登陆注册
37340700000025

第25章

The girl was looking full upon him all the time with inchoate eyes.

`Oh, I think they're beastly, they're horrid,' she cried.`If I see one, it gives me the creeps all over.If one were to crawl on me, I'm sure I should die -- I'm sure I should.'

`I hope not,' whispered the young Russian.

`I'm sure I should, Maxim,' she asseverated.

`Then one won't crawl on you,' said Gerald, smiling and knowing.In some strange way he understood her.

`It's metaphysical, as Gerald says,' Birkin stated.

There was a little pause of uneasiness.

`And are you afraid of nothing else, Pussum?' asked the young Russian, in his quick, hushed, elegant manner.

`Not weally,' she said.`I am afwaid of some things, but not weally the same.I'm not afwaid of blood.'

`Not afwaid of blood!' exclaimed a young man with a thick, pale, jeering face, who had just come to the table and was drinking whisky.

The Pussum turned on him a sulky look of dislike, low and ugly.

`Aren't you really afraid of blud?' the other persisted, a sneer all over his face.

`No, I'm not,' she retorted.

`Why, have you ever seen blood, except in a dentist's spittoon?' jeered the young man.

`I wasn't speaking to you,' she replied rather superbly.

`You can answer me, can't you?' he said.

For reply, she suddenly jabbed a knife across his thick, pale hand.

He started up with a vulgar curse.

`Show's what you are,' said the Pussum in contempt.

`Curse you,' said the young man, standing by the table and looking down at her with acrid malevolence.

`Stop that,' said Gerald, in quick, instinctive command.

The young man stood looking down at her with sardonic contempt, a cowed, self-conscious look on his thick, pale face.The blood began to flow from his hand.

`Oh, how horrible, take it away!' squealed Halliday, turning green and averting his face.

`D'you feel ill?' asked the sardonic young man, in some concern.`Do you feel ill, Julius? Garn, it's nothing, man, don't give her the pleasure of letting her think she's performed a feat -- don't give her the satisfaction, man -- it's just what she wants.'

`Oh!' squealed Halliday.

`He's going to cat, Maxim,' said the Pussum warningly.The suave young Russian rose and took Halliday by the arm, leading him away.Birkin, white and diminished, looked on as if he were displeased.The wounded, sardonic young man moved away, ignoring his bleeding hand in the most conspicuous fashion.

`He's an awful coward, really,' said the Pussum to Gerald.`He's got such an influence over Julius.'

`Who is he?' asked Gerald.

`He's a Jew, really.I can't bear him.'

`Well, he's quite unimportant.But what's wrong with Halliday?'

`Julius's the most awful coward you've ever seen,' she cried.`He always faints if I lift a knife -- he's tewwified of me.'

`H'm!' said Gerald.

`They're all afwaid of me,' she said.`Only the Jew thinks he's going to show his courage.But he's the biggest coward of them all, really, because he's afwaid what people will think about him -- and Julius doesn't care about that.'

`They've a lot of valour between them,' said Gerald good-humouredly.

The Pussum looked at him with a slow, slow smile.She was very handsome, flushed, and confident in dreadful knowledge.Two little points of light glinted on Gerald's eyes.

`Why do they call you Pussum, because you're like a cat?' he asked her.

`I expect so,' she said.

The smile grew more intense on his face.

`You are, rather; or a young, female panther.'

`Oh God, Gerald!' said Birkin, in some disgust.

They both looked uneasily at Birkin.

`You're silent tonight, Wupert,' she said to him, with a slight insolence, being safe with the other man.

Halliday was coming back, looking forlorn and sick.

`Pussum,' he said, `I wish you wouldn't do these things -- Oh!' He sank in his chair with a groan.

`You'd better go home,' she said to him.

`I will go home,' he said.`But won't you all come along.Won't you come round to the flat?' he said to Gerald.`I should be so glad if you would.Do -- that'll be splendid.I say?' He looked round for a waiter.

`Get me a taxi.' Then he groaned again.`Oh I do feel -- perfectly ghastly!

Pussum, you see what you do to me.'

`Then why are you such an idiot?' she said with sullen calm.

`But I'm not an idiot! Oh, how awful! Do come, everybody, it will be so splendid.Pussum, you are coming.What? Oh but you must come, yes, you must.What? Oh, my dear girl, don't make a fuss now, I feel perfectly -- Oh, it's so ghastly -- Ho! -- er! Oh!'

`You know you can't drink,' she said to him, coldly.

`I tell you it isn't drink -- it's your disgusting behaviour, Pussum, it's nothing else.Oh, how awful! Libidnikov, do let us go.'

`He's only drunk one glass -- only one glass,' came the rapid, hushed voice of the young Russian.

They all moved off to the door.The girl kept near to Gerald, and seemed to be at one in her motion with him.He was aware of this, and filled with demon-satisfaction that his motion held good for two.He held her in the hollow of his will, and she was soft, secret, invisible in her stirring there.

They crowded five of them into the taxi-cab.Halliday lurched in first, and dropped into his seat against the other window.Then the Pussum took her place, and Gerald sat next to her.They heard the young Russian giving orders to the driver, then they were all seated in the dark, crowded close together, Halliday groaning and leaning out of the window.They felt the swift, muffled motion of the car.

The Pussum sat near to Gerald, and she seemed to become soft, subtly to infuse herself into his bones, as if she were passing into him in a black, electric flow.Her being suffused into his veins like a magnetic darkness, and concentrated at the base of his spine like a fearful source of power.Meanwhile her voice sounded out reedy and nonchalant, as she talked indifferently with Birkin and with Maxim.Between her and Gerald was this silence and this black, electric comprehension in the darkness.

同类推荐
  • 华严纲

    华严纲

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 禅宗正脉

    禅宗正脉

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 菩萨戒本疏

    菩萨戒本疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 元始无量度人上品妙经内义

    元始无量度人上品妙经内义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 幽闲鼓吹

    幽闲鼓吹

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 乐平宴

    乐平宴

    这个世上哪怕很多人有机会重活一次,也并不能活的更好。当了半辈子的好人,冷不丁变成一个瞎子的生活并不怎么惬意。
  • 戴上手环,看见鬼

    戴上手环,看见鬼

    一个附着二次元女鬼的运动手环,一个带着神秘力量的蝙蝠纹身……人不能做的,鬼都能做?生活在社会最底层的付炎,为了追到自己喜欢的女神,开始了一场与女鬼的交易。(付炎:这只女鬼怎么越看越像大叔?居然看见美女就流口水……喂,喂,你,你又用我的身体去做了什么坏事?为什么每次都是你享受,我背锅啊?!)PS:封神、斩鬼,一念之间。
  • 衍灵幽梦

    衍灵幽梦

    轮回前,她说:“我们这一生不能相守,忘了我们之间的承诺吧。”他说:“你敢?!生不同衾,死同穴!”轮回后,她说:“道灵当道,灵则为天。天若需我,我必赴之!”他说:“道灵之道,誓要护你,生死相许,至死不渝!”道灵之道,有她与他,有,幽苍儿和冷轩陌相生相守,纵有世间万物与之为敌,也连枝共冢,至死靡它!
  • 玄洲风云录

    玄洲风云录

    叶尘,本是一个没落家族的废物子弟,后得神秘老者相助,修炼之路一路平坦,后来一次意外的情况邂逅了执行任务的落雪宫七仙之首的沐雪芸,两人暗生情愫,沐雪芸在被落雪宫带走的时候在青阳镇留下一对双胞胎,为了救出沐雪芸,叶尘刻苦修炼大闹落雪宫,将沐雪芸救了出来,吃醋的沐雪芸来到青阳镇想要找回自己的孩子,却是发现当初自己留下孩子的地方已经变得荒凉废弃了......叶羽叶欣,就是沐雪芸所留下的孩子,故事,就从两人说起......
  • 都市狂尊

    都市狂尊

    小小修真者坠入凡尘,摇身一变高富帅。美女不要多泡,有一腿就行。富二代不要招惹太多,一堆就行。当个医生治百病,做个道士抓抓鬼。读书当扛把,狂踩异能者,蹂躏吸血鬼,暴虐忍者,力压古武者,看他如何在红尘之中突破枷锁,破碎虚空,证得真仙!
  • 谋商

    谋商

    无商不奸,无奸不商,商者,贱业也,从其业,谋其财。一个不得志的美术生,阴差阳错穿越一个落魄商户之家的庶子。扫地出门本想做点买卖好好养家,却到最后不小心掀了封建礼教,斗了龙头老大做成了大商。“喂!扯什么犊子,老子就是奸商,怎么地!有条大腿,快来抱!”商场诡谲,尔虞我诈,看他祸害一下官府,偶尔逛一逛钱庄。这是一个小子,如何翻云覆雨,在商场中逍遥的故事。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 伊人叹

    伊人叹

    金牌杀手变身金牌宫女,没想到杀手改行伺候人了。若人和冷月彬本来以为到了一个新的地方就以为可平静的度过一生,只可惜造化弄人,偏偏将她二人卷进一场宫廷斗争,不愿意做,却又不得不做,为了喜欢的人,为了好朋友...结识新朋友,智斗皇子,看一个小丫鬟如何斗智斗勇。
  • 俏甜心:恋恋爱成殇

    俏甜心:恋恋爱成殇

    这是一个关于青春的故事。爱情,友情。遇上作为社长的阿皓,她突然心跳的很快,一次次的误解,关心,让他们相爱,但闺蜜突然的背叛,阿皓是否依旧爱着她……
  • 遥遥淑女,君子好逑

    遥遥淑女,君子好逑

    她本是个平凡的女子,却被两个男人所深爱。清冷淡漠如他,捧她在手心,发誓一生小心的呵护;温柔深情如他,在她痛苦迷茫之时,一直给她最温暖的保护。他说,“对你的爱已经像呼吸一样不能停止,即便忘记自己我都不能忘记你。”他说,“我的爱不需要你回报,只要你心里有一个角落给我就好。”纠结的情感,难舍的至爱,历经百转千回,姻缘的红线究竟会把谁和谁牢牢牵系。