登陆注册
15479200000080

第80章 VIII(1)

During the bleak month of March Mr. Wheeler went to town in his buckboard almost every day. For the first time in his life he had a secret anxiety. The one member of his family who had never given him the slightest trouble, his son Bayliss, was just now under a cloud.

Bayliss was a Pacifist, and kept telling people that if only the United States would stay out of this war, and gather up what Europe was wasting, she would soon be in actual possession of the capital of the world. There was a kind of logic in Bayliss' utterances that shook Nat Wheeler's imperturbable assumption that one point of view was as good as another. When Bayliss fought the dram and the cigarette, Wheeler only laughed. That a son of his should turn out a Prohibitionist, was a joke he could appreciate.

But Bayliss' attitude in the present crisis disturbed him. Day after day he sat about his son's place of business, interrupting his arguments with funny stories. Bayliss did not go home at all that month. He said to his father, "No, Mother's too violent. I'd better not."

Claude and his mother read the papers in the evening, but they talked so little about what they read that Mahailey inquired anxiously whether they weren't still fighting over yonder. When she could get Claude alone for a moment, she pulled out Sunday supplement pictures of the devastated countries and asked him to tell her what was to become of this family, photographed among the ruins of their home; of this old woman, who sat by the roadside with her bundles. "Where's she goin' to, anyways? See, Mr. Claude, she's got her iron cook-pot, pore old thing, carryin' it all the way!"

Pictures of soldiers in gas-masks puzzled her; gas was something she hadn't learned about in the Civil War, so she worked it out for herself that these masks were worn by the army cooks, to protect their eyes when they were cutting up onions! "All them onions they have to cut up, it would put their eyes out if they didn't wear somethin'," she argued.

On the morning of the eighth of April Claude came downstairs early and began to clean his boots, which were caked with dry mud. Mahailey was squatting down beside her stove, blowing and puffing into it. The fire was always slow to start in heavy weather. Claude got an old knife and a brush, and putting his foot on a chair over by the west window, began to scrape his shoe. He had said good-morning to Mahailey, nothing more. He hadn't slept well, and was pale.

"Mr. Claude," Mahailey grumbled, "this stove ain't never drawed good like my old one Mr. Ralph took away from me. I can't do nothin' with it. Maybe you'll clean it out for me next Sunday."

"I'll clean it today, if you say so. I won't be here next Sunday.

I'm going away."

Something in his tone made Mahailey get up, her eyes still blinking with the smoke, and look at him sharply. "You ain't goin' off there where Miss Enid is?" she asked anxiously.

"No, Mahailey." He had dropped the shoebrush and stood with one foot on the chair, his elbow on his knee, looking out of the window as if he had forgotten himself. "No, I'm not going to China. I'm going over to help fight the Germans."

He was still staring out at the wet fields. Before he could stop her, before he knew what she was doing, she had caught and kissed his unworthy hand.

"I knowed you would," she sobbed. "I always knowed you would, you nice boy, you! Old Mahail' knowed!"

Her upturned face was working all over; her mouth, her eyebrows, even the wrinkles on her low forehead were working and twitching.

Claude felt a tightening in his throat as he tenderly regarded that face; behind the pale eyes, under the low brow where there was not room for many thoughts, an idea was struggling and tormenting her. The same idea that had been tormenting him.

"You're all right, Mahailey," he muttered, patting her back and turning away. "Now hurry breakfast."

"You ain't told your mudder yit?" she whispered.

"No, not yet. But she'll be all right, too." He caught up his cap and went down to the barn to look after the horses.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 混沌之战神传说

    混沌之战神传说

    幸运值爆满,传说级人物。神一般的存在。。。。具体内容请看小说内容
  • 盛世末章:大明花下

    盛世末章:大明花下

    她是汾阳王郭子仪的孙女她是升平公主与郭暧的爱女她是恩宠受尽的广陵王妃她是无奈花下的郭氏贵妃她是手握朝政的五朝太后她是。。。。。。。谁起谁伏,后宫争宠昔日荣华只是一尺白绫怨不得,恨不得只求永生不在帝王家。这只是大唐的后宫。只是郭璇的一代荣辱罢了
  • 都市喋血

    都市喋血

    有人的地方就有江湖,江湖亦在你我间;江湖中的恩怨情仇,时间总会给出份答卷。常言道:天道无常,人道无情。那个少年,目睹了世间黑暗,经历过兄弟背叛。才刚出‘人间地狱’,却得知父亲已被江湖人士暗杀。背负着父亲的血仇,少年如破土重生的种子,柔嫩却顽强不息的奋发向上。踏上浴血纷争的世间路,难言的苦涩时刻伴随着成长,最后的果实显得尤为甘甜。而那份血债,少年怎会不向江湖人讨要?恍惚数年,才明白,信仰缺失的年代,老天终不能眷顾世人;唯有自我救赎,才能度己度他人;他日终为信仰,亦是自己的信徒。都市喋血,述说少年的成长故事!
  • 十四载

    十四载

    来时学子,满面秀气去时虎将,一身沧桑有人说,这是洒脱,有人说,这是无奈,可对杨铭来说,这就够了,十四载淤血,终将死敌驱逐。再无牵挂。这一次,我们讲一个无关政治,只有铁与血的抗战故事。
  • 我能做到的仅仅是忘记你

    我能做到的仅仅是忘记你

    那年花开,我们相爱,那年花落,我们离开。郑妙妙,人并如名字一样,美妙,开心。她很坚强,即使受到了很多委屈,为什么要哭呢?哭有又什么用呢?花开时,她们相爱:丁香花:一直默默守护着你,不愿伤害你;曼珠沙华:可以使人“起死回生”但他死的时候,真的是无用的,把他放在花丛中,慢慢与他睡去,慢慢的.....
  • 真爱的谎言:操纵者

    真爱的谎言:操纵者

    一穷二白的包子尹夏沫在某一天突然发现不知从什么时候开始她已经活在了一个充满谎言的世界中,刚刚海归回国的闺蜜沐紫谖带回来了一个失忆的男人,在学校里莫名其妙招惹上的富家少爷也突然对她穷追不舍,两个男人的突然出现究竟是巧合还是有人在背后操纵这一切?他们的感情终究是真爱还是谎言?她的家族秘密也浮出水面,失踪的父亲究竟是死是生?
  • 命运之轮(下)

    命运之轮(下)

    从单纯的言情到承载着人类的命运,几次修改,大篇幅的删减使得小说故事情节更为紧凑曲折,人物性格更为丰满生动,叙事更为简练流畅,小说的可读性大大增强。一路走来,作者的思想也同书中的少年主人公一起渐渐走向成熟,完成了从小我到大我的转变。
  • 宠妃乱宫闱

    宠妃乱宫闱

    一天前,她是西楚宫里被刻意遗忘的公主;一天后,那场战争,她成了他的奴。是福是祸?她的人生究竟会如何?她能否改写自己的命运?一阵阵烽烟战火,一场场悲欢离合多少红颜悴,多少相思碎,唯留血染墨香哭乱冢
  • HP之巫师世界

    HP之巫师世界

    穿越到哈利波特世界,从低调走向辉煌的故事。
  • 沉夜阑珊:伴你三生世

    沉夜阑珊:伴你三生世

    和风轻剪,巧裁一方嫣华微风横斜,细织壮丽锦锻他们的故事,永不停止。