Whitney Terrell - The Good Lieutenant

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The Good Lieutenant: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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An acclaimed American novelist with a keen eye for our biggest issues and themes turns his gaze to Iraq, with astonishing results.
The Good Lieutenant literally starts with a bang as an operation led by Lieutenant Emma Fowler of the Twenty-seventh Infantry Battalion goes spectacularly wrong. Men are dead-one, a young Iraqi, by her hand. Others were soldiers in her platoon. And the signals officer, Dixon Pulowski. Pulowski is another story entirely-Fowler and Pulowski had been lovers since they met at Fort Riley in Kansas.
From this conflagration, The Good Lieutenant unspools backward in time as Fowler and her platoon are guided into disaster by suspicious informants and questionable intelligence, their very mission the result of a previous snafu in which a soldier had been kidnapped by insurgents. And then even further back, before things began to go so wrong, we see the backstory unfold from points of view that usually are not shown in war coverage-a female frontline officer, for one, but also jaded career soldiers and Iraqis both innocent and not so innocent. Ultimately, as all these stories unravel, what is revealed is what happens when good intentions destroy, experience distorts, and survival becomes everything.
Brilliantly told and expertly captured by a terrific writer at the top of his form, Whitney Terrell's The Good Lieutenant is a gripping, insightful, necessary novel about a war that is proving to be the defining tragedy of our time.

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“How do you suppose you can tell the difference?” he asked.

“What, between a conviction and a pose?”

Pulowski rumpled his lips and shrugged, as if this were a choice that she had defined on her own, rather than something he’d led her to — though of course he hoped he had. “That’s a pose,” he said, nodding at Jay Leno, and then, rolling onto his side, he kissed her breast, right atop the nipple. “And this is a conviction,” he said.

How the hell did he come up with crap like this? He’d had a knack for it ever since Fowler had first crossed the lawn between their apartments, knocked on his door, and stood there, looking actually angry as she said, “Would you like to go to lunch?” and he’d said — he’d somehow known to say—“Well, if you’re going to ask me out, you could at least look like you think I might say yes.” He’d never specifically said that self-doubt was a bad habit of hers, but every time she tried to get him to admit to some flaw that she had — as opposed to discussing his flaws — he’d twist and turn and evade the question, turning it into a joke, as if there couldn’t be anything more ridiculous than taking such talk seriously in any way. Part of her appreciated that. He felt it, a little click.

Fowler reached down and circled his penis with her fist. Click . “Yeah? And what kind of conviction do we have here?”

“That’s a tired conviction,” Pulowski said.

“So you do have them,” Fowler said.

“Horniness, love of beautiful women, love of television.” He held up the bag of chips. “Ruffles. These are the things that make our society great.”

“You forgot baseball,” she said.

“I suck at baseball,” he said. “Remember that.”

“So, what, you can only have convictions about things you enjoy?”

“I think convictions are the things you enjoy,” Pulowski said.

“Those are called temptations,” Fowler said.

“Really?” This time it was Pulowski’s turn to sit up in bed. “You seriously believe that?”

“That’s what I always told Harris,” she said.

“We’re skipping that,” Pulowski said firmly. “You raised a sociopath. Welcome to America! — where, by the way, you started parenting at age eight . It’s not some life lesson you’re doomed to repeat.”

“That’s your conviction.”

“It is.”

“Wish I could say the same.”

“You got plenty of convictions, Fowler. Don’t short yourself.”

“Yeah? What the hell are they?”

“Convictions are the things that you do without thinking about it.”

After they made love, he lay on his back in the dark, with his arm curled beneath her neck. He would’ve liked to point out that that was one area where Fowler did fine without thinking. But he could feel her thinking now, their prior conversation drifting back down over them like a mist, lighter, he hoped, than the way that her brother, Harris, talked to her — though in essence, he and her brother were recommending similar things. Ease up. Stop worrying about the rules so much.

“I cannot believe Masterson stole those shackles,” she said. “Right there. Right in my face. He stood there and told me that I didn’t know what I was seeing.”

“But you did see it.”

“Yup.”

“Sounds like a conviction to me.”

“Yeah, well, the problem is that Captain Hartz’s conviction is that there’s nothing more important in the Army than chain of command. Know your place. Keep your head down. And if you’re a support lieutenant, don’t fuck with the infantry. All of which I can live with, so long as somebody convinces Beale to do the same thing with me.”

“How do you intend to do that?”

“I don’t know, Pulowski,” she said. “That’s how we started this whole conversation, okay? I don’t have any convictions, that’s the problem with me. I thought that I joined the Army because it was going to clarify shit. Make things simpler. You got rules, you got responsibilities. One person owes another a certain respect. You don’t have to define how things are supposed to work. It’s all clear. There’s rules for how to cut your toenails, for chrissake. You’re not supposed to sit around and worry about convictions. Right? Beale disobeyed my orders. He screwed up. So forget him — let him pay.”

Jesus, how could he be so nuts about a woman who was such a mess? Maybe because he had a conviction that she wasn’t, really. He lay there grinning in the darkness, enjoying this. “I don’t think that’s your conviction,” he said.

“No? Why not?”

“If it was, you wouldn’t spend so much time explaining it to me.”

13

The motor pool hangar was a lonely place, far from the parade grounds, or the firing range, or anything that seemed remotely immediate in a way that Fowler, over the past few months, had come to appreciate. Thorny locust trees had been left to grow along the edges of its vast parking lot, filled with rows and rows of vehicles, the boring and forgotten kinds: front-end loaders, diesel container trucks, backhoes, even a road grader — along with her favorite, the Hercules, which she’d tucked back into the shade of a cottonwood. Which was why, as she parked her Ford, she was surprised to see Captain Masterson pushing out the hangar exit into the pallid sunlight, a pair of lieutenants flanking him on either side, lugging duffel bags that clanked and seemed oddly heavy. Though Fowler saluted, he did not salute her back. “Too nice a day for the office, Lieutenant,” he said. “We’re going to have a turn in the weather here just about any second. I’ve been out here three straight years, and once that cold air starts pouring across the mountains, it’s game on. So enjoy it now, that’s what I say.”

“I grew up here, sir,” Fowler said.

“Oh.” Masterson seemed unflustered by this correction, or at least uninterested, his eyes a bit vague and out of focus, as if smiling through Fowler at his Humvee. “Well, congratulations on that .”

“You guys find what you need?” she asked. The storage lockers at the motor pool generally held a company’s most valuable and delicate electronics equipment. Not stuff that clanked, like these bags did. Not stuff you’d want to put in a bag.

“This?” Masterson waggled one of the bags in front of her nose, as if inviting her to sniff it. “This is our baseball gear. Isn’t that right, fellas? We’re going to head out and take advantage of this last little bit of warm weather. You want to come, you can.”

“Naw, I got to work,” Fowler said. She glanced back regretfully at the hangar. “I’m the unit movement officer. I need to get all our vehicles and containers inspected and ready for staging at the railhead. We’ve only got another week.”

She felt proud of herself saying that. Proud and official. You almost never got to talk to infantry commanders about supply work, especially not one who’d nearly screamed her off the training course six months back.

“Excellent,” Masterson said. He opened his Humvee’s door and gave her a smart salute. “Hell of a job, isn’t it?”

“We got to move this whole lot,” Fowler said. “Plus a bunch more, sir. I timed it out. We’ve got to be able to load a vehicle on a railcar in thirty minutes. You count up every vehicle on our list, and you look at the window we’ve got to do the work, you want to make sure everything’s inspected and squared away. No time for snags.”

She flushed. Why was she talking so much? Probably because she’d been staying up till all hours of the night, running through spreadsheets listing every vehicle they needed to prepare, where their tools had to be packed, how their containers should be loaded — none of which she’d been given even thirty seconds of training on, either in ROTC or at Fort Lee. And so it was painfully satisfying, like having a deep, unreachable itch scratched, to have an actual company commander like Masterson notice that she had done this. Masterson whistled between his teeth and surveyed the motor-pool yard.

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