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第33节

the three partners-第33节

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returns。  He will be so happy。〃



〃No!  I'm in a hurry。  I will go on and meet him。〃  He took off his

hat; mopped his crisp; wet hair with his handkerchief; and in a

thick; slow; impeded voice; more suggestive than the outburst he

restrained; said; 〃And as long as my son remains here that man; Van

Loo; must not pass this gate; speak to him; or even see him。  You

hear me?  See to it; you and all the others。  See to it; I say;

or〃  He stopped abruptly; clapped his hat on the swollen veins of

his forehead; turned quickly; passed out without another word

through the archway into the road; and before the good priest could

cross himself or recover from his astonishment the thud of his

horse's hoofs came from the dusty road。



It was ten minutes before his face resumed its usual color。  But in

that ten minutes; as if some of the struggle of his rider had

passed into him; his horse was sweating with exhaustion and fear。

For in that ten minutes; in this new imagination with which he was

cursed; he had killed both Van Loo and his son; and burned the

refectory over the heads of the treacherous priests。  Then; quite

himself again; a voice came to him from the rocky trail above the

road with the hail of 〃Father!〃  He started quickly as a lad of

fifteen or sixteen came bounding down the hillside; and ran towards

him。



〃You passed me and I called to you; but you did not seem to hear;〃

said the boy breathlessly。  〃Then I ran after you。  Have you been

to the Mission?〃



Steptoe looked at him quite as breathlessly; but from a deeper

emotion。  He was; even at first sight; a handsome lad; glowing with

youth and the excitement of his run; and; as the father looked at

him; he could see the likeness to his mother in his clear…cut

features; and even a resemblance to himself in his square; compact

chest and shoulders and crisp; black curls。  A thrill of purely

animal paternity passed over him; the fierce joy of his flesh over

his own flesh!  His own son; by God!  They could not take THAT from

him; they might plot; swindle; fawn; cheat; lie; and steal away his

affections; but there he was; plain to all eyes; his own son; his

very son!



〃Come here;〃 he said in a singular; half…weary and half…protesting

voice; which the boy instantly recognized as his father's accents

of affection。



The boy hesitated as he stood on the edge of the road and pointed

with mingled mischief and fastidiousness to the depths of impalpable

red dust that lay between him and the horseman。  Steptoe saw that he

was very smartly attired in holiday guise; with white duck trousers

and patent leather shoes; and; after the Spanish fashion; wore black

kid gloves。  He certainly was a bit of a dandy; as he had said。  The

father's whole face changed as he wheeled and came before the lad;

who lifted up his arms expectantly。  They had often ridden together

on the same horse。



〃No rides to…day in that toggery; Eddy;〃 he said in the same voice。

〃But I'll get down and we'll go and sit somewhere under a tree and

have some talk。  I've got a bit of a job that's hurrying me; and I

can't waste time。〃



〃Not one of your old jobs; father?  I thought you had quite given

that up?〃



The boy spoke more carelessly than reproachfully; or even

wonderingly; yet; as he dismounted and tethered his horse; Steptoe

answered evasively; 〃It's a big thing; sonny; maybe we'll make our

eternal fortune; and then we'll light out from this hole and have a

gay time elsewhere。  Come along。〃



He took the boy's gloved right hand in his own powerful grasp; and

together they clambered up the steep hillside to a rocky ledge on

which a fallen pine from above had crashed; snapped itself in

twain; and then left its withered crown to hang half down the

slope; while the other half rested on the ledge。  On this they sat;

looking down upon the road and the tethered horse。  A gentle breeze

moved the treetops above their heads; and the westering sun played

hide…and…seek with the shifting shadows。  The boy's face was quick

and alert with all that moved round him; but without thought the

father's face was heavy; except for the eyes that were fixed upon

his son。



〃Van Loo came to the Mission;〃 he said suddenly。



The boy's eyes glittered quickly; like a steel that pierced the

father's heart。  〃Oh;〃 he said simply; 〃then it was the padre told

you?〃



〃How did he know you were here?〃 asked Steptoe。



〃I don't know;〃 said the boy quietly。  〃I think he said something;

but I've forgotten it。  But it was mighty good of him to come; for

I thought; you know; that he did not care to see me after Heavy

Tree; and that he'd gone back on us。〃



〃What did he tell you?〃 continued Steptoe。  〃Did he talk of me or

of your mother?〃



〃No;〃 said the boy; but without any show of interest or sympathy;

〃we talked mostly about old times。〃



〃Tell ME about those old times; Eddy。  You never told me anything

about them。〃



The boy; momentarily arrested more by something in the tone of his

father's voicea weakness he had never noticed beforethan by any

suggestion of his words; said with a laugh; 〃Oh; only about what we

used to do when I was very little and used to call myself his

'little brother;'don't you remember; long before the big strike

on Heavy Tree?  They were gay times we had then。〃



〃And how he used to teach you to imitate other people's

handwriting?〃 said Steptoe。



〃What made you think of that; pop?〃 said the boy; with a slight

wonder in his eyes。  〃Why; that's the very thing we DID talk

about。〃



〃But you didn't do it again; you ain't done it since;〃 said Steptoe

quickly。



〃Lord! no;〃 said the boy contemptuously。  〃There ain't no chance

now; and there wouldn't be any fun in it。  It isn't like the old

times when him and me were all alone; and we used to write letters

as coming from other people to all the boys round Heavy Tree and

the Bar; and sometimes as far as Boomville; to get them to do

things; and they'd think the letters were real; and they'd do 'em。

And there'd be the biggest kind of a row; and nobody ever knew who

did it。〃



Steptoe stared at this flesh of his own flesh half in relief; half

in frightened admiration。  Sitting astride the log; his elbows on

his knees and his gloved hands supporting his round cheeks; the

boy's handsome face became illuminated with an impish devilry which

the father had never seen before。  With dancing eyes he went on。

〃It was one of those very games we played so long ago that he

wanted to see me about and wanted me to keep mum about; for some of

the folks that he played it on were around here now。  It was a game

we got off on one of the big strike partners long before the

strike。  I'll tell YOU; dad; for you know what happened afterwards;

and you'll be glad。  Well; that partnerDemorestwas a kind of

silly; you remembera sort of Miss Nancyish fellowalways gloomy

and lovesick after his girl in the States。  Well; we'd written lots

of letters to girls from their chaps before; and got lots of fun

out of it; but we had even a better show for a game here; for it

happened that Van Loo knew all about the girlthings that even the

man's own partners didn't; for Van Loo's mother was a sort of a

friend of the girl's family; and traveled about with her; and knew

that the girl was spoony over this Demorest; and that they

corresponded。  So; knowing that Van Loo was employed at Heavy Tree;

she wrote to him to find out all about Demorest and how to stop

their foolish nonsense; for the girl's parents didn't want her to

marry a broken…down miner like him。  So we thought we'd do it our

own way; and write a letter to her as if it was from him; don't you

see?  I wanted to make him call her awful names; and say that he

hated her; that he was a murderer and a horse…thief; and that he

had killed a policeman; and that he was thinking of becoming a

Digger Injin; and having a Digger squaw for a wife; which he liked

better than her。  Lord! dad; you ought to have seen what stuff I

made up。〃  The boy burst into a shrill; half…feminine laugh; and

Steptoe; catching the infection; laughed loudly in his own coarse;

brutal fashion。



For some moments they sat there looking in each other's faces;

shaking with sympathetic emotion; the father forgetting the purpose

of his coming there; his rage over Van Loo's visit; and even the

rendezvous to which his horse in the road below was waiting to

bring him; the son forgetting their retreat from Heavy Tree Hill

and his shameful vagabond wanderings with that father in the years

that followed。  The sinking sun stared blankly in their faces; the

protecting pines above them moved by a stronger gust shook a few

cones upon them; an enormous crow mockingly repeated the father's

coarse laugh; and a squirrel scampered away from the strangely

assorted pair as Steptoe; wiping his eyes and forehead with his

pocket…handkerchief; said:



〃A

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