dclegg.purity-第3章
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All right; that sounds simplistic。 But I believe that the simplest things can lead to the strongest results。
So; I began working on breathing。
This was not merely inhaling and exhaling; but swimming at the beach in the icy spring and holding my breath under water。 After all; if I were going to be lord of my own breath; I needed to master everything about it; didn't I? I wasn't sure that I'd ever be a great breath…holder; because I never seemed able to go much beyond a minute。 I was holding on too much to my fear of dying。
This is one of the first lessons about breathing … if you have breath within your lungs; you will not die。 Death es once there is no more breath。
Again; simple。 Again; true。
〃Owen;〃 my mother said; pinning the laundry up outside the cottage that the Montgomery's housed us in。 〃What in god's name are you doing?〃
I had e up after logging in a minute…and…a…half beneath the water; right at the rocky ledge。 I had just leaned over and thrust my face underwater。
I was eleven at the time。 I tried to explain to her the principle behind my experiment; but she did not seem to understand。 However; within a few short months; I had bee best friends to the captain of the swim team in seventh grade; and by fall; I was running cross country。 I would never be the best … this was not my goal after all。 I would be a winner。
In fact; I knew I would close in on this with each sport or endeavor I tried … the other kids were lazy。 Life and their families made them that way。 I did not intend to let a day go which I could not claim as my own。 I was going to own life in a way that neither of my parents ever had。
Academics slipped in my middle school years … but not enough for anyone to notice。 I read studiously; and never for enjoyment; but to understand systems of thought that the world was trying to push at us。 I learned quickly that an A+ in school sometimes meant a D… in life; and that in fact equal effort had to be made to excel in both spheres。 Breathing helped。
When I felt overwhelmed by it all; I practiced my breathing again。 Even in December; when the island was desolate and the water was cold enough to drown; I would leap into the sea and stay beneath the water for as long as I could; I would; if possible; use the Montgomery's indoor swimming pool for my morning workout which began at six a。m。
8
That was the wonderful thing about the Montgomery's place:
They were usually gone all winter unless Mr。 and Mrs。 Montgomery were fighting; or Mr。 Montgomery had gone off with one of his mistresses and Mrs。 M was so angry she came to the island for a blisteringly cold February。 I used to see Mrs。 M in those cold Februarys; and I ran errands in town for her because she spent too much time staring at the walls or sitting along the indoor pool while I did laps。 She enjoyed letting me swim there; and she sometimes even got in and did laps; too。 Once; when I was twelve; Mrs。 M told me; 〃You're turning into quite the handsome boy; Owen Crites。〃 She was in good shape for a woman of forty; and there were times when I was with her that she reminded me so much of Jenna it was almost like having Jenna there with me。
When I watched her back; as she got out of the pool; bathing cap on; her narrow waist; the way the water beaded upon her skin … it was like seeing Jenna for a moment。 This made me happy。 Jenna meant a lot to me。
But the pool … dare I describe it now; how I remember it? It was vast。
It was Olympic size。 I could do real laps there as opposed to laps at the beach which ended with a summer lifeguard blowing a whistle for me to e to shore before I'd gone out twenty yards。 It was off the northern wing of their estate; and was constructed so that it was as if you were swimming outside; as if on the bluffs over the Sound; you owned the world as you went back and forth; breathing; carefully breathing so as not to wear out too fast。
Because; during those winters when the M's stayed down in Manhattan; my father and mother and I had the run of the house; I could swim naked in the pool; and rise to see the reflection of my body in the long mirrors that were in the small locker room off the pool。 By my sophomore year in high school; I had created … and mastered … a beautiful; strong body; and what average looks I had were masked by health and physical near…perfection。 I didn't admire this because I believed in beauty。
Beauty is for the lazy。
I admired it because I knew the world admired it; and I wanted to own the world。
Wrestling was my winter sport at school; and I did not excel at it; but I held my own。 The girls loved me … and the boys; too。 I never got too close to them; because I had to spend all my concentration on creating who I was。 But the girls all cheered for me in the sweaty matches as I brought some great bull of a boy from a peting school down to the red mat。 Because the psychological aspect to sports can't be emphasized enough; I would … with each match … create some threat to my opponent。 Something I could whisper in his ear。
This took no small amount of planning; as it meant I had to do research on those I wrestled; so I would know just what button to push to take away their psychological edge。 Dagon helped me; my god took me to books and ideas and notions; if you will; that showed me just what other boys would be most hurt by。 Usually; it involved their sense of sexuality。 After all; even I knew that showering with other boys all day; wearing jockstraps; cracking jokes about everything from dicks to pussies; was a veil across homoeroticism among adolescents。 And who but wrestlers were closest to puncturing that veil? So; I would whisper to my opponent something about him; something perhaps his closest friend had told me … his closest friend; drunk; being taken out to a parking lot … his closest friend who; with six beers in him; would finally admit to something that my opponent would be happiest to hide for a thousand years。
Sometimes; it was less interesting。 My threat might be; 〃I know your little sister; Trey。 I know all about her leg。 I would hate for something to happen to her。 I would hate for someone to do something to a little girl so sweet。〃
You may judge me for this if you like。 It was a petitive edge; and this is what we; in athletics; were taught: to find our edge。
Skill alone never wins。
I wish it did; but lazy people think that way。
Faith is necessary; too。 I had found mine。 It had grown within me。
Now; this began rumors about me; but I had built up a loyal following of other boys and girls in school。 I became head of the pep squad for the football team … team sports were never my thing; but I knew that I had to somehow attach myself to them。 So; when kids from other schools began talking about me saying 〃crazy; psycho〃 things; I had friends who were willing to lay down and die for me rather than accept those lies。 I really liked the kids I went to high school with; I liked the teachers。 It was easy for me to like them。
I think even being poor helped … teachers saw me as an underdog rising。 I would tutor children in the local elementary school some afternoons; I took the coach's daughter to the junior prom; just because I was a nice guy and I felt bad that she wasn't pretty enough to get asked by any of the other guys。 I was wellliked; and sometimes; that carries you。
But I haven't mentioned much about Jenna yet; have I? In all this talk of I; she has not yet entered not in the way she should've。 She was not at my school。 She was not within my sphere。 She was outer; she was beyond beyond。
How could I take her to the prom when she only arrived at Outerbridge Island in the summers?
I would count the days until Memorial Day weekend; when the Outerbridge Majesty would arrive in Quonnoquet Haven; heavy with tourists and summer people; and there; on the highest deck; I'd see her with my binos and I would lay back in the muddy grass and look up at the paling sky and think: please remember what we promised。 Remember everything and don't leave anything out。
Remember why I came to you and why you let me and why it would make everything be the way it was supposed to; and why you're the reason for my every breath。
That's what had happen