Sara Jaffe - Dryland

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Dryland: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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It’s 1992, and the world is caught up in the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the Balkan Wars, but for fifteen-year-old Julie Winter, the news is noise. In Portland, Oregon, Julie moves through her days in a series of negatives: the skaters she doesn’t think are cute, the trinkets she doesn’t buy at the craft fair, the umbrella she refuses to carry despite the incessant rain. Her family life is routine and restrained, and no one talks about Julie’s older brother, a one-time Olympic-hopeful swimmer who now lives in self-imposed exile in Berlin. Julie has never considered swimming herself, until Alexis, the girls’ swim team captain, tries to recruit her. It’s a dare, and a flirtation — and a chance for Julie to find her brother, or to finally let him go. Anything could happen when her body hits water.

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Coach said, Winter.

He said, Lane Five.

He said it like an apology. He said it like a sheepish shrug, like palms upturned.

Erika said, Ah! She flashed Coach the finger behind her hand. She said, I can’t believe he separated us.

The bleacher dug into the backs of my thighs. I looked out at the pool. Lane Five, as I looked, grew narrow and murkier.

Erika said, It’s not fair. I can totally ask him to move me.

I wanted my towel. I said, No. I said, Stay where he put you. You deserve it.

Coach had gotten to the end of the alphabet and he tapped his clipboard against his palm. He said, Some of you, if you were paying attention, may have noticed that I didn’t put anyone in Lane Six. The truth? I don’t think we have any Lane Six material on this team. There are plenty of Lane Six swimmers out there on other teams, and they’re good people, they’ve got some skills. But I’m going to be proud to say to my fellow coaches, You know what? I’ve got so much talent on my team that I couldn’t even fill a Lane Six.

Coach said, Can I hear it?

I was a quivering line on the vibrating bleachers.

THE REDHEAD WITHthe big boobs, Donna, said, You’re a sophomore, right? A tiny boy with big eyes and short hair growing long around his ears giggled and said, You’re a sophomore! Besides the two of them, Lane Five was four scrawny freshmen girls in Day-Glo swimsuits, including the one I’d caught staring at me, eyeing me from behind their too-tight goggles.

Erika reached across the line from Lane Four and patted my arm. She said, Don’t worry, I bet it’s only for a little while. I bet if you just, you know, show Coach that you mean it, he’ll move you up.

I said, What do you mean?

Erika said, You know. With the stopping.

My hand made a fist underwater. I dug my fist hard into my hip bone. I said, I don’t think the stopping had anything to do with it. Coach blew the whistle to start the warm-up. I said, It’s not a big deal. You don’t need to make a big deal about it.

All up the lanes, swimmers pushed off and stroked. No one in Lane Five moved. The boy waif with his soft-looking baby nipples jumped around like a bird, and the loud-suited freshmen stood bug-eyed and tense. Donna, who’d gotten a swimsuit that covered her cleavage, said, Jesus, someone has to go first.

Everyone was waiting for me.

My arms stroked and stroked and stroked and stroked and my head turned to breathe and my feet kicked. My arms and my feet and my lungs swam me down Lane Five, as far away as they could get me. My legs couldn’t do as much as my arms. I let my arms be legs. I could have cut off my legs and been faster. The worst part was thinking of Alexis hearing my name and my lane assignment, seeing me tossed in with this lane of teeming strivers, of tangible misfits. I tried not to think. I stroked and breathed and touched the wall and turned without looking to see if there were swimmers at my heels and pushed off and breathed and stroked. Fuck Erika for acting as if I’d gotten myself stuck here on purpose. And fuck Coach for seeing me founder in Lane Four and not doing what he was supposed to do, which was what, coach me? The worst part was thinking of something in Alexis opening up when she heard Coach say my name and closing off when she heard where he’d put me.

Halfway through the fifth length, my right foot slapped the water. I thought, My foot. My left foot slapped and pulled me rightward. I thought, I’m losing it. My arms went arhythmic. I thought, I’ve lost it. Down the other side of the lane went a floater, a splasher. I thought, Fucking Lane Five. I thought, Fucking Coach. A striver was inches behind me. I chopped. My hip stitched. I thought. I thought, Fucking Erika, and I knew when I got to the wall at the end of the sixth length — I knew first that I would and then I did — I knew I’d stop at the wall and stay there.

I pulled up my goggles and watched. Donna was the splasher. The boy waif was a feather on the water. He was helpless against the current, and everyone passed him. The other girls in the lane took tentative, practiced strokes as if they’d learned to swim by watching a video about swimming. Swimmers in the other lanes were finishing their laps, which meant that soon Coach would blow the whistle, whether or not Lane Five was done. I’d stopped breathing hard. The boy waif was halfway down the lane in front of me. Before anyone else could join me at the wall, I pressed on my goggles and took off for one more lap, stroking hard toward the little boy. I caught up to him, swiped his heel, and waited for him to shrink to the side.

We had just finished the cooldown and I was about to hoist myself out of the pool. Someone behind me said, Excuse me? Julie?

It was the starer in pink Day-Glo. She was the worst of the videotape swimmers: the most practiced, the strivingest. She said, Sorry, hi, I’m in your lane.

We were standing in our lane. I said, I know.

She said, I just had a question for you, because you’re a sophomore, right? I was just wondering, do you know if we’re ever going to get to do butterfly?

I eyed the girl. She was scrawny and soft-shouldered. Her hot-pink suit clearly came from the girls’ department.

I said, Do you know how to do the butterfly?

She said, I’ve been practicing. There’s a pool at the gym my mom goes to. She said, I thought it would be good to specialize.

Swimmers around us crawled out of the pool. I should have felt sorry for this girl, for wanting something it was clear that no amount of practice laps at her mom’s gym would help her achieve. The girl’s striving buzzed off of her and roiled Lane Five, where we stood alone, pruning. I felt hungry or nauseated. Beyond the striver was Lane Six.

Lane Six was still, a jewel, and empty.

Lane Six pulled at me. I eyed the girl again, and I could see her getting taller, her shoulders broadening, her triceps or biceps or whatever she needed tumoring up along her arms. My skin felt tight. I was built for the butterfly: tall, wide shoulders, long arms. Big hands.

I said, I don’t know anything about it.

I SAID, HEYCoach. Can I ask you something?

Coach said, Julie. His voice, its palms upturned. You know, nothing’s permanent.

I said, Actually. I said, I was wondering. Could someone swim in Lane Six if they wanted to?

Coach said, Julie-Julie! You’re just getting off to a slow start. It’s going to go great.

I said, If they wanted to.

A FINGERPRINT MARREDthe shiny gold on my brother’s trophy for 100 Butterfly, 1985. In elementary school they’d lined us up in the gym to get fingerprinted, so our parents could find us if we ever got lost or kidnapped. I remembered a police officer, or just someone who worked with the police, mashing my fingertips into the wet purple ink pad. They must have given us something to clean our fingers with. I knew now from watching TV what fingerprints were really for. The print on the trophy looked like a thumb. Ben might have seen my brother win that race.

Alexis said, Hey Julie.

The hallway had been deserted and I’d assumed everyone had taken off, especially Alexis in her silver Taurus, with Greg in the passenger seat.

I said, Oh hey. I stood up quickly, as though she had caught me doing something.

Alexis said, Do you need a ride?

I said, Where’s Greg?

She said, He took off. He didn’t want to wait around for me while I went up to Yearbook. For five minutes, but whatever.

I had decided not to call my dad for a ride because I didn’t want all my calling to make him suspicious. Especially today, when I’d taken a two-second shower in order to get myself away from the pool and out of the Y as quickly as possible. I reeked of chlorine. I said, A ride would be great. I said, Is it okay if I just run up to my locker?

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