登陆注册
15283400000003

第3章 THE TRAIL(1)

A curious strength seemed to have come to the man.With almost steady hands he took down the photographs and the Sistine Madonna,packing them neatly away in a box to be left.From beneath his bunk he dragged a large,dusty traveling-bag,and in this he stowed a little food,a few garments,and a great deal of the music scattered about the room.

David,in the doorway,stared in dazed wonder.Gradually into his eyes crept a look never seen there before.

"Father,where are we going?"he asked at last in a shaking voice,as he came slowly into the room.

"Back,son;we're going back."

"To the village,where we get our eggs and bacon?""No,no,lad,not there.The other way.We go down into the valley this time.""The valley--MY valley,with the Silver Lake?""Yes,my son;and beyond--far beyond."The man spoke dreamily.He was looking at a photograph in his hand.It had slipped in among the loose sheets of music,and had not been put away with the others.It was the likeness of a beautiful woman.

For a moment David eyed him uncertainly;then he spoke.

"Daddy,who is that?Who are all these people in the pictures?

You've never told me about any of them except the little round one that you wear in your pocket.Who are they?"Instead of answering,the man turned faraway eyes on the boy and smiled wistfully.

"Ah,David,lad,how they'll love you!How they will love you!

But you mustn't let them spoil you,son.You must remember--remember all I've told you."Once again David asked his question,but this time the man only turned back to the photograph,muttering something the boy could not understand.

After that David did not question any more.He was too amazed,too distressed.He had never before seen his father like this.

With nervous haste the man was setting the little room to rights,crowding things into the bag,and packing other things away in an old trunk.His cheeks were very red,and his eyes very bright.He talked,too,almost constantly,though David could understand scarcely a word of what was said.Later,the man caught up his violin and played;and never before had David heard his father play like that.The boy's eyes filled,and his heart ached with a pain that choked and numbed--though why,David could not have told.Still later,the man dropped his violin and sank exhausted into a chair;and then David,worn and frightened with it all,crept to his bunk and fell asleep.

In the gray dawn of the morning David awoke to a different world.

His father,white-faced and gentle,was calling him to get ready for breakfast.The little room,dismantled of its decorations,was bare and cold.The bag,closed and strapped,rested on the floor by the door,together with the two violins in their cases,ready to carry.

"We must hurry,son.It's a long tramp before we take the cars.""The cars--the real cars?Do we go in those?"David was fully awake now.

"Yes."

"And is that all we're to carry?"

"Yes.Hurry,son."

"But we come back--sometime?"

There was no answer.

"Father,we're coming back--sometime?"David's voice was insistent now.

The man stooped and tightened a strap that was already quite tight enough.Then he laughed lightly.

"Why,of course you're coming back sometime,David.Only think of all these things we're leaving!"When the last dish was put away,the last garment adjusted,and the last look given to the little room,the travelers picked up the bag and the violins,and went out into the sweet freshness of the morning.As he fastened the door the man sighed profoundly;but David did not notice this.His face was turned toward the east--always David looked toward the sun.

"Daddy,let's not go,after all!Let's stay here,"he cried ardently,drinking in the beauty of the morning.

"We must go,David.Come,son."And the man led the way across the green slope to the west.

It was a scarcely perceptible trail,but the man found it,and followed it with evident confidence.There was only the pause now and then to steady his none-too-sure step,or to ease the burden of the bag.Very soon the forest lay all about them,with the birds singing over their heads,and with numberless tiny feet scurrying through the underbrush on all sides.Just out of sight a brook babbled noisily of its delight in being alive;and away up in the treetops the morning sun played hide-and-seek among the dancing leaves.

And David leaped,and laughed,and loved it all,nor was any of it strange to him.The birds,the trees,the sun,the brook,the scurrying little creatures of the forest,all were friends of his.But the man--the man did not leap or laugh,though he,too,loved it all.The man was afraid.

He knew now that he had undertaken more than he could carry out.

Step by step the bag had grown heavier,and hour by hour the insistent,teasing pain in his side had increased until now it was a torture.He had forgotten that the way to the valley was so long;he had not realized how nearly spent was his strength before he even started down the trail.Throbbing through his brain was the question,what if,after all,he could not--but even to himself he would not say the words.

At noon they paused for luncheon,and at night they camped where the chattering brook had stopped to rest in a still,black pool.

The next morning the man and the boy picked up the trail again,but without the bag.Under some leaves in a little hollow,the man had hidden the bag,and had then said,as if casually:--"I believe,after all,I won't carry this along.There's nothing in it that we really need,you know,now that I've taken out the luncheon box,and by night we'll be down in the valley.""Of course!"laughed David."We don't need that."And he laughed again,for pure joy.Little use had David for bags or baggage!

They were more than halfway down the mountain now,and soon they reached a grass-grown road,little traveled,but yet a road.

同类推荐
  • 释签缘起

    释签缘起

    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。
  • 广成集

    广成集

    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。
  • OLIVER TWIST

    OLIVER TWIST

    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。
  • 贞白遗稿

    贞白遗稿

    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。
  • 禁藏

    禁藏

    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
  • 皇帝要修仙

    皇帝要修仙

    李凌穿越了,还当上了皇上,这下子美得要冒泡了。只是为什么皇上不是九五至尊,还要向上仙纳贡?为什么皇族公主要和亲仙宗以求取皇朝太平?为什么群妖祸乱境内,皇族兵士要退避三舍?所谓的至尊皇权,到底是天下独尊?还是只是仙宗扶持起的收集资源的傀儡?李凌说:老子当皇帝,就要天下独尊,万仙来朝!ps:其实这就是一个人带领一群人重掌皇权的故事,其中有欢乐,有悲伤,有逗逼,有杀伐,打造后世被称之为仙朝、神朝的故事。
  • 王俊凯你依居我心

    王俊凯你依居我心

    十岁那年她遇见了他,十年后再度重逢。经历了许许多多的的事后他们还会在一起吗。
  • 与魔共行

    与魔共行

    一个梦想着要娶美人为妻,当丐帮帮主的小乞丐,又如何去实现他的梦想呢?
  • 玄音

    玄音

    他,走路都能被陨石击中,一觉醒来,发现自己来到一片陌生大陆……陨星大帝的出现将引领他走向怎样的巅峰命运的齿轮开始转动他将带给我们怎样的未来让我们一起期待……
  • 我的鬼仙男友

    我的鬼仙男友

    大难不死,必有美男。女骗子苏芊芊遭人报复时意外坠湖,机缘巧合下奇遇湖中男鬼,不仅没有淹死,还因此服下鬼珠,打开了阴阳眼,自此不可思议的事情接踵而来……
  • 生命之蓝

    生命之蓝

    肖川从很小的时候就知道,父亲的心里隐藏着一个天大的秘密,所以他们必须经常的搬家,一直到他20岁生日的时候,家里发生了很多惊心动魄的事。在未婚妻的帮助下,他终于知道了他的身世,之后他开始了他一生中最疯狂的搜寻。在经历了众多的爱恨情仇之后才知道,这只是一个局,故事才刚刚开始......繁华的背后,是一个又一个感人的,虚伪的,执着的,绝望的,默默守候的故事......
  • 铠甲勇士异界帝皇侠之人间浩劫

    铠甲勇士异界帝皇侠之人间浩劫

    宇宙初分之时,超时空玄铁幻化为一个身着宇宙战甲的时空人---宇宙之王,在公元3089年降临地球保护地球消灭入侵者,发现这个时代已经无法拯救,变利用铠甲的空间能力回到以前
  • 如果命运也有形状

    如果命运也有形状

    曾经一直在想,如果命运也有形状,那会是什么?许多年后,当再一次从申这个问题,我想,如果命运真的有形状,那必然是一张网。——网住的不止我一个。
  • 血冥传说

    血冥传说

    无意中穿越的平凡少年,在新的世界彰显不平凡的人生,战凶兽,闹皇城,一剑震天下。更多精彩内容请关注本书,新人新作,请各位多提建议
  • exo之爱上学渣

    exo之爱上学渣

    自己爱的人与他人的婚礼,邀请自己参加。自己爱的人受了伤,自己却几天后才知道。自己曾发过誓永不爱上他们,三年后的自己却违背了誓言。。。。。