登陆注册
5453800000010

第10章 PART TWO(2)

He looked up.It was the girl.She shook her head,evidently as a warning that he must keep silent,then parted the bushes and quick-ly led the way along the narrow track into the wood.Obviously she had been that way before,for she dodged the boggy pits as though by habit.Winston followed,still clasping his bunch of flowers.His first feeling was relief,but as he watched the strong slender body moving in front of him,with the scarlet sash that was just tight enough to bring out the curve of her hips,the sense of his own infe-riority was heavy upon him.Even now it seemed quite likely that when she turned round and looked at him she would draw back af-ter all.The sweetness of the air and the greenness of the leaves daunted him.Already, on the walk from the station, the May sun-shine had made him feel dirty and etiolated,a creature of indoors, with the sooty dust of London in the pores of his skin.It occurred to him that till now she had probably never seen him in broad daylight in the open.They came to the fallen tree that she had spoken of.The girl hopped over and forced apart the bushes,in which there did not seem to be an opening.When Winston followed her,he found that they were in a natural clearing,a tiny grassy knoll surrounded by tall saplings that shut it in completely.The girl stopped and turned.

"Here we are,"she said.

He was facing her at several paces' distance.As yet he did not dare move nearer to her.

"I didn't want to say anything in the lane,"she went on,"in case there's a mike hidden there.I don't suppose there is,but there could be.There's always the chance of one of those swine recogniz-ing your voice.We're all right here."

He still had not the courage to approach her."We're all right here?"he repeated stupidly.

"Yes.Look at the trees."They were small ashes,which at some time had been cut down and had sprouted up again into a for-est of poles,none of them thicker than one's wrist."There's noth-ing big enough to hide a mike in.Besides,I've been here before."

They were only making conversation.He had managed to move closer to her now.She stood before him very upright,with a smile on her face that looked faintly ironical,as though she were wonder-ing why he was so slow to act.The bluebells had cascaded onto the ground.They seemed to have fallen of their own accord.He took her hand.

"Would you believe,"he said,"that till this moment I didn't know what color your eyes were?"They were brown,he noted,a rather light shade of brown,with dark lashes.

"Now that you've seen what I'm really like,can you still bear to look at me?"

"Yes,easily."

"I'm thirty-nine years old.I've got a wife that I can't get rid of.I've got varicose veins.I've got five false teeth."

"I couldn't care less,"said the girl.

The next moment,it was hard to say by whose act,she was in his arms.At the beginning he had no feeling except sheer increduli-ty.The youthful body was strained against his own,the mass of dark hair was against his face,and yes! actually she had turned her face up and he was kissing the wide red mouth.She had clasped her arms about his neck,she was calling him darling,precious one, loved one.He had pulled her down onto the ground,she was utterly unresisting,he could do what he liked with her.But the truth was that he had no physical sensation except that of mere contact.All he felt was incredulity and pride.He was glad that this was happening, but he had no physical desire.It was too soon,her youth and pretti-ness had frightened him,he was too much used to living without women—he did not know the reason.The girl picked herself up and pulled a bluebell out of her hair.She sat against him,putting her arm round his waist.

"Never mind,dear.There's no hurry.We've got the whole af-ternoon.Isn't this a splendid hide-out? I found it when I got lost once on a community hike.If anyone was coming you could hear them a hundred meters away."

"What is your name?"said Winston.

"Julia.I know yours.It's Winston—Winston Smith."

"How did you find that out?"

"I expect I'm better at finding things out than you are,dear. Tell me,what did you think of me before that day I gave you the note?"

He did not feel any temptation to tell lies to her.It was even a sort of love offering to start off by telling the worst.

"I hated the sight of you,"he said."I wanted to rape you and then murder you afterwards.Two weeks ago I thought seriously of smashing your head in with a cobblestone.If you really want to know,I imagined that you had something to do with the Thought Police."

The girl laughed delightedly,evidently taking this as a tribute to the excellence of her disguise.

"Not the Thought Police! You didn't honestly think that?"

"Well,perhaps not exactly that.But from your general appear-ance—merely because you're young and fresh and healthy,you un-derstand—I thought that probably—"

"You thought I was a good Party member.Pure in word and deed.Banners,processions,slogans,games,community hikes—all that stuff.And you thought that if I had a quarter of a chance I'd denounce you as a thought-criminal and get you killed off?"

"Yes,something of that kind.A great many young girls are like that,you know."

"It's this bloody thing that does it,"she said,ripping off the scarlet sash of the Junior Anti-Sex League and flinging it onto a bough.Then,as though touching her waist had reminded her of something,she felt in the pocket of her overalls and produced a small slab of chocolate.She broke it in half and gave one of the pieces to Winston.Even before he had taken it he knew by the smell that it was very unusual chocolate.It was dark and shiny,and was wrapped in silver paper.Chocolate normally was dull-brown crum-bly stuff that tasted,as nearly as one could describe it,like the smoke of a rubbish fire.But at some time or another he had tasted chocolate like the piece she had given him.The first whiff of its scent had stirred up some memory which he could not pin down, but which was powerful and troubling.

"Where did you get this stuff?"he said.

"Black market,"she said indifferently."Actually I am that sort of girl,to look at.I'm good at games.I was a troop leader in the Spies.I do voluntary work three evenings a week for the Junior An-ti-Sex League.Hours and hours I've spent pasting their bloody rot all over London.I always carry one end of a banner in the proces-sions.I always look cheerful and I never shirk anything.Always yell with the crowd,that's what I say.It's the only way to be safe."

The first fragment of chocolate had melted on Winston's tongue.The taste was delightful.But there was still that memory moving round the edges of his consciousness,something strongly felt but not reducible to definite shape,like an obj ect seen out of the corner of one's eye.He pushed it away from him,aware only that it was the memory of some action which he would have liked to undo but could not.

"You are very young,"he said."You are ten or fifteen years younger than I am.What could you see to attract you in a man like me?"

"It was something in your face.I thought I'd take a chance.I'm good at spotting people who don't belong.As soon as I saw you I knew you were against them."

Them,it appeared,meant the Party,and above all the Inner Party,about whom she talked with an open j eering hatred which made Winston feel uneasy,although he knew that they were safe here if they could be safe anywhere.A thing that astonished him a-bout her was the coarseness of her language.Party members were supposed not to swear,and Winston himself very seldom did swear, aloud,at any rate.Julia,however,seemed unable to mention the Par-ty,and especially the Inner Party,without using the kind of words that you saw chalked up in dripping alleyways.He did not dislike it. It was merely one symptom of her revolt against the Party and all its ways,and somehow it seemed natural and healthy,like the sneeze of a horse that smells bad hay They had left the clearing and were wandering again through the checkered shade,with their arms round each other's waists whenever it was wide enough to walk two abreast.He noticed how much softer her waist seemed to feel now that the sash was gone.They did not speak above a whisper. Outside the clearing,Julia said,it was better to go quietly.Presently they had reached the edge of the little wood.She stopped him.

"Don't go out into the open.There might be someone watc-hing.We're all right if we keep behind the boughs."

They were standing in the shade of hazel bushes.The sunlight, filtering through innumerable leaves,was still hot on their faces. Winston looked out into the field beyond,and underwent a curious, slow shock of recognition.He knew it by sight.An old,close-bitten pasture,with a footpath wandering across it and a molehill here and there.In the ragged hedge on the opposite side the boughs of the elm trees swayed just perceptibly in the breeze,and their leaves stirred faintly in dense masses like women's hair.Surely somewhere near by,but out of sight,there must be a stream with green pools where dace were swimming.

"Isn't there a stream somewhere near here?"he whispered.

"That's right,there is a stream.It's at the edge of the next field,actually.There are fish in it,great big ones.You can watch them lying in the pools under the willow trees,waving their tails."

"It's the Golden Country—almost,"he murmured.

"The Golden Country?"

"It's nothing,really.A landscape I've seen sometimes in a dream."

"Look!"whispered Julia.

A thrush had alighted on a bough not five metres away,almost at the level of their faces.Perhaps it had not seen them.It was in the sun,they in the shade.It spread out its wings,fitted them carefully into place again,ducked its head for a moment,as though making a sort of obeisance to the sun,and then began to pour forth a torrent of song.In the afternoon hush the volume of sound was startling. Winston and Julia clung together,fascinated.The music went on and on,minute after minute,with astonishing variations,never once re-peating itself,almost as though the bird were deliberately showing off its virtuosity.Sometimes it stopped for a few seconds,spread out and resettled its wings,then swelled its speckled breast and again burst into song.Winston watched it with a sort of vague reverence. For whom,for what,was that bird singing? No mate,no rival was watching it.What made it sit at the edge of the lonely wood and pour its music into nothingness? He wondered whether after all there was a microphone hidden somewhere near.He and Julia had only spoken in low whispers,and it would not pick up what they had said,but it would pick up the thrush.Perhaps at the other end of the instrument some small,beetle like man was listening intent-ly—listening to that.But by degrees the flood of music drove all speculations out of his mind.It was as though it were a kind of liq-uid stuff that poured all over him and got mixed up with the sun-light that filtered through the leaves.He stopped thinking and merely felt.The girl's waist in the bend of his arm was soft and warm.He pulled her round so that they were breast to breast;her body seemed to melt into his.Wherever his hands moved it was all as yielding as water.Their mouths clung together;it was quite dif-ferent from the hard kisses they had exchanged earlier.When they moved their faces apart again both of them sighed deeply.The bird took fright and fled with a clatter of wings.

Winston put his lips against her ear."N ow,"he whispered.

"Not here,"she whispered back."Come back to the hideout. It's safer."

Quickly,with an occasional crackle of twigs,they threaded their way back to the clearing.When they were once inside the ring of saplings she turned and faced him.They were both breathing fast,but the smile had reappeared round the corners of her mouth. She stood looking at him for an instant,then felt at the zipper of her overalls.And,yes! it was almost as in his dream.Almost as swiftly as he had imagined it,she had torn her clothes off,and when she flung them aside it was with that same magnificent gesture by which a whole civilization seemed to be annihilated.Her body gleamed white in the sun.But for a moment he did not look at her body;his eyes were anchored by the freckled face with its faint,bold smile.He knelt down before her and took her hands in his.

"Have you done this before?"

"Of course.Hundreds of times—well,scores of times,anyway."

"With Party members?"

"Yes,always with Party members."

"With members of the Inner Party?"

"Not with those swine,no.But there's plenty that would if they got half a chance.They're not so holy as they make out."

His heart leapt.Scores of times she had done it;he wished it had been hundreds—thousands.Anything that hinted at corruption always filled him with a wild hope.Who knew? Perhaps the Party was rotten under the surface,its cult of strenuousness and self-deni-al simply a sham concealing iniquity.If he could have infected the whole lot of them with leprosy or syphilis,how gladly he would have done so!Anything to rot,to weaken,to undermine! He pulled her down so that they were kneeling face to face.

"Listen.The more men you've had,the more I love you.Do you understand that?"

"Yes,perfectly."

"I hate purity,I hate goodness.I don't want any virtue to exist anywhere.I want everyone to be corrupt to the bones."

"Well then,I ought to suit you,dear.I'm corrupt to the bones."

"You like doing this? I don't mean simply me;I mean the thing in itself?"

"I adore it."

That was above all what he wanted to hear.Not merely the love of one person but the animal instinct,the simple undifferentiated desire:that was the force that would tear the Party to pieces.He pressed her down upon the grass,among the fallen bluebells.This time there was no difficulty.Presently the rising and falling of their breasts slowed to normal speed,and in a sort of pleasant helpless-ness they fell apart.The sun seemed to have grown hotter.They were both sleepy.He reached out for the discarded overalls and pulled them partly over her.Almost immediately they fell asleep and slept for about half an hour.

Winston woke first.He sat and watched the freckled face,still peacefully asleep,pillowed on the palm of her hand.Except for her mouth,you could not call her beautiful.There was a line or two round the eyes,if you looked closely.The short dark hair was ex-traordinarily thick and soft.It occurred to him that he still did not know her surname or where she lived.

The young,strong body,now helpless in sleep,awoke in him a pitying,protecting feeling.But the mindless tenderness that he had felt under the hazel tree,while the thrush was singing,had not quite come back.He pulled the overalls aside and studied her smooth white flank.In the old days,he thought,a man looked at a girl's body and saw that it was desirable,and that was the end of the sto-ry.But you could not have pure love or pure lust nowadays.No emo-tion was pure,because everything was mixed up with fear and ha-tred.Their embrace had been a battle,the climax a victory.It was a blow struck against the Party.It was a political act.

Chapter 3

"W e can come here once again,"said"Julia."It'sgenerally safe to use any hide-out twice.But notfor another month or two,of course.

As soon as she woke up her demeanor had changed.She became alert and businesslike,put her clothes on,knotted the scarlet sash about her waist,and began arranging the details of the journey home.It seemed natural to leave this to her.She obviously had a practical cunning which Winston lacked,and she seemed also to have an exhaustive knowledge of the countryside round London, stored away from innumerable community hikes.The route she gave him was quite different from the one by which he had come,and brought him out at a different railway station."Never go home the same way as you went out,"she said,as though enunciating an im-portant general principle.She would leave first,and Winston was to wait half an hour before following her.

She had named a place where they could meet after work,four evenings hence.It was a street in one of the poorer quarters,where there was an open market which was generally crowded and noisy. She would be hanging about among the stalls,pretending to be in search of shoelaces or sewingthread.If she j udged that the coast was clear she would blow her nose when he approached;otherwise he was to walk past her without recognition.But with luck,in the mid-dle of the crowd,it would be safe to talk for a quarter of an hour and arrange another meeting.

"And now I must go,"she said as soon as he had mastered his instructions."I'm due back at nineteen-thirty.I've got to put in two hours for the Junior Anti-Sex League,handing out leaflets,or some-thing.Isn't it bloody? Give me a brush-down,would you.Have I got any twigs in my hair? Are you sure? Then good-by,my love, good-by!"

She flung herself into his arms,kissed him almost violently, and a moment later pushed her way through the saplings and disap-peared into the wood with very little noise.Even now he had not found out her surname or her address.However,it made no differ-ence,for it was inconceivable that they could ever meet indoors or exchange any kind of written communication.

As it happened they never went back to the clearing in the wood.During the month of May there was only one further occasion on which they actually succeeded in making love.That was in anoth-er hiding place known to Julia,the belfry of a ruined church in an almost-deserted stretch of country where an atomic bomb had fallen thirty years earlier.It was a good hiding place when once you got there,but the getting there was very dangerous.For the rest they could meet only in the streets,in a different place every evening and never for more than half an hour at a time.In the street it was usu-ally possible to talk,after a fashion.As they drifted down the crowded pavements,not quite abreast and never looking at one an-other,they carried on a curious,intermittent conversation which flicked on and off like the beams of a lighthouse,suddenly nipped into silence by the approach of a Party uniform or the proximity of a telescreen,then taken up again minutes later in the middle of a sentence,then abruptly cut short as they parted at the agreed spot, then continued almost without introduction on the following day. Julia appeared to be quite used to this kind of conversation,which she called"talking by instalments".She was also surprisingly adept at speaking without moving her lips.Just once in almost a month of nightly meetings they managed to exchange a kiss.They were pass-ing in silence down a sidestreet (Julia would never speak when they were away from the main streets)when there was a deafening roar, the earth heaved,and the air darkened,and Winston found himself lying on his side,bruised and terrified.A rocket bomb must have dropped quite near at hand.Suddenly he became aware of Julia's face a few centimeters from his own,deathly white,as white as chalk.Even her lips were white.She was dead! He clasped her against him and found that he was kissing a live warm face.But there was some powdery stuff that got in the way of his lips.Both of their faces were thickly coated with plaster.

There were evenings when they reached their rendezvous and then had to walk past one another without a sign,because a patrol had just come round the corner or a helicopter was hovering over-head.Even if it had been less dangerous,it would still have been dif-ficult to find time to meet.Winston's working week was sixty hours,Julia's was even longer,and their free days varied according to the pressure of work and did not often coincide.Julia,in any case, seldom had an evening completely free.She spent an astonishing amount of time in attending lectures and demonstrations,distribu-ting literature for the Junior Anti-Sex League,preparing banners for Hate Week,making collections for the savings campaign,and suchlike activities.It paid,she said;it was camouflage.If you kept the small rules,you could break the big ones.She even induced Win-ston to mortgage yet another of his evenings by enrolling himself for the part-time munition work which was done voluntarily by zealous Party members.So,one evening every week,Winston spent four hours of paralysing boredom,screwing together small bits of metal which were probably parts of bomb fuses,in a draughty ill-lit workshop where the knocking of hammers mingled drearily with the music of the telescreens.

When they met in the church tower the gaps in their fragmen-tary conversation were filled up.It was a blazing afternoon.The air in the little square chamber above the bells was hot and stagnant, and smelt overpoweringly of pigeon dung.They sat talking for hours on the dusty,twig-littered floor,one or other of them getting up from time to time to cast a glance through the narrowslits and make sure that no one was coming.

Julia was twenty-six years old.She lived in a hostel with thirty other girls ("Always in the stink of women! How I hate women!"she said parenthetically),and she worked,as he had guessed,on the novel-writing machines in the Fiction Department.She enjoyed her work,which consisted chiefly in running and servicing a powerful but tricky electric motor.She was"not clever",but was fond of using her hands and felt at home with machinery.She could describe the whole process of composing a novel,from the general directive issued by the Planning Committee down to the final touching-up by the Rewrite Squad.But she was not interested in the finished pro-duct.She"didn't much care for reading,"she said.Books were just a commodity that had to be produced,like jam or bootlaces.

She had no memories of anything before the early Sixties, and the only person she had ever known who talked frequently of the days before the Revolution was a grandfather who had disappeared when she was eight.At school she had been captain of the hockey team and had won the gymnastics trophy two years running.She had been a troop leader in the Spies and a branch secretary in the Youth League before joining the Junior Anti-Sex League.She had always borne an excellent character.She had even (an infallible mark of good reputation) been picked out to work in Pornosec,the sub-section of the Fiction Department which turned out cheap por-nography for distribution among the proles.It was nicknamed Muck House by the people who worked in it,she remarked.There she had remained for a year,helping to produce booklets in sealed packets with titles like Spanking Stories or One Night in a Girls'School, to be bought furtively by proletarian youths who were under the impression that they were buying something illegal.

"What are these books like?"said Winston curiously.

"Oh,ghastly rubbish.They're boring,really.They only have six plots,but they swap them round a bit.Of course I was only on the kaleidoscopes.I was never in the Rewrite Squad.I' m not literary,dear—not even enough for that."

He learned with astonishment that all the workers in Por-nosec,except the head of the department,were girls.The theory was that men,whose sex instincts were less controllable than those of women,were in greater danger of being corrupted by the filth they handled.

"They don't even like having married women there,"she add-ed."Girls are always supposed to be so pure.Here's one who isn't, anyway."

She had had her first love affair when she was sixteen,with a Party member of sixty who later committed suicide to avoid arrest."And a good job too,"said Julia,"Otherwise they'd have had my name out of him when he confessed."Since then there had been va-rious others.Life as she saw it was quite simple.You wanted a good time;"they",meaning the Party,wanted to stop you having it;you broke the rules as best you could.She seemed to think it just as nat-ural that"they"should want to rob you of your pleasures as that you should want to avoid being caught.She hated the Party,and said so in the crudest words,but she made no general criticism of it.Ex-cept where it touched upon her own life she had no interest in Party doctrine.He noticed that she never used Newspeak words, except the ones that had passed into everyday use.She had never heard of the Brotherhood,and refused to believe in its existence.Any kind of organized revolt against the Party,which was bound to be a failure, struck her as stupid.The clever thing was to break the rules and stay alive all the same.He wondered vaguely how many others like her there might be in the younger generation—people who had grown up in the world of the Revolution,knowing nothing else,ac-cepting the Party as something unalterable,like the sky,not rebel-ling against its authority but simply evading it,as a rabbit dodges a dog.

同类推荐
  • 一句话让老美刮目相看

    一句话让老美刮目相看

    想要练就炉火纯青的英语口语,就要将复杂的话说得简单易懂,就要将简单的话说得有模有样。人们常说:“难者不会,会者不难。”学习英语,也是同样的道理,找到方法,掐准要点,你也就不会在面对老外时结结巴巴,甚至是哑口无言了。本书就将带你进入一个轻松快乐的学习氛围,一点一滴、举一反三地破解英语口语密码。本书涉及情感表达、工作学习、社交娱乐三个方面,以发散、拓展的思维方式,亮出英语日常应用口语。本书由阳程主编。
  • 竞选风波(Aunt Jane's Nieces at Work)

    竞选风波(Aunt Jane's Nieces at Work)

    《竞选风波》是纯爱英文馆?少女成长系列的第四本,讲述了约翰叔叔带着三个心爱的侄女——帕齐、贝丝和露易丝去帮助他们的朋友肯尼思竞选议员的故事。在帮助他竞选的过程中,三个女孩受到其对手的一再抨击,她们会坚持下来吗?此外,她们还帮助一对老夫妇寻找到了一个受刺激后精神失常而失踪的少女,这又是怎么回事呢?
  • 我的最后一本日语语法书,看这本真的够了

    我的最后一本日语语法书,看这本真的够了

    翻开这本基础日语书。这里也许没有大受吹捧的“抛开语法学日语”,但这里有循序渐进的语法讲解和会话分析;这里也许没有“2000句让你走遍日本”的噱头,但这里有深入浅出的单词详解和表达方式;这里也许没有“15天包你精通日语”的虚假诱惑,但这里有举一反三的地道敬语表达。在琳琅满目的日语学习书前徘徊,你要知道,自己需要的是什么。不是色彩缤纷、引人入胜的图画书;也并非东拼西凑、生搬硬套的词典;更不是让你只知其然而不知其所以然的教科书;而是基础扎实、内容丰富、表达地道的这本——《我的最后一本日语语法书,看这本真的够了》。
  • Never Give Up on Yourself 永不放弃自己

    Never Give Up on Yourself 永不放弃自己

    谁也不能改变你的容貌,但你能通过修炼自己变成一个魅力四射的女人。汪洋的经历就充分证明了这一点。《永不放弃自己》一书告诉大家,只要你不放弃希望,灰姑娘也会变成美丽的公主,你梦想的一切都会实现!
  • 英语常用短语大全集

    英语常用短语大全集

    创想外语研发团队编著的《英语常用短语大全集》不是要讲述英语短语高深的语法,也不是对其进行深入细致的研究,而是从学习、记忆和运用的目的出发,让学习者能准确记忆每一个短语,能准确运用每一短语,这就是编写本书的初衷。本书精选日常学习生活中常见的短语,剔除了那些比较生僻的内容,在一定程度上减轻了学习者的负担,而且更具有针对性。
热门推荐
  • 诸天尽头

    诸天尽头

    一觉醒来,罗素脑海中就多出了一个可以穿梭诸天世界的系统。杀手、怪兽、女巫、异形、魔鬼、神明……无限的世界有无限的可能,亦有无限的历险,而踏破无限之人,必将留下属于自己的传说。从平凡到不朽,在诸天的道路上寻觅尽头!……看着永无止尽的道路,罗素摸着系统的狗头,他手里只有抽奖得来的卡片……有点慌!
  • 佛说给孤长者女得度因缘经

    佛说给孤长者女得度因缘经

    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。
  • 狙击安德烈

    狙击安德烈

    1947年3月7日,上午十时许,一支由六辆轿车组成的车队驶至国民政府首都南京市警察厅第三看守所前。从警卫室走出几个高级警官,为首的是一个五短身材的胖子,五十来岁,面黄无须,此人是首都警察厅副厅长厉畏程。跟在他后面的,是首都警察厅预审部门的两个处长和看守所长。这几个高级警察迎接的,是当时南京的一个由蒋介石夫人宋美龄发起组建的民间慈善组织“天良慈善济难会”的六位负责成员。这六位均是女性,其丈夫皆为国民党的党、政、军高级官员。
  • 灵药秘方

    灵药秘方

    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。
  • 皇宠之杠上大牌夫君

    皇宠之杠上大牌夫君

    一朝穿越,火场复生,洛青青这才发现自己居然进了皇室的下属部门,成了保皇一族的一员。还以为自己当上了风光的皇家人员,没想到跳进的根本就是一个无底火坑。她郁闷、她愤恨、她想暴走,但她不能告诉自己的顶头上司,“宝鸡”适合做的是地名而不是人名,除非她迫不及待地想进行第二次穿越……名字不好听?没什么!谁的穿越之旅不是痛并快乐着?缺陷不怕,只要有美来填!精彩片段:情节一(南宫烁篇):“小叽叽,真是不容易呀,你终于是本宫的了。”南宫烁摇头尾巴晃地走到保鸡面前,得意地说道。保鸡头上瞬间冒出数根黑线,苦笑道:“主子,可否麻烦您称呼奴婢的全名——保鸡。”南宫烁笑得纯真无邪,点头道:“好啊,小叽叽。”情节二(依旧南宫烁篇):南宫烁同皇兄们蹴鞠正起兴时突然尿急,转头向保鸡喊道:“保鸡,本宫要去小解,你过来替本宫,把局势稳住了!”保鸡慢慢坐起,装作中暑后的症状,虚弱道:“主子,属下不会……”“不会?你们保皇一族第一天就是教这个,你以为本宫不清楚?”眼见众人露出疑惑的眼神,保鸡“噌”地坐起身,斗志满满地改口道:“属下是说不会……输的!”情节三(南宫斐篇):面对不定期来光顾的亲爱大姨妈,保鸡束手无策,躲在茅厕里不敢出去,正在郁闷之时,头顶却突然伸出一只手,送上了大姨妈助手。保鸡揶揄道:“六皇子的心真细,不是给好多女人送过就一定是……”南宫斐挑眉,“是什么?”“就一定是有随身携带女性用品的嗜好。”“呵呵,说错了。第一,本宫不敢说今生会不会给很多女人送,但至少在你之前还没送过;第二,那是本宫刚刚特意为某个不知好歹的女人买来的,本宫没有随身携带那种东西的嗜好,但是不介意为了某个女人增加一种这样的嗜好!”笑点多多,先拉这两只出来遛遛,更多情节就坑里见喽!(文中涉及到的代号与地名、车名等如有雷同,纯属情节需要。)
  • 台湾郑氏始末

    台湾郑氏始末

    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。
  • 十三福晋失踪之谜

    十三福晋失踪之谜

    大婚之际,准福晋不翼而飞。三阿哥临危受命,帮助十三弟找寻未来老婆。关键证人接连失踪,精巧绣帕暗藏玄机。福晋身世之谜难解,贴身丫鬟敌友莫辨。一桩普通寻人案竟牵扯出多桩大案……
  • 飞鸢

    飞鸢

    这是一个关于班的传说。班今年十八岁了。没有父亲,没有兄弟姐妹,也没有其他什么亲戚。只有一个老得不能再老的老母亲。老母亲整天絮絮叨叨,老是对班讲这讲那。今天她讲,你看某某某,人家才十七岁,比你还小,已经当上鲁国大司马了,俸禄可是三千石呢。明天她讲,你看我们家邻居某某,他今年也就二十岁,只比你大两岁嘛,可人家呢,现在已经写出一本划时代的书来了,越来越多的人都在读他的书,信奉他所讲的道理呢。昨天她又讲,讲什么来着?好像是说乡党某家在国外的亲戚由于会做生意,发了大财,准备把某国的三座城池买到手。
  • 跨天虹

    跨天虹

    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。
  • 我是谁的歌

    我是谁的歌

    孤女柳依依,为了挽救病危的外祖父,远走他乡打工挣钱,意外地遇到了十几年前离家出走的父亲与母亲。不幸,造化弄人,三人在一个不足两万人的小镇生活,甚至每天擦肩而过,却无法相认。终于有一天,一切要真相大白时,柳依依深爱的少年灰灰走进来,喜剧变成悲剧。