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sk.dreamcatcher-第11章

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    Jonesy screwed the red stopper into the Thermos of coffee and put it aside。 Then he pushed the sleeping bag off his lower body like a big quilted sock (wincing at the stiffness in his hip as he did it) and grabbed his gun。 There was no need to chamber a round; producing that loud; deer…frightening click; old habits died hard; and the gun was ready to fire as soon as he thumbed off the safety。 This he did when he was solidly on his feet。 The old wild excitement was gone; but there was a residue … his pulse was up and he weled the rise。 In the wake of his accident; he weled all such reactions … it was as if there were two of him now; the one before he had been knocked flat in the street and the warier; older fellow who had awakened in Mass General 。 。 。 if you could call that slow; drugged awareness being awake。 Sometimes he still heard a voice … whose he didn't know; but not his … calling out Please stop; I can't stand it; give me a shot; where's Marcy; I want Marcy。 He thought of it as death's voice … death had passed him in the street and had then e to the hospital to finish the job; death masquerading as a man (or perhaps it had been a woman; it was hard to tell) in pain; someone who said Marcy but meant Jonesy。
    The idea passed … all of the funny ideas he'd had in the hospital eventually passed … but it left a residue。 Caution was the residue。 He had no memory of Henry calling and telling him to watch himself for the next little while (and Henry hadn't reminded him); but since then Jonesy had watched himself。 He was careful。 Because maybe death was out there; and maybe sometimes it called your name。
    But the past was the past。 He had survived his brush with death; and nothing was dying here this morning but a deer (a buck; he hoped) who had strolled in the wrong direction。
    The sound of the rustling brush and snapping twigs was conu'ng toward him from the southwest; which meant he wouldn't have to shoot around the trunk of the maple … good … and put him upwind。 Even better。 Most of the maple's leaves had fallen; and he had a good; if not perfect; sightline through the interlacing branches。 Jonesy raised the Garand; settled the buttplate into the hollow of his shoulder; and prepared to shoot himself a conversation…piece。
    What saved McCarthy … at least temporarily … was Jonesy's disenchantment with hunting。 What almost got McCarthy killed was a phenomenon George Kilroy; a friend of his father's; had called 'eye…fever'。 Eye…fever; Kilroy claimed; was a form of buck fever; and was probably the second most mon cause of hunting accidents。 'First is drink;' said George Kilroy 。 。 。 and like Jonesy's father; Kilroy knew a bit on that subject; as well。 'First is always drink。'
    Kilroy said that victims of eye…fever were uniformly astounded to discover they had shot a fencepost; or a passing car; or the broad side of a barn; or their own hunting partner (in many cases the partner was a spouse; a sib; or a child)。 'But I saw it;' they would protest; and most of them according to Kilroy; could pass a lie…detector test on the subject。 They had seen the deer or the bear or the wolf; or just the grouse flip…flapping through the high autumn grass。 They had seen it。
    What happened; according to Kilroy; was that these hunters were afflicted by an anxiety to make the shot; to get it over with; one way or the other。 This anxiety became so strong that the brain persuaded the eye that it saw what was not yet visible; in order to end the tension。 This was eye…fever。 And although Jonesy was aware of no particular anxiety … his fingers had been perfectly steady as he screwed the red stopper back into the throat of the Thermos … he admitted later to himself that yes; he might have fallen prey to the malady。
    For one moment he saw the buck clearly at the end of the tunnel made by the interlocking branches … as clearly as he had seen any of the previous sixteen deer (six bucks; ten does) he had brought down over the years at Hole in the Wall。 He saw its brown head; one eye so dark it was almost the black of jeweler's velvet; even part of its rack。
    Shoot now! part of him cried … it was the Jonesy from the other side of the accident; the whole Jonesy。 That one had spoken more frequently in the last month or so; as he began to approach some mythical state which people who had never been hit by a car blithely referred to as 'total recovery'; but he had never spoken as loudly as he did now。 This was a mand; almost a shout。
    And his finger did tighten on the trigger。 It never put on that last pound of pressure (or perhaps it only would have taken another half; a paltry eight ounces); but it did tighten。 The voice that stopped him was that second Jonesy; the one who had awakened in Mass General; doped and disoriented and in pain; not sure of anything anymore except that someone wanted something to stop; someone couldn't stand it … not without a shot; anyway … that someone wanted Marcy。
    No; not yet … wait; watch; this new cautious Jonesy said; and that was the voice he listened to。 He froze in place; most of his weight thrown forward on his good left leg; rifle raised; barrel angled down that interlacing tunnel of light at a cool thirty…five degrees。
    The first flakes of snow came skating down out of the white sky just then; and as they did; Jonesy saw a bright vertical line of orange below the deer's head … it was as if the snow had somehow conjured it up。 For a moment perception simply gave up and what he was seeing over the barrel of his gun became only an unconnected jumble; like paints swirled all together on an artist's palette。 There was no deer and no man; not even any woods; just a puzzling and untidy jumble of black; brown; and orange。
    Then there was more orange; and in a shape that made sense: it was a hat; the kind with flaps you could fold down to cover your ears。 The out…of…staters bought them at L。L。 Bean's for forty…four dollars; each with a little tag inside that said PROUDLY MADE IN THE USA BY UNION LABOR。 Or you could pick one up at Gosselin's for seven bucks。 The tag in a Gosselin's cap just said MADE IN BANGLADESH。
    The hat brought everything into horrible oh…God focus: the brown he had mistaken for a buck's head was the front of a man's wool jacket; the black jeweler's velvet of the buck's eye was a button; and the antlers were only more branches … branches belonging to the very tree in which he was standing。 The man was unwise (Jonesy could not quite bring himself to use the word crazy) to be wearing a brown coat in the woods; but Jonesy was still at a loss to understand how he himself could have made a mistake of such potentially horrifying consequence。 Because the man was also wearing an orange cap; wasn't he? And a bright orange flagman's vest as well; over the admittedly unwise brown coat。 The man was…
    …was a pound of finger…pressure from death。 Maybe less。
    It came home to him in a visceral way then; knocking him clean out of his own body。 For a terrible; brilliant moment he never forgot; he was neither Jonesy Number One; the confident pre…accident Jonesy; or Jonesy Number Two; the more tentative survivor who spent so much of his time in a tiresome state of physical d
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