登陆注册
5260500000048

第48章 IV(1)

Ernest Havel was cultivating his bright, glistening young cornfield one summer morning, whistling to himself an old German song which was somehow connected with a picture that rose in his memory. It was a picture of the earliest ploughing he could remember.

He saw a half-circle of green hills, with snow still lingering in the clefts of the higher ridges; behind the hills rose a wall of sharp mountains, covered with dark pine forests. In the meadows at the foot of that sweep of hills there was a winding creek, with polled willows in their first yellow-green, and brown fields. He himself was a little boy, playing by the creek and watching his father and mother plough with two great oxen, that had rope traces fastened to their heads and their long horns. His mother walked barefoot beside the oxen and led them; his father walked behind, guiding the plough. His father always looked down.

His mother's face was almost as brown and furrowed as the fields, and her eyes were pale blue, like the skies of early spring. The two would go up and down thus all morning without speaking, except to the oxen. Ernest was the last of a long family, and as he played by the creek he used to wonder why his parents looked so old.

Leonard Dawson drove his car up to the fence and shouted, waking Ernest from his revery. He told his team to stand, and ran out to the edge of the field.

"Hello, Ernest," Leonard called. "Have you heard Claude Wheeler got hurt day before yesterday?"

"You don't say so! It can't be anything bad, or they'd let me know."

"Oh, it's nothing very bad, I guess, but he got his face scratched up in the wire quite a little. It was the queerest thing I ever saw. He was out with the team of mules and a heavy plough, working the road in that deep cut between their place and mine. The gasoline motor-truck came along, making more noise than usual, maybe. But those mules know a motor truck, and what they did was pure cussedness. They begun to rear and plunge in that deep cut. I was working my corn over in the field and shouted to the gasoline man to stop, but he didn't hear me. Claude jumped for the critters' heads and got 'em by the bits, but by that time he was all tangled up in the lines. Those damned mules lifted him off his feet and started to run. Down the draw and up the bank and across the fields they went, with that big plough-blade jumping three or four feet in the air every clip. I was sure it would cut one of the mules open, or go clean through Claude. It would have got him, too, if he hadn't kept his hold on the bits.

They carried him right along, swinging in the air, and finally ran him into the barb-wire fence and cut his face and neck up."

"My goodness! Did he get cut bad?"

"No, not very, but yesterday morning he was out cultivating corn, all stuck up with court plaster. I knew that was a fool thing to do; a wire cut's nasty if you get overheated out in the dust. But you can't tell a Wheeler anything. Now they say his face has swelled and is hurting him terrible, and he's gone to town to see the doctor. You'd better go over there tonight, and see if you can make him take care of himself."

Leonard drove on, and Ernest went back to his team. "It's queer about that boy," he was thinking. "He's big and strong, and he's got an education and all that fine land, but he don't seem to fit in right." Sometimes Ernest thought his friend was unlucky. When that idea occurred to him, he sighed and shook it off. For Ernest believed there was no help for that; it was something rationalism did not explain.

The next afternoon Enid Royce's coupe drove up to the Wheeler farmyard. Mrs. Wheeler saw Enid get out of her car and came down the hill to meet her, breathless and distressed. "Oh, Enid!

You've heard of Claude's accident? He wouldn't take care of himself, and now he's got erysipelas. He's in such pain, poor boy!"

Enid took her arm, and they started up the hill toward the house.

"Can I see Claude, Mrs. Wheeler? I want to give him these flowers."

Mrs. Wheeler hesitated. "I don't know if he will let you come in, dear. I had hard work persuading him to see Ernest for a few moments last night. He seems so low-spirited, and he's sensitive about the way he's bandaged up. I'll go to his room and ask him."

"No, just let me go up with you, please. If I walk in with you, he won't have time to fret about it. I won't stay if he doesn't wish it, but I want to see him."

Mrs. Wheeler was alarmed at this suggestion, but Enid ignored her uncertainty. They went up to the third floor together, and Enid herself tapped at the door.

"It's I, Claude. May I come in for a moment?"

A muffled, reluctant voice answered. "No. They say this is catching, Enid. And anyhow, I'd rather you didn't see me like this."

Without waiting she pushed open the door. The dark blinds were down, and the room was full of a strong, bitter odor. Claude lay flat in bed, his head and face so smothered in surgical cotton that only his eyes and the tip of his nose were visible. The brown paste with which his features were smeared oozed out at the edges of the gauze and made his dressings look untidy. Enid took in these details at a glance.

"Does the light hurt your eyes? Let me put up one of the blinds for a moment, because I want you to see these flowers. I've brought you my first sweet peas."

Claude blinked at the bunch of bright colours she held out before him. She put them up to his face and asked him if he could smell them through his medicines. In a moment he ceased to feel embarrassed. His mother brought a glass bowl, and Enid arranged the flowers on the little table beside him.

"Now, do you want me to darken the room again?"

"Not yet. Sit down for a minute and talk to me. I can't say much because my face is stiff."

"I should think it would be! I met Leonard Dawson on the road yesterday, and he told me how you worked in the field after you were cut. I would like to scold you hard, Claude."

"Do. It might make me feel better." He took her hand and kept her beside him a moment. "Are those the sweet peas you were planting that day when I came back from the West?"

"Yes. Haven't they done well to blossom so early?"

同类推荐
  • 寿世青编

    寿世青编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说三转法轮经

    佛说三转法轮经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大乘阿毗达磨集论

    大乘阿毗达磨集论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 潜书

    潜书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 孔子诗论

    孔子诗论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 永不放弃:马云给创业者的24堂课

    永不放弃:马云给创业者的24堂课

    有人说,人生有两杯必喝之水,一杯是苦水,一杯是甜水,没有人能回避得了。区别不过是不同的人喝甜水和喝苦水的顺序不同,成功者往往先喝苦水,再喝甜水;而一般人都是先喝甜水,再喝苦水。在成功的过程中,持之以恒非常重要,面对挫折时,要告诉自己:坚持,再来一次。因为这一次失败已经过去,下次才是成功的开始。人生的过程都是一样的,跌倒了,爬起来。只是成功者跌倒的次数比爬起来的次数要少一次,平庸者跌倒的次数比爬起来的次数多了一次而已。缺乏恒心是大多数人后来失败的根源,一切领域中的重大成就无不与坚韧的品质有关。成功更多依赖的是一个人在逆境中的恒心与忍耐力,而不是天赋与才华。布尔沃说:“恒心与忍耐力是征服者的灵魂,它是人类反抗命运、个人反抗世界、灵魂反抗物质的最有力支持者。”对于创业者来说,要想成功创业,就要像马云、约翰森那样认准目标,坚持到底,永不放弃。即使遇到一千次一万次困难也不放弃追求,不言失败,不退缩,不向命运屈服,如果能做到这点,那么你就可能会成为另一个马云,另一个约翰森。
  • 至尊邪神

    至尊邪神

    一代邪尊殒命重生。“这一世,与我为敌之人,一个不留!”“这一世,与我争物之人,一个不放!”“这一世,我要那天随我意,我要那地随我心!”“阻我者,杀无赦!”
  • 冷少缠欢

    冷少缠欢

    “我不会救他。”她的眼泪是致命的武器,会让他失去理智,会让他心软,可是此刻,他要自己硬下心肠来,伸手无情地推开了她,她跌坐在地上。若恩像一个无助的孩子一样呜咽哭泣,眼泪簌簌落下,肩膀抖动,小小的身体痛苦地蜷缩在那里,好似被人丢弃了的洋娃娃。若恩不知道该怎么办,如果明天没有人出面去救磊子,那么磊子就要被枪决,他是冤枉的啊,他是冤枉的,她不敢想象磊子被鲜血染红头颅的那一刻,不敢想象他失……
  • 无限之贼行天下

    无限之贼行天下

    当一个十八岁少年让一个四十多岁的王爷叫为父亲,六十岁的武则天叫大哥,所有人把他当神是一种什么体验,李峰告诉你'那是相当的扯淡'。原本以为可以无限穿越是一件牛B的事情,可事情证明有时候还是很纠结的。由其是別人以为他可以长生不老的时候,他真的很想说:″我也想长生不老,可我真的只有十八岁"。新书【文娱暴徒】已经上传,
  • 异闻录:小说怪谈系列(套装共3册)

    异闻录:小说怪谈系列(套装共3册)

    《无终仙境:典藏版》蛇妖缠身、五鬼擒龙、千里追尸、吃人巨怪……继《鬼吹灯》后,天下霸唱2014年全新超越之作。《中国异闻录》招魂骨笛、剪纸巫术、中元鬼节、封魂油伞、江南鬼戏……每一个历史悠久的国度,都流传着神秘诡异的奇闻异事!《中国奇异档案记录》揭开从未示人的诡秘档案,探秘尘封历史的不解之谜:陈年诡事,都市异案,地外生物,未知地狱,营口坠龙,红衣男孩,萧山UFO,昆仑魔谷现代版《山海经》《搜神记》带你深入探索神秘事件内幕。
  • 诸佛境界摄真实经

    诸佛境界摄真实经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 盘古之龙神

    盘古之龙神

    天地间更是有一段遥传古话,“造化之剑,天下第一,盘古不出,谁与争锋!”这盘古,就是指的盘古石,造化之剑是当年造化仙王的随身佩剑,造化仙王在数百个宇宙年前,已经陨落无踪,他的佩剑也落入了仙界第一大派——造化门的手中,为门主掌握,是造化门镇门之宝,绝不轻易示人。
  • 呆萌小仙妻

    呆萌小仙妻

    忘川河上,她是个四肢不全、头脑简单的小妖,但是却有个极其拉风的名字——海白;她是贝类,才转化为灵,连脑袋都没发育完全,阴间的事,她可以转眼便忘却;可,唯独记得每百年走一趟忘川河,到人间去渡千劫的摇光星君;执念已起,势必紧跟脚步,不追到美人不回壳;谁知,人笨没药救,妖笨更是害死神,投错胎就算了,还神穿越,屈服在水蛇妖的淫威之下,三观全毁!为回家,她也闭上眼睛拼了,不就是搞定王爷,造个宝吗?来,老子可不怕,看你星君哪里逃……可,历尽艰辛、几经生死,最终,谁才是谁的谁?
  • 爱上邪魅魔君

    爱上邪魅魔君

    一个奇怪的梦时刻纠结着她的心,他到底是谁?为何那眼眸如此悲伤?她,遇到了神秘魔君;他,曾经浴血入魔,等待百年只为见到她。一把神秘的绝世宝剑开启了他们的命运之门。前世之谜解开,有人为爱入魔,有人为爱成妖,只为再相见,继续这前世夙愿。******
  • 宫观碑志

    宫观碑志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。