Bonnie Nadzam - Lions

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Lions: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Bonnie Nadzam — author of the critically acclaimed, award-winning debut,
—returns with this scorching, haunting portrait of a rural community in a "living ghost town" on the brink of collapse, and the individuals who are confronted with either chasing their dreams or — against all reason — staying where they are.
Lions is set on the high plains of Colorado, a nearly deserted place, steeped in local legends and sparse in population. Built to be a glorious western city upon a hill, it was never fit for farming, mining, trading, or any of the illusory sources of wealth its pioneers imagined. The Walkers have been settled on its barren terrain for generations — a simple family in a town otherwise still taken in by stories of bigger, better, brighter.
When a traveling stranger appears one day, his unsettling presence sets off a chain reaction that will change the fates of everyone he encounters. It begins with the patriarch John Walker as he succumbs to a heart attack. His devastated son Gordon is forced to choose between leaving for college with his girlfriend, Leigh, and staying with his family to look after their flailing welding shop and, it is believed, to continue carrying out a mysterious task bequeathed to all Walker men. While Leigh is desperate to make a better life in the world beyond the desolation of Lions, Gordon is strangely hesitant to leave it behind. As more families abandon the town, he is faced with what seem to be their reasonable choices and the burden of betraying his own heart.
A story of awakening,
is an exquisite novel that explores ambition and an American obsession with self-improvement, the responsibilities we have to ourselves and each other, as well as the everyday illusions that pass for a life worth living.

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She went to the far east window and called his name. Down the ladder and all around the second story, calling his name, swearing at him. No light. No sound but the weather outside the broken windows.

Dock found her in a heap on the floor.

“I saw him.”

“Where?”

“He won’t answer.” She lifted her head and called him again. Dock held still and listened.

“Come on, Leigh. It’s late.”

“He’s here somewhere.”

“There’s no one here. It’s empty. It’s late.”

“But I saw him.”

“Where?”

“Up in a window. From the yard.”

“You could not have possibly seen that far.”

“I saw a light flash.”

“Lightning.”

She shook her head.

“Listen. We’ll come back in the morning, in the daylight, and look through every single room. If he’s here, or was here, there’s no way he won’t have left some sign. Mud or something, right? We’ll come back in the morning. That’s just a couple hours.”

“Promise?”

“Of course I do.”

Dock took her under his arm and walked her to his truck. He turned on the heat and handed her a dry jacket to put over her shoulders.

“Dock,” she said quietly. “Do you remember telling me and Gordon about Echo Station?”

He glanced at her. “Sure. That old game.”

“I did it. That same night. I snuck out of the house and I went out there and did it.”

“Did you?”

“And I’m afraid, Dock.”

“Leigh,” he said softly. “That’s a children’s game.”

At dawn a cold bracing wind sang over the brittle fields. The sky was the color of brushed aluminum. Dock and Leigh searched the factory and its grounds in the cold, but there were no tracks other than their own, and there was no one inside, nor any sign that anybody else had been. He was just here, she thought. He was just. Here.

“Tell me again,” Dock said, pouring hot water into her teacup, “what you saw?” May was at the diner but Boyd stood behind them in the kitchen doorway, arms crossed. He locked eyes with Dock and shook his head.

“Two flashes of a flashlight,” Leigh said. “Like a signal. It came out of a window and across the field.”

He handed her a small glass of juice and two aspirin. “We have to call Chuck.”

“OK.”

“We don’t think that was Gordon you saw,” Boyd said from the doorway.

Leigh turned around. “What do you think it was?”

“We think you’re upset,” he said, nodding at his own statement.

“I am upset.”

“Wherever he is,” Dock said, “seems like he wants a little space right now.”

“When did you see him last, Leigh?” Boyd looked at her hard. “What was the last thing you talked about?”

“I don’t remember,” she said. Boyd shook his head. Heat rose in her face. “What? Why are you shaking your head at me?”

“Alright,” Dock said. “Let’s get Annie and Emery and go have some real breakfast. Chuck can meet us at the diner.”

“I don’t want to go to the diner.”

“Leigh,” Boyd said, “this is like work. It’s something we have to do. OK?”

Was she supposed to have followed him up north to see what it was all about? Then move in with him in his dorm? And now what? Chase him? Hunt him down across the plains? Move in with Georgianna in case he should show up with his dead father, for tea? Move back in with May or into the empty factory, waiting for someone who didn’t want any of the things of this world? Who didn’t seem even to belong to it?

~ ~ ~

She stayed in Lions another week, as long as she could without having to drop classes or withdraw entirely. For those seven days she moved back into the house with her mother and now with Boyd, and walked each morning to the diner, always looking around her, conscious of being watched, ready in every moment to hear the sound of her name, to sense his presence behind her and to turn and be folded again into his arms. How he would smell. How warm he would be. How his hands would feel like her own hands.

The days were cool, the shadows long. From her room she could see straight across the field through the thinning yellow leaves to the factory. She walked through it by day and by night. Tents and canopies of cobwebs whitened every corner and along the broken ceilings. She picked through the piles of treasure the two of them had accumulated in their childhood and stashed here and there. She turned over a broken cottonwood drum.

“I’m going to fix this,” she said. The sound of her voice was small and flat in the huge open space. She set the broken drum down on the concrete floor. She trailed her fingers in the dust, along the bricks. It’d always seemed the place was crawling with life — moths, bats, mice, possums, swallows in their little clay and daub houses in the rafters. Now they were all quiet.

She called his name. She cursed him. She sat beneath their third-story lookout and drew her knees into her chest. He was a blur in her vision, a softening and brightening of the shadows until they resolved themselves into the fawn and powder blue of his old flannel shirt. He was there in her dreams on the far side of a long narrow room.

And yet for that week in Lions, it was she who felt like a ghost. May and Boyd, the Sterlings, Chuck, when he came around, even Georgie — they were cheerful and calm about their daily routines: a little hog feeding, a little welding, a little chicken frying, a little drinking, a little ticketing on the highway. They didn’t talk to her much, or look at her much. They ate May’s grilled cheese or meat loaf sandwiches and toasted each other in the bar, which had two new panes of glass on either side of a new door, painted a clean, smooth yellow. After dark the men would go outside and play horseshoes in the empty street by floodlight.

On the highway, someone put a ghost town sign back up, a bright one, blue and red and green — cheerful and ironic, this time, and meant only to attract customers. By day there was a steady stream of them, and May kept the old jukebox playing western tunes, for effect. “Yellow Rose of Texas” and “Tumbling Tumbleweeds” and “Call of the Canyon” and “Red River Valley” and Leigh plugged her ears when she heard it. None of those songs was about this place. Who did they think they were kidding?

“I don’t like it,” Boyd said after breakfast on her last day in town, his arms and elbows propped up on the driver’s side window.

“I need to go see.”

“If you’re not back in six hours I’m sending Chuck after you.”

“Six hours? There’s no way he went that far. On foot?”

“I’m serious. I’ll assume Boggs has tied you up and is going to eat you and I’ll send Chuck after you.”

“Come on, Boyd.”

“I mean I’ll at least want the truck back. That’s a good truck.”

“OK, OK. I hear you.”

“Be careful.”

“I will.”

“Tell you what,” he said, his voice softening as he looked down the road. “There’s something those Walker men could see that no one else around here was ever able to see.”

She stared at him.

“Those were some good men.”

The words wanted to open a space in her chest that she didn’t want open. “That’s not how you used to talk,” she said, her sentence a blade.

“The more shame on me.”

“You sound like my mom.”

“Pity it took me so long.”

She followed the same county road north that she knew Gordon had taken time and again that summer, up through the stricken farm fields, past the old trailer and gas station where John used to bring them when they were kids, for salty tacos in greasy paper envelopes. She could imagine the feel of them in her hands, warm and waxy. Then twenty miles more, picking carefully along the unpaved county road as it narrowed and dipped and grassed over and washboarded down a plane. Then past the little homestead behind a broken shelterbelt of dead cottonwood and living buckthorn, the siding weathered to a silvery, lavender colored wood. How lonely it looked, and how beautiful.

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