友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
3K电子书 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

The Ghost(英文版)-第章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!




  The anti…Lang demonstration had dwindled to just one man on the opposite side of the road。 He had obviously been busy over the past few hours; erecting some kind of installation—low wooden boards on which had been mounted hundreds of terrible images; torn from magazines and newspapers; of burned children; tortured corpses; beheaded hostages; and bomb…flattened neighborhoods。 Interspersed among this collage of death were long lists of names; some handwritten poems; and letters。 It was all protected against the elements by sheets of plastic。 A banner ran across the top; as over a stall at a church jumble sale:FOR AS IN ADAM ALL DIE; EVEN SO IN CHRIST SHALL ALL BE MADE ALIVE 。 Beneath it was a flimsy shelter made of wooden struts and more plastic; containing what looked like a card table and a folding chair。 Sitting patiently at the table was the man whom I’d briefly glimpsed that morning and couldn’t remember。 But I recognized him now; all right。 He was the military type from the hotel bar who’d called me a cunt。

  I came to an uncertain halt and checked left and right for traffic; conscious all the while of him staring at me from only twenty feet away。 And he must have recognized me; because I saw to my horror that he had got to his feet。 “Just one moment!” he shouted; in that peculiar clipped voice; but I was so anxious not to become embroiled in his madness that; even though there was a car coming; I teetered out into the road and began pedaling away from him; standing up to try to get up some speed。 The car hit its horn。 There was a blur of light and noise; and I felt the wind of it as it passed; but when I looked back the protester had given up his pursuit and was standing in the center of the road; staring after me; arms akimbo。

  After that; I cycled hard; conscious I would soon start to lose the light。 The air in my face was cold and damp; but the pumping of my legs kept me warm enough。 I passed the entrance to the airport and followed the perimeter of the state forest; its fire lanes stretching wide and high through the trees like the shadowy aisles of cathedrals。 I couldn’t imagine McAra doing this—he didn’t look the cycling type—and I wondered again what I thought I would achieve; apart from getting drenched。 I toiled on past the white clapboard houses and the neat New England fields; and it didn’t take much effort to visualize it still peopled by women in stern black bonnets and by men who regarded Sunday as the day to put on a suit rather than take one off。

  Just out of West Tisbury I stopped by Scotchman’s Lane to check directions。 The sky was really threatening now; and a wind was getting up。 I almost lost the map。 In fact; I almost turned back。 But I’d come so far; it seemed stupid to give up now; so I eased myself back onto the thin; hard saddle and set off again。 About two miles later the road forked and I parted from the main highway; turning left toward the sea。 The track down to the cove was similar to the approach to the Rhinehart place—scrub oak; ponds; dunes—the only difference being that there were more houses here。 Mostly; they were vacation homes; shuttered up for the winter; but a couple of chimneys fluttered thin streamers of brown smoke; and from one house I heard a radio playing classical music。 A cello concerto。 That was when it started to rain at last—hard; cold pellets of moisture; almost hail; that exploded on my hands and face and carried the smell of the sea in them。 One moment they were plopping sporadically in the pond and rattling in the trees around me; and the next it was as if some great aerial dam had broken and the rain started to sweep down in torrents。 Now I remembered why I disliked cycling: bicycles don’t have roofs; they don’t have windshields; and they don’t have heaters。

  The spindly; leafless scrub oaks offered no hope of shelter; but it was impossible to carry on cycling—I couldn’t see where I was going—so I dismounted and pushed my bike until I came to a low picket fence。 I tried to prop the bike against it; but the machine fell over with a clatter; its back wheel spinning。 I didn’t bother to pick it up but ran up the cinder path; past a flagpole; to the veranda of the house。 Once I was out of the rain; I leaned forward and shook my head vigorously to get the water out of my hair; and immediately a dog started barking and scratching at the door behind me。 I’d assumed the house was empty—it certainly looked it—but a hazy white moon of a face appeared at the dusty window blurred by the screen door; and a moment later the door opened and the dog flew out at me。

  I dislike dogs almost as much as they dislike me; but I did my best to seem charmed by the hideous; yapping white furball; if only to appease its owner; an old…timer of not far off ninety to judge by the liver spots; the stoop; and the still…handsome skull poking through the papery skin。 He was wearing a well…cut sports jacket over a buttoned…up cardigan and had a plaid scarf round his neck。 I made a stammering apology for disturbing his privacy; but he soon cut me off。

  “You’re British?” he said; squinting at me。

  “I am。”

  “That’s okay。 You can shelter。 Sheltering’s free。”

  I didn’t know enough about America to be able to tell from his accent where he was from; or what he might have done。 But I guessed he was a retired professional and fairly well…off—you had to be; living in a place where a shack with an outside lavatory would cost you half a million dollars。

  “British; eh?” he repeated。 He studied me through rimless spectacles。 “You anything to do with this feller Lang?”

  “In a way;” I said。

  “Seems intelligent。 Why’d he want to get himself mixed up with that damn fool in the White House?”

  “That’s what everyone would like to know。”

  “War crimes!” he said; with a roll of his head; and I caught a glimpse of two flesh…colored hearing aids; one in either ear。 “We could all have been charged with those! And maybe we ought to have been。 I don’t know。 I guess I’ll just have to put my trust in a higher judgment。” He chuckled sadly。 “I’ll find out soon enough。”

  I didn’t know what he was talking about。 I was just glad to be standing where it was dry。 We leaned on the weathered handrail and stared out together at the rain while the dog skittered dementedly on its claws around the veranda。 Through a gap in the trees I could just make out the sea—vast and gray; with the white lines of the incoming waves moving remorselessly down it; like interference on an old black…and…white TV。

  “So what brings you to this part of the Vineyard?” asked the old man。

  There seemed no point in lying。 “Someone I knew was washed up on the beach down there;” I said。 “I thought I’d take a look at the spot。 To pay my respects;” I added; in case he thought I was a ghoul。

  “Nowthat was a funny business;” he said。 “You mean the British guy a few weeks ago? Noway should that current have carried him this far west。 Not at this time of year。”

  “What?” I turned to look at him。 Despite his great age; there was still something youthful about his sharp features and keen manner。 His thin white hair was combed straight back off his forehead。 He looked like an antique Boy Scout。

  “I’ve known this sea most of my life。 Hell; a guy tried to throwme off that damn ferry when I was still at the World Bank; and I can tell you this: if he’d succeeded; I wouldn’t have floated ashore in Lambert’s Cove!”

  I was conscious of a drumming in my ears; but whether it was my blood or the downpour hitting the shingle roof I couldn’t tell。

  “Did you mention this to the police?”

  “The police? Young man; at my age; I have better things to do with what little time I have left than spend it with the police! Anyway; I told all this to Annabeth。 She was the one who was dealing with the police。” He saw my blank expression。 “Annabeth Wurmbrand;” he said。 “Everybody knows Annabeth—Mars Wurmbrand’s widow。 She has the house nearest the ocean。” At my failure to react; he became slightly testy。 “She’s the one who told the police about the lights。”

  “The lights?”

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!