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双语·钟形罩 17

所属教程:译林版·钟形罩

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2022年05月06日

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“You're a lucky girl today.”

The young nurse cleared my breakfast tray away and left me wrapped in my white blanket like a passenger taking the sea air on the deck of a ship.

“Why am I lucky?”

“Well, I'm not sure if you're supposed to know yet, but today, you're moving to Belsize.” The nurse looked at me expectantly.

“Belsize,” I said. “I can't go there.”

“Why not?”

“I'm not ready. I'm not well enough.”

“Of course, you're well enough. Don't worry, they wouldn't be moving you if you weren't well enough.”

After the nurse left, I tried to puzzle out this new move on Doctor Nolan's part. What was she trying to prove? I hadn't changed. Nothing had changed. And Belsize was the best house of all. From Belsize people went back to work and back to school and back to their homes.

Joan would be at Belsize. Joan with her physics books and her golf clubs and her badminton rackets and her breathy voice. Joan, marking the gulf between me and the nearly well ones. Ever since Joan left Caplan I'd followed her progress through the asylum grapevine.

Joan had walk privileges, Joan had shopping privileges, Joan had town privileges. I gathered all my news of Joan into a little, bitter heap, though I received it with surface gladness. Joan was the beaming double of my old best self, specially designed to follow and torment me.

Perhaps Joan would be gone when I got to Belsize.

At least at Belsize I could forget about shock treatments. At Caplan a lot of the women had shock treatments. I could tell which ones they were, because they didn't get their breakfast trays with the rest of us. They had their shock treatments while we breakfasted in our rooms, and then they came into the lounge, quiet and extinguished, led like children by the nurses, and ate their breakfasts there.

Each morning, when I heard the nurse knock with my tray, an immense relief flooded through me, because I knew I was out of danger for that day. I didn't see how Doctor Nolan could tell you went to sleep during a shock treatment if she'd never had a shock treatment herself. How did she know the person didn't just look as if he was asleep, while all the time, inside, he was feeling the blue volts and the noise?

Piano music sounded from the end of the hall.

At supper I sat quietly, listening to the chatter of the Belsize women. They were all fashionably dressed and carefully made up, and several of them were married. Some of them had been shopping downtown, and others had been out visiting friends, and all during supper they kept tossing back and forth these private jokes.

“I'd call Jack,” a woman named DeeDee said, “only I'm afraid he wouldn't be home. I know just where I could call him, though, and he'd be in, all right.”

The short, spry blonde woman at my table laughed. “I almost had Doctor Loring where I wanted him today.” She widened her starey blue eyes like a little doll. “I wouldn't mind trading old Percy in for a new model.”

At the opposite end of the room, Joan was wolfing her Spam and broiled tomato with great appetite. She seemed perfectly at home among these women and treated me coolly,with a slight sneer, like a dim and inferior acquaintance.

I had gone to bed right after supper, but then I heard the piano music and pictured Joan and DeeDee and Loubelle, the blonde woman, and the rest of them, laughing and gossiping about me in the living room behind my back. They would be saying how awful it was to have people like me in Belsize and that I should be in Wymark instead.

I decided to put a lid on their nasty talk.

Draping my blanket loosely around my shoulders, like a stole, I wandered down the hall toward the light and the gay noise.

For the rest of the evening I listened to DeeDee thump out some of her own songs on the grand piano, while the other women sat round playing bridge and chatting, just the way they would in a college dormitory, only most of them were ten years over college age.

One of them, a great, tall, gray-haired woman with a booming bass voice, named Mrs. Savage, had gone to Vassar. I could tell right away she was a society woman, because she talked about nothing but débutantes. It seemed she had two or three daughters, and that year they were all going to be débutantes, only she had loused up their débutante party by signing herself into the asylum.

DeeDee had one song she called “The Milkman” and everybody kept saying she ought to get it published, it would be a hit. First her hands would clop out a little melody on the keys, like the hoofbeats of a slow pony, and next another melody came in, like the milkman whistling, and then the two melodies went on together.

“That's very nice,” I said in a conversational voice.

Joan was leaning on one corner of the piano and leafing through a new issue of some fashion magazine, and DeeDee smiled up at her as if the two of them shared a secret.

“Oh, Esther,” Joan said then, holding up the magazine, “isn't this you?”

DeeDee stopped playing. “Let me see.” She took the magazine, peered at the page Joan pointed to, and then glanced back at me.

“Oh no,” DeeDee said. “Surely not.” She looked at the magazine again, then at me. “Never!”

“Oh, but it is Esther, isn't it, Esther?” Joan said.

Loubelle and Mrs. Savage drifted over, and pretending I knew what it was all about, I moved to the piano with them.

The magazine photograph showed a girl in a strapless evening dress of fuzzy white stuff, grinning fit to split, with a whole lot of boys bending around her. The girl was holding a glass full of a transparent drink and seemed to have her eyes fixed over my shoulder on something that stood behind me, a little to my left. A faint breath fanned the back of my neck. I wheeled round.

The night nurse had come in, unnoticed, on her soft rubber soles.

“No kidding,” she said, “is that really you?”

“No, it's not me. Joan's quite mistaken. It's somebody else.”

“Oh, say it's you!” DeeDee cried. But I pretended I didn't hear her and turned away.Then Loubelle begged the nurse to make a fourth at bridge, and I drew up a chair to watch, although I didn't know the first thing about bridge, because I hadn't had time to pick it up at college, the way all the wealthy girls did.

I stared at the flat poker faces of the kings and jacks and queens and listened to the nurse talking about her hard life. “You ladies don't know what it is, holding down two jobs,” she said. “Nights I'm over here, watching you…”

Loubelle giggled. “Oh, we're good. We're the best of the lot, and you know it.”

“Oh, you're all right.” The nurse passed round a packet of spearmint gum, then unfolded a pink strap from its tinfoil wrapper herself. “You're all right, it's those boobies at the state place that worry me off my feet.”

“Do you work in both places then?” I asked with sudden interest.

“You bet.” The nurse gave me a straight look, and I could see she thought I had no business in Belsize at all. “You wouldn't like it over there one bit, Lady Jane.”

I found it strange that the nurse should call me Lady Jane when she knew what my name was perfectly well.

“Why?” I persisted.

“Oh, it's not a nice place, like this. This is a regular country club. Over there they've got nothing. No OT to talk of, no walks…”

“Why haven't they got walks?”

“Not enough em-ploy-ees.” The nurse scooped in a trick and Loubelle groaned. “Believe me, ladies, when I collect enough do-re-mi to buy me a car, I'm clearing out.”

“Will you clear out of here, too?” Joan wanted to know.

“You bet. Only private cases from then on. When I feel like it…”

But I'd stopped listening.

I felt the nurse had been instructed to show me my alternatives. Either I got better, or I fell, down, down, like a burning, then burnt-out star, from Belsize, to Caplan, to Wymark and finally, after Doctor Nolan and Mrs. Guinea had given me up, to the state place next door.

I gathered my blanket round me and pushed back my chair.

“You cold?” the nurse demanded rudely.

“Yes,” I said, moving off down the hall. “I'm frozen stiff.”

I woke warm and placid in my white cocoon. A shaft of pale, wintry sunlight dazzled the mirror and the glasses on the bureau and the metal doorknobs. From across the hall came the early-morning clatter of the maids in the kitchen, preparing the breakfast trays.

I heard the nurse knock on the door next to mine, at the far end of the hall. Mrs. Savage's sleepy voice boomed out, and the nurse went in to her with the jingling tray. I thought, with a mild stir of pleasure, of the steaming blue china coffee pitcher and the blue china breakfast cup and the fat blue china cream jug with the white daisies on it.

I was beginning to resign myself.

If I was going to fall, I would hang on to my small comforts, at least, as long as I possibly could.

The nurse rapped on my door and, without waiting for an answer, breezed in.

It was a new nurse—they were always changing—with a lean, sand-colored face and sandy hair, and large freckles polka-dotting her bony nose. For some reason the sight of this nurse made me sick at heart, and it was only as she strode across the room to snap up the green blind that I realized part of her strangeness came from being empty-handed.

I opened my mouth to ask for my breakfast tray, but silenced myself immediately. The nurse would be mistaking me for somebody else. New nurses often did that. Somebody in Belsize must be having shock treatments, unknown to me, and the nurse had, quite understandably, confused me with her.

I waited until the nurse had made her little circuit of my room, patting, straightening, arranging, and taken the next tray in to Loubelle one door farther down the hall.

Then I shoved my feet into my slippers, dragging my blanket with me, for the morning was bright, but very cold, and crossed quickly to the kitchen. The pink-uniformed maid was filling a row of blue china coffee pitchers from a great, battered kettle on the stove.

I looked with love at the lineup of waiting trays—the white paper napkins, folded in their crisp, isosceles triangles, each under the anchor of its silver fork, the pale domes of soft-boiled eggs in the blue egg cups, the scalloped glass shells of orange marmalade. All I had to do was reach out and claim my tray, and the world would be perfectly normal.

“There's been a mistake,” I told the maid, leaning over the counter and speaking in a low, confidential tone. “The new nurse forgot to bring me in my breakfast tray today.”

I managed a bright smile, to show there were no hard feelings.

“What's the name?”

“Greenwood. Esther Greenwood.”

“Greenwood, Greenwood, Greenwood.” The maid's warty index finger slid down the list of names of the patients in Belsize tacked upon the kitchen wall. “Greenwood, no breakfast today.”

I caught the rim of the counter with both hands.

“There must be a mistake. Are you sure it's Greenwood?”

“Greenwood,” the maid said decisively as the nurse came in.

The nurse looked questioningly from me to the maid. “Miss Greenwood wanted her tray,” the maid said, avoiding my eyes.

“Oh,” the nurse smiled at me, “you'll be getting your tray later on this morning, Miss Greenwood. You…”

But I didn't wait to hear what the nurse said. I strode blindly out into the hall, not to my room, because that was where they would come to get me, but to the alcove, greatly inferior to the alcove at Caplan, but an alcove, nevertheless, in a quiet corner of the hall,where Joan and Loubelle and DeeDee and Mrs. Savage would not come.

I curled up in the far corner of the alcove with the blanket over my head. It wasn't the shock treatment that struck me, so much as the bare-faced treachery of Doctor Nolan. I liked Doctor Nolan, I loved her, I had given her my trust on a platter and told her everything, and she had promised, faithfully, to warn me ahead of time if ever I had to have another shock treatment.

If she had told me the night before I would have lain awake all night, of course, full of dread and foreboding, but by morning I would have been composed and ready. I would have gone down the hall between two nurses, past DeeDee and Loubelle and Mrs. Savage and Joan, with dignity, like a person coolly resigned to execution.

The nurse bent over me and called my name.

I pulled away and crouched farther into the corner. The nurse disappeared. I knew she would return, in a minute, with two burly men attendants, and they would bear me, howling and hitting, past the smiling audience now gathered in the lounge.

Doctor Nolan put her arm around me and hugged me like a mother.

“You said you'd tell me!” I shouted at her through the dishevelled blanket.

“But I am telling you,” Doctor Nolan said. “I've come specially early to tell you, and I'm taking you over myself.”

I peered at her through swollen lids. “Why didn't you tell me last night?”

“I only thought it would keep you awake. If I'd known…”

“You said you'd tell me.”

“Listen, Esther,” Doctor Nolan said. “I'm going over with you. I'll be there the whole time, so everything will happen right, the way I promised. I'll be there when you wake up, and I'll bring you back again.”

I looked at her. She seemed very upset.

I waited a minute. Then I said, “Promise you'll be there.”

“I promise.”

Doctor Nolan took out a white handkerchief and wiped my face. Then she hooked her arm in my arm, like an old friend, and helped me up, and we started down the hall. My blanket tangled about my feet, so I let it drop, but Doctor Nolan didn't seem to notice. We passed Joan, coming out of her room, and I gave her a meaning, disdainful smile and she ducked back and waited until we had gone by.

Then Doctor Nolan unlocked a door at the end of the hall and led me down a flight of stairs into the mysterious basement corridors that linked, in an elaborate network of tunnels and burrows, all the various buildings of the hospital.

The walls were bright, white lavatory tile with bald bulbs set at intervals in the black ceiling. Stretchers and wheelchairs were beached here and there against the hissing, knocking pipes that ran and branched in an intricate nervous system along the glittering walls. I hung on to Doctor Nolan's arm like death, and every so often she gave me an encouraging squeeze.

Finally, we stopped at a green door with Electrotherapy printed on it in black letters. I held back, and Doctor Nolan waited. Then I said, “Let's get it over with,” and we went in.

The only people in the waiting room besides Doctor Nolan and me were a pallid man in a shabby maroon bathrobe and his accompanying nurse.

“Do you want to sit down?” Doctor Nolan pointed at a wooden bench, but my legs felt full of heaviness, and I thought how hard it would be to hoist myself from a sitting position when the shock treatment people came in.

“I'd rather stand.”

At last a tall, cadaverous woman in a white smock entered the room from an inner door. I thought that she would go up and take the man in the maroon bathrobe, as he was first, so I was surprised when she came toward me.

“Good morning, Doctor Nolan,” the woman said, putting her arm around my shoulders. “Is this Esther?”

“Yes, Miss Huey. Esther, this is Miss Huey, she'll take good care of you. I've told her about you.”

I thought the woman must be seven feet tall. She bent over me in a kind way, and I could see that her face, with the buck teeth protruding in the center, had at one time been badly pitted with acne. It looked like maps of the craters on the moon.

“I think we can take you right away, Esther,” Miss Huey said. “Mr. Anderson won't mind waiting, will you, Mr. Anderson?”

Mr. Anderson didn't say a word, so with Miss Huey's arm around my shoulder, and Doctor Nolan following, I moved into the next room.

Through the slits of my eyes, which I didn't dare open too far, lest the full view strike me dead, I saw the high bed with its white, drumtight sheet, and the machine behind the bed, and the masked person—I couldn't tell whether it was a man or a woman—behind the machine, and other masked people flanking the bed on both sides.

Miss Huey helped me climb up and lie down on my back.

“Talk to me,” I said.

Miss Huey began to talk in a low, soothing voice, smoothing the salve on my temples and fitting the small electric buttons on either side of my head. “You'll be perfectly all right, you won't feel a thing, just bite down…” And she set something on my tongue and in panic I bit down, and darkness wiped me out like chalk on a blackboard.

“今天是你的幸运日哦。”

年轻护士收走我的早餐盘,我继续裹着白毯子,像个在轮船甲板上吹海风的旅客。

“为什么这么说?”

“嗯,不晓得该不该现在就告诉你,今天你就要搬到贝尔赛思楼了。”护士满眼期待地看着我。

“贝尔赛思楼。”我说,“我不能去那里。”

“为什么?”

“我还没准备好。我恢复得还不够好。”

“你当然够好了。别担心,要是你不够好,他们不会让你搬过去。”

护士走后,我开始苦苦思索诺兰医生这一新动作是怎么回事。她想证明什么?我根本没有变化。一切都没有变化。贝尔赛思是疗养院里最好的大楼,离开贝尔赛思的人就可以重回工作岗位,重回学校,重回家庭。

琼应该在贝尔赛思楼,她和她的物理书、高尔夫球杆、羽毛球拍、带着气音的声音一起住在那儿。琼,代表的就是我和即将康复的人之间的那道鸿沟。自打她离开卡普兰楼后,我就从各种小道消息随时了解她的进展。

琼有了散步权,琼有了购物权,琼有了进城权。我将搜集到的所有关于琼的消息聚拢成一个令我感到苦涩的小堆,尽管我表面上为她高兴。她就像以前最美时光的我,是故意来这里跟踪、折磨我的。

等我到贝尔赛思楼,她可能已经走了。

不过,至少在贝尔赛思楼可以忘了电击。卡普兰楼里很多女人都受过电击治疗,我能看出谁做过,因为她们不像我们其他人这样有人送早餐来。我们在房间吃早餐的时候,她们在接受电击。做完后,护士像领着一队小孩一样,带着安静不语、死气沉沉的她们去休息厅吃早餐。

每天清晨,听见护士敲门送早餐的声音,我心中都感到一阵汹涌澎湃的安慰,因为我知道那一天我安全了。我不明白诺兰医生自己没经历过电击治疗,凭什么说做电击的时候可以睡着。她又怎么会知道被电击的人并不像表面上看到的睡着的样子,其实从始至终病人的脑中都是蓝色的电流和巨响?

走廊尽头传来钢琴声。

晚餐时,我静静地坐着,听贝尔赛思楼的女人们叽叽喳喳。她们都打扮入时,妆容精致,有几个已经结了婚。有些人刚进城购物回来,有些则外出访过友,整个晚餐期间她们都不停地说着她们的私房笑话。

“我会给杰克打电话。”一个名叫蒂蒂的女人说,“只怕他不在家。当然喽,我知道可以打去哪里找他,他一定会在那儿。”

我同桌一个矮小活泼的女人笑着说:“我今天差点就搞定了罗林医生。”她睁着炯炯有神的蓝色眼睛,活像个洋娃娃,“我不介意用老波希换个新款式。”

在房间的另一头,琼狼吞虎咽地吃着斯帕姆午餐肉和焗番茄,胃口好得很。她似乎跟这些女人很合得来,对我却冷冰冰的,还带着点鄙夷,她似乎是把我当成一个迟钝的熟人,高攀不上她。

吃过晚餐我打算去睡觉,可正好听见了钢琴声,脑海中浮现琼、蒂蒂、金发女人罗贝尔和其他女人在客厅里背着我讲我闲话、肆意嘲笑我的画面。她们会说贝尔赛思楼有我这种人多可怕啊,我应该待在威玛克楼才对。

我决定让她们闭上鸟嘴。

把毯子往肩上一披,当成个松松垮垮的披肩,我沿着走廊慢慢踱向那片灯火和欢声笑语。

这个夜晚接下来的时间,我都在听蒂蒂用那台大钢琴自弹自唱,其他女人则围坐一圈打牌聊天,就像在大学宿舍里一样。只是她们多半超出大学年龄十岁。

其中有个叫萨维奇太太的,身材高大,头发灰白,声音低沉,毕业于名校瓦萨尔学院。我一眼就看出她是社交名媛,因为她谈的都是少女初入社交界的各种逸事。据说她有两三个女儿,就在她们即将进入社交圈的那年,她自愿进了精神病院,毁了女儿们的初次派对。

蒂蒂创作了首名为《送牛奶工》的歌。大家一直说她应该拿去发表,一定会成为畅销歌曲。她的双手先在琴键上敲出一小段旋律,像小马慢跑的嗒嗒声,接着另一段旋律加入,像送奶工在吹口哨,最后两段旋律合二为一。

“真好听。”我以闲聊的口吻说。

琼靠在钢琴的一角,翻阅着一本刚出版的时尚杂志,蒂蒂抬头冲她一笑,仿佛二人之间有什么心照不宣的秘密。

“哦,埃斯特,”琼举起那本杂志,说,“这不是你吗?”

蒂蒂停下演奏。“让我看看。”她拿走杂志,看着琼指出的那页,然后瞧了我一眼。

“哦,不会吧。”蒂蒂说,“肯定不是。”她又看看杂志,再看看我,“绝不可能!”

“但那就是埃斯特,对不对,埃斯特?”琼说。

罗贝尔和萨维奇太太袅娜而来,我强装信心十足,跟着她们一起走向钢琴。

杂志照片上的女孩穿着毛茸茸的白色无肩带晚礼服,笑得嘴巴简直要裂开,身边一群男生众星拱月似的围着她。那女孩手里端着一杯透明饮料,眼神似乎越过我的肩膀,注视着立在我身后稍偏左的什么东西。一阵微弱的气息吹过我的后颈,我旋即转过身。

夜班护士不知何时进来了,穿着软底胶鞋,没人注意到。

“别开玩笑了。”她说,“真是你吗?”

“不,不是我。琼完全搞错了。那是别人。”

“哦,说吧,是你!”蒂蒂嚷嚷道。我假装没听见,转过身去。罗贝尔求护士跟她们一起打牌,因为这会儿正好三缺一。尽管对桥牌一窍不通,我还是拉了张椅子在一旁观看。大学里我可没时间学这些富家女玩的东西。

我一边看着国王、杰克和王后拉长的扑克脸,一边听着护士大吐生活的苦水。“你们这些女士哪里知道打两份工的辛苦。”她说,“晚上我在这里照看你们……”

罗贝尔咯咯笑道:“哦,我们可乖了。我们是这么多人里最乖的,你知道。”

“对,你们很棒。”护士把一包绿薄荷口香糖分给大家,然后打开自己手上那片的锡纸,拿出一片粉红色的口香糖,“你们都很棒,是那些州立医院的笨蛋让我疲于奔命。”

“这么说,你在两个地方工作?”我忽然很有兴趣。

“可不。”护士直直看着我,我看得出来,她觉得我根本没资格待在贝尔赛思楼。“你绝对不会喜欢待在那种地方的,简女士。”

她明明知道我的名字,可是却叫我简女士,真是奇怪。

“为什么呢?”我追问。

“哦,那里可不比这里舒服。这里就像正规的乡村俱乐部,而那里什么都没有,没有专业治疗,不能散步……”

“为什么不能散步?”

“缺人——手——啊。”护士手里的牌占了先机,罗贝尔发出哀叹。护士接着说:“相信我,小姐们,只要存够了买车的银子,我就不干了。”

“连这里也不做了?”琼问。

“还用说么。以后只接私活,而且想接的时候才接……”

可我已经听不下去了。

我觉得这个护士是被派来暗示我的,给了我两条出路。要么我好转,要么我沉沦下去,一直沉沦,像一颗燃烧殆尽最终崩塌的星星,从贝尔赛思落到卡普兰,再落到威玛克。最终,当诺兰医生和吉尼亚夫人也放弃我时,就落到隔壁的州立疗养院去了。

我裹紧身上的毯子,将椅子向后推。

“冷啦?”护士粗声问道。

“对。”我说着朝走廊走去,“我快冻僵了。”

我在白色的茧中醒来,温暖而平静。镜子、柜子上的眼镜和金属门把上映出一道苍白却炫目的冬日阳光。厨房女工正在准备早餐,嘈杂的声音透过走廊传来。

我听见护士在敲着隔壁的房门,那是走廊尽头了。萨维奇太太睡意浓浓的声音隆隆作响,护士端着早餐盘,叮里当啷地走了进去。我带着淡淡的欢喜,期待热气腾腾的蓝瓷咖啡壶、蓝瓷早餐杯和那只绘有白色雏菊的蓝瓷奶油罐。

我开始放弃自己了。

即使我会沉沦,起码先把握当下这小小的慰藉,有多久算多久。

护士敲了敲门,没等我应门,就一阵风似的进来了。

今天是个新护士——这里的人总是换来换去——清瘦的脸和头发都是浅褐色的,骨感的鼻子上有斑斑点点的大雀斑。不知为什么,她的出现让我心里一慌。我看着她大步穿过房间,打开绿色百叶窗,才突然意识到,这种奇怪的感觉是因为她两手空空。

我想开口问她我的早餐呢,但随即闭上了嘴,她可能把我错认成别人了,新护士总是这样。贝尔赛思楼里一定有我不认识的人在进行电击治疗,这护士把我和其他病人搞混了,这倒情有可原。

我一直等着。护士在我房里巡了一圈,拍拍这里,扯扯那里,整理一下东西,然后拿着早餐托盘走向长廊的下一个门,那是罗贝尔的病房。

我把脚塞进拖鞋,拽着毯子——早上天气虽然晴朗,却非常冷——快速走到对门的厨房。穿着粉色制服的女帮工正把炉子上一只破旧大茶壶里的液体灌入一排蓝瓷咖啡壶中。

我深情款款地注视着列队等候的托盘——白色的餐巾纸,折成简洁的等边三角形,上面摆着银叉子,半熟的水煮蛋从蓝色蛋杯里露出白色的圆顶,扇贝形的玻璃碟子里盛着橙子果酱。我只要伸出手去,拿起属于我的托盘,世界就会恢复如常。

“一定是搞错了。”我靠着柜台,用亲密的口吻低声对女帮工说,“新来的护士今天忘了把早餐拿到我房间。”

我挤出一个开朗的笑容,表示我没有生气。

“你的名字?”

“格林伍德。埃斯特·格林伍德。”

“格林伍德,格林伍德,格林伍德。”女帮工伸出布满肿疣的食指,一路扫过墙上那张贝尔赛思楼病人名单,“格林伍德,今天没有早餐。”

我双手抓住柜台边缘。

“一定是弄错了。你确定是格林伍德没有早餐?”

“格林伍德。”女帮工坚定地说。正在此时,护士进来了。

她狐疑地看看我,又看看女帮工。“格林伍德小姐要拿她的早餐。”女帮工避开我的目光,告诉护士。

“哦。”护士笑着对我说,“你今天迟点吃早餐,格林伍德小姐。你……”

没等护士说完,我就没头没脑地冲入走廊。我没回房间,因为会被他们抓住,我去了走廊上的内凹室。虽然这里远远比不上卡普兰楼的内凹室,但好歹是走廊上的一个僻静角落,琼、罗贝尔、蒂蒂和萨维奇太太都不会来这里。

我用毯子蒙住头,蜷缩在内凹室的角落。真正打击我的不是电击治疗,而是诺兰医生公然的背叛。我喜欢诺兰医生,敬爱她,我对她推心置腹,倾诉一切,她也信誓旦旦跟我保证,如果非得做电击治疗,一定会事先通知我。

如果她昨晚告诉我,我一定会彻夜难眠,忐忑不安,心中充满不祥的预感,但一夜过后,我应该已经镇定下来,准备妥当。当两名护士挟着我穿过走廊,经过蒂蒂、罗贝尔、萨维奇太太和琼的门前时,我会保持尊严,冷静地奔赴“刑场”。

护士弯下腰,唤我的名字。

我挪动身体,又往角落里缩了缩。护士走了,我知道她马上就会带着两个身材魁梧的男看护过来,架着我走过休息厅里那群微笑的看客,任凭我一路嘶喊挣扎。

诺兰医生像母亲一样伸手抱住我。

“你说你会提前告诉我!”我躲在一团凌乱的毯子里对她吼道。

“我就是来告诉你的呀。”诺兰医生说,“我特地一大早来跟你说,而且我会亲自陪你过去。”

我睁开浮肿的眼皮盯着她。“昨晚为什么不告诉我?”

“我怕你会睡不着。要是早知道……”

“你说过,你会提前告诉我的。”

“听我说,埃斯特。”诺兰医生说,“我会陪你去,全程在场,一切都会像我保证过的那样进行。你醒来时就会看见我,我会把你带回来。”

我看着她,她一脸忧心。

等了一会儿,我说:“答应我,你会一直陪着我。”

“我保证。”

诺兰医生拿出一条白手帕擦擦我的脸,然后像老朋友一般挽起我的手臂,扶我起身,走向长廊。毯子纠缠在我脚边,我索性丢开它,不过诺兰医生似乎并未注意到。我们走过琼的房间,她正好出来,我对她露出一个意味深长的冷笑,她急忙躲回房去等着我们走远。

诺兰医生打开长廊尽头的一扇房门,领我走下台阶,进入神秘的地下通道。通道里有许多复杂的地道和洞穴,像张网一样连接着疗养院的各栋建筑。

通道墙壁贴着洗手间用的光面白瓷砖,黑色天花板上间隔有序地挂着光秃秃的灯泡。随处可见担架和轮椅靠在嘶嘶震动的管子上,管子沿着白亮的墙面延伸、分岔,形成一个复杂的神经系统图案。我吓得半死,紧紧攀着诺兰医生的手臂,她不时捏捏我,给我打气。

最后,我们停在一扇绿色的门前,门上印有黑色字体:电击治疗室。我裹足不前,诺兰医生耐心等着。然后我说:“做就做吧。”我们一起走了进去。

等候区里除了诺兰医生和我,还有一个面色惨白、穿着破旧紫褐色浴袍的男子和他的随行护士。

“要不要坐着等?”诺兰医生指着一张木质长椅,但我的双腿重得像灌了铅一样,坐下容易,等电疗人员进来带我时,站起来就难了。

“还是站着好了。”

终于,一个穿着白色工作服、一脸憔悴的高个子女人从里屋走出来。我以为她会带走那个穿紫褐色浴袍的男人,因为他排在我前面,所以她向我走来的时候我真的很吃惊。

“早上好,诺兰医生。”女人说着,伸手揽住我的肩膀,“这就是埃斯特吧?”

“没错,休伊小姐。埃斯特,这位是休伊小姐,她会好好照顾你的,我把你的情况都跟她说了。”

我想,这位休伊女士的身高足有七英尺。她亲切地弯下腰,我看见她的脸,暴突的门牙在中间突出,脸上都是青春痘疤,看起来就像是月球上的环形山分布图。

“我想我们可以先给你做,埃斯特。”休伊小姐说,“安德森先生不会介意稍等一下的,是不是,安德森先生?”

安德森先生没回答,于是休伊小姐搂着我的肩膀走进隔壁房间,诺兰医生紧随其后。

从眯起的眼缝中——我不敢把眼睛睁得太大,怕一下子看清房间会吓死自己——我看见一张高架床,白色床单紧绷如鼓面,床后就是机器,有个人站在机器后面——戴着口罩辨不出男女——床两侧也站了几个戴口罩的人。

休伊小姐扶我爬上床,帮我仰面躺好。

“跟我说话。”我说。

休伊小姐一边轻声细语安抚我,一边将软膏涂在我太阳穴上,然后在我头两侧贴上小小的电流片。“你绝对不会有事的,什么感觉也没有。来,咬住……”她往我舌头上塞了个东西,我惊恐地咬住。黑暗将我像黑板上的粉笔字一样擦去。

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