"Чарльз Буковски. Бутерброд с дерьмом (engl)" - читать интересную книгу автора I had never seen him drive the car that fast.
3 My father had two brothers. The younger was named Ben and the older was named John. Both were alcoholics and ne'er-do-wells. My parents often spoke of them. "Neither of them amount to anything," said my father. "You just come from a bad family, Daddy," said my mother. "And your brother doesn't amount to a damn either!" My mother's brother was in Germany. My father often spoke badly of him. I had another uncle, Jack, who was married to my father's sister, Elinore. I had never seen my Uncle Jack or my Aunt Elinore because there were bad feelings between them and my father. "See this scar on my hand?" asked my father. "Well, that's where Elinore stuck me with a sharp pencil when I was very young. That scar has never gone away." My father didn't like people. He didn't like me. "Children should be seen and not heard," he told me. It was an early Sunday afternoon without Grandma Emily. "We should go see Ben," said my mother. "He's dying." "He borrowed all that money from Emily. He'd pissed it away on gambling and women and booze." "I know, Daddy." "We should still go see Ben. They say he has only two weeks left." "All right, all right! We'll go!" So we went and got into the Model-T and started driving. It took some time, and my mother had to stop for flowers. It was a long drive toward the mountains. We reached the foothills and took the little winding mountain road upwards. Uncle Ben was in a sanitarium up there, dying of TB. "It must cost Emily a lot of money to keep Ben up here," said my father. "Maybe Leonard is helping." "Leonard doesn't have anything. He drank it up and he gave it away. "I like grandpa Leonard," I said. "Children should be seen and not heard," .said my father. Then he continued, "Ah, that Leonard, the only time he was good to us children was when he was drunk. He'd joke with us and give us money. But the next day when he was sober he was the meanest man in the world." The Model-T was climbing the mountain road nicely. The air was clear and sunny. "Here it is," said my father. He guided the car into the parking lot of the sanitarium and we got out. I followed my mother and father into the building. As we entered his room, my Uncle Ben was sitting upright in bed, staring out the window. He turned and looked at us as we entered. He was a very handsome man, thin, with black hair, and he had dark eyes which glittered, were brilliant with glittering light. |
|
|