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第58部分

The Shining 原版小说-第58部分

小说: The Shining 原版小说 字数: 每页4000字

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some (or perhaps only with the stupid cunning of any hardpressed animal); told 
the doctor she had fallen downstairs。 There was blood on the tablecloth because 
he had tried to wipe her dear face with it。 Had her glasses flown all the way 
through the living room and into the dining room to land in her mashed potatoes 
and gravy? the doctor asked with a kind of horrid; grinning sarcasm。 Is that 
what happened; Mark? I have heard of folks who can get a radio station on their 
gold fillings and I have seen a man get shot between the eyes and live to tell 


 
 
about it; but that is a new one on me。 Daddy had merely shook his head and said 
he didn't know; they must have fallen off her face when he brought her through 
the dining room。 The four children had been stunned to silence by the calm 
stupendousness of the lie。 Four days later Brett quit his job in the mill and 
joined the Army。 Jack had always felt it was not just the sudden and irrational 
beating his father had administered at the dinner table but the fact that; in 
the hospital; their mother had corroborated their father's story while holding 
the hand of the parish priest。 Revolted; Brett had left them to whatever might 
e。 He had been killed in Dong Ho province in 1965; the year when Jack 
Torrance; undergraduate; had joined the active college agitation to end the war。 
He had waved his brother's bloody shirt at rallies that were increasingly well 
attended; but it was not Brett's face that hung before his eyes when he spoke  it 
was the face of his mother; a dazed; unprehending face; his mother saying: 
〃Who's got the newspaper?〃 
  Mike escaped three years later when Jack was twelve  he went to UNH on a hefty 
Merit Scholarship。 A year after that their father died of a sudden; massive 
stroke which occurred while he was prepping a patient for surgery。 He had 
collapsed in his flapping and untucked hospital whites; dead possibly even 
before he hit the industrial black…and…red hospital tiles; and three days later 
the man who had dominated Jacky's life; the irrational white ghost…god; was 
under ground。 
  The stone read Mark Anthony Torrance; Loving Father。 To that Jack would have 
added one line: He Knew How to Play Elevator。 
  There had been a great lot of insurance money。 There are people who collect 
insurance as pulsively as others collect coins and stamps; and Mark Torrance 
had been that type。 The insurance money came in at the same time the monthly 
policy payments and liquor bills stopped。 For five years they had been rich。 
Nearly rich 。。。 
  In his shallow; uneasy sleep his face rose before him as if in a glass; his 
face but not his face; the wide eyes and innocent bowed mouth of a boy sitting 
in the ball with his trucks; waiting for his daddy; waiting for the white ghost… 
god; waiting for the elevator to rise up with dizzying; exhilarating speed 
through the salt…and…sawdust mist of exhaled taverns; waiting perhaps for it to 
go crashing down; spilling old clocksprings out of his ears while his daddy 
roared with laughter; and it 
  (transformed into Danny's face; so much like his own had been; his eyes had 
been light blue while Danny's were cloudy gray; but the lips still made a bow 
and the plexion was fair; Danny in his study; wearing training pants; all his 
papers soggy and the fine misty smell of beer rising 。。。 a dreadful batter all 
in ferment; rising on the wings of yeast; the breath of taverns 。。。 snap of 
bone 。。。 his own voice; mewling drunkenly Danny; you okay doc? 。。。 Oh God oh 
God your poor sweet arm 。。。 and that face transformed into) 
  (momma's dazed face rising up from below the table; punched and bleeding; and 
momma was saying) 
  (〃 — from your father。 I repeat; an enormously important announcement from your 
father。 Please stay tuned or tune immediately to the Happy Jack frequency。 
Repeat; tune immediately to the Happy Hour frequency。 I repeat — 〃) 
  A slow dissolve。 Disembodied voices echoing up to him as if along an endless; 


 
 
cloudy hallway。 
  (Things keep getting in the way; dear Tommy 。。。) 
  (Medoc; are you here? I've been sleepwalking again; my dear。 It's the inhuman 
monsters that I fear 。。。) 
  (〃Excuse me; Mr。 Ullman; but isn't this the。。。〃) 
  。。。 office; with its file cabinets; Ullman's big desk; a blank reservations 
book for next year already in place  never misses a trick; that Ullman — all the 
keys hanging neatly on their hooks 
  (except for one; which one; which key; passkey…passkey; passkey; who's got the 
passkey? if we went upstairs perhaps we'd see) 
  and the big two…way radio on its shelf。 
  He snapped it on。 CB transmissions ing in short; crackly bursts。 He 
switched the band and dialed across bursts of music; news; a preacher haranguing 
a softly moaning congregation; a weather report。 And another voice which he 
dialed back to。 It was his father's voice。 
  〃 — kill him。 You have to kill him; Jacky; and her; too。 Because a real artist 
must suffer。 Because each man kills the thing he loves。 Because they'll always 
be conspiring against you; trying to hold you back and drag you down。 Right this 
minute that boy of yours is in where he shouldn't be。 Trespassing。 That's what 
he's doing。 He's a goddam little pup。 Cane him for it; Jacky; cane him within an 
inch of his life。 Have a drink Jacky my boy; and we'll play the elevator game。 
Then I'll go with you while you give him his medicine。 I know you can do it; of 
course you can。 You must kill him。 You have to kill him; Jacky; and her; too。 
Because a real artist must suffer。 Because each man — 〃 
  His father's voice; going up higher and higher; being something maddening; 
not human at all; something squealing and petulant and maddening; the voice of 
the Ghost…God; the Pig…God; ing dead at him out of the radio and 
  〃No!〃 he screamed back。 〃You're dead; you're in your grave; you're not in me 
at all!〃 Because he had cut all the father out of him and it was not right that 
he should e back creeping through this hotel two thousand miles from the New 
England town where his father had lived and died。 
  He raised the radio up and brought it down; and it smashed on the floor 
spilling old clocksprings and tubes like the result of some crazy elevator game 
gone awry; making his father's voice gone; leaving only his voice; Jack's voice; 
Jacky's voice; chanting in the cold reality of the office: 
  〃 — dead; you're dead; you're dead!〃 
  And the startled sound of Wendy's feet hitting the floor over his head; and 
Wendy's startled; frightened voice: 〃Jack? Jack!〃 
  He stood; blinking down at the shattered radio。 Now there was only the 
snowmobile in the equipment shed to link them to the outside world。 
  He put his hands over his eyes and clutched at his temples。 He was getting a 
headache。 
 
 
 
 
   》 


 
 
 
 
   CATATONIC 
 
 
  Wendy ran down the hall in her stocking feet and ran down the main stairs to 
the lobby two at a time。 She didn't look up at the carpeted flight that led to 
the second floor; but if she had; she would have seen Danny standing at the top 
of them; still and silent; his unfocused eyes directed out into indifferent 
space; his thumb in his mouth; the collar and shoulders of his shirt damp。 There 
were puffy bruises on his neck and just below his chin。 
  Jack's cries had ceased; but that did nothing to ease her fear。 Ripped out of 
her sleep by his voice; raised in that old hectoring pitch she remembered so 
well; she still felt that she was dreaming — but another part knew she was awake; 
and that terrified her more。 She half…expected to burst into the office and find 
him standing over Danny's sprawled…out body; drunk and confused。 
  She pushed through the door and Jack was standing there; rubbing at his 
temples with his fingers。 His face was ghostwhite。 The two…way CB radio lay at 
his feet in a sprinkling of broken glass。 
  〃Wendy?〃 he asked uncertainly。 〃Wendy — ?〃 
  The bewilderment seemed to grow and for a moment she saw his true face; the 
one he ordinarily kept so well hidden; and it was a face of desperate 
unhappiness; the face of an animal caught in 

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