which became a seed.
Publié le 06/01/2014
Extrait du document
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BEAUTIFUL
ANDTRUE
Mom made spaghetti fordinner thatnight.
Ronatewith us.Iasked himifhe was stillinterested inbuying meafive-piece
drum setwith Zildjian cymbals.
Hesaid, "Yeah.
Ithink thatwould begreat." "Howabout adouble basspedal?" "Idon't
know whatthatis,but Ibet wecould arrange it."Iasked himwhy hedidn't havehisown family.
Momsaid,"Oskar!" I
said, " What? "
Ron putdown hisknife andfork andsaid, "It'sOK." Hesaid, "Idid have afamily, Oskar.Ihad awife anda
daughter." "Didyougetdivorced?" Helaughed andsaid, "No." "Then where arethey?" Momlooked ather plate.
Ron
said, "They wereinan accident." "Whatkindofaccident?" "Acar accident." "Ididn't knowthat." "YourmomandImet in
a group forpeople thathave lostfamily.
That'swhere webecame friends." Ididn't lookatMom, andshedidn't lookat
me.
Why hadn't shetold meshe was inagroup?
"How comeyoudidn't dieinthe accident?" Momsaid,"That's enough, Oskar."Ronsaid, "Iwasn't inthe car." "Why
weren't youinthe car?" Mom looked outthewindow.
Ronranhisfinger around hisplate andsaid, "Idon't know."
"What's weird,"Isaid, "isthat I'venever seenyoucry." Hesaid, "Icry allthe time."
My backpack wasalready packed, andI'dalready gottentheother supplies together, likethealtimeter andgranola bars
and theSwiss ArmyknifeI'ddug upinCentral Park,sothere wasnothing elsetodo.
Mom tucked meinat 9:36.
"Do youwant metoread toyou?" "Nothanks." "Isthere anything youwant totalk about?" Ifshe wasn't goingtosay
anything, Iwasn't goingtosay anything, soIshook myhead no."Icould makeupastory?" "Nothank you.""Orlook for
mistakes inthe Times? "
"Thanks, Mom,butnot really." "Thatwasnice ofRon totell you about hisfamily." "Iguess so."
"Try tobe nice tohim.
He'sbeen suchagood friend, andheneeds help,too." "I'mtired."
I set my alarm for11:50 P.M.,even though Iknew Iwouldn't sleep.
While Ilay there inbed, waiting forthe time tocome, Idid alot ofinventing.
I invented abiodegradable car.
I invented abook thatlisted every wordinevery language.
Itwouldn't beavery useful book,butyou could holditand
know thateverything youcould possibly saywas inyour hands.
What about agoogolplex telephones?
What about safety netseverywhere?
At 11:50 P.M.,I got upextremely quietly,tookmythings fromunder thebed, andopened thedoor onemillimeter ata
time, soitwouldn't makeanynoise.
Bart,thenight doorman, wasasleep atthe desk, which waslucky, because itmeant I
didn't havetotell any more lies.Therenter waswaiting forme under thestreetlamp.
Weshook hands, whichwasweird.
At exactly 12:00,Gerald pulledupinthe limousine.
Heopened thedoor forus,and Itold him, "Iknew you'd beon time."
He patted meonthe back andsaid, "Iwouldn't belate." Itwas mysecond timeinalimousine ever.
As we drove, Iimagined wewere standing stilland theworld wascoming towardus.The renter satallthe way onhis side,
not doing anything, andIsaw theTrump Tower, whichDadthought wastheugliest building inAmerica, andtheUnited
Nations, whichDadthought wasincredibly beautiful.Irolled downthewindow andstuck myarm out.
Icurved myhand
like anairplane wing.Ifmy hand hadbeen bigenough, Icould've madethelimousine fly.What about enormous gloves?
Gerald smiledatme inthe rearview mirrorandasked ifwe wanted anymusic.
Iasked himifhe had anykids.
Hesaid he
had two daughters.
"Whatdothey like?" "What dothey like? "
"Yeah." "Lemme see.Kelly, mybaby, likesBarbie and
puppies andbead bracelets." "I'llmake herabead bracelet." "I'msure she'd likethat." "What else?""Ifit's soft andpink,
she likes it.""Ilike soft andpink things, too."Hesaid, "Well, allright." "Andwhat about yourother daughter?" "Janet?
She likes sports.
Herfavorite isbasketball, andI'lltell you, shecan play.
Idon't mean foragirl, either.
Imean she's good.
"
"Are theyboth special?" Hecracked upand said, "Ofcourse theirpopisgonna saythey're special." "Butobjectively."
"What's that?""Like,factually.
Truthfully." "Thetruth isI'm their pop."
I stared outthewindow somemore.
Wewent overthepart ofthe bridge thatwasn't inany borough, andIturned around
and watched thebuildings getsmaller.
Ifigured outwhich button opened thesunroof, andIstood upwith thetop half of
my body sticking outofthe car.
Itook pictures ofthe stars withGrandpa's camera,andinmy head Iconnected themto
make words, whatever wordsIwanted.
Whenever wewere about togo under abridge orinto atunnel, Geraldtoldmeto
get back intothecarsoIwouldn't bedecapitated, whichIknow about butreally, really wish
Ididn't.
Inmy brain Imade
"shoe" and"inertia" and"invincible."
It was 12:56 A.M.when Gerald droveuponto thegrass andpulled thelimousine rightnexttothe cemetery.
Iput onmy
backpack, andtherenter gotthe shovel, andweclimbed ontotheroof ofthe limousine sowe could getover thefence.
Gerald whispered, "Yousureyouwant todo this?"
Through thefence Itold him, "Itprobably won'ttakemore thantwenty minutes.
Maybethirty." Hetossed overthe
renter's suitcases andsaid, "I'llbehere."
Because itwas sodark, wehad tofollow thebeam ofmy flashlight.
I pointed itat alot oftombstones, lookingforDad's..
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