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May We Be Forgiven

May We Be Forgiven

Titel: May We Be Forgiven Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: A. M. Homes
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having a sip of my uncle’s beer—he thought it tasted funny. Does this taste bad to you?” He holds the beer glass up to the Headmaster.
    “All beer tastes like piss water to me. I only drink bourbon, but not while I’m on duty.”
    The man with the mustache hurries over. “Everything all right?”
    “Bring this man a fresh beer, and the young fella looks like he could use a refill too—what was that son, a Coke?” the Headmaster bellows.
    “Root beer, actually,” Nate says.
    “I like your sporran,” I say, unable to help myself. “Is it sealskin?” And I’m wondering, where the hell did I pull the word “sporran” from?
    “It is sealskin,” he says. “You’ve got a good eye. It was my grandfather’s,” he says, affecting a full Scottish accent.
    “And so it was,” I say.
    He nods. “Have a good dinner, and congratulations on your climb. I’m glad to finally see where Nathaniel’s prowess comes from.”
    The Headmaster saunters off to another table.
    “What were you talking about—spawning salmon?” Nate asks.
    “Sporran. His purse. I complimented him on his purse. That’s what that chain-belted thingy is—no pockets with a kilt.”
    Nate is, for a moment, impressed.
    I pull out my packet of pills (and the page of directions) and line up the dinner series, before, during, and after.
    “So what else about you, Nate, should I know?”
    “I have a school in South Africa,” Nate says. “I’m pretty proud of that.”
    “You mean you raised money to help build a school?—I think your mom mentioned something about that.”
    “I built it,” he says, flatly.
    “With your hands?”
    “Yes, with my hands, and with the villagers who live there, and some wood and nails and sheets of metal—all the things you build a school with. And I set up a water-filtration system for the town. It’s named for me. It used to have another name, but everyone who lives there calls it Nateville.”
    Is he telling the truth? “How were you able to do this all by yourself?”
    “It’s not as hard as you think,” Nate says. “It’s kind of like a big Lego. I had these Sunset books of plans for small structures that I was going to use to build myself something in the backyard, and we used those for inspiration. The real question is, if a kid can do it, why can’t others? There’s no reason the world is in as bad shape as it is, except that people are so fucking passive and immobile and focused on what can’t happen instead of what can.”
    Nate goes on. Everything he says is not only true, it is logical, well considered, articulate, persuasive. He’s explaining himself and the world around him, and all I can think is that it’s shocking that George didn’t kill him too.

    I am falling in love with Nate; he’s the boy I wish I had been, the boy I wish I was even now. I’m in awe of him and terrified. He’s more capable than any of the rest of us and yet he’s still a kid.
    “Does your dad know you can do all this?”
    “I doubt it,” he says.
    “Did you ever tell him?”
    “I don’t know how to say this politely, but when Dad came up here, he was basically shaking a lot of hands and didn’t exactly notice anything. And I’d like to keep it that way. He never noticed me, thought I was some lump of a loser sucking up air and resources—that’s what he called it, resources.”
    “He’s a pretty tough customer,” I say.
    “I don’t want to talk about it,” Nate says.
    “Not a problem,” I say. “What can we talk about?”
    “Why didn’t you and Claire have kids?”
    I take the beer from Nate and drink too much, too quickly; it tickles my nose and I choke, spitting Guinness across the table.
    “Pretty,” Nate says as I wipe it up.
    “We almost had a baby. Claire got pregnant once and something happened.”
    “She lost the baby?” Nate presses for clarity.
    I nod. That’s the polite version of it. The truth is, the baby was stillborn and got stuck and actually came apart as they were pulling it out. I saw the whole thing. I’d been on Claire’s side of the drape, and then, when they were pulling the baby out, the doctor made a painful sound, and so I stood up and looked over and saw pieces. It must have been dead for a while. Claire lifted her head. “Can I see the baby?” she asked. “No,” I said, too abruptly. And I never told her the rest.
    “The baby has passed,” the doctor said, and I was never sure if he was trying to tell her that it was all out or

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