Pushkin Vertigo

  • Clarisa R.Khar citeratför 6 månader sedan
    How’s the brainwork going?”

    “Better than ever!”
  • b2985985546har citeratför 7 månader sedan
    If I were a heroine in a fairy tale, I often thought, and a fairy godmother offered to grant me wishes, I would ask for peaches-and-cream skin, eyes like deep blue pools, hair like spun gold instead of blackest ink. I knew I would be worthy of it all. There was nothing I wouldn’t trade for that kind of magic, that kind of beauty. If you were pretty, if you were normal, if you were white, then the good things everyone saw on the outside would match the goodness you knew existed on the inside.
  • b2985985546har citeratför 7 månader sedan
    Don’t you want to meet your real parents?”
  • b2985985546har citeratför 7 månader sedan
    How come you don’t look like them?”
  • b2985985546har citeratför 7 månader sedan
    “You’re so ugly, your own parents didn’t even want you!”23
    It was the first time anyone had ever used my adoption as an insult, and it would have been shocking and painful enough without the eyes, the broken singsong chant. He screwed up his face into a squint, asking how I could see. “Me Chinee, me can’t see!”
    Was “Chinee” supposed to be a nickname?
  • b2985985546har citeratför 7 månader sedan
    And wouldn’t it be wonderful to go to sleep one night and wake up an entirely different person, one who would be loved and welcomed everywhere? Wouldn’t it be wonderful to look at your face in the mirror and know you would always belong?
  • b2985985546har citeratför 7 månader sedan
    Are you black?”
  • b2985985546har citeratför 7 månader sedan
    Of course the other kids would be curious about my birth family. Of course they would want to solve the mystery I, too, obsessed over
  • ngyanaranjan05har citerati fjol
    The detectives looked through the glass. The glass was one-way and beyond was a purpose-built chamber. The chamber’s walls were concrete block fitted with ringbolts and against the far wall lay an iron-frame bed, thin mattress wrapped in plastic, headboard hung with manacles. Gazing down at what lay piled beside the bed on the poured concrete floor was the cold glass eye of a wall-mounted camera.

    ‘What are we talking here?’ Lynch said.

    They were standing in the viewing room, a dark and narrow space that ran the length of the chamber, and maybe out of reverence for the dead or owing to the oppressive dimensions of the room, both men whispered when they spoke.

    ‘Communication breakdown,’ Carlin said. ‘Transaction failure.’

    Male and female. Some barely adults. A death-camp pile yoked together by their necks with collars and chains. Their hands and feet manacled. At least three of them had fresh purple scars hacking across the sides of their torsos. All had track-marked arms. All had been branded. All had been shot in the head. The blood
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