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

sk.theshining-第29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!



as scrambling up the roof as fast as he could; looking back over his shoulder to see if the wasp's brothers and sisters were rising from the nest he had uncovered to do battle。 If they were; it could be bad; the nest was between him and his ladder; and the trapdoor leading down into the attic was locked from the inside。 The drop was seventy feet from the roof to the cement patio between the hotel and the lawn。
  The clear air above the nest was still and undisturbed。
  Jack whistled disgustedly between his teeth; sat straddling the peak of the roof; and examined his right index finger。 It was swelling already; and he supposed he would have to try and creep past that nest to his ladder so he could go down and put some ice on it。
  It was October 20。 Wendy and Danny had gone down to Sidewinder in the hotel truck (an elderly; rattling Dodge that was still more trustworthy than the VW; which was now wheezing gravely and seemed terminal) to get three gallons of milk and do some Christmas shopping。 It was early to shop; but there was no telling when the snow would e to stay。 There had already been flurries; and in some places the road down from the Overlook was slick with patch ice。
  So far the fall had been almost preternaturally beautiful。 In the three weeks they had been here; golden day had followed golden day。 Crisp; thirty…degree mornings gave way to afternoon temperatures in the low sixties; the perfect temperature for climbing around on the Overlook's gently sloping western roof and doing the shingling。 Jack had admitted freely to Wendy that he could have finished the job four days ago; but he felt no real urge to hurry。 The view from up here was spectacular; even putting the vista from the Presidential Suite in the shade。 More important; the work itself was soothing。 On the roof he felt himself healing from the troubled wounds of the last three years。 On the roof he felt at peace。 Those three years began to seem like a turbulent nightmare。
  The shingles had been badly rotted; some of them blown entirely away by last winter's storms。 He had ripped them all up; yelling 〃Bombs away!〃 as he dropped them over the side; not wanting Danny to get hit in case he had wandered over。
  He had been pulling out bad flashing when the wasp had gotten him。
  The ironic part was that he warned himself each time he climbed onto the roof to keep an eye out for nests; he had gotten that bug bomb just in case。 But this morning the stillness and peace had been so plete that his watchfulness had lapsed。 He had been back in the world of the play he was slowly creating; roughing out whatever scene he would be working on that evening in his head。 The play was going very well; and although Wendy had said little; he knew she was pleased。 He had been roadblocked on the crucial scene between Denker; the sadistic headmaster; and Gary Benson; his young hero; during the last unhappy six months at Stovington; months when the craving for a drink had been so bad that he could barely concentrate on his in…class lectures; let alone his extracurricular literary ambitions。
  But in the last twelve evenings; as he actually sat down in front of the office…model Underwood he had borrowed from the main office downstairs; the roadblock had disappeared under his fingers as magically as cotton candy dissolves on the lips。 He had e up almost effortlessly with the insights into Denker's character that had always been lacking; and he had rewritten most of the second act accordingly; making it revolve around the new scene。 And the progress of the third act; which he had been turning over in his mind when the wasp put an end to cogitation; was ing clearer all the time。 He thought he could rough it out in two weeks; and have a clean copy of the whole damned play by New Year's。
  He had an agent in New York; a tough red…headed woman named Phyllis Sandler who smoked Herbert Tareytons; drank Jim Beam from a paper cup; and thought the literary sun rose and set on Sean O'Casey。 She had marketed three of Jack's short stories; including the Esquire piece。 He had written her about the play; which was called The Little School; describing the basic conflict between Denker; a gifted student who had failed into being the brutal and brutalizing headmaster of a turn…of…the…century New England prep school; and Gary Benson; the student he sees as a younger version of himself。 Phyllis had written back expressing interest and admonishing him to read O'Casey before sitting down to it。 She had written again earlier that year asking where the hell was the play?
  He had written back wryly that The Little School had been indefinitely…and perhaps infinitely…delayed between hand and page 〃in that interesting intellectual Gobi known as the writer's block。〃 Now it looked as if she might actually get the play。 Whether or not it was any good or if it would ever see actual production was another matter。 And he didn't seem to care a great deal about those things。 He felt in a way that the play itself; the whole thing; was the roadblock; a colossal symbol of the bad years at Stovington Prep; the marriage he had almost totaled like a nutty kid behind the wheel of an old jalopy; the monstrous assault on his son; the incident in the parking lot with George Hatfield; an incident he could no longer view as just another sudden and destructive flare of temper。 He now thought that part of his drinking problem had stemmed from an unconscious desire to be free of Stovington and the security he felt was stifling whatever creative urge he had。 He had stopped drinking; but the need to be free had been just as great。 Hence George Hatfield。 Now all that remained of those days was the play on the desk in his and Wendy's bedroom; and when it was done and sent off to Phyllis's hole…in…the…wall New York agency; he could turn to other things。 Not a novel; he was not ready to stumble into the swamp of another three…year undertaking; but surely more short stories。 Perhaps a book of them。
  Moving warily; he scrambled back down the slope of the roof on his hands and knees past the line of demarcation where the fresh green Bird shingles gave way to the section of roof he had just finished clearing。 He came to the edge on the left of the wasps' nest he had uncovered and moved gingerly toward it; ready to backtrack and bolt down his ladder to the ground if things looked too hot。
  He leaned over the section of pulled…out flashing and looked in。
  The nest was in there; tucked into the space between the old flashing and the final roof undercoating of three…by…fives。 It was a damn big one。 The grayish paper ball looked to Jack as if it might be nearly two feet through the center。
  Its shape was not perfect because the space between the flashing and the boards was too narrow; but he thought the little buggers had still done a pretty respectable job。 The surface of the nest was acrawl with the lumbering; slow… moving insects。 They were the big mean ones; not yellow jackets; which are smaller and calmer; but wall wasps。 They had been rendered sludgy and stupid by the fall temperatures; but Jack; who knew about wasps from his childhood; counted himself lucky that he had been stung only once。 And; h
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!