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双语·返老还童:菲茨杰拉德短篇小说选 冬天的梦 四

所属教程:译林版·返老还童:菲茨杰拉德短篇小说选

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2022年06月27日

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WINTER DREAMS IV

It began like that—and continued, with varying shades of intensity, on such a note right up to the dénouement. Dexter surrendered a part of himself to the most direct and unprincipled personality with which he had ever come in contact. Whatever Judy wanted, she went after with the full pressure of her charm. There was no divergence of method, no jockeying for position or premeditation of effects—there was a very little mental side to any of her affairs. She simply made men conscious to the highest degree of her physical loveliness. Dexter had no desire to change her. Her deficiencies were knit up with a passionate energy that transcended and justified them.

When, as Judy's head lay against his shoulder that first night, she whispered, “I don't know what's the matter with me. Last night I thought I was in love with a man and to-night I think I'm in love with you—”—it seemed to him a beautiful and romantic thing to say. It was the exquisite excitability that for the moment he controlled and owned. But a week later he was compelled to view this same quality in a different light. She took him in her roadster to a picnic supper, and after supper she disappeared, likewise in her roadster, with another man. Dexter became enormously upset and was scarcely able to be decently civil to the other people present. When she assured him that she had not kissed the other man, he knew she was lying—yet he was glad that she had taken the trouble to lie to him.

He was, as he found before the summer ended, one of a varying dozen who circulated about her. Each of them had at one time been favored above all others—about half of them still basked in the solace of occasional sentimental revivals. Whenever one showed signs of dropping out through long neglect, she granted him a brief honeyed hour, which encouraged him to tag along for a year or so longer. Judy made these forays upon the helpless and defeated without malice, indeed half unconscious that there was anything mischievous in what she did.

When a new man came to town every one dropped out—dates were automatically cancelled.

The helpless part of trying to do anything about it was that she did it all herself. She was not a girl who could be“won”in the kinetic sense—she was proof against cleverness, she was proof against charm; if any of these assailed her too strongly she would immediately resolve the affair to a physical basis, and under the magic of her physical splendor the strong as well as the brilliant played her game and not their own. She was entertained only by the gratification of her desires and by the direct exercise of her own charm. Perhaps from so much youthful love, so many youthful lovers, she had come, in self-defense, to nourish herself wholly from within.

Succeeding Dexter's first exhilaration came restlessness and dissatisfaction. The helpless ecstasy of losing himself in her was opiate rather than tonic. It was fortunate for his work during the winter that those moments of ecstasy came infrequently. Early in their acquaintance it had seemed for a while that there was a deep and spontaneous mutual attraction—that first August, for example—three days of long evenings on her dusky veranda, of strange wan kisses through the late afternoon, in shadowy alcoves or behind the protecting trellises of the garden arbors, of mornings when she was fresh as a dream and almost shy at meeting him in the clarity of the rising day. There was all the ecstasy of an engagement about it, sharpened by his realization that there was no engagement. It was during those three days that, for the first time, he had asked her to marry him. She said“maybe some day,” she said“kiss me,” she said“I'd like to marry you,” she said“I love you”—she said—nothing.

The three days were interrupted by the arrival of a New York man who visited at her house for half September. To Dexter's agony, rumor engaged them. The man was the son of the president of a great trust company. But at the end of a month it was reported that Judy was yawning. At a dance one night she sat all evening in a motor-boat with a local beau, while the New Yorker searched the club for her frantically. She told the local beau that she was bored with her visitor, and two days later he left. She was seen with him at the station, and it was reported that he looked very mournful indeed.

On this note the summer ended. Dexter was twenty-four, and he found himself increasingly in a position to do as he wished. He joined two clubs in the city and lived at one of them. Though he was by no means an integral part of the stag-lines at these clubs, he managed to be on hand at dances where Judy Jones was likely to appear. He could have gone out socially as much as he liked—he was an eligible young man, now, and popular with down-town fathers. His confessed devotion to Judy Jones had rather solidified his position. But he had no social aspirations and rather despised the dancing men who were always on tap for the Thursday or Saturday parties and who filled in at dinners with the younger married set. Already he was playing with the idea of going East to New York. He wanted to take Judy Jones with him. No disillusion as to the world in which she had grown up could cure his illusion as to her desirability.

Remember that—for only in the light of it can what he did for her be understood.

Eighteen months after he first met Judy Jones he became engaged to another girl. Her name was Irene Scheerer, and her father was one of the men who had always believed in Dexter. Irene was light-haired and sweet and honorable, and a little stout, and she had two suitors whom she pleasantly relinquished when Dexter formally asked her to marry him.

Summer, fall, winter, spring, another summer, another fall—so much he had given of his active life to the incorrigible lips of Judy Jones. She had treated him with interest, with encouragement, with malice, with indifference, with contempt. She had inflicted on him the innumerable little slights and indignities possible in such a case—as if in revenge for having ever cared for him at all. She had beckoned him and yawned at him and beckoned him again and he had responded often with bitterness and narrowed eyes. She had brought him ecstatic happiness and intolerable agony of spirit. She had caused him untold inconvenience and not a little trouble. She had insulted him, and she had ridden over him, and she had played his interest in her against his interest in his work—for fun. She had done everything to him except to criticise him—this she had not done—it seemed to him only because it might have sullied the utter indifference she manifested and sincerely felt toward him.

When autumn had come and gone again it occurred to him that he could not have Judy Jones. He had to beat this into his mind but he convinced himself at last. He lay awake at night for a while and argued it over. He told himself the trouble and the pain she had caused him, he enumerated her glaring deficiencies as a wife. Then he said to himself that he loved her, and after a while he fell asleep. For a week, lest he imagined her husky voice over the telephone or her eyes opposite him at lunch, he worked hard and late, and at night he went to his office and plotted out his years.

At the end of a week he went to a dance and cut in on her once. For almost the first time since they had met he did not ask her to sit out with him or tell her that she was lovely. It hurt him that she did not miss these things—that was all. He was not jealous when he saw that there was a new man to-night. He had been hardened against jealousy long before.

He stayed late at the dance. He sat for an hour with Irene Scheerer and talked about books and about music. He knew very little about either. But he was beginning to be master of his own time now, and he had a rather priggish notion that he—the young and already fabulously successful Dexter Green—should know more about such things.

That was in October, when he was twenty-five. In January, Dexter and Irene became engaged. It was to be announced in June, and they were to be married three months later.

The Minnesota winter prolonged itself interminably, and it was almost May when the winds came soft and the snow ran down into Black Bear Lake at last. For the first time in over a year Dexter was enjoying a certain tranquility of spirit. Judy Jones had been in Florida, and afterward in Hot Springs, and somewhere she had been engaged, and somewhere she had broken it off. At first, when Dexter had definitely given her up, it had made him sad that people still linked them together and asked for news of her, but when he began to be placed at dinner next to Irene Scheerer people didn't ask him about her any more—they told him about her. He ceased to be an authority on her.

May at last. Dexter walked the streets at night when the darkness was damp as rain, wondering that so soon, with so little done, so much of ecstasy had gone from him. May one year back had been marked by Judy's poignant, unforgivable, yet forgiven turbulence—it had been one of those rare times when he fancied she had grown to care for him. That old penny's worth of happiness he had spent for this bushel of content. He knew that Irene would be no more than a curtain spread behind him, a hand moving among gleaming tea-cups, a voice calling to children… fire and loveliness were gone, the magic of nights and the wonder of the varying hours and seasons…slender lips, down-turning, dropping to his lips and bearing him up into a heaven of eyes.…The thing was deep in him. He was too strong and alive for it to die lightly.

In the middle of May when the weather balanced for a few days on the thin bridge that led to deep summer he turned in one night at Irene's house. Their engagement was to be announced in a week now—no one would be surprised at it. And to-night they would sit together on the lounge at the University Club and look on for an hour at the dancers. It gave him a sense of solidity to go with her—she was so sturdily popular, so intensely“great.”

He mounted the steps of the brownstone house and stepped inside.

“Irene,” he called.

Mrs. Scheerer came out of the living-room to meet him.

“Dexter,” she said, “Irene's gone up-stairs with a splitting headache. She wanted to go with you but I made her go to bed.”

“Nothing serious, I—”

“Oh, no. She's going to play golf with you in the morning. You can spare her for just one night, can't you, Dexter?”

Her smile was kind. She and Dexter liked each other. In the living-room he talked for a moment before he said good-night.

Returning to the University Club, where he had rooms, he stood in the doorway for a moment and watched the dancers. He leaned against the door-post, nodded at a man or two—yawned.

“Hello, darling.”

The familiar voice at his elbow startled him. Judy Jones had left a man and crossed the room to him—Judy Jones, a slender enamelled doll in cloth of gold: gold in a band at her head, gold in two slipper points at her dress's hem. The fragile glow of her face seemed to blossom as she smiled at him. A breeze of warmth and light blew through the room. His hands in the pockets of his dinner-jacket tightened spasmodically. He was filled with a sudden excitement.

“When did you get back?” he asked casually.

“Come here and I'll tell you about it.”

She turned and he followed her. She had been away—he could have wept at the wonder of her return. She had passed through enchanted streets, doing things that were like provocative music. All mysterious happenings, all fresh and quickening hopes, had gone away with her, come back with her now.

She turned in the doorway.

“Have you a car here? If you haven't, I have.”

“I have a coupé.”

In then, with a rustle of golden cloth. He slammed the door. Into so many cars she had stepped—like this—like that—her back against the leather, so—her elbow resting on the door—waiting. She would have been soiled long since had there been anything to soil her—except herself—but this was her own self outpouring.

With an effort he forced himself to start the car and back into the street. This was nothing, he must remember. She had done this before, and he had put her behind him, as he would have crossed a bad account from his books.

He drove slowly down-town and, affecting abstraction, traversed the deserted streets of the business section, peopled here and there where a movie was giving out its crowd or where consumptive or pugilistic youth lounged in front of pool halls. The clink of glasses and the slap of hands on the bars issued from saloons, cloisters of glazed glass and dirty yellow light.

She was watching him closely and the silence was embarrassing, yet in this crisis he could find no casual word with which to profane the hour. At a convenient turning he began to zigzag back toward the University Club.

“Have you missed me?” she asked suddenly.

“Everybody missed you.”

He wondered if she knew of Irene Scheerer. She had been back only a day—her absence had been almost contemporaneous with his engagement.

“What a remark!” Judy laughed sadly—without sadness. She looked at him searchingly. He became absorbed in the dashboard.

“You're handsomer than you used to be,” she said thoughtfully. “Dexter, you have the most rememberable eyes.”

He could have laughed at this, but he did not laugh. It was the sort of thing that was said to sophomores. Yet it stabbed at him.

“I'm awfully tired of everything, darling.” She called every one darling, endowing the endearment with careless, individual comraderie. “I wish you'd marry me.”

The directness of this confused him. He should have told her now that he was going to marry another girl, but he could not tell her. He could as easily have sworn that he had never loved her.

“I think we'd get along,” she continued, on the same note, “unless probably you've forgotten me and fallen in love with another girl.”

Her confidence was obviously enormous. She had said, in effect, that she found such a thing impossible to believe, that if it were true he had merely committed a childish indiscretion—and probably to show off. She would forgive him, because it was not a matter of any moment but rather something to be brushed aside lightly.

“Of course you could never love anybody but me,” she continued. “I like the way you love me. Oh, Dexter, have you forgotten last year?”

“No, I haven't forgotten.”

“Neither have I!”

Was she sincerely moved—or was she carried along by the wave of her own acting?

“I wish we could be like that again,” she said, and he forced himself to answer:

“I don't think we can.”

“I suppose not.…I hear you're giving Irene Scheerer a violent rush.”

There was not the faintest emphasis on the name, yet Dexter was suddenly ashamed.

“Oh, take me home,” cried Judy suddenly; “I don't want to go back to that idiotic dance—with those children.”

Then, as he turned up the street that led to the residence district, Judy began to cry quietly to herself. He had never seen her cry before.

The dark street lightened, the dwellings of the rich loomed up around them, he stopped his coupé in front of the great white bulk of the Mortimer Joneses house, somnolent, gorgeous, drenched with the splendor of the damp moonlight. Its solidity startled him. The strong walls, the steel of the girders, the breadth and beam and pomp of it were there only to bring out the contrast with the young beauty beside him. It was sturdy to accentuate her slightness—as if to show what a breeze could be generated by a butter fly's wing.

He sat perfectly quiet, his nerves in wild clamor, afraid that if he moved he would find her irresistibly in his arms. Two tears had rolled down her wet face and trembled on her upper lip.

“I'm more beautiful than anybody else,” she said brokenly, “why can't I be happy?” Her moist eyes tore at his stability—her mouth turned slowly downward with an exquisite sadness: “I'd like to marry you if you'll have me, Dexter. I suppose you think I'm not worth having, but I'll be so beautiful for you, Dexter.”

A million phrases of anger, pride, passion, hatred, tenderness fought on his lips. Then a perfect wave of emotion washed over him, carrying off with it a sediment of wisdom, of convention, of doubt, of honor. This was his girl who was speaking, his own, his beautiful, his pride.

“Won't you come in?” He heard her draw in her breath sharply.

Waiting.

“All right,” his voice was trembling, “I'll come in.”

冬天的梦 四

爱情就这样开始了——并以这样的节奏一直持续到结束,其间,他们爱得起起伏伏。她这样直截了当、肆无忌惮的性格,德克斯特是见所未见、闻所未闻的。他在一定程度上把自己交付给她了。不管朱迪想要什么,她都会毫不保留地施展她的魅力,不达目的誓不罢休。她的方法一成不变,决不会为了谋取地位或达到预先设定的结果而耍手段——她和任何人谈恋爱几乎都不动什么心思。她只是最大限度地让男人们意识到她的美貌与可爱。德克斯特无意改变她。她的缺陷和她那澎湃的激情是合二为一、不可分割的,而且激情远远超越了缺陷,并让缺陷也似乎变得可爱起来。

就在那第一天晚上,她枕着他的肩膀,小声对他说:“也不知道是怎么回事,昨天晚上,我还以为我爱上了一个人,而今天晚上,我却觉得我爱上了你——”这些话在他看来似乎很美,很浪漫。一时之间他不由得热血沸腾,他努力控制着,幸福地品味着。然而,一个礼拜后,他不得不重新审视她的这种德行。一天晚上,她开着跑车带他去参加野餐派对,吃完晚饭,她开着同一辆跑车带着另一个男人不见了。德克斯特火冒三丈,当着在场的其他人,也几乎无法顾及最起码的斯文了。虽然她向他保证,她没有和那个人接吻,但是他知道她在撒谎——然而,她肯劳神费心地向他撒谎,他还是觉得挺欣慰的。

夏天结束前,他发现围着她团团转的竟有十二个不同的人,他只是这十二个人中的一个。他们中的每一个人都曾经独领风骚,从她那里得到的宠爱超过其他所有人——他们中大约有一半人依然满足于她那一星半点的施舍。一旦谁因为受到长时间的冷落而流露出想要放弃的迹象,她就会与他卿卿我我一番,赏给他一个小时的柔情蜜意,这样就能让他受到鼓舞,继续用一年或者更长的时间黏在她的身边。朱迪将这十二个无计可施、垂头丧气的人玩弄于股掌之间,却也没有恶意,她也的确几乎不知道她的这些作为有任何恶劣之处。

一旦有个新人粉墨登场,其他人都得靠边站——他们的约会就自动取消了。

要想对这一点做些什么的话,最难办的地方在于,局面全凭她掌控。而要想“赢得”她的青睐,靠拍马钻营这一套可行不通——她对小聪明和施展魅力之类的手腕具有免疫力。如果有谁咄咄逼人、来势汹汹的话,她就直接用身体来应付了事,她那令人意乱情迷的身体具有一种魔力:在这种魔力的迷魂阵中,任凭你多么强硬,多么富有才华,都会纷纷落入她温柔的陷阱里,迷失方向,无法自拔。只要她的个人欲望得到满足,充分施展了她的个人魅力,她就会快乐无比了。也许,她从这么多年轻人对她的爱慕中,从这么多年轻的情人身上渐渐地得到了彻底的滋养,而且她也很会自我保护。

在德克斯特的第一次兴奋过后,继之而来的是坐卧不安和不满足。他极度兴奋,难以克制,完全沦陷在她的城堡里,与其说他是中了毒,不如说他是吸食鸦片上了瘾。幸好,那个冬天他还有工作要做,这样极度兴奋的时刻来袭的次数并不是太多。他们相识之初,似乎一度深情地、发自内心地相互倾慕过——比如他们相识那年的八月——在她那夜色朦胧的露台上度过的三个久久不忍分离的漫漫长夜。那些在傍晚时分,在幽静的凉亭里或者在花园里花木掩映的格子棚架后面的那些奇妙销魂的长吻,她带着清新如梦的气息和娇羞欲滴的姿态迎接他的那些曙光初照的清晨。所有的一切都是人们订婚时才会有的狂喜和兴奋,而意识到他们并没有订婚,于是,他就愈加欢喜,愈加激动。就在那三天里,他第一次向她求婚。她的态度风云变幻,捉摸不定,一会儿说“没准哪一天我就会嫁给你”,一会儿又说“吻吻我吧”,一会儿说“我愿意嫁给你,只是……”,一会儿又说“我爱你”——一会儿她——她却什么也不说。

三天后,他们这种情意缠绵的约会便给人搅黄了。九月,一个纽约人到她的住所来访,并在她家待了半个月。令德克斯特苦恼的是,他们俩的绯闻被传得沸沸扬扬。这个纽约人是一家大信托公司总裁的儿子。但是到了月底,又传出朱迪和他已经玩腻了。在一天晚上的舞会上,她和一个当地的情郎在一艘汽艇里坐了一个晚上,而那个纽约人在俱乐部里到处疯狂地寻找她的踪迹。她告诉那个当地的情郎,她厌倦了她的那个客人,于是,两天后,那个客人便离开了。有人看见她送他去了车站,据说,他看起来伤心欲绝。

夏天就在这种基调中结束了。德克斯特二十四岁了,他发现自己的事业做得越来越风生水起。他参加了城里的两个俱乐部,并住在其中的一个俱乐部里。尽管他决非一定要成为这两个俱乐部里没有女伴的单身客,可他还是随时出现在朱迪·琼斯可能去的那个俱乐部里。他本可以随心所欲地到别处去参加社交活动——他现在是个有能耐的年轻人,很受那些家有女儿的商界大佬们的青睐。他对朱迪·琼斯的一片赤诚更让人觉得他对感情专一,更增加了人们对他的好感。然而他在社交方面并没有多大抱负,并且非常瞧不起那些总是泡在礼拜四或者礼拜日舞会上的男人们,他们和已婚的年轻人挤在一起进餐。他已经在考虑去东部的纽约了。他想带朱迪·琼斯一起去。在她从小到大生活的那个世界里,任凭你抱有什么幻想都得成为泡影,然而这一点却始终无法消除他对她抱有的幻想。

请记住这一点——因为只有明白了这一点,我们才能理解他为她付出的一切。

从他上次见到朱迪·琼斯的时候算起,又过了十八个月,他和另一个女孩订婚了。她的名字叫艾琳·谢雷尔,她的父亲是始终信任德克斯特的众多父亲中的一个。艾琳长着浅色头发,温柔大方,稍微有点胖,拥有两个追求者,当德克斯特正式向她求婚的时候,她便同他们和和气气地分手了。

夏秋冬春,四季已逝,接着,夏去秋来——他将如此多的大好年华慷慨地献给了朱迪·琼斯那无药可救的嘴唇。她对他时而兴致勃勃,时而引诱蛊惑,时而心怀叵测,时而冷若冰霜,时而又极尽鄙夷和嘲弄。她就这样让他受尽了冷落和羞辱——仿佛她喜欢过谁就得狠狠地报复谁似的。她对他呼之即来挥之即去,他常常痛心疾首,眯着眼睛疑惑地看着她。她把他带到幸福之巅,也把他带到精神的炼狱。她给他造成了难以启齿的痛苦,令他不胜其烦。她侮辱他,骑在他的头上作威作福,她——为了快活——玩弄他对她的感情,使他无法专心工作。除了谴责他,她对他无所不做。她没有谴责他,他觉得这似乎只是因为,这样做可能会玷污她那表里如一的冷血动物的英名。

秋天来了又去,他终于意识到他不可能拥有朱迪·琼斯了。经过反反复复的思考,他终于说服了自己。他曾经夜不成寐地躺在床上,同自己争论不休,他提醒自己她给他带来的烦恼和痛苦,他列举出她作为妻子的严重缺陷。可是,紧接着,他又喃喃自语,他爱她,爱她,说了一会儿,便睡着了。一个礼拜以来,为了不去想她打电话时的沙哑嗓音,不去想午饭时她从对面投来的目光,他就拼命工作,拼命加班;夜里,他到办公室处理事务以打发时间。

到了周末,他去参加舞会,插进去和她跳了一支舞。这一次,他没有请她一起出去坐坐,也没有对她说她很迷人之类的话,这几乎是自从他们认识以来的第一次。而她身边这样恭维她的可大有人在呢,他不这样说,有什么关系呢。这种情况更让他伤心——一切都结束了。今天晚上,他看见她又有了一个新的男朋友,他也不嫉妒。他早就练就一身刀枪不入的真功夫,早就嫉妒不起来了。

他在舞会上待到很晚,陪着艾琳·谢雷尔坐了一个小时,他们又谈书又谈音乐的。而他对书和音乐都知之甚少。不过,现在他是时间的主人了,可以自由安排自己的时间了。他突然有了一个相当自负的想法,他——年轻又事业有成的德克斯特·格林——应该多培养一些诸如此类的雅趣。

这些事情都发生在十月份,当时他二十五岁。到了一月,德克斯特和艾琳订了婚,订婚的消息准备在六月公布,然后再过三个月他们就准备完婚。

明尼苏达州的冬天长得没完没了,终于等到和风吹拂,积雪融化流入黑熊湖的时候,差不多已经是五月了。德克斯特一年来第一次开始领略心灵上的平静。朱迪·琼斯先去了佛罗里达,后来又去了温泉城,一会儿在某个地方订了婚,一会儿又在某个地方分了手。当初,当德克斯特决心要斩断与她的那段情思的时候,人们依然把他们联系在一起,依然向他打听她的消息,为此他感到很悲哀。然而吃饭的时候,他的位子和艾琳·谢雷尔的位子总是紧挨着,人们就再也不向他打听她的消息了——他们反而把她的消息告诉他。因为关于她的消息,他已经不再是权威了。

终于到了五月。晚上的空气潮湿如雨,德克斯特走在黑漆漆的街上,纳闷地想到,他还几乎没干出什么名堂呢,他就兴奋不起来了,再也找不到那种欣喜若狂的感觉了,似乎在一夜之间,整个人就变了。而一年前的那个五月,他的感情还处于风云激荡之中,还烙下了朱迪那尖酸刻薄、不可饶恕但最终还是被他饶恕了的印记——那时候他还抱着幻想,认为她会渐渐地爱上他,现在想来,这样的时候也还是挺难得的。为了得到那泛滥的满足,他葬送了自己无比珍贵的幸福。他知道艾琳只不过是挂在他身后的窗帘,是一只在闪闪发光的茶杯中间忙活的手,是一个召唤孩子们的声音……此情不再,伊人远去,那些令人意乱情迷的夜晚,那每个季节、每个时辰都不一样的奇妙感受……那向下一弯便落在他唇上的两片薄薄的嘴唇,那让他看一眼便可以飘飘欲仙的眼神……这些印象都深深地埋藏在他的心底,如此刻骨铭心,如此欲罢不能,他自然不会说忘记就忘记。

五月中旬,有几天天气处于向盛夏过渡的平稳期。一天晚上,他来到艾琳家。那时他们订婚的消息一个礼拜后就要宣布了——没有人会对这个消息感到奇怪的。这天晚上,他们会一起坐在大学俱乐部的长沙发上,准备坐上一个小时,作为旁观者看着人们跳舞。和她一起出去,他的心里总是充满了敬意——她太讨人喜欢,太出类拔萃了。

他登上台阶,走进这座上流社会的府邸。

“艾琳。”他喊道。

谢雷尔太太从起居室里出来迎接他。

“德克斯特,”她说,“艾琳头疼得厉害,上楼去了。她本来打算和你一起去的,不过我让她睡觉去了。”

“不要紧,我——”

“哦,别这样。她明天早上就能陪你打高尔夫球。你能批准她休息一个晚上吗,就一个晚上,可以吗,德克斯特?”

她笑容可掬。她和德克斯特互有好感。他们在起居室里聊了一会儿,然后他就道别了。

回到他租住的大学俱乐部,在门口站了一会儿,看着那些跳舞的人。他靠在门柱子上,朝一两个人点头致意——然后打了个哈欠。

“嗨,亲爱的。”

他的肘边传来了那个熟悉的声音,他吓了一跳。朱迪·琼斯从一个男人身边走开,穿过舞厅来到他身边——朱迪·琼斯,一个身材苗条的搪瓷娃娃,浑身金光闪闪的:头上戴着金色发带,裙裾下的两只轻便舞鞋尖也金灿灿的。她对他微微一笑,面如娇花,散发着动人的光晕。舞厅里立刻和风习习,一片光明。他插在晚礼服口袋里的手紧紧地握着,一阵一阵地痉挛,他一下子便激情迸发、心潮澎湃了。

“你什么时候回来的?”他若无其事地问。

“跟我来,我告诉你。”

她转身离去,他紧跟其后。她已渐行渐远——如今却回心转意,他要为这场邂逅痛哭一场才是。她一定在魔法城堡里修炼了一身蛊惑人心的本事。所有的那些曾经有过的神秘体验,所有的那些让人死而复生的新的希望,都曾经随着她的离去而消失,如今又随着她的归来而重现。

她在门口处转身问道:

“你有车吗?如果你没有,我有。”

“我有一辆小轿车。”

她随即上了他的车,身上金光闪闪的衣饰窸窣作响。他关上车门,不由得想,她不知上过多少人的车——这样的——那样的——她总是像这样靠在皮座椅上,胳膊肘搭在车门上等待着。这么久以来,除了她自己,但凡有人想玷污她,她绝对避免不了——因为她本性如此。

他努力收回脱缰的思绪,强迫自己发动车子,上了路。他必须记住,这没有任何意义。她以前也是这么干的,他已经将她抛之脑后了,仿佛将一段写坏了的文字从书中删除了似的。

他装作心不在焉的样子,穿过商业区悄无声息的大街,朝市区缓缓开去。商业区的街上,偶尔有三三两两的人从电影院里走出来,或者有几个小青年在桌球房前面晃荡着,有的蔫得像得了肺痨病似的,有的兴奋得像打了鸡血似的。酒吧传出叮当作响的碰杯声和用手猛击柜台的声音,回廊的彩釉玻璃透出昏暗的灯光。

她定定地瞧着他,沉默使两个人都很尴尬,然而面对这样的情感危机,他却不能随随便便找出几个词来亵渎此时此刻的气氛。在一个方便拐弯的地方,他七拐八绕地开回了大学俱乐部。

“想念我吗?”她突然问。

“大家都想念你。”

他不知道她是否已经听说艾琳·谢雷尔了。她才回来一天——他订婚的时候,差不多是她不在这里的时候。

“说得真好!”朱迪伤心地笑了笑——却看不出有什么可悲伤的。她审视着他,而他则专心致志地看着仪表盘。

“你比以前更帅了,”她若有所思地说,“德克斯特,你的眼睛最让人忘不了。”

听到这些话,他本可以一笑置之,但是他没有笑。这种话应该说给大二学生听。然而,他却中招了。

“我对什么都厌倦透了,亲爱的。”谁都是她的亲爱的,她会将这种代表个人交情笃厚的亲热话漫不经心地赐予每一个人,“我希望你娶我。”

她这样直白倒使他一下子反应不过来了。此时此刻,他应该告诉她,他马上就要和另一个姑娘结婚了,然而他却没能说出口。他倒真想向她发誓说,他从来都没有爱过他那个准新娘。

“我想我们能够和睦相处,”她继续说着,还是那副老样子,“除非你可能已经把我忘了,而爱上了另一个姑娘。”

很显然,她非常自信。实际上,她还说,她觉得他不可能爱上另一个姑娘,但如果他真的爱上了另一个姑娘,那也是犯了小孩子脾气,做了轻率幼稚的事——可能是为了炫耀一下,逗她吃醋。她会原谅他,因为这没什么大不了的,只要轻轻地把它拨到一边就行了。

“当然,除了我,你永远不可能爱上任何人,”她继续说,“我喜欢你爱我的样子。哦,德克斯特,你忘记去年我们在一起的情景了吗?”

“不,我没忘。”

“我也没忘!”

她是动了真情——还是表演太投入而被自己的演技感动了?

“我希望我们还能够像以前那样。”她说。他只好强迫自己做出回答:

“我想我们回不去了。”

“我也觉得我们回不去了……听说你正在对艾琳·谢雷尔穷追猛打呢。”

她一点都没有刻意强调这个名字,然而德克斯特却突然感到羞愧难当。

“好了,送我回家吧,”朱迪突然哭起来,“我不想和——和那些乳臭未干的小屁孩去跳那种愚蠢的舞了。”

于是,他拐了个弯,将车开到通向居民区的那条路上时,朱迪开始自顾自地小声抽泣起来。他以前从来没有看见她哭过。

黑漆漆的大街亮了起来,周围到处都兀立着有钱人的宅邸。他将小轿车停在莫蒂默·琼斯家门前。这座庞大的白色建筑物颇为气派,沐浴在润泽明亮的月光中,显得富丽堂皇。它的坚固程度让他大吃一惊。结实的墙壁,钢做的房梁,宽敞的空间,明亮的灯光,很是壮观。这与他身旁这个青春貌美的人儿形成了强烈的对比。它的雄壮突出了她的娇小轻盈——如同一只小小的蝴蝶的翅膀扇起的一缕微风。

他纹丝不动地坐着,而大脑却在翻江倒海地运转着。他怕稍稍动一下,她就会势不可挡地扑进他的怀抱。两颗泪珠顺着她那湿润的面颊扑簌簌地滚落下来,在她的上嘴唇上颤动着。

“我比任何人都漂亮,”她哽咽着说,“为什么我却过得不幸福?”她那泪汪汪的眼睛粉碎了他的平静——她的嘴唇慢慢地弯下去,一脸楚楚可怜的哀伤。“如果你想拥有我,我很愿意嫁给你,德克斯特。我想,你是不是觉得我不值得你拥有。可是,为了你,我会一直这么漂亮下去的,德克斯特。”

愤怒、骄傲、激动、憎恨、柔情蜜意,这千言万语都在他的唇上挣扎。接着,一阵剧烈的感情浪潮席卷而来,将积存已久的理智、传统舆论、顾虑和荣誉都席卷一空。说话的这个姑娘是他的女人,她属于他,她的美丽是献给他的,她就是他的骄傲。

“怎么不进来?”他听见她猛地吸了一口气。

她翘首以待。

“好,”他声音颤抖着说,“我这就进来。”

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