilkie Walker? If you want to know what I think, I think he’s damned lucky to have you, and if he doesn’t realize that, he’s a—” Lee paused, swallowing something stronger, and finished, “a complete booby. And you’re not ordinary. You’re one of the least ordinary people I’ve ever known.”

Remembering Lee’s warm, indignant expression as she had said this, Jenny smiled in spite of her confused unhappiness.

It was wonderful to know someone like Lee, even if she might not be right. That was what a real friend was, she thought: somebody who thought better of you than you did of yourself. Somebody you really liked; no, loved. Who loved you too, when the people who should love you didn’t. “I feel as if I can tell you anything,” she’d said to Lee two days ago, “and you’ll never say Bad Girl.”

“Same here,” Lee had replied, grinning—though it was already clear to Jenny that if anyone said Bad Girl to Lee, she wouldn’t give a damn.

Outside it was raining again, for the fifth day in a row, and the air was saturated with damp. It had been too cold and wet for a week to swim; and Jenny had left the house this morning in a heavy misty drizzle that blurred the palms along the street. Her hair, which she had washed before breakfast, still wasn’t dry. She pulled the white elastic band off her ponytail and fanned it out over her white T-shirt, where it lay loose and pale and slightly wavy from the humidity.

Three hours times three mornings times twelve: a hundred and eight dollars a week, the first money Jenny had earned since she was twenty-two. She didn’t need it: the Walkers had a joint account, and Wilkie never questioned her spending. But the idea of those hundred and eight dollars pleased her. And it was so easy—just sitting here and answering the phone, taking reservations, dealing with any minor problems the guests might have, and handing out maps and information on tours and shops and restaurants.

According to Lee, Key West was in the midst of what she called “our regular ten-day winter.” “Hell, I don’t mind,” she had told Jenny this morning. “It might chase some of the tourists away, but it gives me time to catch my breath before the first wave of college students hits town for spring break.”

Only two of Lee’s guests had been driven off by the weather, but those who remained were cross and disappointed. Pretending to be joking, they blamed Jenny for the rain. (“Will you look at it outside! How could you do this to us?”)

All morning she had done her best to suggest alternate activities: a tour of the perfume factory or the aquarium; or, if it stopped raining, a visit to the dolphin sanctuary, or a kayak excursion among the mangrove swamps like the one Jacko’s mother and cousin were going on today. But nothing seemed to interest Lee’s guests. This disturbed Jenny, and when Lee returned at noon she said so.

“Hey, don’t worry about it,” Lee reassured her, smiling and tossing a sparkle of rain from her dense, dark hair. She was wearing a tangerine-orange nylon poncho that would have been garish on anyone else. “Who was grousing today? Was it Bitsy and her Oriental friend in Room Four?” She opened the screen door, pulled off her poncho, and shook it out onto the porch. How wonderful she looks, Jenny thought, how she lights up the room!

“Yes, them. And those two nice schoolteachers from Connecticut. They didn’t want to do any of the things I suggested.”

“That figures. Aw, don’t look like that, it’s not your fault, really. You have to understand that what some people come to Key West for is to do nothing. They could goof off back home, of course, but their superegos won’t let them. Especially the New England types.”

“Oh, Lee.” Jenny looked up, almost blushed. “That’s not why I came, honestly.”

Lee gave her wonderful, deep laugh. “I know that. I’m not talking about snowbirds like you. There it’s mostly fear of winter, I suppose.”

“I did rather fear the winter,” Jenny said, and paused, recalling that what she had feared most was the effect the darkening days and falling temperatures might have on Wilkie’s state of mind. But she had resolved not to mention her husband today: she didn’t want to become a one-note whine.

“Well, you’re safe from winter in Key West,” Lee said in an odd, thick voice. “Luckily for me.” She leaned forward and for a moment rested her warm hand on Jenny’s bare shoulder and brushed Jenny’s face with her warm mouth.

“It’s lucky for me, too,” Jenny replied as the phone began to ring. The places on her shoulder and cheek that Lee had touched seemed to glow as if a match had been held to them.

Actually I don’t always feel safe in Key West, she thought as Lee spoke into the phone; but I do here. That’s odd, because the guest house is full of strangers. But they’re all women; that makes it safe. (“It was one of the best damn ideas I ever had in my life, only renting to women,” Lee had confided last week. “No serious violence, no piss stains on the bathroom floors, no high decibel beer parties, and if women do get drunk they usually don’t smash up the furniture.”)

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