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Elizabeth Strout [Strout - Olive, Again (ARC)

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Elizabeth Strout [Strout Olive, Again (ARC)

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By Elizabeth Strout Olive Again Anything Is Possible My Name Is Lucy Barton - photo 1

By Elizabeth Strout Olive Again Anything Is Possible My Name Is Lucy Barton - photo 2

By Elizabeth Strout

Olive, Again

Anything Is Possible

My Name Is Lucy Barton

The Burgess Boys

Olive Kitteridge

Abide with Me

Amy and Isabelle

This is an uncorrected ebook file Please do not quote for publication until - photo 3

This is an uncorrected ebook file. Please do not quote for publication until you check your copy against the finished book.

Olive, Again is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright 2019 by Elizabeth Strout

All rights reserved.

Published in the United States by Random House, an imprint and division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

R ANDOM H OUSE and the H OUSE colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

The Walk was first published in Night Stories: Linden FrederickFifteen Paintings and the Stories They Inspired , copyright 2017 Forum Gallery, published by Glitterati Arts. It was also published previously in It Occurs to Me That I Am America, edited by Jonathan Santlofer (New York: Touchstone, 2018).

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING - IN - PUBLICATION DATA

Names: Strout, Elizabeth, author.

Title: Olive, again / Elizabeth Strout.

Description: New York : Random House, [2019]

Identifiers: LCCN 2019004792 | ISBN 9780812996548 | ISBN 9780812996555 (ebook)

Classification: LCC PS3569.T736 O45 2019 | DDC 813/.54dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019004792

Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper

randomhousebooks.com

2 4 6 8 9 7 5 3 1

FIRST EDITION

Book design by Dana Leigh Blanchette

For Zarina,

again

Contents

Arrested

I n the early afternoon on a Saturday in June, Jack Kennison put on his sunglasses, got into his sports car with the top down, strapped the seatbelt over his shoulder and across his large stomach, and drove to Portlandalmost an hour awayto buy a gallon of whiskey rather than bump into Olive Kitteridge at the grocery store here in Crosby, Maine. Or even that other woman he had seen twice in the store as he stood holding his whiskey while she talked about the weather. The weather. That womanhe could not remember her namewas a widow as well.

As he drove, an almost-calmness came to him, and once in Portland he parked and walked down by the water. Summer had opened itself, and while it was still chilly in mid-June, the sky was blue and the gulls were flying above the docks. There were people on the sidewalks, many were young people with kids or strollers, and they all seemed to be talking to one another. This fact impressed him. How easily they took this for granted, to be with one another, to be talking! No one seemed to even glance at him, and he realized what he had known before, only now it came to him differently: He was just an old man with a sloppy belly and not anyone worth noticing. Almost, this was freeing. There had been many years of his life when he was a tall, good-looking man, no gut, strolling about the campus at Harvard, and people did look at him then, for all those years, he would see students glance at him with deference, and also women, they looked at him. At department meetings he had been intimidating; this was told to him by colleagues, and he understood it to be true, for he had meant to be that way. Now he sauntered down one of the wharfs where condos were built, and he thought perhaps he should move here, water everywhere around him, and people too. He took from his pocket his cellphone, glanced at it, and returned it to his pocket. It was his daughter he wished to speak to.

A couple emerged from the door of one apartment; they were his age, the man also had a stomach, though not as big as Jacks, and the woman looked worried, but the way they were together made him think they had been married for years. Its over now, he heard the woman say, and the man said something, and the woman said, No, its over. They walked past him (not noticing him) and when he turned to glance at them a moment later, he was surprisedvaguelyto see that the woman had put her arm through the mans, as they walked down the wharf toward the small city.

Jack stood at the end of the wharf and watched the ocean; he looked one way, then the other. Small whitecaps rolled up from a breeze that he felt only now. This is where the ferry came in from Nova Scotia, he and Betsy had taken it one day. They had stayed in Nova Scotia three nights. He tried to think if Betsy had put her arm through his; she may have. So now his mind carried an image of them walking off the ferry, his wifes arm through his

He turned to go.

Knucklehead. He said the word out loud and saw a young boy on the wharf close by turn to look at him, startled. This meant he was an old man who was talking to himself on a wharf in Portland, Maine, and he could notJack Kennison, with his two PhDshe could not figure out how this had happened. Wow. He said that out loud as well, past the young boy by now. There were benches, and he sat down on an empty one. He took out his phone and called his daughter; it would not yet be noontime in San Francisco, where she lived. He was surprised when she answered.

Dad? she said. Are you okay?

He looked skyward. Oh, Cassie, he said, I just wondered how you were doing.

Im okay, Dad.

Okay, then. Good. Thats good to hear.

There was silence for a moment, then she said, Where are you?

Oh. Im on the dock in Portland.

Why? she asked.

I just thought Id come to Portland. You know, get out of the house. Jack squinted out toward the water.

Another silence. Then she said, Okay.

Listen, Cassie, Jack said, I just wanted to say I know Im a shit. I know that. Just so you know. I know that Im a shit.

Daddy, she said. Daddy, come on. What am I supposed to say?

Nothing, he answered agreeably. Nothing to say to that. But I just wanted you to know I know.

There was another silence, longer this time, and he felt fear.

She said, Is this because of how youve treated me, or because of your affair for all those years with Elaine Croft?

He looked down at the planks of the wharf, saw his black old-man sneakers on the roughened boards. Both, he said. Or you can take your pick.

Oh, Daddy, she said. Oh, Daddy, I dont know what to do. What am I supposed to do for you?

He shook his head. Nothing, kid. Youre not supposed to do anything for me. I just wanted to hear your voice.

Dad, we were on our way out.

Yeah? Wherere you going?

The farmers market. Its Saturday and we go to the farmers market on Saturdays.

Okay, Jack said. You get going. Dont worry. Ill talk to you again. Bye-bye now.

He thought he could hear her sigh. All right, she said. Goodbye.

And that was that! That was that.

Jack sat on the bench a long time. People walked by, or perhaps no people walked by for a while, but he kept thinking of his wife, Betsy, and he wanted to howl. He understood only this: that he deserved all of it. He deserved the fact that right now he wore a pad in his underwear because of prostate surgery, he deserved it; he deserved his daughter not wanting to speak to him because for years he had not wanted to speak to hershe was gay; she was a gay woman, and this still made a small wave of uneasiness move through him. Betsy, though, did not deserve to be dead. He deserved to be dead, but Betsy did not deserve that status. And yet he felt a sudden fury at his wifeOh, Jesus Christ Almighty, he muttered.

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