"Donnelly, Marcos - El Hijo De Hernez" - читать интересную книгу автора (Donnelly Marcos)MARCOS DONNELLY EL HIJO DE HERNEZ * "His fingers, they noticed, were ever straying As if impatient to be playing . . ." -- Robert Browning The neighborhood's north boundary was East 82nd Street. When I was growing up, I'd watch the black kids play basketball there, on the pavement inside the eight-foot fence around Saint Malachy's church and Catholic school. The priests left the gate unlocked from sun-up to dinner time. There was never any trouble there, no drugs, no blades or guns, no gang members showing colors. Not on the church grounds. The priests just figured there'd be no trouble, and there wasn't. I saw Saint Malachy's in the newspaper last week. I think I did. One of those helicopter photos, and not a real high-up picture like the ones the LAPD helicopters take. It was low, a Times shot. The crazy-mother journalists feel it's their life duty to keep taking those pictures. If you ask me, the cops got the right idea: stay high, real high. The photo showed seven towers on what used to be the Saint Malachy's grounds. You could make out the pole for the basketball hoop, still there west of the rectory. Three of the towers looked finished already, sprouting out of the skeleton frame of the church like accidental steeples. They're like the hundred or so other towers around the old neighborhood: tall, rungy, like concrete spider webs pulled from the middle on up toward the sky, and decorated with dishes, stop signs, soda cans. Other bizarre stuff. Bizarre stuff . . . the stuff you mention last. Like the tower at the comer of 10th and Compton, made up all of skulls. That one's forty-five feet high. And the one at Imperial and Avalon, the one called Las Munecas. Dolls, hundreds and thousands of them, cemented into the pipe and chicken-wired struts -- stuffed dolls, rag dolls, china dolls, Cabbage Patch dolls, and every race, shade, color and creed of plastic Barbies. I don't know, of course, but I like to think that Mr. Pietr had my brother Luis help build that one, the tower Las Munecas. That would be fitting. That would have made Mama proud. I still hear him sometimes. Not my brother Luis, but Mr. Pietr. And not just at night, either. "Jose," he says. "Jose, come build the city." And there's the music, the sweet, sweet, goddamn music behind his words. And the only thing holding me back is |
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