登陆注册
5260500000110

第110章 II(2)

Claude took a quick breath. Verdun . . . the very sound of the name was grim, like the hollow roll of drums. Victor was going there tomorrow. Here one could take a train for Verdun, or thereabouts, as at home one took a train for Omaha. He felt more "over" than he had done before, and a little crackle of excitement went all through him. He tried to be careless:

"Then you won't get to London soon?"

"God knows," Victor answered gloomily. He looked up at the ceiling and began to whistle softly an engaging air. "Do you know that? It's something Maisie often plays; 'Roses of Picardy.' You won't know what a woman can be till you meet her, Wheeler."

"I hope I'll have that pleasure. I was wondering if you'd forgotten her for the moment. She doesn't object to these diversions?"

Victor lifted his eyebrows in the old haughty way. "Women don't require that sort of fidelity of the air service. Our engagements are too uncertain."

Half an hour later Victor had gone in quest of amorous adventure, and Claude was wandering alone in a brightly lighted street full of soldiers and sailors of all nations. There were black Senegalese, and Highlanders in kilts, and little lorry-drivers from Siam,--all moving slowly along between rows of cabarets and cinema theatres. The wide-spreading branches of the plane trees met overhead, shutting out the sky and roofing in the orange glare. The sidewalks were crowded with chairs and little tables, at which marines and soldiers sat drinking shops and cognac and coffee. From every doorway music-machines poured out jazz tunes and strident Sousa marches. The noise was stupefying. Out in the middle of the street a band of bareheaded girls, hardy and tough looking; were following a string of awkward Americans, running into them, elbowing them, asking for treats, crying, "You dance me Fausse-trot, Sammie?"

Claude stationed himself before a movie theatre, where the sign in electric lights read, "Amour, quand tu nous tiens!" and stood watching the people. In the stream that passed him, his eye lit upon two walking arm-in-arm, their hands clasped, talking eagerly and unconscious of the crowd,--different, he saw at once, from all the other strolling, affectionate couples.

The man wore the American uniform; his left arm had been amputated at the elbow, and he carried his head awry, as if he had a stiff neck. His dark, lean face wore an expression of intense anxiety, his eyebrows twitched as if he were in constant pain. The girl, too, looked troubled. As they passed him, under the red light of the Amour sign, Claude could see that her eyes were full of tears. They were wide, blue eyes, innocent looking, and she had the prettiest face he had seen since he landed. From her silk shawl, and little bonnet with blue strings and a white frill, he thought she must be a country girl. As she listened to the soldier, with her mouth half-open, he saw a space between her two front teeth, as with children whose second teeth have just come. While they pushed along in the crowd she looked up intently at the man beside her, or off into the blur of light, where she evidently saw nothing. Her face, young and soft, seemed new to emotion, and her bewildered look made one feel that she did not know where to turn.

Without realizing what he did, Claude followed them out of the crowd into a quiet street, and on into another, even more deserted, where the louses looked as if they had been asleep a long while. Here there were no street lamps, not even a light in the windows, but natural darkness; with the moon high overhead throwing sharp shadows across the white cobble paving. The narrow street made a bend, and he came out upon the church he and his comrades had entered that afternoon. It looked larger by night, and but for the sunken step, he might not have been sure it was the same. The dark neighbouring houses seemed to lean toward it, the moonlight shone silver-grey upon its battered front.

The two walking before him ascended the steps and withdrew into the deep doorway, where they clung together in an embrace so long and still that it was like death. At last they drew shuddering apart. The girl sat down on the stone bench beside the door. The soldier threw himself upon the pavement at her feet, and rested his head on her knee, his one arm lying across her lap.

In the shadow of the houses opposite, Claude kept watch like a sentinel, ready to take their part if any alarm should startle them. The girl bent over her soldier, stroking his head so softly that she might have been putting him to sleep; took his one hand and held it against her bosom as if to stop the pain there. Just behind her, on the sculptured portal, some old bishop, with a pointed cap and a broken crozier, stood, holding up two fingers.

同类推荐
  • E+P Manus

    E+P Manus

    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。
  • 小苑春望宫池柳色

    小苑春望宫池柳色

    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。
  • 积聚门

    积聚门

    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。
  • 醉乡日月

    醉乡日月

    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。
  • 熊龙峰小说四种

    熊龙峰小说四种

    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
  • 园丁集·新月集·飞鸟集(纯爱·英文馆)

    园丁集·新月集·飞鸟集(纯爱·英文馆)

    《新月集》主要译自1903年出版的孟加拉文诗集《儿童集》,诗人生动描绘了儿童们的游戏,巧妙地表现了孩子们的心理,以及他们活泼的想象。它的特殊的隽永的艺术魅力,把我们带到了一个纯洁的儿童世界,勾起了我们对于童年生活的美好回忆。《飞鸟集》是泰戈尔的代表作之一,也是世界上最杰出的诗集之一,它包括300余首清丽的小诗。
  • 大宋起航

    大宋起航

    大宋新立,叛乱四起,群狼环伺,内忧外患。赵匡胤这位行伍出身的帝王,却制定了文治的国策。宋鼻涕的雅号,也许连穿越之神,都难以接受。于是一个倒霉蛋,便跨越了千年的时光,来到了这中古大宋。历史的车轮,命运的齿轮,天命的转轮.......等等,许多的轮子,都开始改变了方向。至于会驶向何方,现在连作者都不知道........我们还是一起见证吧!
  • 东京热门

    东京热门

    现代女子赤凤凰魂回北宋,阴差阳错,与一流氓合体,悲天悯人,欲以己之力,挽救天下苍生,然冥冥中有注定。。。
  • 佛说大方广曼殊室利经

    佛说大方广曼殊室利经

    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。
  • 我恨你,我爱你

    我恨你,我爱你

    林浅希望今生一刀干净利落,一刀爱憎分明,可惜看着陆泽川眼睛的时候,就变成了一刀穿心而过,一刀如鲠在喉。别人说,人分两类,迷人乏味。陆泽川这个男人当真是狡猾又可恶,在这两种之间徘徊不定,低眉浅笑的时候那么勾人,叫她把孩子拿掉的时候又多么残忍。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 忆虞兮

    忆虞兮

    戚戚兮,吾生君已老攘攘兮,市集生陌人我见鱼市星宿暗哑行于秋繁华墨景,事事迁移,莫生留恋,到让人实在凄凉,一番惆怅,无边若景生,属实悲惨,不如祈祷流年~如同那日,那年,那景:那年繁华不落暮爱吃炸鸡:此致敬礼谢
  • Jeff Briggs's Love Story

    Jeff Briggs's Love Story

    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。
  • 试管婴儿秘档

    试管婴儿秘档

    【根据真实故事改编】在毕业即分手的年代,我们的校园爱情让很多人羡慕不已。然而,恋爱十年,结婚两年,始终没有怀上孩子。万不得已之下,我们选择了试管婴儿。这是我们的故事,也是试管婴儿夫妇共同的故事。PS:简介有种无力感,不过你想知道的人工授精、试管婴儿都在书里啦!谨以此书,献给那些因各种原因不得不选择试管婴儿的人们,以及对试管婴儿感兴趣的书友们。
  • 一纸婚约:天才宝腹黑爹

    一纸婚约:天才宝腹黑爹

    杀他老婆,灭他威风,她带着他儿子落跑。8年后,她带着天才儿子回国,他已有未婚妻。“孩子给我,否则代价你付不起。”“姑娘吃荤吃素不吃亏,想要孩子多是女人给你生。”宝贝笑眯眯说,“想当我爹地,就看看你有没有这本事,否则代价你也付不起。”父子第一次网上见面,宝贝装人妖诱惑爹地,“求宠爱。”爹地大人淡定回,“我对对象有点挑。”
  • 梦幻中的天地

    梦幻中的天地

    传说在世间,有两种生灵,可以达到修行的至高境界。一种生灵有如祖龙:资质逆天,勇往直前,镇压当代,逆天而上,俯视万古;另一种生灵有如鲲鹏:在无意间看到更高的天地,于是奋起直追,梦想成为天空的王者,在苦难中前行,于绝望中崛起,终达彼岸成为天地霸主。当上古传说涌现地球,他们看到长生的希望,可在异界的大地上,他们沦为妖族的食物,好不容易看到同族,却被当成低贱的奴隶对待…命运是什么?命运是众生对原有世界的认知,打破原有世界的认知,才能打破思维的局限性和轮回,进而才能影响命运,改变命运。