Cures for Hunger by Deni BĂ©chard (story books for 5 year olds txt) đ
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- Author: Deni BĂ©chard
Read book online «Cures for Hunger by Deni BĂ©chard (story books for 5 year olds txt) đ». Author - Deni BĂ©chard
That evening, as I did my homework, I kept thinking about the card. I approached the chair where he was watching TV.
âEst-ce que tu peux mâaider avec mes devoirs?â I said. If he checked my homework and spoke in French, I might figure something out. Maybe there were questions I could ask in French that I couldnât in English. Besides, I was always curious to hear his voice change.
âOkay, viens,â he told me, but as soon as my workbook came into his big hands, he furrowed his brow. His eyelids drooped and he hunched in his chair as I rattled away, explaining a translation assignment. When I stopped, he made a suggestion on how to write a sentence about a moose, but accidentally used the French word for mouse insteadâune souris. I corrected him, telling him that a moose was un orignal.
He lowered the book and stared at the TV. Black smoke rose from an aerial view of a city. He seemed upset, as if this were a place he knew. All around him hummed familiar danger, the electric buzz of his irritation.
When he switched to English and said, âThis isnât a good time,â I felt relieved.
âŽ
MY MOTHER HAD clear blue eyes, not dark like his, and silvery stripes in her light brown hair that, when she pulled it back in a ponytail, reminded me of the markings on a cat.
âWhose eyes do I have?â I asked. We were alone in the kitchen while she made goat cheese and I pretended to do my homework. I spoke as if the question werenât a big deal, though my teacher had made us read about eye color and told us that to have blue eyes the genes had to come from both parents. My mother said that mine were probably from her, unless someone in my fatherâs family also had blue eyes, but she didnât know. I didnât bother to explain how it really worked and asked, âWhy donât you know?â
âBecause Iâve never met them. Heâs not close to them anymore.â
âWhy not?â
âI donât really know. He doesnât like to talk about it.â
âOh,â I said, grudgingly. I fiddled with my pencil and considered my workbook. âAnd whose hair do I have?â
âI had blond hair when I was younger.â
âAnd my nose?â Sheâd often told me that I was lucky not to have her small nose. She called it a ski jump, though I saw nothing wrong with it.
âYour nose is your fatherâs. You have his real nose.â
âHis real nose?â I repeated. âHis nose isnât real?â
âHe had his real nose smashed in a fight. Doctors rebuilt it and gave him a new one thatâs smaller and very straight. I never saw his real one, but Iâm sure youâll have it when you grow up.â
I was sitting at a picnic table, the kind you saw in parks but never in other kidsâ houses. My life was nothing like other kidsâ. I never said âMomâ and âDad,â but âBonnieâ and âAndrĂ©,â and no one I knew had changed homes so often. Summers, we used to stay in a trailer on blocks in the valley, with goats and German shepherds in pens. My first memories were sunny days and broken-down motors, the mountain just above us, no electricity or running water, and our drinks in wire milk crates set in the stream. Winters, we moved to places with heat, rundown houses where my father got electricity using jumper cables, clipping the ends above and below the meter after stripping away the rubber. From my motherâs stories, I knew sheâd gone to art school in Virginia but ran away with a draft dodger. I pictured a guy really good at dodgeball, but, as if angry, she said he was dodging war, not balls. She met my father in Vancouver while working as a waitress, an encounter thatâbecause heâd once described it to me as âShe served me ham and eggs, and I left with herââmade me hungry whenever I thought about it. After that, they traveled British Columbia, living out of a van and fishing, an existence I fantasized aboutâmornings waking up and going straight outside to the river, no bedroom to clean, no school to worry about. But they decided to have children, and my perfect life ended just before I was born.
Whenever I asked her questionsâabout war or why it was wrongâshe answered carefully, explaining with so many detailsâVietnam, corrupt government, the loss of individual freedomâthat I didnât understand much. She talked to me as if I werenât a child but rather a very old and serious man.
Unlike her, my father barely answered whenever I asked about his family. âWhy donât you like to speak French?â or âWhat did your parents do?â earned me few words: âThereâs no point,â or âHe fished. She took care of the kids.â Then he told me about his travels or fights, like the time he hitchhiked cross-country to Calgary and went to a party and got in a terrible fight over a beautiful woman.
âThis bruiser,â he said, âwas two or three times as big as me. We were throwing each other across the room. We broke the table and chairs and knocked all the pictures off the walls. There wasnât anything we didnât break. That guy was tough, but I didnât let myself get worried. You get worried in a fight, and youâve had it. So I kept hitting him, and pretty soon everyone at the party started cheering me. They were originally his friends, but he was arrogant, and I was the better fighter. They could see that, so I guess they wanted to be on my side. Each time I got him down, Iâd say, âStay down,â and everyone else would shout, âStay down!â but
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