第 12 节
作者:寻找山吹      更新:2022-11-28 19:12      字数:9322
  little   air   that   she   had   been   strumming   at   the   piano   the   evening   before;
  having bought it downtown that same afternoon。                   It had struck Orville's
  fancy; and she had played it over and over for him。                 Her right forefinger
  was playing the   entire   tune;   and   something   in   the   back of her   head   was
  following it accurately; though the separate thinking process was going on
  just the same。      Her eyes were bright; and wide; and hot。                Suddenly she
  became   conscious   of   the   musical   antics   of   her   finger。   She   folded   it   in
  with its mates; so that her hand became a fist。               She stood up and stared
  down at the clutter of the breakfast table。              The eggthat fateful second
  egghad congealed to a mottled mess of yellow and white。                       The spoon
  lay on the cloth。 His coffee; only half consumed; showed tan with a cold
  gray film over it。 A slice of toast at the left of his plate seemed to grin at
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  her with the semi…circular wedge that he had bitten out of it。
  Terry stared down at these congealing remnants。              Then she laughed; a
  hard high little laugh; pushed a plate away contemptuously with her hand;
  and walked into the sitting room。           On the piano was the piece of music
  (Bennie Gottschalk's great song hit; 〃Hicky Boola〃) which she had been
  playing the night before。        She picked it up; tore it straight across; once;
  placed    the   pieces   back   to  back;   and   tore  it  across   again。   Then     she
  dropped the pieces to the floor。
  〃You bet I'm going;〃 she said; as though concluding a train of thought。
  〃You just bet I'm going。         Right now!〃       And Terry went。        She went for
  much the same reason as that given by the ladye of high degree in the old
  English songshe who had left her lord and bed and board to go with the
  raggle…taggle   gipsies…O!       The   thing   that   was   sending   Terry   Platt   away
  was much more than a conjugal quarrel precipitated by a soft…boiled egg
  and a flap of the arm。       It went so deep that it is necessary to delve back to
  the days when Theresa Platt was Terry Sheehan to get the real significance
  of it; and of the things she did after she went。
  When Mrs。 Orville Platt had been Terry Sheehan; she had played the
  piano; afternoons and evenings; in the orchestra of the Bijou Theater; on
  Cass Street; Wetona; Wisconsin。           Anyone with a name like Terry Sheehan
  would;  perforce;   do   well   anything   she   might   set   out   to   do。 There   was
  nothing of genius in Terry; but there was something of fire; and much that
  was    Irish。   Which     meant    that  the  Watson     Team;    Eccentric    Song    and
  Dance     Artists;   never   needed    a  rehearsal   when    they   played   the  Bijou。
  Ruby      Watson     used   merely     to  approach      Terry   before    the   Monday
  performance;   sheet   music   in   hand;   and   say;   〃Listen;   dearie。  We've   got
  some new business I want to wise you to。              Right here it goes ‘TUM dee…
  dee DUM dee…dee TUM DUM DUM。'                     See?     Like that。    And then Jim
  vamps。      Get me?〃
  Terry; at the piano; would pucker her pretty brow a moment。                   Then;
  〃Like this; you mean?〃
  〃That's it!   You've got it。〃
  〃All right。    I'll tell the drum。〃
  She could play any tune by ear; once heard。               She got the spirit of a
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  thing;    and   transmitted    it。  When      Terry   played    a  martial   number     you
  tapped     the  floor   with   your   foot;  and   unconsciously      straightened     your
  shoulders。      When she played a home…and…mother song you hoped that the
  man next to you didn't know you were crying (which he probably didn't;
  because he was weeping; too)。
  At that time motion pictures had not attained their present virulence。
  Vaudeville;   polite   or   otherwise;   had   not   yet   been   crowded   out   by   the
  ubiquitous film。       The Bijou offered entertainment of the cigar…box…tramp
  variety; interspersed with trick bicyclists; soubrettes in slightly soiled pink;
  trained   seals;   and   Family   Fours   with   lumpy   legs   who   tossed   each   other
  about and struck Goldbergian attitudes。
  Contact with these gave Terry Sheehan a semiprofessional tone。                    The
  more     conservative     of  her  townspeople      looked    at  her   askance。    There
  never had been an evil thing about Terry; but Wetona considered her rather
  fly。  Terry's   hair   was   very   black;   and   she   had   a   fondness   for   those   little;
  close…fitting scarlet turbans。        Terry's mother had died when the girl was
  eight; and Terry's father had been what is known as easygoing。                   A good…
  natured;   lovable;   shiftless   chap   in   the   contracting   business。    He   drove
  around Wetona in a sagging; one…seated cart and never made any money
  because he did honest work and charged as little for it as men who did not。
  His mortar stuck; and his bricks did not crumble; and his lumber did not
  crack。 Riches are not acquired in the contracting business in that way。                 Ed
  Sheehan   and   his   daughter   were   great   friends。     When   he   died   (she   was
  nineteen) they say she screamed once; like a banshee; and dropped to the
  floor。
  After they had straightened out the muddle of books in Ed Sheehan's
  gritty; dusty little office Terry turned her piano…playing talent to practical
  account。      At twenty…one she was still playing at the Bijou; and into her
  face was creeping the first hint of that look of sophistication which comes
  from daily contact with the artificial world of the footlights。
  There are; in a small Midwest town like Wetona; just two kinds of girls。
  Those who go downtown Saturday nights; and those who don't。 Terry; if
  she had not been busy with her job at the Bijou; would have come in the
  first group。     She   craved   excitement。      There was little   chance   to   satisfy
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  such   craving   in   Wetona;   but   she   managed   to   find   certain   means。   The
  traveling men from the Burke House just across the street used to drop in
  at the Bijou for an evening's entertainment。             They usually sat well toward
  the front; and Terry's expert playing; and the gloss of her black hair; and
  her   piquant   profile   as   she   sometimes   looked   up   toward   the   stage   for   a
  signal from one of the performers caught their fancy; and held it。
  She   found   herself;   at   the   end   of   a   year   or   two;   with   a   rather   large
  acquaintance among these peripatetic gentlemen。                  You occasionally saw
  one of them strolling home with her。              Sometimes she went driving with
  one    of  them    of  a  Sunday     afternoon。     And     she   rather   enjoyed    taking
  Sunday   dinner   at   the   Burke   Hotel   with   a   favored   friend。    She   thought
  those   small…town   hotel   Sunday   dinners   the   last   word   in   elegance。      The
  roast    course     was    always     accompanied       by    an   aqueous;     semifrozen
  concoction which the bill of fare revealed as Roman Punch。                      It added a
  royal touch to the repast; even when served with roast pork。
  Terry was twenty…two when Orville Platt; making his initial Wisconsin
  trip   for  the   wholesale     grocery    house    he   represented;    first  beheld    her
  piquant Irish profile; and heard her deft manipulation of the keys。                 Orville
  had the fat man's sense of rhythm and love of music。                   He had a buttery
  tenor voice; too; of which he was rather proud。
  He spent three days in Wetona that first trip; and every evening saw
  him   at   the   Bijou;   first   row;   center。 He   stayed   through   two   shows   each
  time; and before he had been there fifteen minutes Terry was conscious of
  him through the back of her head。            Orville Platt paid no more heed to the
  stage;  and   what   was   occurring   thereon;   than   if   it   had   not   been。 He   sat
  looking at Terry;  and waggling his head in time  to the music。                   Not   that
  Terry was a beauty。         But she was one of those immaculately clean types。
  That look of fragrant cleanliness was her chief charm。                 Her clear; smooth
  skin contributed to it; and the natural penciling