Grasshopper Jungle. Andrew Smith. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Andrew Smith
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Руководства
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781780316215
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Clickety • On the Roof Again • Denny Drayton Has a Gun, Motherfucker • Exile in Eden • A Chance Meeting under a Portrait of a Presbyterian, or, Calvin Coolidge’s Canoe • A Most Soothing Showerhead • Infinita Milites! Infinita Milites! • Robby the Theologian • Satan and the Pastor • Serial Killer USA • Looking for Wiggles • Concerning the Bison, and Free Will • Population Explosion • Everything a Guy Could Need, and the Two Best Rock Albums Ever Made • The Blood of God • Wanda Mae’s Pink Bowling Ball • Rules Are Rules, but the Brain Room Is Not Particularly Brainy • Never Look for Ice Cream in a Sperm Freezer • A Real Concrete Iowa Thinker • Nighttime in Eden • Too Bad for Boys Like Me • The Worst Imaginable Small-Town Social Blunder • The Right Kind of Cigarettes to Smoke Just Before You Kill Something • There Are No Cup-O-Noodles in Eden • Rat Boys from Mars, and an Unfortunate Incident Involving an Inflatable Whale • The Battle of the Del Vista Arms • The End of the World • Pictures of Robby and Shann • The Intergalactic Bug Cops • Enola Gay and Beau Barton’s Boner • The Battle of Kelsey Creek Bridge • Great Big Jar

       EPILOGUE: LUCKY, A CIGARETTE RUN, AND THE BISON

       Acknowledgments

       About the Author

       PART 1:

       EALING

      I READ SOMEWHERE that human beings are genetically predisposed to record history.

      We believe it will prevent us from doing stupid things in the future.

      But even though we dutifully archived elaborate records of everything we’ve ever done, we also managed to keep on doing dumber and dumber shit.

      This is my history.

      There are things in here: babies with two heads, insects as big as refrigerators, God, the devil, limbless warriors, rocket ships, sex, diving bells, theft, wars, monsters, internal combustion engines, love, cigarettes, joy, bomb shelters, pizza, and cruelty.

      Just like it’s always been.

      ROBBY BREES AND I made the road the Ealing Mall is built on.

      Before we outgrew our devotion to BMX bicycles, the constant back-and-forth ruts we cut through the field we named Grasshopper Jungle became the natural sweep of Kimber Drive, as though the dirt graders and street engineers who paved it couldn’t help but follow the tracks Robby and I had laid.

      Robby and I were the gods of concrete rivers, and history does prove to us that wherever boys ride bicycles, paved roadways ribbon along afterward like intestinal tapeworms.

      So the mall went up—built like a row of happy lower teeth—grinned for a while, and then about a year ago some of the shops there began shutting down, blackening out like cavities when people left our town for other, better places.

      BMX riding was for middle-school kids.

      We still had our bikes, and I believe that there were times Robby and I thought about digging them out from the cobwebbed corners of our families’ garages. But now that we were in high school—or at least in high school classes, because we’d attended Curtis Crane Lutheran Academy since kindergarten—we rode skateboards, and also managed to sneak away in Robby’s old car.

      We were in tenth grade, and Robby could drive, which was very convenient for me and my girlfriend, Shann Collins.

      We could always depend on Robby. And I counted on the hope—the erotic plan I fantasized over—that one night he’d drive us out along the needle-straight roads cutting through the seas of cornfields surrounding Ealing, and Robby wouldn’t say anything at all as I climbed on top of Shann and had sex with her right there on the piles of Robby’s laundry that always seemed to lie scattered and unwashed in the dirty old Ford Explorer his dad left behind.

      ON THE FRIDAY that ended our painfully slow first week after spring break, Robby and I took our boards and skated through the filthy back alley of Grasshopper Jungle.

      Nobody cared about skaters anymore.

      Well, at least nobody cared among the four remaining businesses that managed to stay open in the Ealing Mall after the McKeon plant closed down: The laundromat Robby never quite made it to, The Pancake House, and the liquor and thrift stores owned by Shann’s stepdad.

      So we could skate there, and did pretty much whatever we wanted to do.

      Judging from the empty beer cans, the mysterious floral sleeper sofa we were certain was infested with pubic lice, and the pungent smell of piss in the alley, it was clear everyone else in Ealing was similarly okay with the no-limits code of conduct in Grasshopper Jungle, too.

      And that proved to be an unfortunate fact for me and Robby on that Friday.

      We had built ramps from sagging flaps of plywood that we laid across a flight of concrete steps behind a vacant unit that used to be a foot doctor’s office.

      “Bad business plan,” Robby said.

      “What?”

      “Fixing people’s feet in a town everyone’s dying to run away from.”

      Robby was so smart it hurt my head to think about how sad he could be sometimes.

      “We should go into business,” I said.

      “Want to have a fag?”

      Robby liked calling cigarettes fags .

      “Okay.”

      There was no way we’d ever sit down on that couch. We upended blue plastic milk crates and sat with forearms resting across our knees while we propped our feet on our boards and rocked them back and forth like we floated over invisible and soothing waves.

      Robby was a better smoker. He could inhale thick, deep clouds of cigarette smoke and blow life-sized ghost models of both of us when he’d casually lean back and exhale.

      I liked cigarettes, but I’d never smoke if Robby didn’t.

      “What kind of business?” Robby said.

      “I don’t know. I could write stuff. Maybe comic books.”

      “And you could draw me.” Robby took a big drag from his cigarette. “I’d be like your spokesmodel or something.”

      I have to explain.

      I have that obsession with history, too.

      In one corner of my closet, stacked from the floor to the middle of my thigh, sits a pile of notebooks and composition binders filled with all the dumb shit I’ve ever done. My hope was that, one day, my dumb history would serve as the source for countless fictional accounts of, well, shit.

      And I drew, too. There were thousands of sketches of me, of Shann and Robby, in those books.

      I consider it my job to tell the truth.

      “What, exactly, does a spokesmodel do?”

      “We speak. And look good at the same time. It’s a tough job, so I’d expect to make decent money.”

      “Multitasking.”