Mark Dunn - We Five

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We Five: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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We Five The result is a novel about five young women pursued by five young men of predatory purpose, which takes place alternatively in a small mill town outside of Manchester, England in 1859; in San Francisco on the eve of the 1906 earthquake and fire; in Sinclair Lewis’s fictional Zenith, Winnemac in 1923; in London during the Blitz of autumn, 1940; and in a small town in northern Mississippi in 1997. In the first book “We Five” are seamstresses; in the next they are department store sales clerks; in the next, they sing in the choir of a popular female evangelist; in the next, they work in an ordinance factory outside of London; and in the final version, they are cocktail waitresses in a Mississippi River casino.
The book’s climax is a dramatic collision of all five incarnations of the story: an incident of mass hysteria arising from a solar storm in 1859, the 1906 San Francisco quake, a fire in the evangelist’s newly built “temple” in 1923, the 1940 Balham Underground station bombing and flooding, and a tornado in rural 1997 Mississippi.

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Will’s serious expression remained fixed. It told Minerva that he didn’t think the question silly at all.

Minerva stopped smiling. She chewed her lower lip for a moment. “Do you happen to know a girl who’s that way? Did she break your heart, slugger?”

Will didn’t answer right away. He took a drink first. “She didn’t break my heart,” he finally disclosed. “But she was bad news.”

Minerva nodded, slowly comprehending. “Sounds to me like it was one particular man she didn’t have much use for.”

Will shook his head. “No, Miss Quintane. It was men in general. There are girls like that. You must know a few. I knew a man who was like that, but the other way around.”

“And if I find you a girl like that, what are you going to do, Will?”

“I’ll make her do what nature intended. Whether she likes it or not.”

Minerva laughed. “But of course she wouldn’t like it — wouldn’t like it at all, would she? Will, honey, I don’t think you have any business punishing any girl — mine or any other — for what some other girl did to you. There is no amount of money that can get me to arrange something like that.”

Then Minerva grinned enigmatically.

“But maybe there is a way I can be of service. But only if you promise to be a good boy and play by the rules. Rose. She has a special gift. She can pretend to be anybody you like.”

“Is she pretty?”

“She’s quite pretty. She is a little Rubenesque.”

“I don’t know what that word means.”

“She’s ample , darling. She’s well-rounded, in the physical sense.”

“That’s good. I like that. That works.”

Minerva set her glass down and rose from her chair. “You intrigue me, Mr. Holborne. You’re quite a closed book. But then, what man isn’t?”

Sister Lydia now spread her arms out to the sides and lifted her eyes to the stained-glass skylights in the dome above her. “I thank You, my loving God, for Your divine presence in the lives of all Your children who’ve gathered here today. So very grateful are we for the wondrous blessings You’ve bestowed upon us.”

Sister Lydia lowered her arms and re-engaged her imagined audience with a look of fevered passion. She stepped to the side of the rose-covered pulpit and sniffed. “Do you smell it, brothers and sisters? Do you smell that sweet attar of roses in the air? Is there any flower more fragrant? Any flower more delicate in its construction? What is the rose but the embodiment of beauty upon this earth?”

Sister Lydia held out a rose as if she were admiring herself in a hand mirror. “But a thing so beautiful, so ambrosially fragrant can only be appreciated in contrast to those things which cannot be thought beautiful or fragrant or caressing of the human spirit. My children, the rose has thorns for a very good reason. As we embrace the Rose of Sharon that is our loving, merciful Jesus Christ, we must realize that faith is a thing to be earned through triumph over adversity, through the endurance of all the pain of life’s trials and tribulations. It is a gift, yea, it is a gift, brothers and sisters, of most divine purpose, but we must make the journey that will place us in the garden to receive it. God helps us in our struggles by setting our sights upon the garden, upon the rose that dwells within. There are thorns along that path, children, nettles and briars, and spines and needles of the thirsty desert, but we persevere for the love and grace that waits for us at journey’s end.

“Our blood is red for a reason, brothers and sisters. It is red to match the blood of Christ in his sufferings upon the Golgotha cross, and it is red to match the exquisite color of that Rose of Sharon which is the floral incarnation of our dear and loving Lord.”

Now the choir members rose to their feet and sang out:

Just as I am — without one plea,

But that Thy blood was shed for me,

And that Thou bid’st me come to Thee,

O Lamb of God, I come.

I come.

___________

Rose looked nothing like Ruth, but Will drew the similarity in his mind’s eye.

And Rose was good. She was very good.

“What are you doing here?” she asked unsmilingly. “Men aren’t allowed in this room.”

“I couldn’t care less,” said Will, closing the door behind him.

The two stood for a moment, staring at one another in silence. Then Will began his advance. Each step forward elicited a corresponding step of retreat from Rose, until she was halted by the wall behind her. With no place else for her to go, Will stood before her, his muscular arms hanging at his sides like slaughterhouse slabs of beef, the veins of his thick and corded neck prominent and pulsing. He was breathing deeply, perspiring heavily at the temples. He was regarding Rose with menacing contempt — the jungle predator taking the measure of his cornered prey.

Rose responded. She demanded that he leave at once, hissing the words at him with requisite venom. She was playing the game — just as Minerva had instructed her — but it was all she could do to tamp down the genuine fear she was feeling at this moment — a fear which, left unchecked, could only undermine her performance.

Yet there was no performance so far as Will was concerned. What Will saw standing in defiance before him was a woman who could very well have been Ruth — a woman who could have gotten along quite well without Will, without any man for that matter.

And how does man subdue, subjugate, subordinate woman if woman is going to muck up the works with all this ridiculous ramping and resisting?

Will would see to it that at least this one woman knew her role, knew her place and did not depart from it.

No matter what it took.

___________

The rehearsal ended after more stirring words from Sister Lydia, performances from several singers — a trio of young men in A.E.F. uniforms who sang “Soldiers of Christ, Arise,” a quartet of older women from the choir who sang softly and tenderly the old hymn “Softly and Tenderly,” two eight-year-old twin girls in ribbons and pigtails who earnestly belted out “The Church in the Wildwood,” with one of the two mostly singing the lyrics and the other mostly doing the “come, come, come”s. Finally, a stout Negro woman from the largest of the city’s A.M.E. churches walked out on the stage to astonished gasps from the ushers (who hadn’t been apprised of her participation), half of whom were touched by her willingness to contribute her beautiful voice to the day’s celebration and half of whom either didn’t know or had forgotten the fact that Sister Lydia was fond of Negroes and hoped to make her tabernacle services as racially integrated as her tent revivals had been.

The woman sang “His Eye is on the Sparrow,” and three of We Five wept: Molly, who was reminded each time Sister Lydia spoke the words “our Heavenly Father” that the fate of her own earthly father still remained in question; Carrie, who deeply missed her late mother, herself a woman of strong religious faith; and Ruth, who recalled that this very song was sung by a member of her aunt and uncle’s own racially integrated church at a memorial service for the woman’s nephew who was lynched by members of the Indiana Klan.

It wasn’t the clean uppercut which brought Will down, or even the not-so-clean-but-powerfully-delivered left hook. It was the liver punch. It left Will on his knees, cradling his gut in agony, as if all of his insides had been violently rearranged. He was left there on the floor by Big Jim, the Negro ex-boxer whom Minerva employed for the purpose of rescuing her girls from the violent drunks, from the all-around women-haters, from the odd ducks like Will Holborne who were either unwilling or unable to take revenge upon the true objects of their wrathful discontent but must seek a paid surrogate to abuse in their stead.

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