Douglas Coupland - Hey Nostradamus!

VIP免费
2024-12-06 0 0 1.33MB 106 页 5.9玖币
侵权投诉
Hey Nostradamus!
By Douglas Coupland
Behold, I tell you a mystery;
we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,
in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet;
for the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable,
and we shall be changed.
I Cor. 15:51-52
Part One
1988: Cheryl
I believe that what separates humanity from everything else in this world - spaghetti, binder
paper, deep-sea creatures, edelweiss and Mount McKinley - is that humanity alone has the
capacity at any given moment to commit all possible sins. Even those of us who try to live a good
and true life remain as far away from grace as the Hillside Strangler or any demon who ever tried
to poison the village well. What happened that morning only confirms this.
It was a glorious fall morning. The sun burned a girly pink over the mountain ranges to the west,
and the city had yet to generate its daily smog blanket. Before driving to school in my little white
Chevette, I went into the living room and used my father's telescope to look down at the harbor,
as smooth as mercury, and on its surface I could see the moon dimming over East Vancouver.
And then I looked up into the real sky and saw the moon on the cusp of being overpowered by
the sun.
My parents had already gone to work, and my brother, Chris, had left for swim team hours
before. The house was quiet - not even a clock ticking - and as I opened the front door, I looked
back and saw some gloves and unopened letters on the front hallway desk. Beyond them, on the
living room's gold carpet, were some discount warehouse sofas and a lamp on a side table that we
never used because the light bulb always popped when we switched it on. It was lovely, all that
silence and all that calm order, and I thought how lucky I was to have had a good home. And then
I turned and walked outside. I was already a bit late, but I was in no hurry.
Normally I used the garage door, but today I wanted a touch of formality. I had thought that this
morning would be my last truly innocent glance at my childhood home - not because of what
really ended up happening, but because of another, smaller drama that was supposed to have
unfolded.
I'm glad that the day was as quiet and as average as it was. The air was see-your-breath chilly,
and the front lawn was crunchy with frost, as though each blade had been batter fried. The
brilliant blue and black Steller's jays were raucous and clearly up to no good on the eaves trough,
and because of the frost, the leaves on the Japanese maples had been converted into stained-glass
shards. The world was unbearably pretty, and it continued being so all the way down the
mountain to school. I felt slightly high because of the beauty, and the inside of my head tickled. I
wondered if this is how artists go through life, with all of its sensations tickling their craniums
like a peacock feather.
* * *
I was the last to park in the school's lot. That's always such an uneasy feeling no matter how
together you think you are — being the last person there, wherever there may be.
I was carrying four large binders and some textbooks, and when I tried shutting the Chevette's
door, it wouldn't close properly. I tried slamming it with my hip, but that didn't work; it only
made the books spray all over the pavement. But I didn't get upset.
Inside the school, classes were already in session and the hallways were as silent as the inside of
my house, and I thought to myself, What a day for silence.
I needed to go to my locker before class, and as I was working my combination lock, Jason came
up from behind.
"Boo."
"Jason — don't do that. Why aren't you in class?"
"I saw you parking, so I left."
"You just walked out?"
"Forget about that, Miss Priss. Why were you being so weird on the phone last night?"
"I was being weird?"
"Jesus, Cheryl - don't act like your airhead friends."
"Anything else?"
"Yes. You're my wife, so act like it."
"How should I be acting, then?"
"Cheryl, look: in God's eyes we're not two individuals, okay? We're one unit now. So if you dick
around with me, then you're only dicking around with yourself."
And Jason was right. We were married - had been for about six weeks at that point - but we were
the only ones who knew it.
* * *
I was late for school because I'd wanted everyone out of the house before I used a home
pregnancy test. I was quite calm about it - I was a married woman, and shame wasn't a factor. My
period was three weeks late, and facts were facts.
Instead of the downstairs bathroom I shared with my brother, I used the guest bathroom upstairs.
The guest bathroom felt one notch more medical, one notch less tinged by personal history - less
accusatory, to be honest. And the olive fixtures and foil wallpaper patterned with brown bamboo
looked swampy and dank when compared to the test's scientific white-and-blue box. And there's
not much more to say, except that fifteen minutes later I was officially pregnant and I was late for
math class.
* * *
"Jesus, Cheryl . . ."
"Jason, don't curse. You can swear, but don't curse."
"Pregnant?"
I was quiet.
"You're sure?"
"I'm late for math class. Aren't you even happy?"
A student walked by, maybe en route to see the principal.
Jason squinted like he had dust in his eyes. "Yeah - well, of course - sure I am."
I said, "Let's talk about it at homeroom break."
"I can't. I'm helping Coach do setup for the Junior A team. I promised him ages ago. Lunchtime
then. In the cafeteria."
I kissed him on his forehead. It was soft, like antlers I'd once touched on a petting zoo buck.
"Okay. I'll see you there."
He kissed me in return and I went to math class.
* * *
I was on the yearbook staff, so' I can be precise here. Delbrook Senior Secondary is a school of
1,106 students located about a five-minute walk north of the Trans-Canada Highway, up the
algae-green slope of Vancouver's North Shore. It opened in the fall of 1962, and by 1988, my
senior year, its graduates numbered about thirty-four thousand. During high school, most of them
were nice enough kids who'd mow lawns and baby-sit and get drunk on Friday nights and maybe
wreck a car or smash a fist through a basement wall, not even knowing why they'd done it, only
that it had to happen. Most of them grew up in rectangular postwar homes that by 1988 were
called tear-downs by the local real estate agents. Nice lots. Nice trees and vines. Nice views.
As far as I could tell, Jason and I were the only married students ever to have attended Delbrook.
It wasn't a neighborhood that married young. It was neither religious nor irreligious, although
back in eleventh-grade English class I did a tally of the twenty-six students therein: five
abortions, three dope dealers, two total sluts, and one perpetual juvenile delinquent. I think that's
what softened me up for conversion: I didn't want to inhabit that kind of moral world. Was I a
snob? Was I a hypocrite? And who was I to even judge? Truth be told, I wanted everything those
kids had, but I wanted it by playing the game correctly. This meant legally and religiously and -
this is the part that was maybe wrong - I wanted to outsmart the world. I had, and continue to
have, a nagging suspicion that I used the system simply to get what I wanted. Religion included.
Does that cancel out whatever goodness I might have inside me?
Jason was right: Miss Priss.
* * *
Math class was x's and y's and I felt trapped inside a repeating dream, staring at these two evil
little letters who tormented me with their constant need to balance and be equal with each other.
They should just get married and form a new letter together and put an end to all the nonsense.
And then they should have kids.
I thought about my own child-to-be as I stared out the window, turning the pages only when I
heard everybody else turn theirs. I saw fleeting images of breast-feeding, prams and difficult
labor, my knowledge of motherhood being confined mostly to magazines and cartoons. I ignored
Lauren Hanley, two rows over, who held a note in her hand that she obviously wanted me to read.
Lauren was one of the few people left from my Youth Alive! group who would still speak to me
after rumors began spreading that Jason and I were making it.
Carol Schraeger passed the note my way; it was a plea from Lauren to talk during homeroom
break. We did, out by her locker. I know Lauren saw this meeting as being charged with drama,
and my serenity must have bothered her.
"Everyone's talking, Cheryl. Your reputation is being tarnished. You have to do something about
it."
Lauren was probably the key blabber, but I was a married woman, so why should I care? I said,
"Let people say what they want, Lauren. I take comfort in knowing that my best friends are
squelching any rumors from the start, right?"
She reddened. "But everyone knows your Chevette was parked at Jason's all weekend while his
parents were away in the Okanogan."
"So?"
"So you guys could have been doing anything in there -not that you were - but imagine what it
looked like."
Truth was, Jason and I were doing everything in there that weekend, but I have to admit that for a
moment or two I enjoyed watching Lauren squirm at my nonresponse. In any event, I was far too
preoccupied to have any sort of conversation. I told Lauren I had to go to my homeroom and
sequence some index cards for an oral presentation later that afternoon on early Canadian fur
trappers, and I left.
In homeroom I sat at my desk and wrote over and over on my pale blue binder the words GOD IS
NOWHERE/GOD IS NOW HERE /GOD IS NOWHERE/GOD IS NOW HERE. When this binder with these
words was found, caked in my evaporating blood, people made a big fuss about it, and when my
body is shortly lowered down into the planet, these same words will be felt-penned all over the
surface of my white coffin. But all I was doing was trying to clear out my head and think of
nothing, to generate enough silence to make time stand still.
* * *
Stillness is what I have here now - wherever here is. I'm no longer a part of the world and I'm still
not yet a part of what follows. I think there are others from the shooting here with me, but I can't
tell where. And for whatever it's worth, I'm no longer pregnant, and I have no idea what that
means. Where's my baby? What happened to it? How can it just go away like that?
It's quiet here - quiet like my parents' house, and quiet in the way I wanted silence when writing
on my binder. The only sounds I can hear are prayers and curses; they're the only sounds with the
power to cross over to where I am.
I can only hear the words of these prayers and curses - not the voice of the speaker. I'd like to
hear from Jason and my family, but I'm unable to sift them out.
Dear God,
Remove the blood from the souls of these young men and women. Strip their memories of our
human vile-ness. Return them to the Garden and make them babes, make them innocent.
Erase their memories of today.
As I'm never going to be old, I'm glad that I never lost my sense of wonder about the world,
although I have a hunch it would have happened pretty soon. I loved the world, its beauty and
bigness as well as its smallness: the first thirty seconds of the Beatles' "Lovely Rita"; pigeons
sitting a fist apart on the light posts entering Stanley Park; huckleberries both bright orange and
dusty blue the first week of June; powdered snow down to the middle gondola tower of Grouse
Mountain by the third week of every October; grilled-cheese sandwiches and the sound of
lovesick crows on the electrical lines each May. The world is a glorious place, and filled with so
many unexpected moments that I'd get lumps in my throat, as though I were watching a bride
walk down the aisle - moments as eternal and full of love as the lifting of veils, the saying of
vows and the moment of the first wedded kiss.
* * *
The lunch hour bell rang and the hallways erupted into ordered hubbub. Normally I wouldn't
have gone to the cafeteria; I was part of the Out to Lunch Bunch - six girls from the Youth Alive!
program. We'd go down to one of the fast-food places at the foot of the mountain for salad bar,
fries and ice water. Our one rule was that every lunch we had to confess a sin to the group. I
always made mine up: I'd stolen a blusher from the drugstore; I'd peeked at my brother's porn
stash - nothing too big, but nothing too small, either. In the end, it was simply easier to be with
five people in a restaurant booth than three hundred in a cafeteria. I was antisocial at heart. And if
people knew how dull our lunches were, they'd never have bothered to waste energy calling us
stuck-up. So, I was surprised when I went into the cafeteria to meet Jason to find the Bunch
hogging one of the cafeteria's prime center tables. I asked, "So what's this all about?"
Their faces seemed so - young to me. Unburdened. Newly born. I wondered if I'd now lost what
they still had, the aura of fruit slightly too unripe to pick.
Jaimie Kirkland finally said, "My dad got smashed and took out a light post on Marine Drive last
night. And Dee's Cabrio has this funny smell in it since she loaned it to her grandmother, so we
thought we'd go native today."
"Everyone must be flattered." I sat down. Meaningful stares pinballed from face to face, but I
feigned obliviousness. Lauren was the clique's designated spokeswoman. "Cheryl, I think we
should continue our talk from earlier."
"Really?"
"Yes, really."
I was trying to decide between Jell-O and fruit cocktail from the cafeteria counter.
Dee cut in: "Cheryl, I think you need to do some confessing to as." Five sets of eyes drilled into
me in judgment.
"Confess to what?" Forcing them to name the deed was fun.
"You," said Lauren, "and Jason. Fornicating."
I began giggling, and I could see their righteousness melting away like snow on a car's hood.
And that was when I heard the first gunshot.
* * *
Jason and I connected the moment we first met (albeit through some seat switching on my part)
in tenth-grade biology class. My family had just moved into the neighborhood from across town.
I knew that Jason's attraction to me would go nowhere unless I learned more about his world. He
appealed to me because he was so untouched by life, but I think this attraction for someone dewy
clean was unnatural for a girl as young as me. I think most girls want a guy who's seen a bit of
sin, who knows just a little bit more than they do about life.
Jason appeared to be heavily into Youth Alive!, which added to his virginal charm. I later learned
that his enthusiastic participation was an illusion, fostered by the fact that Jason's older brother,
Kent, two years ahead of us, was almost head of Alive!'s Western Canadian division; Jason was
roped in and was dragged along in Kent's dust. Kent was like Jason minus the glow. When I was
around Kent, I never felt that life was full of wonder and adventure; Kent made it sound as if our
postschool lives were going to be about as exciting as temping in a motor vehicles office. He was
always into planning and preparing for the next step. Jason was certainly not into planning. I
wonder how much of our relationship was a slap on Kent's face by his brother who was tired of
being scheduled into endless group activities.
In any event, Pastor Fields's sermons on chastity could only chill the blood in Jason's loins so
long. So I began attending Youth Alive! meetings three times a week, singing "Kumbaya,"
bringing along salads and standing in prayer circles - all of this, at first, just to nab Jason Klaasen
and his pink chamois skin.
And I did - nab him. We were an item within the group itself, and to the rest of the school an
attractive but dull couple. And not a day went by where Jason didn't ask for something more than
a kiss, but I held out. I knew he was into religion just deep enough to think losing his virginity
meant crossing a line.
The thing was, I did discover religion during my campaign to catch Jason, and that's not
something I'd expected, as there was nothing in my upbringing that predisposed me to
conversion. My family paid lip service to religious convictions. They were fickle - no God being
feared there. My family wasn't so much anti-God as it was pro the world. God got misplaced
along the way. Are they lost? Are they damned? I don't know. I'd be mistrustful of anybody who
said they were, and yet here I am, in the calm dark waiting to go off into the Next Place, and I
think it's a different place from where my family's headed.
My family didn't know what to make of my conversion. It's not as if I was a problem teen who
rebounded into faith -the most criminal I ever got was generic teenage girl things like prank
phone calls and shoplifting.
My parents seemed happy for me in a well-at-least-she's-not-dating-the-entire-basketball-team
kind of way, but when I discussed going to heaven or righteousness, they became constrained and
a bit sad. My younger brother, Chris, came to a few Alive! meetings but chose team sports
instead. Truth be told, I was glad to have religion all to myself.
Dear God,
I'm going to stop believing in you unless you can tell me what possible good could have come
from the bloodshed. I can't see any meaning or evidence of divine logic.
I can discuss the killings with the detachment I have from being in this new place. The world is
pulling away from me, losing its capacity to hurt.
For starters, nobody screamed. That's maybe the oddest component of the killings. All of us
thought the first shots were firecrackers - part of a Halloween prank, as firecracker season starts
in early October. When the popping got louder, people in the cafeteria looked to its six wide
doors with the expectation of being slightly amused by some young kids doing a stunt. And then
this kid from the tenth grade, Mark Something, came tottering in, his chest red and purple from
what looked like really bad makeup, and there were some nervous laughs in the room. Then he
fell and his head landed the wrong way on the corner of a bench, like a bag of gym equipment.
We heard some guys yelling, and three grade eleven students walked into the caf wearing duck-
hunting outfits - military green fatigues with camouflage patterns, covered with bulging pockets
and strips of ammunition -and right away one of them shot out a bank of overhead fluorescent
lights. One of the suspension cables broke and a light bank fell down onto a table of food - the
not-very-popular photo club and chess club table. The second guy, in sunglasses and a beret,
plucked out two grade nine boys and one girl who were standing at the vending machines. These
-were messy shots that left a mist of blood on the ivory-colored cinder-block walls. A group of
maybe ten students tried bolting for the doors, but the gunmen - gunboys, really - turned and
showered them with buckshot or bullets, whatever it is that guns and rifles use.
Two of them got away cleanly and I could hear their footsteps echoing down the corridor. As for
the rest of us, there was no escape route, so we clambered underneath the tables, as if in some
ancient nuclear drill from the 1960s.
* * *
In the summer between grades eleven and twelve, after my conversion and after landing Jason, I
had a summer job at a concession stand at Ambleside Beach. It was a dry hot summer and the
two other girls I worked with were fun -kind of skinny and nutty and they mimicked the
customers quite wickedly. They also didn't go to Delbrook, so they didn't have any history with
me, which was a relief, and I felt guilty feeling this relief. Youth Alive! was concerned that my
constant exposure to semiclad skin, sun and non-Youth Alive! members would make me revert to
the World - as if listening to screaming babies and groping for the last purple Popsicle at the
bottom of the freezer bin could be a test of faith or tempt me into secular drift. Lauren and Dee
and some of the others visited me a bit too often, and I don't think a night ever went by without
returning to my car at shift's end and finding an Alive!er eager to invite me to a barbecue or a
hike or a Spirit Cruise around the harbor.
By the end of that August, Jason was going mental for me. He came into the city on weekends
from his job up the coast, surveying for a mining company. A sample conversation from this
period might go:
"Cheryl, God would never have made it feel so right or so good unless it was right and good."
"Jason, could you honestly hold up your head and say to Pastor Fields or your mother or the Lord
that you'd been fornicating with Cheryl Anway? Could you?"
Well, of course he couldn't. There was only one way he could land what he wanted, and that was
marriage. One weekend in my bedroom, he said we could get married after graduation. I removed
his hand from near my right breast and said, "God doesn't issue moral credit cards, Jason. He's
not like a bank. You can't borrow now and pay later."
"My strength - Cheryl, I'm losing it."
"Then pray for more. God never sends you a temptation that you aren't strong enough to
overcome."
I did want Jason but, as I've said, only on my own terms, which also happened to be God's terms.
I'm not sure if I used God or He used me, but the result was the same. In the end, we are judged
by our deeds, not our wishes. We're the sum of our decisions.
* * *
During none of my lunch-hour confessions, whether at the White Spot drive-in eating fries with
the Bunch, or at an Alive! weekend seminar on kingdom building, did I ever once confess how
much I needed Jason, in every sort of way. Even thinking of him made me drunk, and all the
teenage girl stuff that came with it: bees needing flowers; wanting to dissolve like sugar into tea.
Of course, everybody else in the school was going at it like minks. Nothing was forbidden to
them, so why not? It's indeed a mistake to confuse children with angels. And while the ever-
present aura of casual sex saturated the school like locker aroma, I didn't surrender to my own
instincts, though I really did have to wonder why God makes teenagers so desperate. Why could
we see Archie and Betty and Veronica on dates at the malt shop, but never screwing around in
Archie's dad's basement covered in oil stains, spit and semen? Double standard. You can't do one
without implying the other. Preachy me.
Dear Lord,
Protect our children, while they . . . Lord keep them as . . . Sorry. I can't pray right now.
Dear God,
What's hardest here is that I simply can't believe this is happening. Why do You make certain
kinds of events feel real, but not others? Do You have a name for this? And could You please
make all of this feel real?
As I was saying, silence.
In the first few moments of the attack, I remember briefly seeing a patch of sky out the window
and I remembered how crisp and clean the day was.
Then one of the boys shot his gun in that direction and stemmed the exodus. I know nothing
about guns. Whatever they were, they were powerful, and when they cocked them, it sounded
industrial, like a machine stamping something flat.
Under the tables we all dove - thumpa-thumpa-thump.
Don't shoot at me - I'm not making any noise! Look! Look at How! Quiet! I'm! Being!
Shoot someone else over there! Shoot me? No! Way!
I could have stood up, shouted and caused a diversion and saved a hundred people, or organized
the lifting of our table to create a shield to ram into the gunmen. But I sat there like a meek little
sheep and it's the only thing I've ever done that disgusts me. Silence was my sin. I sinned as I
cowered and watched three pairs of ocher-colored work boots tromp about the room, toying with
us as though we were bacteria under a magnifying lens.
I recognized all of the boys - working on the yearbook is good for that kind of thing. There was
Mitchell Van Waters. I remembered seeing him down at the smoke hole by the parking lot with
his fellow eleventh-grade gunmen, Jeremy Kyriakis and Duncan Boyle.
I watched Mitchell, Jeremy and Duncan walk from table to table. Take away the combat fatigues
and they looked like the kid who mows your lawn or shoots hoops in the driveway next door.
There was nothing physically interesting about them except that Mitchell was pretty skinny and
Duncan had a small port-wine birthmark inside his hairline - I knew about this only because we'd
been looking at photos as part of paste-up and layout during class.
As the three walked from table to table, they talked among themselves - most of what they said I
couldn't make out. Some tables they shot at; some they didn't. As the boys came nearer to us,
Lauren pretended to be dead, eyes open, body limp, and I wanted to smack her, but I was just
mad at myself, perhaps more than anything for being afraid. It had been drilled into us that to feel
fear is to not fully trust God. Whoever made that one up has never been beneath a cafeteria table
with a tiny thread of someone else's blood trickling onto their leg.
* * *
One contradiction of the human heart is this: God refuses to see any one person as unique in his
or her relationship to Him, and yet we humans see each other as bottomless wells of creativity
and uniqueness. I write songs about horses; you make owl-shaped wall hangings; he combs his
hair like some guy on TV; she knows the capital city of every country on earth. Inasmuch as
uniqueness is an arrogant human assumption, Jason was unique, and because of this, he was
lovable. To me. First off, he was terrific with voices - ones he made up and ones he mimicked. As
with the girls from my summer job, I was a sucker for anyone who could imitate others. Jason
with even one beer in him was better than cable TV. He used his voices the way ventriloquists
use their dummies — to say things he was too shy to say himself. Whenever a situation was
boring and there was no escaping it - dinner with my family, or party games organized by Pastor
Fields's wife that incorporated name tags and blindfolds - Jason went into his cat character, Mr.
No, an otherwise ordinary cat who had a Nielsen TV ratings monitor box attached to his small
black-and-white TV. Mr. No hated everything and he showed his displeasure by making a tiny,
almost sub-audible squeaking nee-yow sound. I guess you had to be there. But Mr. No made more
than a few painful hours a treat.
Jason could also wiggle his ears, and his arms were double-jointed - some of his contortions were
utterly harrowing, and I'd scream for him to stop. He also bought me seventeen roses for my
seventeenth birthday, and how many boys do you know who'd do that?
I was surprised when Jason did propose - in his dad's Buick on a rainy August afternoon in the
White Spot parking lot over a cheeseburger and an orange float. I was surprised first because he
did it, then second because he'd concocted a secret plan that was so wild that only the deadest of
souls could refuse. Basically, using money he'd stockpiled from his summer job, we were going
to fly to Las Vegas. There in the car, he produced fake IDs, a bottle of Champale and the thinnest
of gold rings, barely strong enough to retain its shape. He said, "A ring is a halo for your finger.
From now on, we no longer cast two shadows, we cast one."
"Fake IDs?" I asked.
"I don't know the legal age there. They're for backup."
I looked, and they seemed to be convincing fakes, with our real names and everything, with just
the birth dates changed. And as it turned out, the legal age was eighteen, so we did need the
fakes.
Jason asked me if I wanted to elope: "No big churchy wedding or anything?"
"Jason, marriage is marriage, and if it were as simple as pushing a button on the dash of this car,
I'd do it right now."
What I didn't go on about was the sexiness of it all. Sex -finally - plus freedom from guilt or
retribution. My only concern was that Jason would develop chilly feet and blab to his buddies or
Pastor Fields. I told him that blabbing would be a deal wrecker, and I made him vow, under
threat-of-hell conditions, that this would be our secret. I'd also recently been reading a book of
religious inspiration geared mainly to men, and I'd dog-eared the chapter that told its readers,
essentially, to trust nobody. Friends are always betrayers in the end - everybody has the one
person to whom they spill everything, and that special person isn't always the obvious person
you'd think. People are leaky. What kind of paranoid creep would write something like that?
Well, whoever it was, it helped further my cause.
The important thing is that we were to marry in the final week of August in Las Vegas. I greased
the skids at home and told my folks I was attending a hymn retreat up the coast; I told Lauren and
the Alive! crew I was driving to Seattle with my family. Jason did the same thing. It was set.
Dear God,
I'm trying to take my mind off the slayings, but I don't know if that's possible. I'll forget about
them for maybe a minute and then I'll remember again. I tried finding solace looking at the
squirrels in the front yard, already gathering food for the winter - and then I got to thinking
about how short their lives are - so short that their dreams can only possibly be a full
mirroring of their waking lives. So I guess for a squirrel, being awake and being asleep are
the same thing. Maybe when you die young it's like that, too. A baby's dream would only be
the same as being awake - teenagers, too, to some extent. As I've said, I'm grasping here for
some solace.
Lord,
I know I don't have a fish sticker, or whatever it is I'm supposed to have on my car bumper,
like all those stuck-up kids who think they're holier than Thou, but I also don't think they have
some sort of express lane to speak to You, so I imagine You're hearing this okay. I guess my
question to You is whether or not You get to torture those evil bastards who did the killings,
or if it's purely the devil's job and You subcontract it out. Is there any way I can help torture
them from down here on earth? Just give me a sign and I'm in.
What I now find odd is how Jason and I both assumed our marriage had to be a secret. It wasn't
from shame, and it wasn't from fear, because eighteen is eighteen (well, almost) and the law's the
law, so in the eyes of the taxman and the Lord, we could go at it like rabbits all day as long as we
paid our taxes and made a few babies along the way. Sometimes life, when laid out plainly like
this, can seem so simple.
What appealed to me was that this marriage was something the two of us could have entirely to
ourselves, like being the only two guests in a luxury hotel. I knew that if we got engaged and
waited until after high school to marry, our marriage would become something else - ours, yes,
but not quite ours, either. There would be presents and sex lectures and unwanted intrusions.
Who needs all that? And in any event, I had no pictures in my head of life after high school. My
girlfriends all wanted to go to Hawaii or California and drive sports cars and, if I correctly read
between the lines on the yearbook questionnaires they submitted, have serial monogamous
relations with Youth Alive! guys that didn't necessarily end in marriage. The best I could see for
myself was a house, a kid or two, some chicken noodle soup at three in the afternoon while
standing at the kitchen sink watching clouds unfurl coastward from Vancouver Island.
I was sure that whatever Jason did for a living would amply fulfill us both - an unpopular
sentiment among girls my age. Jason once halfheartedly inquired as to my career ambitions, and
when he was certain I had none, he was relieved. His family - churchier than Thou - looked down
on girls who worked. If I was ever going to get a job, it would only be to annoy them, his parents
- his dad, mostly. He was a mean, dried-out fart who defied charity, and who used religion as a
foil to justify his undesirable character traits. His cheapness became thrift; his lack of curiosity
about the world and his contempt for new ideas were called being traditional.
Jason's mother was, well, there's no way around it, a bit drunk the few times I met her. I don't
think she liked the way her life had played out. Who am I to judge? How the two of them
procreated a sweetie-pie like Jason remains one of God's true mysteries.
* * *
If nothing else, relating the step-by-step course of events in the cafeteria allows me to
comprehend how distanced from the world I'm feeling now - how quickly the world is pulling
away. And for this reason I'll continue.
After the first dozen shots, the fire alarm went off. Mitchell Van Waters walked to the main
cafeteria doors, said, "Goddammit," and fired into the hall, blasting out the bell ringing there.
Jeremy Kyriakis took out the cafeteria's fire bell in three shots, after which a hail of drywall
particles pinged and rattled throughout the otherwise silent room. Beneath the tables we could
still hear fire bells ringing from deep within the school's bowels, bells that would ring past sunset
since the RCMP would hold off disabling the central OFF switch for fear of tripping homemade
bombs placed throughout the school - bombs made of benzene and powdered swimming-pool
cleaner. Wait - how did I know that combo? Oh yes, Mitchell Van Waters's contribution to the
science fair: "Getting the Most Bang for Your Buck." It was in last year's yearbook.
Back to the cafeteria.
摘要:

HeyNostradamus!ByDouglasCouplandBehold,Itellyouamystery;weshallnotallsleep,butweshallallbechanged,inamoment,inthetwinklingofaneye,atthelasttrumpet;forthetrumpetwillsound,andthedeadwillberaisedimperishable,andweshallbechanged.ICor.15:51-52PartOne1988:CherylIbelievethatwhatseparateshumanityfromeveryth...

展开>> 收起<<
Douglas Coupland - Hey Nostradamus!.pdf

共106页,预览10页

还剩页未读, 继续阅读

声明:本站为文档C2C交易模式,即用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。玖贝云文库仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知玖贝云文库,我们立即给予删除!
分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:106 页 大小:1.33MB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-06

开通VIP享超值会员特权

  • 多端同步记录
  • 高速下载文档
  • 免费文档工具
  • 分享文档赚钱
  • 每日登录抽奖
  • 优质衍生服务
/ 106
客服
关注