登陆注册
5360200000009

第9章 ON THE MAKALOA MAT(9)

"Through all the confusion and excitement, Lilolilo, at the rail, who must say last farewells and quip last jokes to many, looked squarely down at me.On his head he wore my ilima lei, which I had made for him and placed there.And into the canoes, to the favoured ones, they on the yacht began tossing their many leis.I had no expectancy of hope...And yet I hoped, in a small wistful way that I know did not show in my face, which was as proud and merry as any there.But Lilolilo did what I knew he would do, what I had known from the first he would do.Still looking me squarely and honestly in the eyes, he took my beautiful ilima lei from his head and tore it across.I saw his lips shape, but not utter aloud, the single word pau" (finish)."Still looking at me, he broke both parts of the lei in two again and tossed the deliberate fragments, not to me, but down overside into the widening water.Pau.It was finished..."For a long space Bella's vacant gaze rested on the sea horizon.Martha ventured no mere voice expression of the sympathy that moistened her own eyes.

"And I rode on that day, up the old bad trail along the Hamakua coast," Bella resumed, with a voice at first singularly dry and harsh."That first day was not so hard.I was numb.I was too full with the wonder of all I had to forget to know that I had to forget it.I spent the night at Laupahoehoe.Do you know, I had expected a sleepless night.Instead, weary from the saddle, still numb, I slept the night through as if I had been dead.

"But the next day, in driving wind and drenching rain! How it blew and poured! The trail was really impassable.Again and again our horses went down.At fist the cowboy Uncle John had loaned me with the horses protested, then he followed stolidly in the rear, shaking his head, and, I know, muttering over and over that I was pupule.The pack horse was abandoned at Kukuihaele.We almost swam up Mud Lane in a river of mud.At Waimea the cowboy had to exchange for a fresh mount.But Hilo lasted through.From daybreak till midnight I was in the saddle, till Uncle John, at Kilohana, took me off my horse, in his arms, and carried me in, and routed the women from their beds to undress me and lomi me, while he plied me with hot toddies and drugged me to sleep and forgetfulness.I know I must have babbled and raved.Uncle John must have guessed.But never to another, nor even to me, did he ever breathe a whisper.Whatever he guessed he locked away in the taboo room of Naomi.

"I do have fleeting memories of some of that day, all a broken- hearted mad rage against fate--of my hair down and whipped wet and stinging about me in the driving rain; of endless tears of weeping contributed to the general deluge, of passionate outbursts and resentments against a world all twisted and wrong, of beatings of my hands upon my saddle pommel, of asperities to my Kilohana cowboy, of spurs into the ribs of poor magnificent Hilo, with a prayer on my lips, bursting out from my heart, that the spurs would so madden him as to make him rear and fall on me and crush my body for ever out of all beauty for man, or topple me off thetrail and finish me at the foot of the palis" (precipices), "writing pau at the end of my name as final as the unuttered pau on Lilolilo's lips when he tore across my ilima lei and dropped it in the sea....

"Husband George was delayed in Honolulu.When he came back to Nahala I was there waiting for him.And solemnly he embraced me, perfunctorily kissed my lips, gravely examined my tongue, decried my looks and state of health, and sent me to bed with hot stove- lids and a dosage of castor oil.Like entering into the machinery of a clock and becoming one of the cogs or wheels, inevitably and remorselessly turning around and around, so I entered back into the grey life of Nahala.Out of bed was Husband George at half after four every morning, and out of the house and astride his horse at five.There was the eternal porridge, and the horrible cheap coffee, and the fresh beef and jerky.I cooked, and baked, and scrubbed.I ground around the crazy hand sewing machine and made my cheap holokus.Night after night, through the endless centuries of two years more, I sat across the table from him until eight o'clock, mending his cheap socks and shoddy underwear, while he read the years' old borrowed magazines he was too thrifty to subscribe to.And then it was bed-time--kerosene must be economized--and he wound his watch, entered the weather in his diary, and took off his shoes, the right shoe first, and placed them, just so, side by side, at the foot of the bed on his side.

"But there was no more of my drawing to Husband George, as had been the promise ere the Princess Lihue invited me on the progress and Uncle John loaned me the horse.You see, Sister Martha, nothing would have happened had Uncle John refused me the horse.But I had known love, and I had known Lilolilo; and what chance, after that, had Husband George to win from me heart of esteem or affection? And for two years, at Nahala, I was a dead woman who somehow walked and talked, and baked and scrubbed, and mended socks and saved kerosene.The doctors said it was the shoddy underwear that did for him, pursuing as always the high- mountain Nahala waters in the drenching storms of midwinter.

"When he died, I was not sad.I had been sad too long already.Nor was I glad.Gladness had died at Hilo when Lilolilo dropped my ilima leiinto the sea and my feet were never happy again.Lilolilo passed within a month after Husband George.I had never seen him since the parting at Hilo.La, la, suitors a many have I had since; but I was like Uncle John.Mating for me was but once.Uncle John had his Naomi room at Kilohana.I have had my Lilolilo room for fifty years in my heart.You are the first, Sister Martha, whom I have permitted to enter that room..."A machine swung the circle of the drive, and from it, across the lawn, approached the husband of Martha.Erect, slender, grey- haired, of graceful military bearing, Roscoe Scandwell was a member of the "Big Five," which, by the interlocking of interests, determined the destinies of all Hawaii.Himself pure haole, New England born, he kissed Bella first, arms around, full-hearty, in the Hawaiian way.His alert eye told him that there had been a woman talk, and, despite the signs of all generousness of emotion, that all was well and placid in the twilight wisdom that was theirs.

"Elsie and the younglings are coming--just got a wireless from their steamer," he announced, after he had kissed his wife."And they'll be spending several days with us before they go on to Maui.""I was going to put you in the Rose Room, Sister Bella," Martha Scandwell planned aloud."But it will be better for her and the children and the nurses and everything there, so you shall have Queen Emma's Room.""I had it last time, and I prefer it," Bella said.

Roscoe Scandwell, himself well taught of Hawaiian love and love- ways, erect, slender, dignified, between the two nobly proportioned women, an arm around each of their sumptuous waists, proceeded with them toward the house.

WAIKIKI, HAWAII.June 6, 1916

同类推荐
  • 丁香花

    丁香花

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 算学启蒙总括

    算学启蒙总括

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 物不迁论辩解

    物不迁论辩解

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Poems1

    Poems1

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 小儿初生诸疾门

    小儿初生诸疾门

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 七城风月

    七城风月

    按年纪他该叫她一声姐姐。可他却是唯一敢直呼她大名还胡搅蛮缠非要娶她的臭小子。她是绣河庄医仙,江湖人称七姐,闻说高冷孤僻,锱铢必较,只救财神,不救瘟神。有钱便来,没钱滚蛋。不料河边洗澡被窥见玉体,还让这个油嘴滑舌的臭小子缠上?收医徒反被撩,他是财神还是瘟神?东朝北域两国秦晋,背后却是一场居心叵测的阴谋,绣河庄陷入难逃的数劫,万事变迁,俩人最终分道扬镳,各不相干。数年后,他金刀铁马,威风凛凛,手刃无数敌兵,驰骋沙场却与她不期而遇,可她已成了他眼下的东朝狗贼。生死不过他举剑一句———顾十七,你无路可走了。一世韶光,一世风月,都因你而浮沉。
  • 福甲天下

    福甲天下

    杨小乐:作者菌,我们的目标是啥?作者:给读者大大们祈福!杨小乐:愿读者大大们学业有成!步步高升!幸福美满!阖家欢乐……
  • 一片冰心

    一片冰心

    有一阵,我厌倦了职场生活,于是决定换个环境。没过多久,我就将一封辞职信递交给了上司。递给辞职信的第二天上午,我的老板就找我谈话。他倚靠在用真皮制作,而且一看就价格不菲的摇摇老板椅上,漫不经心地摇晃着身子,左手夹着一支黑色粗糙棒棒状的巴西雪茄,右手时不时地在老板桌上端起刚泡好的西湖龙井茶,凑到嘴边吹上几口气,抿上一小口。我很规矩地坐在他对面,身体不由得紧张了起来,脸色通红,心跳加速。为了掩饰这种拘束感,我很快地将两手放在腿上,低着头三心二意地抠起了指甲。我此时的这种心态行为,或许对于别人看来,好像是一丝不苟,全神贯注的样子。
  • 366个爱情故事

    366个爱情故事

    每个人每天就要遇见几百个人,多少人你可以记住,一年三百六十五天,每天都喜欢着你,你什么时候喜欢我啊?
  • 鲁迅散文

    鲁迅散文

    《中华散文珍藏版:鲁迅散文》是“中华散文珍藏版”系列丛书之一种,精选了鲁迅经典散文80余篇,如:《秋夜》《从百草园到三味书屋》《藤野先生》《论“费厄泼赖”应该缓刑》等。所选作品代表了作者不同时期散文创作的风格与特色、成就与辉煌。为读广大读者,特别是青年读者提供了一部极有价值的阅读与欣赏范本。
  • 一品灵田

    一品灵田

    引灵遇险的刘毅意外觉醒前世记忆获得一品灵田凭借着种啥都挣钱的灵田刘毅打算做一个闷声发大财佛系穿越者谁曾想刘毅发现“总有刁民想要害朕”于是刘毅今天拣到二阶刺藤妖、明天拣到雷音核桃别人对战灵剑、符纂漫天飞刘毅打架“你等等让我看看那只树妖有空”
  • 365夜故事:春夏秋冬(套装共4册)

    365夜故事:春夏秋冬(套装共4册)

    1.《365夜故事》是由鲁兵先生专为孩子编选的“国宝级”童书。以孩子的视角为选择眼光,以儿童的口语来裁剪语言,便于年轻父母的口述。一经出版,好评如潮,风靡全国,总销超700万册,荣获“国家图书奖”、“全国优秀儿童读物一等奖”,堪称中国童书出版史上的奇迹。书中的故事饱含智慧,纯真童趣,具有永恒的美与韵味,是享誉全球的华语儿童经典。2.本书获得鲁兵先生的作品授权,在选编故事篇目时,因循鲁兵先生的指引,询访诸位儿童文学名家,叶圣陶、赵冰波、野军、顾城……
  • 陈先生与陈太太

    陈先生与陈太太

    我和他在一起,唯美很少,偶尔浪漫,但是这并不妨碍他爱我,我爱他。或许,这才是爱情落实到生活中的样子。粗糙、平淡而无比真实。
  • 中国文化与中国的兵

    中国文化与中国的兵

    华夏文明,源远流长;历代盛衰,根源何在。本书收录了雷海宗先生关于“中国文化”和“中国的兵”的珍贵学术论文,全书分为两编。本书最为独特之处是,通过对于中国兵制的梳理,研究兵的精神,兵的文化。作者以侧锋破题,从“兵文化”入手,试图解答中国文化何以造成千年积弱,堂堂中华何以一再遭人欺凌。今天读来,仍发人深省。
  • 旧爱撩人:腹黑总裁求放过

    旧爱撩人:腹黑总裁求放过

    他是国内新晋钻石王老五,年轻有为零绯闻。而她是五年前害死他妹妹的最大嫌疑人,出国潜逃。再次回来,第一眼见到的就是他。从此,离不开的他的视线,逃不脱他的掌心。媒体蜂拥而至,她答:“也许,穆先生觉得全世界,只有我们最合适,所以一直非我不可。”