第 3 节
作者:男孩不逛街      更新:2021-02-25 00:10      字数:9321
  contiguity to the church with a stir of defiance。  But he was
  relieved; nevertheless。  His pent…up emotion had found vent; and
  without the nervous excitement that had followed his old
  exaltation。  That night he slept better。  He had found the Lord
  againwith Psalmody!
  The next evening he chanced upon a softer hymn of the same
  simplicity; but with a vein of human tenderness in its aspirations;
  which his more hopeful mood gently rendered。  At the conclusion of
  the first verse he was; however; distinctly conscious of being
  followed by the same twanging sound he had heard on the previous
  night; and which even his untutored ear could recognize as an
  attempt to accompany him。  But before he had finished the second
  verse the unknown player; after an ingenious but ineffectual essay
  to grasp the right chord; abandoned it with an impatient and almost
  pettish flourish; and a loud bang upon the sounding…board of the
  unseen instrument。  Masterton finished it alone。
  With his curiosity excited; however; he tried to discover the
  locality of the hidden player。  The sound evidently came from the
  Mission garden; but in his ignorance of the language he could not
  even interrogate his Indian housekeeper。  On the third night;
  however; his hymn was uninterrupted by any sound from the former
  musician。  A sense of disappointment; he knew not why; came over
  him。  The kindly overture of the unseen player had been a relief to
  his loneliness。  Yet he had barely concluded the hymn when the
  familiar sound again struck his ears。  But this time the musician
  played boldly; confidently; and with a singular skill on the
  instrument。
  The brilliant prelude over; to his entire surprise and some
  confusion; a soprano voice; high; childish; but infinitely quaint
  and fascinating; was mischievously uplifted。  But alas! even to his
  ears; ignorant of the language; it was very clearly a song of
  levity and wantonness; of freedom and license; of coquetry and
  incitement!  Yet such was its fascination that he fancied it was
  reclaimed by the delightful childlike and innocent expression of
  the singer。
  Enough that this tall; gaunt; broad…shouldered man arose and;
  overcome by a curiosity almost as childlike; slipped into the
  garden and glided with an Indian softness of tread toward the
  voice。  The moon shone full upon the ruined Mission wall tipped
  with clusters of dark foliage。  Half hiding; half mingling with one
  of theman indistinct bulk of light…colored huddled fleeces like
  an extravagant bird's nesthung the unknown musician。  So intent
  was the performer's preoccupation that Masterton actually reached
  the base of the wall immediately below the figure without
  attracting its attention。  But his foot slipped on the crumbling
  debris with a snapping of dry twigs。  There was a quick little cry
  from above。  He had barely time to recover his position before the
  singer; impulsively leaning over the parapet; had lost hers; and
  fell outward。  But Masterton was tall; alert; and self…possessed;
  and threw out his long arms。  The next moment they were full of
  soft flounces; a struggling figure was against his breast; and a
  woman's frightened little hands around his neck。  But he had broken
  her fall; and almost instantly; yet with infinite gentleness; he
  released her unharmed; with hardly her crisp flounces crumpled; in
  an upright position against the wall。  Even her guitar; still
  hanging from her shoulder by a yellow ribbon; had bounded elastic
  and resounding against the wall; but lay intact at her satin…
  slippered feet。  She caught it up with another quick little cry;
  but this time more of sauciness than fear; and drew her little hand
  across its strings; half defiantly。
  〃I hope you are not hurt?〃 said the circuit preacher; gravely。
  She broke into a laugh so silvery that he thought it no
  extravagance to liken it to the moonbeams that played over her made
  audible。  She was lithe; yet plump; barred with black and yellow
  and small…waisted like a pretty wasp。  Her complexion in that light
  was a sheen of pearl satin that made her eyes blacker and her
  little mouth redder than any other color could。  She was small;
  but; remembering the fourteen…year…old wife of the shopkeeper; he
  felt that; for all her childish voice and features; she was a grown
  woman; and a sudden shyness took hold of him。
  But she looked pertly in his face; stood her guitar upright before
  her; and put her hands behind her back as she leaned saucily
  against the wall and shrugged her shoulders。
  〃It was the fault of you;〃 she said; in a broken English that
  seemed as much infantine as foreign。  〃What for you not remain to
  yourself in your own CASA?  So it come。  You creep soin the dark…
  …and shake my wall; and I fall。  And she;〃 pointing to the guitar;
  〃is a'most broke!  And for all thees I have only make to you a
  serenade。  Ingrate!〃
  〃I beg your pardon;〃 said Masterton quickly; 〃but I was curious。  I
  thought I might help you; and〃
  〃Make yourself another cat on the wall; eh?  No; one is enough;
  thank you!〃
  A frown lowered on Masterton's brow。  〃You don't understand me;〃 he
  said; bluntly。  〃I did not know WHO was here。〃
  〃Ah; BUENO!  Then it is Pepita Ramirez; you see;〃 she said; tapping
  her bodice with one little finger; 〃all the same; the niece from
  Manuel Garcia; who keeps the Mission garden and lif there。  And
  you?〃
  〃My name is Masterton。〃
  〃How mooch?〃
  〃Masterton;〃 he repeated。
  She tried to pronounce it once or twice desperately; and then shook
  her little head so violently that a yellow rose fastened over her
  ear fell to the ground。  But she did not heed it; nor the fact that
  Masterton had picked it up。
  〃Ah; I cannot!〃 she said; poutingly。  〃It is as deefeecult to make
  go as my guitar with your serenade。〃
  〃Can you not say 'Stephen Masterton'?〃 he asked; more gently; with
  a returning and forgiving sense of her childishness。
  〃Es…stefen?  Ah; ESTEBAN!  Yes; Don Esteban!  BUENO!  Then; Don
  Esteban; what for you sink so melank…olly one night; and one night
  so fierce?  The melank…olly; he ees not so bad; but the fierceah!
  he is weeked!  Ess it how the Americano make always his serenade?〃
  Masterton's brow again darkened。  And his hymn of exultation had
  been mistaken by these peopleby thisthis wanton child!
  〃It was no serenade;〃 he replied; curtly; 〃it was in the praise of
  the Lord!〃
  〃Of how mooch?〃
  〃Of the Lord of Hostsof the Almighty in Heaven。〃  He lifted his
  long arms reverently on high。
  〃Oh!〃 she said; with a frightened look; slightly edging away from
  the wall。  At a secure distance she stopped。  〃Then you are a
  soldier; Don Esteban?〃
  〃No!〃
  〃Then what for you sink 'I am a soldier of the Lord;' and you will
  make die 'in His army'?  Oh; yes; you have said。〃  She gathered up
  her guitar tightly under her arm; shook her small finger at him
  gravely; and said; 〃You are a hoombog; Don Esteban; good a' night;〃
  and began to glide away。
  〃One moment; MissMiss Ramirez;〃 called Masterton。  〃Ithat is
  youyou haveforgotten your rose;〃 he added; feebly; holding up
  the flower。  She halted。
  〃Ah; yes; he have drop; you have pick him up; he is yours。  I have
  drop; you have pick ME up; but I am NOT yours。  Good a' night;
  COMANDANTE Don Esteban!〃
  With a light laugh she ran along beside the wall for a little
  distance; suddenly leaped up and disappeared in one of the largest
  gaps in its ruined and helpless structure。  Stephen Masterton gazed
  after her stupidly; still holding the rose in his hand。  Then he
  threw it away and re…entered his home。
  Lighting his candle; he undressed himself; prayed ferventlyso
  fervently that all remembrance of the idle; foolish incident was
  wiped from his mind; and went to bed。  He slept well and
  dreamlessly。  The next morning; when his thoughts recurred to the
  previous night; this seemed to him a token that he had not deviated
  from his spiritual integrity; it did not occur to him that the
  thought itself was a tacit suspicion。
  So his feet quite easily sought the garden again in the early
  sunshine; even to the wall where she had stood。  But he had not
  taken into account the vivifying freshness of the morning; the
  renewed promise of life and resurrection in the pulsing air and
  potent sunlight; and as he stood there he seemed to see the figure
  of the young girl again leaning against the wall in all the charm
  of her irrepressible and innocent youth。  More than that; he found
  the whole scene re…enacting itself before him; the nebulous drapery
  half hidden in the foliage; the cry and the fall; the momentary
  soft contact of the girl's figure against his own; the clinging
  arms around his neck; the brush and fragrance of her flouncesall
  this came back to him with a strength he had NOT felt when it
  occurred。
  He was turning hurriedly away when his eyes fell upon the yellow
  rose still