友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
热门书库 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

ib.thewaspfactory-第38章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



wn for the hills behind。
  
  
  
  High on a heathered summit; a gentle slope of rock and earth above the Forestry mission's tree line; I sat on a big rock and ate my lunch。 I looked out over the heat…hazed distance; over Porteneil; the pastureland dotted white with sheep; the dunes; the dump; the island (not that you could see it as such; it looked like part of the land); the sands and the sea。 The sky held a few small clouds; it beat blue over the view; fading to paleness towards the horizon and the calm expanse of firth and sea。 Larks sung in the air above me and I watched a buzzard hover as it looked for movement in the grass and heather; broom and whin beneath。 Insects buzzed and danced; and I waved a fan of fern in front of my face to keep them away as I ate my sandwiches and drank my orange juice。
  
  To my left; the mounting peaks of the hills marched off northward; growing gradually higher as they went and fading into grey and blue; shimmering with distance。 I watched the town beneath me through the binoculars; saw trucks and cars make their way along the main road; and followed a train as it headed south; stopping in the town then going on again; snaking across the level ground before the sea。
  
  I like to get away from the island now and again。 Not too far; I still like to be able to see it if possible; but it is good to remove oneself sometimes and get a sense of perspective from a little farther away。 Of course; I know how small a piece of land it is; I'm not a fool。 I know the size of the planet and just how minuscule is that part of it I know。 I've watched too much television and seen too many nature and travel programmes not to appreciate how limited my own knowledge is in terms of first…hand experience of other places; but I don't want to go farther afield; I don't need to travel or see foreign climes or know different people。 I know who I am and I know my limitations。 I restrict my horizons for my own good reasons; fear…oh; yes; I admit it…and a need for reassurance and safety in a world which just so happened to treat me very cruelly at an age before I had any real chance of affecting it。
  
  Also; I have the lesson of Eric。
  
  Eric went away。 Eric; with all his brightness; all his intelligence and sensitivity and promise; left the island and tried to make his way; chose a path and followed it。 That path led to the destruction of most of what he was; changed him into a quite different person in whom the similarities to the sane young man he had been before only appeared obscene。
  
  But he was my brother; and I still loved him in a way。 I loved him despite his alteration the way; I suppose; he had loved me despite my disability。 That feeling of wanting to protect; I suppose; which women are supposed to feel for the young and men are meant to feel for women。
  
  Eric left the island before I was even born; only ing back for holidays; but I think that spiritually he was always there; and when he did return properly; a year after my little accident; when my father thought we both old enough for him to be able to look after the two of us; I didn't resent him being there at all。 On the contrary; we got on well from the start; and I'm sure I must have embarrassed him with my slavish following around and copying; though; being Eric; he was too sensitive to other people's feelings to tell me so and risk hurting me。
  
  When he was sent off to private schools I pined; when he came back on holidays I enthused; I jumped and bubbled and got excited。 Summer after summer we spent on the island; flying kites; making models from wood and plastic; Lego and Meccano and anything else we found lying about; building dams and constructing huts and trenches。 We flew model airplanes; sailed model yachts; built sand…yachts with sails and invented secret societies; codes and languages。 He told me stories; inventing them as he went along。 We played some stories out: brave soldiers in the dunes and fighting; winning and fighting and fighting and sometimes dying。 Those were the only times he deliberately hurt me; when his stories required his own heroic death and I would take it all too seriously as he lay expiring on the grass or the sands; having just blown up the bridge or the dam or the enemy convoy and like as not saved me from death; too; I would choke back tears and punch him lightly as I tried to change the story myself and he refused; slipping away from me and dying; too often dying。
  
  When he had his migraines…sometimes lasting days…I lived on edge; taking cool drinks and some food up to the darkened room on the second floor; creeping in; standing and shaking sometimes if he moaned and shifted on the bed。 I was wretched while he suffered; and nothing meant anything; the games and the stories seemed stupid and pointless; and only throwing stones at bottles or seagulls made much sense。 I went out fishing for gulls; determined things other than Eric should suffer: when he recovered it was like him ing back for the summer allover again; and I was irrepressible。
  
  Finally; though; that outward urge consumed him; as it does any real man; and it took him away from me; to the outside world with all its fabulous opportunities and awful dangers。 Eric decided to follow in his father's footsteps and bee a doctor。 He told me then that nothing much would change; he would still have most of the summer off; even if he would have to stay down in Glasgow to do hospital work or go around with doctors when they visited people; he told me that we would still be the same when we were together; but I knew it wasn't true; and I could see that in his heart he knew it; too。 It was there in his eyes and his words。 He was leaving the island; leaving me。
  
  I couldn't blame him; even then; when I felt it hardest。 He was Eric; he was my brother; he was doing what he had to do; just like the brave soldier who died for the cause; or for me。
  
  How could I doubt or blame him when he had never even started to suggest that he doubted or blamed me ? My God; all those murders; those three young children killed; one a fratricide。 And he simply could not have entertained the idea that I had had a hand in even one of them。 I would have known。 He couldn't have looked me in the face if he had suspected; he was so incapable of deceit。
  
  So south he went; first one year; carried there earlier than most by his brilliant examination results; then another。 The summer in between he came back; but he was changed。 He still tried to get along with me the way he always had; but I could feel it was forced。 He was away from me; his heart was no longer on the island。 It was with the people he knew in the University; with his studies; which he loved; it was in all the rest of the world perhaps; but it was no longer on the island。 No longer with me。
  
  We went out; we flew kites; built dams and so on; but it wasn't the same; he was an adult helping me to enjoy myself; not another boy sharing his own joy。 It wasn't a bad time; and I was still glad he was there; but he was relieved to go after a month to join some of his student friends on a holiday in the South of France。 I 
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!