C. Morgan - The Sport of Kings

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The Sport of Kings: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Hellsmouth, an indomitable thoroughbred with the blood of Triple Crown winners in her veins, runs for the glory of the Forge family, one of Kentucky’s oldest and most powerful dynasties. Henry Forge has partnered with his daughter, Henrietta, in an endeavor of raw obsession: to breed the next superhorse, the next Secretariat. But when Allmon Shaughnessy, an ambitious young black man, comes to work on their farm after a stint in prison, the violence of the Forges’ history and the exigencies of appetite are brought starkly into view. Entangled by fear, prejudice, and lust, the three tether their personal dreams of glory to the speed and grace of Hellsmouth.
A spiraling tale of wealth and poverty, racism and rage,
is an unflinching portrait of lives cast in shadow by the enduring legacy of slavery. A vital new voice, C. E. Morgan has given life to a tale as mythic and fraught as the South itself — a moral epic for our time.

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The man nodded again. “The race didn’t go your way — it didn’t go anybody’s way — but I think you got a strong filly worth working with.”

“Yes.” A soft grin of resurrection spread on Henry’s face; he breathed in, almost imperceptibly.

Now Mack took a single step forward toward him, his shoulder effectively angling Henrietta from their conversation, though she stood mere inches away. He lowered his voice slightly. His attempt at small talk was over, the air was charged.

“Mr. Forge,” he said quietly, “do you know how big Secretariat’s heart was?”

Henry nodded, but Mack continued. He spread his red hands for emphasis: “Twenty-two goddamn pounds.”

“What?” Henrietta said. She had never heard such a thing. It was hard to believe.

“And whose side does a monster heart like that come down through?”

Henry nodded again slowly, the light of recognition kindling in his eyes.

“That’s right,” Mack said quietly, firmly. “Down the female line. I believe you’re understanding me now, but let me be real straight. If there’s one thing you need to know about me, it’s I’m a straight shooter. I live a fast life and you don’t want me for a best friend, but I am the man you want when you need plain speaking.” Snyder turned suddenly and positioned himself squarely in front of Henry again. Henry could smell the sweat of the man, but was pinned by the intensity of those eyes and the hands that rounded before him as if the man were holding a crystal ball between them. He said, “What these folks — what all these folks — are doing wrong is a result of one thing: failure of nerve. They get their piece of Secretariat, and they go fishing around in other lines trying to improve what was already perfect in the first place. They’re milking tits on a bull. What do you think Danzig is bringing to the table, or Nearco? Nothing, that’s what. You can’t better what’s already perfect, you can only water it down. Are you following where I’m leading?”

“I believe so—”

The man was not done: “It’s a failure of nerve. Let me cut to the chase — if the old boy were alive today, we’d breed her right back to him. Seeing as that’s not possible, we do the next best thing. We wait for the half brother with the best distance, maybe even a colt with a little Hellbent in the line if we can get it, and then we breed the best to the best. But we don’t hope for the best like the rest of these yokels — we just wait three years, ’cause we know we got our ace in the hole.”

“Yes,” said Henry slowly. “Yes, I understand you.”

Mack fished a card out of his breast pocket. He handed it to Henry, his eyes slashing through Henrietta once before he said, “Call me or don’t. It’s your choice. But this is the most I’ll ever bend your ear. I don’t talk, I just get the job done. I cost more than that guy you’re working with now, but I believe my record shows I can return dollars on your pennies.”

“I will consider what you’re saying,” said Henry, though already the reserve of ambition was replenishing, almost as if the day had never happened. His hopes, like healthy horses, were scrambling to their feet.

“Well, I wouldn’t expect less. But you ought to know there’s a reason I’m approaching you, and it’s not just because you got a very fine filly, which you do. Frankly, I think you’ve got balls.” He didn’t apologize for his language, but tilted his head in Henrietta’s direction. “I’m just telling the truth.”

They shook hands, and then the man was moving off as abruptly as he had come. Henrietta watched as he moved into the swarm of people, a contrary figure pushing against the bright, well-heeled crowd as it departed. Every single one of them instinctively stepped aside and made a path for him.

Henry was quiet, considering. “You know, maybe this is just what we need right now.”

For a moment, Henrietta was tactful. “They say he’s hard on horses.”

“Trainers are butchers,” he said. “You just have to find the best one. But what do you think of him in particular?”

She watched the punchy figure disappearing now into the crowd. She thought of Seconds Flat, the way she had been as a foal, gentle as a harp. She remembered her tender mouth before the cold rolled steel of the snaffle bit, and the sight of broken horses on the track. She said, barely stifling the anger in her voice, “I think he’s a fucking hillbilly.”

* * *

She drove east toward home, toward the fulsome springtime mountains, but even their ancient presence wouldn’t be enough today, because — my God, now that she was alone, she could let loose the wail in her mind — everyone seemed out to break the world. It wasn’t just horses that humanity was destroying, but everything they chanced to lay eyes upon — even the world’s oldest mountains, which were just now appearing on the horizon. What comfort could be found in them today? Humans were reducing those hills to slag. They’d been hellbent on destruction almost from the time of their arrival, tunneling deep into the mountain walls or sloping in at the surface or downshafting like wellers in search of black water, because the old country had wanted chugging trains in all directions and delicate, filmy cages for tungsten filament. They called for the farmer and hunter and drew them to rickety, newborn towns with promises of canned food and a wife in white cotton; the promise of promise itself. So down trappers and diggers and spraggers, down drivers and mules that brayed in their underground stables, their cries echoing hoarsely in the bord-and-pillar chambers that the blasts and the timbermen built. Down vein after slit vein, down into night, down into blackness without recourse, down where they chipped and picked for decades before the next generation arrived with their rotating drums and toothed bits to chip the coal; then the shearing longwall machines, which collapsed the mine shaft as they moved. Those early miners emerged from the driftmouth, black as coal and poor as dirt. Desperation breeds dreams, and dreams trade for desperation in the company store, no tab. The only cash in town is a man’s life.

Calm yourself, Henrietta, is what her father would say. You are expected at home.

But, after what she’d seen today, she didn’t want to see any foals fresh in their fields, didn’t want to watch them run their rounds, didn’t want to press repeat. Right at this moment with the mountains before her, she couldn’t quite figure how she and her father were any different from the kings of coal who sent miners underground, who underpaid and overworked them, who sentenced them to suffer from black damp, white damp, after damp, stink damp, fire damp, and necrotic lungs and basic want. Miners who died when the roofs failed over them, having long forgotten their native terror of the underground. The bosses got those men coming and going, because aboveground it’s death by a thousand cuts as the slag finds streams, the mine tailings drain acid to aquifers, dams break and slurry spills in black apocalyptic floods, and the men drink it and the women cook with it and the children play in it. And the country just flies high over Kentucky as they travel coast to coast, tracing the same route Henrietta and her father took when they bought horses. Kentucky looks like nothing to the coastal eye, just anonymous mountains that subside and slump into a thousand depressions over countless coal-black bodies, the men and the animals alike, both infinitessimally small from the sky, the black bodies of men and animal bodies, the body called mine, or man’s, mines, men—

You are expected at home, Henrietta.

She thought suddenly of sporting plants, how their tiny offshoot buds assume a character so different from their parent plant, emerging as a genetic anomaly from a shared root family. They occur rarely in nature, because — it seemed to her then — all the busy machines of evolution conspired for similarity. Sameness is safe. Sameness is survival itself.

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