登陆注册
5254200000003

第3章

Jonah rejoined his mate in gloomy silence.The Push had scattered--some to the two-up school,some to the dance-room.The butcher's flare of lights shone with a desolate air on piles of bones and scraps of meat--the debris of battle.The greengrocer's was stripped bare to the shelves,as if an army of locusts had marched through with ravenous tooth.

"Comin'down the street?"asked Chook,feeling absently in his pockets.

"No,"said Jonah.

"W'y,wot's up now?"inquired Chook in surprise.

"Oh,nuthin';but I'm goin'ter sleep at Ada's tonight,"replied Jonah,staring at the shops.

"'Strewth!"cried Chook,looking at him in wonder."Wot's the game now?""Oh!the old woman wants me ter put in the night there.Says some blokes 'ave bin after 'er fowls,"replied Jonah,hesitating like a boy inventing an excuse.

"Fowls!"cried Chook,with infinite scorn."Wants yer to nuss the bloomin'kid.""My oath,she don't,"replied Jonah,with great heartiness.

"Well,gimme a smoke,"said Chook,feeling again in his pockets.

Jonah took out a packet of cigarettes,counted how many were left,and gave him one.

"Kin yer spare it?"asked Chook,derisively."Lucky I've only got one mouth.""Mouth?More like a hole in a wall,"grinned Jonah.

"Well,so long.See yer to-morrer,"said Chook,moving off."Ere,gimme a match,"he added.

"Better tell yer old woman I'm sleepin'out,"said Jonah He was boarding with Chook's family,paying what he could spare out of fifteen shillings or a pound a week.

"Oh,I don't suppose you'll be missed,"replied Chook graciously.

"Rye buck!"cried Jonah.

JONAH EATS GREEN PEAS

Eighteen months past,Jonah had met Ada,who worked at Packard's boot factory,at a dance.Struck by her skill in dancing,he courted her in the larrikin fashion.At night he stood in front of the house,and whistled till she came out.Then they went to the park,where they sprawled on the grass in obscure corners.

At intervals the quick spurt of a match lit up their faces,followed by the red glow of Jonah's everlasting cigarette.Their talk ran incessantly on their acquaintances,whose sayings and doings they discussed with monotonous detail.If it rained,they stood under a veranda in the conventional attitude--Jonah leaning against the wall,Ada standing in front of him.The etiquette of Cardigan Street considered any other position scandalous.

On Saturday night they went to Bob Fenner's dance-room,or strolled down to Paddy's Market.When Jonah was flush,he took her to the "Tiv.",where they sat in the gallery,packed like sardines.If it were hot,Jonah sat in his shirtsleeves,and went out for a drink at the intermission.When they reached home,they stood in the lane bordering the cottage where Ada lived,and talked for an hour in the dim light of the lamp opposite,before she went in.

Sometimes,in a gay humour,she knocked off Jonah's hat,and he retaliated with a punch in the ribs.Then a scuffle followed,with slaps,blows and stifled yells,till Ada's mother,awakened by the noise,knocked on the wall with her slipper.And this was their romance of love.

Mrs Yabsley was a widow;for Ada's father,scorning old age,had preferred to die of drink in his prime.The publicans lost a good customer,but his widow found life easier.

"Talk about payin'ter see men swaller knives an'swords!"she exclaimed.

"My old man could swaller tables an'chairs faster than I could buy 'em."So she opened a laundry,and washed and ironed for the neighbourhood.

Cardigan Street was proud of her.Her eyes twinkled in a big,humorous face;her arm was like a leg of mutton;the floors creaked beneath her as she walked.She laughed as a bull roars;her face turned purple;she fought for air;the veins rose like cords on her forehead.She was pointed out to strangers like a public building as she sat on her veranda,gossiping with the neighbours in a voice that shook the windows.There was no tongue like hers within a mile.Her sayings were quoted like the newspaper.Draymen laughed at her jokes.

Yet the women took their secret troubles to her.For this unwieldy jester,with the jolly red face and rough tongue,could touch the heart with a word,when she was in the humour.Then she spoke so wisely and kindly that the tears gathered in stubborn eyes,and the poor fools went home comforted.

Ever since her daughter was a child she had speculated on her marriage.

There was to be no nonsense about love.That was all very well in novelettes,but in Cardigan Street love-matches were a failure.Generally the first few months saw the divine spark drowned in beer.She would pick a steady man with his two pounds a week;he would jump at the chance,and the whole street would turn out to the wedding.But,as is common,her far-seeing eyes had neglected the things that lay under her nose.

Ada,in open revolt,had chosen Jonah the larrikin,a hunchback,crafty as the devil and monstrous to the sight.In six months the inevitable had happened.

She was dismayed,but unshaken,and set to work to repair the damage with the craft and strategy of an old general.She made no fuss when the child was born,and Jonah,who meditated flight,in fear of maintenance,was assured he had nothing to worry about.Mrs Yabsley had a brief interview with him at the street corner.

"As fer puttin'yous inter court,I'll wait till y'earn enough ter keep yerself,an'Gawd knows w'en that'll 'appen,"she remarked pleasantly.

As she spoke she earnestly considered the large head,wedged between the shoulders as if a giant's hand had pressed it down,the masterful nose,the keen grey eyes,and the cynical lips;and in that moment determined to make him Ada's husband.Yet he was the last man she would have chosen for a son-in-law.A loafer and a vagabond,he spoke of marriage with a grin.Half his time was spent under the veranda at the corner with the Push.He worked at his trade by fits and starts,earning enough to keep himself in cigarettes.

同类推荐
  • 佛说须达经

    佛说须达经

    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。
  • 寓圃杂记

    寓圃杂记

    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。
  • 秦中岁时记

    秦中岁时记

    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。
  • OLIVER TWIST

    OLIVER TWIST

    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。
  • 题云际寺上方

    题云际寺上方

    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
  • 无尽王城

    无尽王城

    在这座神秘的王城,光明与黑暗安静的共存着。悄然间,混沌降临,打破王城的秩序,光明、黑暗的平衡被破坏……那,在最后时刻来临时,能否守住想要守护的一切……
  • 总裁,别爱我

    总裁,别爱我

    我从小被人收养,命运多舛,被养父高价卖给男主。但为了生病的弟弟,我忍气吞声!本以为这件事,随着弟弟的病情的好转,会慢慢的过去,却不曾想越陷越深。本以为就此沉沦,又突然被告知自己是某富翁丢失多年的爱女,身世秘密被揭开,我将何去何从?
  • 却是南中春色别

    却是南中春色别

    她本是南海默默无闻的小海蚌,一朝“狗屎运”捡了个救命恩人的便宜修炼成妖,可被救之人却忙着报另外一个救命恩人的恩。于是乎,她这个救命恩人反倒为了他抱得美人归劳苦奔波。她毁人姻缘,强抢别人的新郎,哀叹世道不公,妖君不仁。她一只弱到尘埃里的小妖精,这样玩弄一个高高在上的仙君,如何是好,小命不保啊!可是,她破坏了高冷仙君的姻缘,他却偏偏不与计较,如此这般,很是奇妙呐…
  • 重生之嫡妻不好欺

    重生之嫡妻不好欺

    “不好了不好了,大夫人落水了。”偌大的花园里,景色十分怡人,那呱噪的声音听着十分的突兀,一个老婆子手做喇叭状,大叫着。“什么,大夫人落水了?”很快,来了不少的女眷,将湖中的那个人拉了上来。可惜,那湖中的女子落水时间不短了,又无人给她做及时的救护,似乎断了气儿。“哎呀,大夫人啊,你怎么就想不通呢?”老婆子把手放在女子鼻下,发现没气了就大哭了起来。“不可能的,我家夫……
  • 关于我所创造的那个世界

    关于我所创造的那个世界

    这里写的是一些比较虐的故事,慎入。这本书是作者空闲时写的。我会努力更新的。如果太监的话,我会发单章。
  • The Acts of the Apostles

    The Acts of the Apostles

    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。
  • 霸道王爷状元妃

    霸道王爷状元妃

    现代女警穿越到唐朝,看她如何玩转大唐,成为第一女状元?她与小王爷、皇上、宰相之子之间如何演绎生死爱情?但是二十一世纪新时代女性,怎能嫁给古代人呢?她需要的可是自由,而不是束缚。于是她跑他追……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 饭前一碗汤,胜过良药方

    饭前一碗汤,胜过良药方

    本书从经典滋补、日常调理、上火调理、肠胃调理、女性调养汤品等五大方面,介绍了行之有效的汤水。
  • 王妃她不走寻常路

    王妃她不走寻常路

    温灵在被男友抛弃后,出了车祸,岂料竟然穿越到一个不知名的国家即为王妃,本该做好自己的工作,可是肖君易却一而再再而三的挑战她的底线信任破裂,伤心远走他乡后,遇上三年前一直等候自己的肖君寒生死相伴,以命换命,为了不顾名声改名换姓再嫁他人,从林羽嫣到苏默云肖君寒的不信任保护让苏默云渐渐感到疲惫,即使身为皇后也有许多无可奈何心远了,苏默云不知该何去何从废后两个字让苏默云彻底心碎,再次离开京城,发誓不再回到这个夺走她一切的地方阴谋、权力相争,最后苏默云的归宿在哪……
  • 给自己的头脑几分尊重

    给自己的头脑几分尊重

    历尽沧桑,依然满怀热望。被誉为“中国良心”、“青年导师”的著名作家梁晓声洞察家国人生的力作,笔耕40余年60篇励志经典全景呈现,既有对中国社会的全景深邃思考,又有对卑微者逆境中展现人性之光的细腻描摹,还有引导青年人走出精神困顿、对个人生命历程的温情回忆等内容。你是什么,中国就是什么。梁晓声以知识分子的良知与情怀,以宏大视野、敏锐目光直面社会现实,鼓励当代青年告别困惑与延宕,给自己的头脑几分尊重,做有理想有志气的青年。