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Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

Titel: Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
Autoren: Jonathan Safran Foer
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“Thanks.” And then I thought of something, so I said it. “Actually, if limousines were extremely long, they wouldn't need drivers. You could just get in the back seat, walk through the limousine, and then get out of the front seat, which would be where you wanted to go. So in this situation, the front seat would be at the cemetery.” “And I would be watching the game right now.” I patted his shoulder and told him, “When you look up 'hilarious' in the dictionary, there's a picture of you.”
    In the back seat, Mom was holding something in her purse. I could tell that she was squeezing it, because I could see her arm muscles. Grandma was knitting white mittens, so I knew they were for me, even though it wasn't cold out. I wanted to ask Mom what she was squeezing and why she had to keep it hidden. I remember thinking that even if I were suffering hypothermia, I would never, ever put on those mittens.
    “Now that I'm thinking about it,” I told Gerald, “they could make an incredibly long limousine that had its back seat at your mom's VJ and its front seat at your mausoleum, and it would be as long as your life.” Gerald said, “Yeah, but if everyone lived like that, no one would ever meet anyone, right?” I said, “So?”
    Mom squeezed, and Grandma knitted, and I told Gerald, “I kicked a French chicken in the stomach once,” because I wanted to make him crack up, because if I could make him crack up, my boots could be a little lighter. He didn't say anything, probably because he didn't hear me, so I said, “I said I kicked a French chicken in the stomach once.” “Huh?” “It said, 'Oeuf.'” “What is that?” “It's a joke. Do you want to hear another, or have you already had un oeuf?” He looked at Grandma in the mirror and said, “What's he saying?” She said, “His grandfather loved animals more than he loved people.” I said, “Get it? Oeuf?”
    I crawled back, because it's dangerous to drive and talk at the same time, especially on the highway, which is what we were on. Grandma started touching me again, which was annoying, even though I didn't want it to be. Mom said, “Honey,” and I said, “Oui,” and she said, “Did you give a copy of our apartment key to the mailman?” I thought it was so weird that she would mention that then, because it didn't have to do with anything, but I think she was looking for something to talk about that wasn't the obvious thing. I said, “The mailperson is a mailwoman.” She nodded, but not exactly at me, and she asked if I'd given the mailwoman a key. I nodded yes, because I never used to lie to her before everything happened. I didn't have a reason to. “Why did you do that?” she asked. So I told her, “Stan—” And she said, “Who?” And I said, “Stan the doorman. Sometimes he runs around the corner for coffee, and I want to be sure all of my packages get to me, so I thought, if Alicia—” “Who?” “The mail-woman. If she had a key, she could leave things inside our door.” “But you can't give a key to a stranger.” “Fortunately Alicia isn't a stranger.” “We have lots of valuable things in our apartment.” “I know. We have really great things.” “Sometimes people who seem good end up being not as good as you might have hoped, you know? What if she had stolen your things?” “She wouldn't.” “But what if?” “But she wouldn't.” “Well, did she give you a key to her apartment?” She was obviously mad at me, but I didn't know why. I hadn't done anything wrong. Or if I had, I didn't know what it was. And I definitely didn't mean to do it.
    I moved over to Grandma's side of the limousine and told Mom, “Why would I need a key to her apartment?” She could tell that I was zipping up the sleeping bag of myself, and I could tell that she didn't really love me. I knew the truth, which was that if she could have chosen, it would have been my funeral we were driving to. I looked up at the limousine's sunroof, and I imagined the world before there were ceilings, which made me wonder: Does a cave have no ceiling, or is a cave all ceiling? “Maybe you could check with me next time, OK?” “Don't be mad at me,” I said, and I reached over Grandma and opened and closed the door's lock a couple of times. “I'm not mad at you,” she said. “Not even a little?” “No.” “Do you still love me?” It didn't seem like the perfect time to mention that I had already made copies of the key for the
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