第 24 节
作者:负债赌博      更新:2024-05-25 15:05      字数:9322
  from     pillar   to  post;   in  danger     every    night   that   I  slept;  and    never
  comfortable。       One   of   the   Folk   died;   and   his   widow   was   taken   into   the
  cave of another one of the Folk。          I took possession of the abandoned cave;
  but it was wide…mouthed; and after Red…Eye nearly trapped me in it one
  day; I returned to sleeping in the passage of the double…cave。                 During the
  summer; however; I used to stay away from the caves for weeks; sleeping
  in a tree…shelter I made near the mouth of the slough。
  I have said that Lop…Ear was not happy。              My sister was the daughter
  of the   Chatterer;  and she   made   Lop…Ear's   life miserable   for him。           In   no
  other cave was there so much squabbling and bickering。                   If Red…Eye was
  a   Bluebeard;   Lop…Ear   was   hen…pecked;   and   I   imagine   that   Red…Eye   was
  too shrewd ever to covet Lop…Ear's wife。
  Fortunately  for   Lop…Ear;   she   died。      An   unusual thing happened   that
  summer。       Late; almost at the end of it; a second crop of the stringy…rooted
  carrots   sprang   up。   These   unexpected   second…crop   roots   were   young   and
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  juicy   and   tender;   and   for   some   time   the   carrot…patch   was   the   favorite
  feeding…place of the horde。           One morning; early; several score of us were
  there   making   our   breakfast。       On   one   side   of   me   was   the   Hairless   One。
  Beyond   him   were   his   father   and   son;   old   Marrow…Bone   and   Long…Lip。
  On the other side of me were my sister and Lop…Ear; she being next to me。
  There was no warning。            On the sudden; both the Hairless One and my
  sister sprang and screamed。             At the same instant I heard the thud of the
  arrows   that   transfixed   them。        The   next   instant   they   were   down   on   the
  ground; floundering and gasping; and the rest of us were stampeding for
  the trees。     An arrow drove past me and entered the ground; its feathered
  shaft   vibrating   and   oscillating   from   the   impact   of   its   arrested   flight。    I
  remember clearly how I swerved as I ran; to go past it; and that I gave it a
  needlessly   wide   berth。       I   must   have   shied   at   it   as   a   horse   shies   at   an
  object it fears。
  Lop…Ear   took   a   smashing   fall   as   he   ran   beside   me。     An   arrow   had
  driven through the calf of his leg and tripped him。                   He tried to run; but
  was     tripped    and   thrown    by   it  a  second    time。    He    sat   up;  crouching;
  trembling   with   fear;   and   called   to   me   pleadingly。      I   dashed   back。     He
  showed       me    the   arrow。    I   caught     hold   of   it  to  pull   it  out;  but   the
  consequent hurt made him seize my hand and stop me。                         A flying arrow
  passed   between   us。        Another   struck   a   rock;   splintered;   and   fell   to   the
  ground。       This   was   too   much。      I   pulled;   suddenly;   with   all   my   might。
  Lop…Ear screamed as the arrow came out; and struck at me angrily。                          But
  the next moment we were in full flight again。
  I   looked    back。     Old    Marrow…Bone;         deserted    and   far   behind;    was
  tottering silently along in his handicapped race with death。 Sometimes he
  almost fell; and once he did fall; but no more arrows were coming。                          He
  scrambled weakly to his feet。             Age burdened him heavily; but he did not
  want to die。       The three Fire…Men; who were now running forward from
  their    forest   ambush;     could    easily   have   got   him;   but   they   did   not   try。
  Perhaps he was too old and tough。 But they did want the Hairless One and
  my   sister;   for   as   I   looked   back   from   the   trees   I   could   see   the   Fire…Men
  beating in their heads with rocks。 One of the Fire…Men was the wizened
  old hunter who limped。
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  We    went    on   through    the  trees   toward    the   cavesan    excited   and
  disorderly mob that drove before it to their holes all the small life of the
  forest; and that set the blue…jays screaming impudently。                Now that there
  was no immediate danger; Long…Lip waited for his grand…father; Marrow…
  Bone; and with the gap of a generation between them; the old fellow and
  the youth brought up our rear。
  And so it was that Lop…Ear became a bachelor once more。 That night I
  slept with him in the old cave; and our old life of chumming began again。
  The loss of his mate seemed to cause him no grief。                 At least he showed
  no signs of it; nor of need for her。 It was the wound in his leg that seemed
  to bother him; and it was all of a week before he got back again to his old
  spryness。
  Marrow…Bone was the only old member in the horde。 Sometimes; on
  looking   back   upon   him;   when   the   vision   of   him   is   most   clear;   I   note   a
  striking resemblance between him and the father of my father's gardener。
  The gardener's father was very old; very wrinkled and withered; and for all
  the world; when he peered through his tiny; bleary eyes and mumbled with
  his   toothless   gums;   he   looked   and   acted   like   old   Marrow…Bone。      This
  resemblance; as a child; used to frighten me。            I always ran when I saw the
  old man tottering along on his two canes。             Old Marrow…Bone even had a
  bit   of   sparse  and   straggly   white   beard   that   seemed    identical   with   the
  whiskers of the old man。
  As I have said; Marrow…Bone was the only old member of the horde。
  He was an exception。         The Folk never lived to old age。           Middle age was
  fairly rare。    Death by violence was the common way of death。 They died
  as   my   father   had   died;   as   Broken…Tooth   had   died;   as   my   sister   and   the
  Hairless One had just diedabruptly and brutally; in the full possession of
  their faculties; in the full swing and rush of life。          Natural death?       To die
  violently was the natural way of dying in those days。
  No one died of old age among the Folk。             I never knew of a case。 Even
  Marrow…Bone         did  not   die  that  way;   and   he   was   the  only   one   in  my
  generation who had the chance。 A bad rippling; any serious accidental or
  temporary   impairment   of   the   faculties;   meant   swift   death。       As   a   rule;
  these deaths were not witnessed。
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  Members   of   the   horde   simply   dropped   out   of   sight。     They   left   the
  caves in the morning; and they never came back。                They disappearedinto
  the ravenous maws of the hunting creatures。
  This inroad of the Fire People on the carrot…patch was the beginning of
  the end; though we did not know it。 The hunters of the Fire People began
  to appear more frequently as the time went by。                They came in twos and
  threes; creeping silently through the forest; with their flying arrows able to
  annihilate distance and bring down prey from the top of the loftiest tree
  without   themselves   climbing   into   it。      The   bow   and   arrow   was   like   an
  enormous extension of their leaping and striking muscles; so that; virtually;
  they could leap and kill at a hundred feet and more。 This made them far
  more terrible than Saber…Tooth himself。              And then they were very wise。
  They   had   speech   that   enabled   them   more   effectively   to   reason;   and   in
  addition they understood cooperation。
  We Folk came to be very circumspect when we were in the forest。 We
  were     more   alert  and   vigilant   and   timid。   No     longer   were    the  trees  a
  protection to be relied upon。 No longer could we perch on a branch and
  laugh   down   at   our   carnivorous   enemies   on   the   ground。 The   Fire   People
  were   carnivorous;   with   claws   and   fangs   a   hundred   feet   long;   the   most
  terrible of all the hunting animals that ranged the primeval world。
  One morning; before the Folk had dispersed to the forest; there was a
  panic among the water…carriers and those who had gone down to the river
  to drink。     The whole horde fled to the caves。             It was our habit; at such
  times; to flee first and investigate afterward。 We waited in the mouths of
  our caves and watched。           After some time a Fire…Man stepped cautiously
  into the open spac