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
狗狗书籍 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

The Thirteenth Tale-第69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!



neven dumplings of cheeks。 lopsided lips; one half a perfect bow that told of former beauty; the other a twisted graft of white flesh。

emmeline! miss winter’s twin! alive; and living in this house!

my mind was in turmoil; blood was pounding in my ears; shock paralyzed me。 she stared at me unblinking; and i realized she was less startled than i was。 but still; she seemed to be under the same spell as me。 we were both cast into immobility。

she was the first to recover。 in an urgent gesture she raised a dark; soil…covered hand toward me and; in a hoarse voice; rasped a string of senseless sounds。

bewilderment slowed my responses; i could not even stammer her name before she turned and hurried away; leaning forward; shoulders hunched。 from out of the shadows emerged the cat。 he stretched calmly and; ignoring me; took himself off after her。 they disappeared under the arch and i was alone。 me and a patch of churned…up soil。

foxes indeed。

once they were gone i might have been able to persuade myself that i had imagined it。 that i had been sleepwalking; and that in my sleep i had dreamed that adeline’s twin appeared to me and hissed a secret; unintelligible message。 but i knew it was real。 and though she was no longer visible; i could hear her singing as she departed。 that infuriating; tuneless five…note fragment。 la la la la la。

i stood; listening; until it faded pletely away。

then; realizing that my feet and hands were freezing; i turned back to the house。

。。!



PHONETIC ALPHABET

(//小|//说//网)
a great many years had passed since i learned the phonetic alphabet。 it began with a chart in a linguistics book in father’s shop。 there was no reason for my interest at first; other than that i had nothing to do one weekend and was enamored of the signs and symbols it contained。 there were familiar letters and foreign ones。 there were capital n’s that weren’t the same as little n’s and capital k’s that weren’t the same as little k’s。 other letters; n’s and d’s and s’s and z’s; had funny little tails and loops attached; and you could cross h’s and i’s and u’s as if they were t’s。 i loved these wild and fanciful hybrids: i filled pages of paper with m’s that turned into j’s; and v’s that perched precariously on tiny o’s like performing dogs on balls at the circus。 my father came across my pages of symbols and taught me the sounds that went with each。 in the international phonetic alphabet; i discovered; you could write words that looked like math; words that looked like secret code; words that looked like lost languages。

i needed a lost language。 one in which i could municate with the lost。 i used to write one special word over and over again。 my sister’s name。 a talisman。 i folded the word into elaborate miniature origami; kept my pleat of paper always close to me。 in winter it lived in my coat pocket; in summer it tickled my ankle inside the fold of my sock。 at night; i fell asleep clutching it in my hand。 for all my care; i did not always keep track of these bits of paper。 i lost them; made new ones; then came across the old ones。 when my mother tried to prize one from my fingers; i swallowed it to thwart her; even though she wouldn’t have been able to read it。 but when i saw my father pick a grayed and fraying fold of paper out of the junk in the bottom of a drawer and unfold it; i did nothing to stop him。 when he read the secret name; his face seemed to break; and his eyes; when they rose to me; were full of sorrow。

he would have spoken。 he opened his mouth to speak but; raising my finger to my lips; i manded his silence。 i would not have him speak her name。 had he not tried to shut her away; in the dark? had he not wanted to forget her? had he not tried to keep her from me? he had no right to her now。

i prized the paper from his fingers。 without a word i left the room。 on the window seat on the second floor i put the morsel of paper in my mouth; tasted its dry; woody tang; and swallowed。 for ten years my parents had buried her name in silence; trying to forget。 now i would protect it in a silence of my own。 and remember。

alongside my mispronunciation of hello; good…bye and sorry in seventeen languages; and my ability to recite the greek alphabet forward and backward (i who have never learned a word of greek in my life); the phonetic alphabet was one of those secret; random wells of useless knowledge left over from my bookish childhood。 i learned it only to amuse myself; its purpose in those days was merely private; so as the years passed i made no particular effort to practice it。 that is why; when i came in from the garden and put pencil to paper to capture the sibilants and fricatives; the plosives and trills of emmeline’s urgent whisper; i had to make several attempts。

after three or four goes; i sat on the bed and looked at my line of squiggles and symbols and signs。 was it accurate? doubts began to assail me。 had i remembered the sounds accurately after my five…minute journey back into the house? was my recollection of the phonetic alphabet itself adequate? what if my first failed attempts had contaminated my memory?

i whispered what i had written on the paper。 whispered it again; urgently。 waited for the birth of some answering echo in my memory to tell me i had got it right。 nothing came。 it was the travestied transcription of something misheard and then only half…remembered。 it was useless。

i wrote the secret name instead。 the spell; the charm; the talisman。

it had never worked。 she never came。 i was still alone。

i screwed the paper into a ball and kicked it into a corner。

 。。 



THE LADDER

,_
my story isn’t boring you; is it; miss lea?“ i endured a number of such ments the following day as; unable to suppress my yawns; i fidgeted and rubbed my eyes while listening to miss winter’s narration。

‘i’m sorry。 i’m just tired。“

‘tired!“ she exclaimed。 ”you look like death warmed up! a proper meal would put you right。 whatever’s the matter with you?“

i shrugged my shoulders。 “just tired。 that’s all。”

she pursed her lips and regarded me sternly; but i said nothing more; and she took up her story。

for si
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!