Do Not Resuscitate. Charley Brindley
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Название: Do Not Resuscitate

Автор: Charley Brindley

Издательство: Tektime S.r.l.s.

Жанр: Зарубежная фантастика

Серия:

isbn: 9788835411031

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      “Oh, okay.”

      I fumbled with the button, then pressed it. My nurse hurried in.

      “What can I get for you, sweetie?” She put a soft hand on my shoulder. I liked her. She was kind, no nonsense.

      “Is Caitlion out there?”

      She nodded. “I expect so. She’s here more than I am.”

      Poor kid. Is she going to be all right? I hope she’s prepared. I held on until she turned eighteen. I didn’t want other people making her decisions. It’d been just her and me since she was two, when her mom ran away with a trucker from Wichita. In a few weeks, Caitlion will be well-off. Alone, but she can go to university, or to Europe…whatever she wants to do. I know it will be a rough month or so.

      “Papa.”

      There she was, my beautiful girl, taking my hand and leaning down for a kiss on the cheek. Her name, Caitlion, like Kate Lion, came from her mother’s slurred speech when she was high on fentanyl and heroin. She was trying to say, “Tavion,” whatever that means.

      “Hey, baby.”

      She wore jeans with manufactured holes and a pink tee saying, ‘5 out of 4 people struggle with math.’

      That made me smile.

      “You’re looking good today,” she said.

      Long auburn hair. Her brown eyes were deep, with a hint of mystery about them, as if they hid a special secret. She’d tinted the last six inches of her hair in a light honey blonde, in what I think she called babylights. And always, the beautiful smile.

      I blew a puff of air past the tube in my nose and waved my hand, shooing away her words. “I think…this is it, sweetheart.”

      “No, Papa. It’s not.” She took my hand, being careful of the IV.

      Chapter Two

      August 10, 1945

      I slipped in through the door in the back of the classroom and took the only vacant seat.

      “Who are you?”

      It was my first day at Fordland High School. The squat little man in front of the class stood glaring at me. He was dressed in a dove gray suit, with a black vest and wide floral tie. I’d never seen a male teacher before.

      “Ch-Charley Brindley.”

      “Wonderful. Brindley boy number five. Are there any more of you?”

      I didn’t know what he meant. Any more brothers, or any more Brindleys? I shook my head.

      Why is everyone looking at me?

      I heard a girl giggle. I slumped down, staring at the huge English textbook on my desk.

      Can I just crawl under it and die?

      “All right.” The teacher turned to the blackboard. “We’ll try to proceed without the benefit of your input.” He picked up a piece of chalk. “Mr. Winter Coldstream,” he said as he wrote his name on the board. “Yes, my mother had a great sense of humor.”

      He dropped the chalk in the tray and dusted his hands. “Who can name the eight parts of speech?”

      Six hands went up. All of them girls.

      Mr. Coldstream looked around at the smiling girls. His eyes fell on me. “Brindley?”

      No one had ever called me by my last name. I looked down and swallowed.

      “Can you name them?”

      I didn’t even know speech had parts. “Um…” I grabbed my textbook and flipped it open.

      “You should have learned this in fourth grade.” He looked around the room. “You, what’s your name?”

      “Ember Coldstream.”

      “I thought you looked familiar. Name them.”

      The others lowered their hands.

      Ember smiled and named off the parts of speech.

      She’s so cute, and smart, too.

      “Very good, Ember.” He glanced around the room. “What’s an adjective?”

      The same six girls raised their hands.

      “Brindley?”

      Oh, my God. Why does he keep asking me this stuff?

      I stared at my open book, keeping quiet and not moving, hoping I’d disappear from the surface of the Earth. I felt my face flush, and I knew everyone was watching me, probably laughing to themselves about my stupidity.

      “Well, I guess Brindley is so deep into mathematical calculations, his ears have blocked out all external stimuli.”

      Several kids laughed, one boy louder than the others. I knew who he was.

      Henry Witt. He probably doesn’t even know what stimuli is. I sure don’t.

      “What’s your name?” the teacher asked another student.

      “William Dermott.”

      “All right, William. What’s an adjective?”

      Why does he call me by my last name and everyone else by their first?

      “Um…” William looked at his hands, the floor, the window. “Um…a person, place, or thing?”

      “Wrong. Does anyone know the part of speech for a person, place, or thing?”

      The same six girls again.

      Mr. Coldstream strode across the front of the room and stopped before a girl with her hand in the air. “Who are you?”

      “Juliet Dermott.” She lowered her hand.

      “Really? Do you know Mr. William Dermott over there?”

      “I wish I didn’t.” She glared at William.

      “Can you answer the question, Juliet?”

      “Noun.”

      She’s pretty, and smart, like Ember.

      “Correct. What are most words ending in ‘-ly’ known as?”

      Please don’t ask me again. I don’t know any of this stuff.

      “Adverbs,” Juliet said.

      “Right.”

      I never knew time could pass so slowly. Hey, I did an adverb.

      “Let’s talk about diagramming a sentence, shall we?” Mr. Coldstream wrote on the board, ‘The quick brown СКАЧАТЬ