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Authors: Lisa O'Donnell

The Death of Bees

BOOK: The Death of Bees
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The Death of Bees

A NOVEL

Lisa O'Donnell

Dedication

To my children, Max and Christie

Contents

Dedication

 

Prologue

 

Winter

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

 

Spring

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

 

Summer

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Nelly

 

Autumn

    
Marnie

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Lennie

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

 

Winter

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

    
Nelly

    
Marnie

 

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Books by Lisa O'Donnell

Credits

Copyright

About the Publisher

Prologue

E
ugene Doyle. Born 19 June 1972. Died 17 December 2010, aged thirty-eight.

 

Isabel Ann Macdonald. Born 24 May 1974. Died 18 December 2010, aged thirty-six.

 

Today is Christmas Eve. Today is my birthday. Today I am fifteen. Today I buried my parents in the backyard.

Neither of them were beloved.

Winter

Marnie

I
zzy called me Marnie after her mother. She's dead now, actually they're both dead. I'm just saying that's how I got it, my name. My mum had a boring name, didn't suit her at all. She was an Isabel called Izzy. She should have been a Charlie, I think of her as a Charlie. My dad had a gay name, Eugene. He never said he hated it, but I bet he did. Everyone called him Gene, but he was a bit of a Frankie, a Tommy, maybe a Mickey. My pal Kimberly gets called Kimbo, she's always getting into fights and would smack her own shadow if she thought she could catch it. Kimbo's name evolved from a slagging she got for being a total psycho and it stuck, like a warning. “Here comes Kimbo, run for your life.”

My other pal is Susie. Her real name's Suzanne and for a long time that's what we called her, we never felt inclined to shorten it the way people do with long names, but then when we were about eleven years old she told us she didn't want to be called Suzanne anymore, she wanted to be called Susie. She thought it sounded older and sexier, I suppose it does. Of course her granny still calls her Snoozy, mortifying baby name.

Then there's my sister, Helen, we call her Nelly, to be honest I don't think she knows her name is Helen, she's been Nelly since she was a baby. Nell would have been cooler, but she was like Dumbo when she was born, so Nelly was a perfect fit.

Izzy said choosing my name was a nightmare; she wanted something different for me, something sophisticated that made people look twice at me, as if they'd missed something about me the first time they looked, and so she chose her mother's name. I understand Emma was also a hot favorite, so was Martha, but Gene didn't like Emma, he said it was a weak name. He didn't like Sam either because he got dumped by a Sam. He also knew a Siobhan who got smacked by a bus when she bent down to pick up a fag end on the curb side. Gene's favorite was Elise because of a song by the Cure, but Izzy hated it, she was more of a New Order fan and I understand Elegia was discussed.

Izzy said I was tiny when I was born, a preemie rushed to the intensive care unit where I was kept in a plastic bubble for nine weeks with Gene and Izzy peering at me through Perspex glass. The safest place I've ever been. Anyway that's why I'm Marnie and not Eve or Prudence or Lucretia. I'm Marnie. Too young to smoke, too young to drink, too young to fuck, but who would have stopped me?

People think Nelly's nicer than me, but only 'cause she's off her head. She's twelve. She likes cornflakes with Coke and period dramas. She likes old movies with Bette Davis and Vivien Leigh. She likes documentaries about animals and anything to do with Harry Potter, she's obsessed with him. She also plays the violin courtesy of Sarah May Pollock, a music teacher who weeded out talent every year by forcing us to listen to recorded notes. I was never selected to play an instrument, although I like to sing and can hold a tune pretty well, but it was Nelly who identified the treble clef necessary to play the piano, an instrument she boked at, drawn instead to a lone violin with a broken string lying flat on a gray Formica table. Obviously she plays brilliantly and within a short period of time Miss Pollock ended up giving her the violin for keeps, a gift last Christmas, that's how good Nelly is or how good Miss Pollock was who loved to play with her. Unfortunately Miss Pollock left the school, was replaced by Mr. Charker, a trumpet man. Nelly still plays and like a master someone said and of course our school gives her a platform every Christmas mostly to wow the board of governors even though the school is not advancing her in any way by hiring someone else to teach her. Not that it would make any difference when she can actually play without music. Kimbo and Susie love to hear her play, so do the neighbors and I like it too except when she pulls it out in the middle of nowhere and starts in with the Bach because she does that, on the subway sometimes, in a bookstore on Sauchiehall Street, and on a bus to Wemyss Bay once. No one ever minds, 'cause she's so good but it sort of embarrasses me, her zipping away and me next to her smoking a fag like a total stranger, as if we don't belong together.

Another little foible of Nelly's is how she talks. She sounds like the queen of England most of the time. She doesn't say
mum
, she says
mother
and she doesn't say
dad
, she says
father
. She has sentences in her head like “What the devil's going on?” and “What on earth's all this hullabaloo?” I've also heard her say “confounded” and “good golly.” Drives me nuts. Constantly having to protect her from head cases who think she's taking the piss. She also wears spectacles, round ones like Harry Potter; she's recently developed an obsession with him and wears them like they're real glasses, except they're not. Last Christmas Izzy got her a magic cloak, but she only wears it around the house and one time to take out the rubbish.

Truth is Nelly's a wee bit touched, not retarded or anything, just different. She doesn't have many friends, she doesn't laugh much, and when you talk to her about something serious she gets really quiet, like she's taking it in and then rearranging it in her head. I don't know how she arranges it, I just know it's different from how I might arrange it. She also takes things very literally, so you have to be careful what you say. For instance if I said, “You're fucking mental,” she'd say something like, “I can assure you, Marnie, one is perfectly sane!” I don't know why she's not dead to be honest. You can't talk like that, not in Maryhill.

Gets to you after a while, even the teachers, they can't deal with her at all. When she started secondary school they put her in a class for total fannies, but halfway through the school year they had to take her out 'cause she's totally brainy at science. Pure Einstein stuff and then of course there's the violin. I feel sorry for her. I mean she can't help it, being how she is, it's not like she wants to say everything in her head. She can't help it, like telling the toughest girl in her year, Sharon Henry, she should wash her “down theres” 'cause Nelly could smell her “foulness.” Seriously. No censor. Lucky for her Shaz thought it was funny, which meant everyone else was permitted to say it was funny, even luckier, it wasn't said in front of any guys. Apparently Shaz grabbed a bar of soap and told everyone she was off to wash her “down theres” and then simulated cleaning aforementioned unmentionables. Hysterical laughter ensued interrupted by an irate Miss Moray, who wants everyone to fuck off so she can have her lunch. Now whenever any of the girls from Nelly's class walk past her they simulate washing their vaginas or ask her if she can smell fanny. Nelly doesn't get it. Tells them not to worry—“They're perfectly sanitary.”

BOOK: The Death of Bees
5.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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