Virtue by Hermione Hoby
Author:Hermione Hoby [Hoby, Hermione]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Published: 2021-07-20T00:00:00+00:00
* * *
â
The first time I heard them shouting at each other, I woke to a room floodlit by the moon. They sounded ready to rip each otherâs scalps off, and I tried to make out the words while my heart hammered. A door slammed. Would I possibly have to call the police? Maybe this was why the boys slept in a whole other building, so they didnât have to hear this? But wouldnât Pina wake up? I didnât yet know that this was just how marriage was for a lot of people: a kind of fighting that seemed to obliterate the possibility of a future until, just a few hours later, it was as if it had never occurred.
After the door slammed they went to bed, I guess. I fell asleep, forgot about it.
Jason wasnât working that summer. In truth, he hadnât worked in years. Heâd been âfull-time dadding,â as he put it. He had other concerns now. The state of the nation, for example. There was that. But also bread. He announced one day that I was going to learn how to make sourdough and this was decreed with some ceremony, as though he were my father deciding it was time he showed me how to shave. (For actual shaving lessons Iâd had YouTube, as for so many other things; in a sense Iâd been fathered by familiar strangers, cheerily relatable as they said, âHey, guys!â into their laptop cameras.)
âOh god, Luca,â Paula said. âJason is obsessed. Heâs going to take you down with him. When you get him started on starters, thatâs it.â
In the kitchen, Jason held up a mason jar of something ectoplasmic. âThis, my friend, is where the magic happens.â
What started, however, wasnât the baking itself just yet, but rather a disquisition on fermentation and bacteria, a sort of panegyric expanding on the fact (as Jason said) that it wasnât even accurate to call a human being an organism; we were in truth whole collections of organisms, mutually parasitic bunches of floraânot our single selves but many selves. (For a moment, I wanted to tell him about walking the High Line with Zara, joking about Byron and WhitmanâWe contain multitudes!âbut I feared Iâd end up sounding like a child telling some confusing story about what happened at school that day.)
Now it seems obvious to me that he wasnât talking about enterotypes per se, but was making, with mock grandiosity, a political argument. As he rhapsodized about interdependence, ecosystems, shared resources, and egalitarianism, he was, in effect, laying out a socialist case. I thought about my Whopper, my highly processed, probably microbiota-less Whopper, eaten en route to this house, and how long ago that seemed. This house, these people, already seemed like my life.
Paula wandered back into the kitchen eating a peach and, beholding the festoons of dough, said, âYou guys . . . ,â in affectionate protest. I pulled a faux panicked face at her, as if we were flinging around cartoon rods of radium.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
The Fine Print (Dreamland Billionaires Book 1) by Lauren Asher(2395)
Fury of Magnus by Graham McNeill(2362)
The Last House on Needless Street by Catriona Ward(2181)
The Rose Code by Kate Quinn(2074)
Malibu Rising by Taylor Jenkins Reid(1804)
Luster by Raven Leilani(1800)
Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi(1770)
A Little Life: A Novel by Hanya Yanagihara(1744)
Moonflower Murders by Anthony Horowitz(1719)
The God of the Woods by Liz Moore(1564)
The Lost Book of the White (The Eldest Curses) by Cassandra Clare & Wesley Chu(1511)
This Changes Everything by Unknown(1421)
The Midwife Murders by James Patterson & Richard Dilallo(1378)
The Lying Life of Adults by Elena Ferrante(1348)
The New Wilderness by Diane Cook(1333)
Written in the Stars by Alexandria Bellefleur(1318)
Wandering in Strange Lands by Morgan Jerkins(1281)
Ambition and Desire: The Dangerous Life of Josephine Bonaparte by Kate Williams(1276)
The Lying Life of Adults by Elena Ferrante;(1233)
