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No Country for Old Men-第40章

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into the livingroom and sat in an easy chair in the  corner and looked out at the street。

after a while he rose and crossed the room and went up the stairs。 he stood listening at  the head of the stairwell。 when he entered the old womans room he could smell the  sweet musty odor of sickness and he thought for a moment she might even be lying  there in the bed。 he switched on the flashlight and went into the bathroom。 he stood  reading the labels of the pharmacy bottles on the vanity。 he looked out the window at  the street below; the dull winter light from the streetlamps。 two in the morning。 dry。

cold。 silent。 he went out and down the hallway to the small bedroom at the rear of the  house。

he emptied her bureau drawers out onto the bed and sat sorting through her things;  holding up from time to time some item and studying it in the bluish light from the  yardlamp。 a plastic hairbrush。 a cheap fairground bracelet。 weighing these things in  his hand like a medium who might thereby divine some fact concerning the owner。 he  sat turning the pages in a photo album。 school friends。 family。 a dog。 a house not this  one。 a man who may have been her father。 he put two pictures of her in his shirtpocket。

there was a ceiling fan overhead。 he got up and pulled the chain and lay down on the  bed with the shotgun alongside him; watching the wooden blades wheel slowly in the  light from the window。 after a while he got up and took the chair from the desk in the  corner and tilted it and pushed the top backladder up under the doorknob。 then he sat  on the bed and pulled off his boots and stretched out and went to sleep。

in the morning he walked through the house again upstairs and down and then returned  to the bathroom at the end of the hall to shower。 he left the curtain pulled back; the  water spraying onto the floor。 the hallway door open and the shotgun lying on the  vanity a foot away。

he dried the dressing on his leg with a hairdryer and shaved and dressed and went down  to the kitchen and ate a bowl of cereal and milk; walking through the house as he ate。 in  the livingroom he stopped and looked at the mail lying in the floor beneath the brass  slot in the front door。 he stood there; chewing slowly。 then he set bowl and spoon on  the coffeetable and crossed the room and bent over and picked up the mail and stood  sorting through it。 he sat in a chair by the door and opened the phone bill and cupped  the envelope and blew into it。

he glanced down the list of calls。 halfway down was the terrell county sheriffs  department。 he folded the bill and put it back in the envelope and put the envelope in  his shirt…pocket。 then he looked through the other pieces of mail again。 he rose and  went into the kitchen and got the shotgun off the table and came back and stood where  hed stood before。 he crossed to a cheap mahogany desk and opened the top drawer。

the drawer was stuffed with mail。 he laid the shotgun down and sat in the chair and  pulled the mail out and piled it on the desk and began to go through it。

moss spent the day in a cheap motel on the edge of town sleeping naked in the bed with  his new clothes on wire hangers in the closet。 when he woke the shadows were long in  the motel courtyard and he struggled up and sat on the edge of the bed。 a pale  bloodstain the size of his hand on the sheets。 there was a paper bag on the night table  that held things hed bought from a drugstore in town and he picked it up and limped  into the bathroom。 he showered and shaved and brushed his teeth for the first time in  five days and then sat on the edge of the tub and taped fresh gauze over his wounds。

then he got dressed and called a cab。

he was standing in front of the motel office when the cab pulled up。 he climbed into  the rear seat; got his breath; then reached and shut the door。 he regarded the face of the  driver in the rearview mirror。 do you want to make some money? he said。

yeah。 i want to make some money。

moss took five of the hundreds and tore them in two and passed one half across the  back of the seat to the driver。 the driver counted the torn bills and put them in his  shirtpocket and looked at moss in the mirror and waited。

whats your name?

paul; said the driver。

you got the right attitude; paul。 i wont get you in trouble。 i just dont want you to leave  me somewheres that i dont want to be left。

all right。

have you got a flashlight?

yeah。 i got a flashlight。

let me have it。

the driver passed the flashlight to the back。

youre the man; moss said。

where are we going。

down the river road。

i aint pickin nobody up。

were not pickin anybody up。

the driver watched him in the mirror。 no drogas; he said。

no drogas。

the driver waited。

im goin to pick up a briefcase。 it belongs to me。 you can look inside if you want。

nothin illegal。

i can look inside。

yes you can。

i hope youre not jerkin me around。

no。

i like money but i like stayin out of jail even better。

im the same way myself; moss said。

they drove slowly up the road toward the bridge。 moss leaned forward over the seat。 i  want you to park under the bridge; he said。

all right。

im goin to unscrew the bulb out of this domelight。

they watch this road round the clock; the driver said。

i know that。

the driver pulled off of the road and shut off the engine and the lights and looked at  moss in the mirror。 moss took the bulb from the light and laid it in the plastic lens and  handed it across the seat to the driver and opened the door。 i should be back in just a  few minutes; he said。

the cane was dusty; the stalks close grown。 he pushed his way through carefully;  holding the light at his knees with his hand partly across the lens。

the case was sitting in the brake rightside up and intact as if someone had simply set it  there。 he switched off the light and picked it up and made his way back in the dark;  taking his sight by the span of the bridge overhead。 when he got to the cab he opened  the door and set the case in the seat and got in carefully and shut the door。 he handed  the flashlight to the driver and leaned back in the seat。 lets go; he said。

whats i
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