Кэтрин Стокетт - The Help / Прислуга. Книга для чтения на английском языке стр 65.

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When will yall see each other again? This is Elizabeth now, twisting a napkin, eyes wide like shes staring at a car accident. Did he say?

Tomorrow night. As soon as he can drive over.

Good. Hillys smile is a fat childs at the Seale-Lily Ice Cream window. The button on her red suitcoat bulges. Well make it a double date, then.

I dont answer. I dont want Hilly and William coming along. I just want to sit with Stuart, have him look at me and only me. Twice, when we were alone, he brushed my hair back when it fell in my eyes. He might not brush my hair back if theyre around.

Williamll telephone Stuart tonight. Lets go to the picture show.

Alright, I sigh.

Im just dying to see Its a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World[131]. Wont this be fun, Hilly says. You and me and William and Stuart.

It strikes me as suspicious, the way shes arranged the names. As if the point were for William and Stuart to be together instead of me and Stuart. I know Im being paranoid. But everything makes me wary now. Two nights ago, as soon as I crossed over the colored bridge, I was stopped by a policeman. He shone his flashlight in the truck, let it shine on the satchel. He asked for my license and where I was going. Im taking a check to my maid Constantine. I forgot to pay her. Another cop pulled up, came to my window. Why did you stop me? I asked, my voice sounding about ten pitches too high. Did something happen? I asked. My heart was slamming against my chest. What if they looked in my satchel?

Some Yankee trash stirring up trouble. Well catch em, maam, he said, patting his billy club. Do your business and get back over the bridge.

When I got to Aibileens street, I parked even farther down the block. I walked around to her back door instead of using the front. I shook so bad for the first hour, I could hardly read the questions Id written for Minny.

Hilly gives the five-minute-till bang with her gavel. I make my way to my chair, lug my satchel onto my lap. I tick through the contents, suddenly conscious of the Jim Crow booklet I stole from the library. In fact, my satchel holds all the work weve done Aibileens and Minnys interviews, the book outline, a list of potential maids, a scathing, unmailed response I wrote to Hillys bathroom initiative everything I cant leave at home for fear Mother will snoop through my things. I keep it all in a side zip-pocket with a flap over it. It bulges unevenly.

Skeeter, those poplin pants are just the cutest thing, why havent I seen those before? Carroll Ringer says a few chairs away and I look up at her and smile, thinking Because I wouldnt dare wear old clothes to a meeting and neither would you. Clothing questions irritate me after so many years of Mother hounding me.

I feel a hand on my other shoulder and turn to find Hilly with her finger in my satchel, right on the booklet. Do you have the notes for next weeks newsletter? Are these them? I hadnt even seen her coming.

No, wait! I say and ease the booklet back into my papers. I need to to correct one thing. Ill bring them to you a little later.

I take a deep breath.

At the podium, Hilly looks at her watch, toying with the gavel like shes just dying to bang it. I push my satchel under my chair. Finally, the meeting begins.

I record the PSCA news, whos on the trouble list, whos not brought in their cans. The calendar of events is full of committee meetings and baby showers, and I shift around in my wooden chair, hoping the meeting will end soon. I have to get Mothers car back to her by three.

Its not until a quarter till, an hour and a half later, that I rush out of the hot room toward the Cadillac. Ill be on the trouble list for leaving early, but Jesus Christ, whats worse, the wrath of Mother or the wrath of Hilly?

I walk into the house five minutes early, humming Love Me Do[132], thinking I ought to go buy a short skirt like Jenny Foushee wore today. She said shed gotten it up in New York City at Bergdorf Goodmans. Mother would keel over if I showed up with a skirt above the knee when Stuart picks me up on Saturday.

Mama, Im home, I call down the hallway.

I pull a Co-Cola from the fridge, sigh and smile, feeling good, strong. I head to the front door for my satchel, ready to thread together more of Minnys stories. I can tell she is itching to talk about Celia Foote, but she always stops after a minute of it and changes the subject. The phone rings and I answer it, but its for Pascagoula. I take a message on the pad. Its Yule May, Hillys maid.

Hey, Yule May, I say, thinking what a small town this is. Ill give her the message when she gets back. I lean a minute against the counter, wishing Constantine was here like it used to be. How Id love to share every single thing about my day with her.

I sigh and finish my Coke and then go to the front door for my satchel. Its not there. I go outside and look in the car but its not there either. Huh, I think and head up the stairs, feeling less pink now and more of a pale yellow[133]. Did I go upstairs yet? I scour my room, but its nowhere to be found. Finally, I stand still in my quiet bedroom, a slow tingle of panic working its way up my spine. The satchel, it has everything in it.

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