登陆注册
15466100000004

第4章 ACT I(3)

CHRISTY -- [dolefully.] I had it in my mind it was a different word and a bigger.

PEGEEN. There's a queer lad. Were you never slapped in school, young fellow, that you don't know the name of your deed?

CHRISTY -- [bashfully.] I'm slow at learning, a middling scholar only.

MICHAEL. If you're a dunce itself, you'd have a right to know that larceny's robbing and stealing. Is it for the like of that you're wanting?

CHRISTY -- [with a flash of family pride.] -- And I the son of a strong farmer (with a sudden qualm), God rest his soul, could have bought up the whole of your old house a while since, from the butt of his tailpocket, and not have missed the weight of it gone.

MICHAEL -- [impressed.] If it's not stealing, it's maybe something big.

CHRISTY -- [flattered.] Aye; it's maybe something big.

JIMMY. He's a wicked-looking young fellow. Maybe he followed after a young woman on a lonesome night.

CHRISTY -- [shocked.] Oh, the saints forbid, mister; I was all times a decent lad.

PHILLY -- [turning on Jimmy.] -- You're a silly man, Jimmy Farrell. He said his father was a farmer a while since, and there's himself now in a poor state. Maybe the land was grabbed from him, and he did what any decent man would do.

MICHAEL -- [to Christy, mysteriously.] -- Was it bailiffs?

CHRISTY. The divil a one.

MICHAEL. Agents?

CHRISTY. The divil a one.

MICHAEL. Landlords?

CHRISTY -- [peevishly.] Ah, not at all, I'm saying. You'd see the like of them stories on any little paper of a Munster town. But I'm not calling to mind any person, gentle, simple, judge or jury, did the like of me. [They all draw nearer with delighted curiosity.]

PHILLY. Well, that lad's a puzzle--the world.

JIMMY. He'd beat Dan Davies' circus, or the holy missioners making sermons on the villainy of man. Try him again, Philly.

PHILLY. Did you strike golden guineas out of solder, young fellow, or shilling coins itself?

CHRISTY. I did not, mister, not sixpence nor a farthing coin.

JIMMY. Did you marry three wives maybe? I'm told there's a sprinkling have done that among the holy Luthers of the preaching north.

CHRISTY -- [shyly.] -- I never married with one, let alone with a couple or three.

PHILLY. Maybe he went fighting for the Boers, the like of the man beyond, was judged to be hanged, quartered and drawn. Were you off east, young fellow, fighting bloody wars for Kruger and the freedom of the Boers?

CHRISTY. I never left my own parish till Tuesday was a week.

PEGEEN -- [coming from counter.] -- He's done nothing, so. (To Christy.) If you didn't commit murder or a bad, nasty thing, or false coining, or robbery, or butchery, or the like of them, there isn't anything that would be worth your troubling for to run from now. You did nothing at all.

CHRISTY -- [his feelings hurt.] -- That's an unkindly thing to be saying to a poor orphaned traveller, has a prison behind him, and hanging before, and hell's gap gaping below.

PEGEEN [with a sign to the men to be quiet.] -- You're only saying it. You did nothing at all. A soft lad the like of you wouldn't slit the windpipe of a screeching sow.

CHRISTY -- [offended.] You're not speaking the truth.

PEGEEN -- [in mock rage.] -- Not speaking the truth, is it? Would you have me knock the head of you with the butt of the broom?

CHRISTY -- [twisting round on her with a sharp cry of horror.] -- Don't strike me. I killed my poor father, Tuesday was a week, for doing the like of that.

PEGEEN [with blank amazement.] -- Is it killed your father?

CHRISTY -- [subsiding.] With the help of God I did surely, and that the Holy Immaculate Mother may intercede for his soul.

PHILLY -- [retreating with Jimmy.] -- There's a daring fellow.

JIMMY. Oh, glory be to God!

MICHAEL -- [with great respect.] -- That was a hanging crime, mister honey.

You should have had good reason for doing the like of that.

CHRISTY -- [in a very reasonable tone.] -- He was a dirty man, God forgive him, and he getting old and crusty, the way I couldn't put up with him at all.

PEGEEN. And you shot him dead?

CHRISTY -- [shaking his head.] -- I never used weapons. I've no license, and I'm a law-fearing man.

MICHAEL. It was with a hilted knife maybe? I'm told, in the big world it's bloody knives they use.

CHRISTY -- [loudly, scandalized.] -- Do you take me for a slaughter-boy?

PEGEEN. You never hanged him, the way Jimmy Farrell hanged his dog from the license, and had it screeching and wriggling three hours at the butt of a string, and himself swearing it was a dead dog, and the peelers swearing it had life?

CHRISTY. I did not then. I just riz the loy and let fall the edge of it on the ridge of his skull, and he went down at my feet like an empty sack, and never let a grunt or groan from him at all.

MICHAEL -- [making a sign to Pegeen to fill Christy's glass.] -- And what way weren't you hanged, mister? Did you bury him then?

CHRISTY -- [considering.] Aye. I buried him then. Wasn't I digging spuds in the field?

MICHAEL. And the peelers never followed after you the eleven days that you're out?

CHRISTY -- [shaking his head.] -- Never a one of them, and I walking forward facing hog, dog, or divil on the highway of the road.

PHILLY -- [nodding wisely.] -- It's only with a common week-day kind of a murderer them lads would be trusting their carcase, and that man should be a great terror when his temper's roused.

MICHAEL. He should then. (To Christy.) And where was it, mister honey, that you did the deed?

CHRISTY -- [looking at him with suspicion.] -- Oh, a distant place, master of the house, a windy corner of high, distant hills.

PHILLY -- [nodding with approval.] -- He's a close man, and he's right, surely.

PEGEEN. That'd be a lad with the sense of Solomon to have for a pot-boy, Michael James, if it's the truth you're seeking one at all.

PHILLY. The peelers is fearing him, and if you'd that lad in the house there isn't one of them would come smelling around if the dogs itself were lapping poteen from the dungpit of the yard.

JIMMY. Bravery's a treasure in a lonesome place, and a lad would kill his father, I'm thinking, would face a foxy divil with a pitchpike on the flags of hell.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 青楼霸唱:皇后娘娘也下堂

    青楼霸唱:皇后娘娘也下堂

    三流码字工穿越成家破人亡的下堂皇后,好姐妹背叛,皇上无情,很好,天骄别的不会,各种宫斗宅斗陷害智谋可是前生吃饭的本事,辅佐明君一统江山,霸唱天下,只是……为毛他要连自己都一并收了?
  • tfboys之那年盛夏

    tfboys之那年盛夏

    这是一个盛夏的故事,无关爱情,只关乎时光。
  • 穿越之嫡女贵妻

    穿越之嫡女贵妻

    生前她是三大世家之富商宁氏嫡长女,却备受侮辱。又莫名被九姨太推入枯井……一朝穿越,她意外地被穿越而来的白宁夏融入身体。既已重生,且携带空间与保护神,既然前世过的如此悲惨,这一世,她必定要活个痛快!
  • 自治官书

    自治官书

    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。
  • 祭路

    祭路

    本文没有什么灵异的,是我的错不小心写成了女主的,是我的错随缘断更,更只更1K,是我的错所以!如果读者大佬看了,觉得还凑和,点了收藏作者菌在此谢谢大佬o(*////▽////*)q
  • 永恒天尊

    永恒天尊

    天逆者,逆天道,降雷劫!顺我之人,我陈天让他与天同寿。逆我之人,我让他永世不得超生!且看陈天如何一步步踏上强者之路,如何逆天改命,如何超脱轮回!ps:(本书是一本情节快速发展书,勿喷!)
  • 齐民要术

    齐民要术

    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。
  • 普罗诺埃的拜占庭

    普罗诺埃的拜占庭

    (PS:讨厌铺垫的请直接跳过第一卷)这是一个关于帝国、认同、与全新的开始的故事。
  • 月下伊人倾城笑

    月下伊人倾城笑

    绪音组合,由队长醉言、副队长霞子,及成员小清、睿妍、林希、雨芊、逸子、冷赫、阳阳组成。她们是一群有梦有追求的女孩,她们酷爱音乐,她们的相聚也是音乐……在西藏录制一宗节目的过程中,无意被带到了异时空。在旅途中,会有什么样的不同故事发生在她们身上?在异时空里,收获满满的甜蜜还是独守一世?21世纪的美少女歌手能否扑倒多重身份的小王爷?等着,大战开始了!
  • 腹黑总裁:温良墨谦

    腹黑总裁:温良墨谦

    温束某次醉酒不小心把高冷的大神给调戏了·······导致温束后来的工作生活完全被某人给搅得水深火热,于是怒道:“你为什么老是跟我作对”某大神总裁邪魅一笑:“被调戏了,难道不应该调戏回来么”温束:“呜呜············”