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Автор: Richard Kramer
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Современная зарубежная литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781609530907
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      These Things Happen

      Richard Kramer

      Credits / Dedication

      U N B R I D L E D B O O K S

      This is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons

      living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

      Unbridled Books

      Copyright © 2012 by Richard Kramer

      All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form

       without permission.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Kramer, Richard, 1952–

       These things happen / by Richard Kramer.

       p. cm.

       ISBN 978-1-60953-089-1

       1. Heterosexual parents—Fiction. 2. Gay parents—Fiction. 3. Joint custody of

       children—Fiction. 4. Families—New York (State)—New York—Fiction. 5. Life

       change events—Fiction. 6. Domestic fiction. I. Title.

       PS3611.R363T47 2012

       813'.6—dc23

       2012010843

      1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

      Book Design by SH . CV

      First Printing

       always the beautiful answer,

       who asks a more beautiful question E.E. CUMMINGS

      for EMZ who waited; who knew

      These Things Happen

      1. Wesley

      Alot can happen in a day, sometimes. Not every day, of course. Most have one event, and that's if you're lucky.

      Many have less, which seems especially true in our school, which is hard to get into and committed to serving the community but is also, as a rule, unthrilling. Maybe things pick up in eleventh grade, which is when Mr. Frechette, a teacher we like, says our brains have developed to the point where we can grasp irony, accept ambivalence, and acknowledge the death's head that lurks at the edge of all human endeavor. His exact words; I put them in my phone. We'll see, although I trust him. Mr. Frechette can get sour, but he's also pretty wise.

      Maybe today's a preview of next year, then, because a lot has happened in it, even without the death's head. School's out. Theo and I are on our way to tae kwon do. Wherever you look, whoever and whatever you see seems glad to be a New Yorker, not just people but buildings, and pigeons, and signs. As for tae kwon do, we've been going since we were seven, and we're sixteen now, or will be. We're both excellent at it, which our gyosa Marshall says isn't bragging if you really are and can truly own it. Theo's my best friend, and always has been. He says that's just because he's the only boy in my school who's not named Max or Jake, but that's not it at all (which he knows). It's simple. He bores easily. So do I. But we don't bore each other, and that's since in utero, practically, as our moms met in Lamaze class and got to be friends. He got his name because his mom wrote a book about the loser relatives of famous artists. Theo Van Gogh was Vincent Van Gogh's brother; Mrs. Rosen, Theo's mom, pronounces the name (I quote Theo here) "like she was choking on a rugelach." Theo V.G. knew Vincent was the talented one and worked hard to make sure the world knew it, too. I admire that, and hope I would do the same, if I had a brother who was an insane depressed genius, which I don't. I'm an only child. He died, though, Theo Van Gogh, that is, chained to a wall and crazy due to the effects of syphilis, which was quite popular at the time. I asked Theo if he was worried that something like that might happen to him. "Are you being facetious?" he said. There was a time, not long ago, when we used to ask that after we pretty much said anything; we mostly just liked the word. He said he wasn't scared, especially. His mom just wanted him to sound special. But he saw my point. He always does, as I see his. And his are solid, I feel. I don't know what he thinks of mine, but one can only assume that he finds them solid, as well, because we hang out, text frequently, and dislike the same people.

      Now that we're out and free I'd like to get right into the things that changed the day from ordinary to interesting. The first is that Theo was elected president of our grade, swept in on a sea of change, like Obama was, which always made me think of an ocean of dimes and nickels. I was his campaign manager and am proud to say we never went negative, although we could have against his opponent, Shannon Traube, who posted pictures of herself on Facebook giving out cookies her maid had baked to homeless guys, in boxes. Other things happened, too, historic ones, even. But even on a day like this you still need the stuff of an ordinary day, too. Maybe you need it more. So before I get into what took place as recently as lunchtime, we do what we do every day, without fail. We call it Facts. Just simple, like that. Because it's a simple thing, and one we've been doing since we were ten. We each are responsible for one Fact that the other guy wouldn't have known but would be interested in, a fact that has no other purpose than to be a) cool and b) somewhat disturbing. One might guess, and one would be right, that Nazis tend to get overrepresented, not to mention the Japanese ( prisoner-of-war camps, not the economic miracle). But you have to work with what's out there. There are certain truths that are universally acknowledged, and you're a moron if you don't know them.

      "Fact," I say.

      "Awesome," says Theo, which is a word frowned upon in our school, especially by Mr. Frechette. He feels it should only be applied to Balanchine, whatever that is.

      "The Nazis made it illegal for Jews to buy flowers."

      "Fuck." He stops walking. He has tears in his eyes, and he's not a sentimental person. "That really depresses me."

      "Dude," I say, "that's mankind."

      "I know. It's still fucked, though."

      "I promise: nothing to do with Germany for a week. So what's your Fact?"

      "It's French." We both like maps, so I'm sure, pretty much, that he's doing what I am, which is seeing Europe, the map of it, that is, picturing Germany, France touching it, Belgium and Switzerland mixed in there in chunks, as with a Ben and Jerry's flavor.

      "France," I say. "Good. France isn't Germany."

      "No, Wesley," says Theo, "it's not." He punches my arm. I punch his. "Fact: at Versailles, they used to shit on the stairs."

      "You mean the king and everyone?"

      "I think it was more friends and family."

      "I like that."

      "Yeah," he says. "It's good. So now that we've done historic Facts—"

      "We need to get into today's."

      "My speech."

      He means his acceptance speech, given today after he won the election. I helped him write parts of it, the future pledges material, in which he promised universal health care, sustainable snacks in vending machines, and an end to the settlements (our school likes us to pretend that we're real people). Then came the part I didn't help with. Theo put down his notes. He drank some water. Then he said, "I thank you for this mandate. I shall try to lead wisely, but not annoyingly. And now, in the spirit of full disclosure and governmental transparency, I would like to share with you that not only am I your new president