登陆注册
15447100000031

第31章 CHAPTER V(6)

The circus began at two. Rather than cling to the straps of a crowded car they chose to walk, following the familiar route of the trolley past the car barns and the base-ball park to the bare field under the seared face of Torrey's Hill, where circuses were wont to settle. A sirocco-like breeze from the southwest whirled into eddies the clouds of germladen dust stirred up by the automobiles, blowing their skirts against their legs, and sometimes they were forced to turn, clinging to their hats, confused and giggling, conscious of male glances. The crowd, increasing as they proceeded, was in holiday mood; young men with a newly-washed aspect, in Faber Street suits, chaffed boisterously groups of girls, who retorted with shrill cries and shrieks of laughter; amorous couples strolled, arm in arm, oblivious, as though the place were as empty as Eden; lady-killers with exaggerated square shoulders, wearing bright neckties, their predatory instincts alert, hovered about in eager search of adventure. There were men-killers, too, usually to be found in pairs, in startling costumes they had been persuaded were the latest Paris models,--imitations of French cocottes in Hampton, proof of the smallness of our modern world. Eda regarded them superciliously.

"They'd like you to think they'd never been near a loom or a bobbin!" she exclaimed.

In addition to these more conspicuous elements, the crowd contained sober operatives of the skilled sort possessed of sufficient means to bring hither their families, including the baby; there were section-hands and foremen, slashers, mule spinners, beamers, French-Canadians, Irish, Scotch, Welsh and English, Germans, with only an occasional Italian, Lithuanian, or Jew. Peanut and popcorn men, venders of tamales and Chile-con-carne hoarsely shouted their wares, while from afar could be heard the muffled booming of a band. Janet's heart beat faster. She regarded with a tinge of awe the vast expanse of tent that rose before her eyes, the wind sending ripples along the heavy canvas from circumference to tent pole. She bought the tickets; they entered the circular enclosure where the animals were kept; where the strong beams of the sun, in trying to force their way through the canvas roof, created an unnatural, jaundiced twilight, the weirdness of which was somehow enhanced by the hoarse, amazingly penetrating growls of beasts. Suddenly a lion near them raised a shaggy head, emitting a series of undulating, soul-shaking roars.

"Ah, what's eatin' you?" demanded a thick-necked youth, pretending not to be awestricken by this demonstration.

"Suppose he'd get out!" cried Eda, drawing Janet away.

"I wouldn't let him hurt you, dearie," the young man assured her.

"You!" she retorted contemptuously, but grinned in spite of herself, showing her gums.

The vague feeling of terror inspired by this tent was a part of its fascination, for it seemed pregnant with potential tragedies suggested by the juxtaposition of helpless babies and wild beasts, the babies crying or staring in blank amazement at padding tigers whose phosphorescent eyes never left these morsels beyond the bars. The two girls wandered about, their arms closely locked, but the strange atmosphere, the roars of the beasts, the ineffable, pungent odour of the circus, of sawdust mingled with the effluvia of animals, had aroused an excitement that was slow in subsiding. Some time elapsed before they were capable of taking a normal interest in the various exhibits.

"`Adjutant Bird,'" Janet read presently from a legend on one of the compartments of a cage devoted to birds, and surveying the somewhat dissolute occupant. "Why, he's just like one of those tall mashers who stay at the Wilmot and stand on the sidewalk,--travelling men, you know."

"Say-isn't he?" Eda agreed. "Isn't he pleased with himself, and his feet crossed!"

"And see this one, Eda--he's a 'Harpy Eagle.' There's somebody we know looks just like that. Wait a minute--I'll tell you--it's the woman who sits in the cashier's cage at Grady's."

"If it sure isn't!" said Eda.

"She has the same fluffy, light hair--hairpins can't keep it down, and she looks at you in that same sort of surprised way with her head on one side when you hand in your check."

"Why, it's true to the life!" cried Eda enthusiastically. "She thinks she's got all the men cinched,--she does and she's forty if she's a day."

These comparisons brought them to a pitch of risible enjoyment amply sustained by the spectacle in the monkey cage, to which presently they turned. A chimpanzee, with a solicitation more than human, was solemnly searching a friend for fleas in the midst of a pandemonium of chattering and screeching and chasing, of rattling of bars and trapezes carried on by their companions.

"Well, young ladies," said a voice, "come to pay a call on your relations--have ye?"

Eda giggled hysterically. An elderly man was standing beside them. He was shabbily dressed, his own features were wizened, almost simian, and by his friendly and fatuous smile Janet recognized one of the harmless obsessed in which Hampton abounded.

"Relations!" Eda exclaimed.

"You and me, yes, and her," he answered, looking at Janet, though at first he had apparently entertained some doubt as to this inclusion, "we're all descended from them." His gesture triumphantly indicated the denizens of the cage.

"What are you giving us?" said Eda.

"Ain't you never read Darwin?" he demanded. "If you had, you'd know they're our ancestors, you'd know we came from them instead of Adam and Eve. That there's a fable."

"I'll never believe I came from them," cried Eda, vehement in her disgust.

But Janet laughed. "What's the difference? Some of us aren't any better than monkeys, anyway."

"That's so," said the man approvingly. "That's so." He wanted to continue the conversation, but they left him rather ruthlessly. And when, from the entrance to the performance tent, they glanced back over their shoulders, he was still gazing at his cousins behind the bars, seemingly deriving an acute pleasure from his consciousness of the connection....

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • EXO之只愿你一世安好

    EXO之只愿你一世安好

    仿佛一场梦一般轻轻飘来又悄悄溜走,我一定会挽回你TAO
  • 桃花夫人

    桃花夫人

    穿越到春秋时期,是一国女公子,锦衣玉食衣食无忧,好开森!出嫁遇见姐夫不是好人,怒告诉老公,老公给自己出气,好开森!结果老公卖蠢引来男小三登堂入室……这个,她能申请重新来一次么?【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 双鱼阴阳道

    双鱼阴阳道

    麒麟之后,血海之仇,刻骨之爱,生死之友;王麟执双鱼之法,走阴阳大道,快意恩仇,笑傲天下。
  • 破晓破苍

    破晓破苍

    破晓之日……“破晓后我们就能回去了吗?”“不一定呢?”异界虫洞开启,一片片虚空风暴来临
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 重装武力

    重装武力

    参加军事演习未果的古烈,意外穿越到“末世之战”千年后,科技与“神力”并存的纽因大陆,成为大陆中最为稀有、也最为尊贵的“人类”,并且还拥有了可以模拟枪械的神奇能力。然而,残酷的现实让古烈清醒认识到,比实力更重要的是如何更好的生存下去!于是……
  • 命运之切割的生命

    命运之切割的生命

    犹豫《夜舞蝶》的更新,《命运之切割的生命》在此占时停更,望各位大大与读者多多支持我的新作《夜舞蝶》!
  • 狂战东方

    狂战东方

    在一个群雄割据的混乱时代里,一个背负国仇家恨的落寞少年,两个个性迥然的青春少女,共同演绎一段荡气回肠的恩怨情仇,看坚毅少年如何走出重围,狂战天下!
  • 侠隐于市

    侠隐于市

    杨建辛辛苦苦活了小半辈子,可谓普普通通平平常常,什么都不会,打工赚点钱,好不容易取了个老婆,没多久实在受不了穷,跟人跑了,人财两空,实在受不了打击的他跳入了长江,穿入一个错代世界,时间上比地球晚20年左右,其他都跟地球的同时代差不多。重新开始了一段因为前世经历而与前世不同的人生历程。
  • 淡蓝的时光

    淡蓝的时光

    每个人青春年少的校园时光里,总有一个能让自己去改变的人,我写这本书没有婉转的剧情,没有轰轰烈烈的情节,仅阐述我和一个从2003年我刚上初中时就喜欢的女生一直到现在期中发生的事情。也许我文笔不是很好,但我想把这个很长的故事讲完。此书也献给90-93年的同代的所有人,愿大家最后都能和自己喜欢的人在一起