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雙語·杰克·倫敦短篇小說選 墨西哥人 4

所屬教程:譯林版·熱愛生命:杰克·倫敦短篇小說選

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2022年06月14日

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The Mexican IV

Barely noticed was Rivera as he entered the ring.Only a very slight and very scattering ripple of half-hearted hand-clapping greeted him.The house did not believe in him.He was the lamb led to slaughter at the hands of the great Danny.Besides,the house was disappointed.It had expected a rushing battle between Danny Ward and Billy Carthey,and here it must put up with this poor little tyro.Still further,it had manifested its disapproval of the change by betting two,and even three,to one on Danny.And where a betting audience's money is,there is its heart.

The Mexican boy sat down in his corner and waited.The slow minutes lagged by.Danny was making him wait.It was an old trick,but ever it worked on the young,new fighters.They grew frightened,sitting thus and facing their own apprehensions and a callous,tobacco-smoking audience.But for once the trick failed.Roberts was right.Rivera had no goat.He,who was more delicately co?rdinated,more finely nerved and strung than any of them,had no nerves of this sort.The atmosphere of foredoomed defeat in his own corner had no effect on him.His handlers were Gringos and strangers.Also they were scrubs—the dirty driftage of the fight game,without honor,without efficiency.And they were chilled,as well,with certitude that theirs was the losing corner.

“Now you gotta be careful,”Spider Hagerty warned him.Spider was his chief second.“Make it last as long as you can—them's my instructions from Kelly.If you don't,the papers'll call it another bum fight and give the game a bigger black eye in Los Angeles.”

All of which was not encouraging.But Rivera took no notice.He despised prize-fighting.It was the hated game of the hated Gringo.He had taken up with it,as a chopping block for others in the training quarters,solely because he was starving.The fact that he was marvelously made for it,had meant nothing.He hated it.Not until he had come in to the Junta,had he fought for money,and he had found the money easy.Not first among the sons of men had he been to find himself successful at a despised vocation.

He did not analyze.He merely knew that he must win this fight.There could be no other outcome.For behind him,nerving him to this belief,were profounder forces than any the crowded house dreamed.Danny Ward fought for money,and for the easy ways of life that money would bring.But the things Rivera fought for burned in his brain—blazing and terrible visions,that,with eyes wide open,sitting lonely in the corner of the ring and waiting for his tricky antagonist,he saw as clearly as he had lived them.

He saw the white-walled,water-power factories of Rio Blanco.He saw the six thousand workers,starved and wan,and the little children,seven and eight years of age,who toiled long shifts for ten cents a day.He saw the perambulating corpses,the ghastly death's heads of men who labored in the dye-rooms.He remembered that he had heard his father call the dye-rooms the “suicide-holes,”where a year was death.He saw the little patio,and his mother cooking and moiling at crude housekeeping and finding time to caress and love him.And his father he saw,large,big-moustached and deep-chested,kindly above all men,who loved all men and whose heart was so large that there was love to overflowing still left for the mother and the little muchacho playing in the corner of the patio.In those days his name had not been Felipe Rivera.It had been Fernandez,his father's and mother's name.Him had they called Juan.Later,he had changed it himself,for he had found the name of Fernandez hated by prefects of police,jefes politicos,and rurales.

Big,hearty Joaquin Fernandez!A large place he occupied in Rivera's visions.He had not understood at the time,but looking back he could understand.He could see him setting type in the little printery,or scribbling endless hasty,nervous lines on the much-cluttered desk.And he could see the strange evenings,when workmen,coming secretly in the dark like men who did ill deeds,met with his father and talked long hours where he,the muchacho,lay not always asleep in the corner.

As from a remote distance he could hear Spider Hagerty saying to him:“No layin' down at the start.Them's instructions.Take a beatin' an'earn your dough.”

Ten minutes had passed,and he still sat in his corner.There were no signs of Danny,who was evidently playing the trick to the limit.

But more visions burned before the eye of Rivera's memory.The strike,or,rather,the lockout,because the workers of Rio Blanco had helped their striking brothers of Puebla.The hunger,the expeditions in the hills for berries,the roots and herbs that all ate and that twisted and pained the stomachs of all of them.And then,the nightmare;the waste of ground before the company's store;the thousands of starving workers;General Rosalio Martinez and the soldiers of Porfirio Diaz;and the death-spitting rifles that seemed never to cease spitting,while the workers' wrongs were washed and washed again in their own blood.And that night!He saw the flat cars,piled high with the bodies of the slain,consigned to Vera Cruz,food for the sharks of the bay.Again he crawled over the grisly heaps,seeking and finding,stripped and mangled,his father and his mother.His mother he especially remembered—only her face projecting,her body burdened by the weight of dozens of bodies.Again the rifles of the soldiers of Porfirio Diaz cracked,and again he dropped to the ground and slunk away like some hunted coyote of the hills.

To his ears came a great roar,as of the sea,and he saw Danny Ward,leading his retinue of trainers and seconds,coming down the center aisle.The house was in wild uproar for the popular hero who was bound to win.Everybody proclaimed him.Everybody was for him.Even Rivera's own seconds warmed to something akin to cheerfulness when Danny ducked jauntily through the ropes and entered the ring.His face continually spread to an unending succession of smiles,and when Danny smiled he smiled in every feature,even to the laughter-wrinkles of the corners of the eyes and into the depths of the eyes themselves.Never was there so genial a fighter.His face was a running advertisement of good feeling,of good fellowship.He knew everybody.He joked,and laughed,and greeted his friends through the ropes.Those farther away,unable to suppress their admiration,cried loudly:“Oh,you Danny!”It was a joyous ovation of affection that lasted a full five minutes.

Rivera was disregarded.For all that the audience noticed,he did not exist.Spider Hagerty's bloated face bent down close to his.“No gettin' scared,”the Spider warned.“An'remember instructions.You gotta last.No layin' down.If you lay down,we got instructions to beat you up in the dressing rooms.Savve?You just gotta fight.”

The house began to applaud.Danny was crossing the ring to him.Danny bent over,caught Rivera's right hand in both his own and shook it with impulsive heartiness.Danny's smile-wreathed face was close to his.The audience yelled its appreciation of Danny's display of sporting spirit.He was greeting his opponent with the fondness of a brother.Danny's lips moved,and the audience,interpreting the unheard words to be those of a kindly-natured sport,yelled again.Only Rivera heard the low words.

“You little Mexican rat,”hissed from between Danny's gaily smiling lips,“I'll fetch the yellow outa you.”

Rivera made no move.He did not rise.He merely hated with his eyes.

“Get up,you dog!”some man yelled through the ropes from behind.

The crowd began to hiss and boo him for his unsportsmanlike conduct,but he sat unmoved.Another great outburst of applause was Danny's as he walked back across the ring.

When Danny stripped,there was ohs!and ahs!of delight.His body was perfect,alive with easy suppleness and health and strength.The skin was white as a woman's,and as smooth.All grace,and resilience,and power resided therein.He had proved it in scores of battles.His photographs were in all the physical culture magazines.

A groan went up as Spider Hagerty peeled Rivera's sweater over his head.His body seemed leaner,because of the swarthiness of the skin.He had muscles,but they made no display like his opponent's.What the audience neglected to see was the deep chest.Nor could it guess the toughness of the fiber of the flesh,the instantaneousness of the cell explosions of the muscles,the fineness of the nerves that wired every part of him into a splendid fighting mechanism.All the audience saw was a brown-skinned boy of eighteen with what seemed the body of a boy.With Danny it was different.Danny was a man of twenty-four,and his body was a man's body.The contrast was still more striking as they stood together in the center of the ring receiving the referee's last instructions.

Rivera noticed Roberts sitting directly behind the newspaper men.He was drunker than usual,and his speech was correspondingly slower.

“Take it easy,Rivera,”Roberts drawled.“He can't kill you,remember that.He'll rush you at the go-off,but don't get rattled.You just cover up,and stall,and clinch.He can't hurt you much.Just make believe to yourself that he's choppin' out on you at the trainin' quarters.”

Rivera made no sign that he had heard.

“Sullen little devil,”Roberts muttered to the man next to him.“He always was that way.”

But Rivera forgot to look his usual hatred.A vision of countless rifles blinded his eyes.Every face in the audience,far as he could see,to the high dollar-seats,was transformed into a rifle.And he saw the long Mexican border arid and sun-washed and aching,and along it he saw the ragged bands that delayed only for the guns.

Back in his corner he waited,standing up.His seconds had crawled out through the ropes,taking the canvas stool with them.Diagonally across the squared ring,Danny faced him.The gong struck,and the battle was on.The audience howled its delight.Never had it seen a battle open more convincingly.The papers were right.It was a grudge fight.Three-quarters of the distance Danny covered in the rush to get together,his intention to eat up the Mexican lad plainly advertised.He assailed with not one blow,nor two,nor a dozen.He was a gyroscope of blows,a whirlwind of destruction.Rivera was nowhere.He was overwhelmed,buried beneath avalanches of punches delivered from every angle and position by a past master in the art.He was overborne,swept back against the ropes,separated by the referee,and swept back against the ropes again.

It was not a fight.It was a slaughter,a massacre.Any audience,save a prize-fighting one,would have exhausted its emotions in that first minute.Danny was certainly showing what he could do—a splendid exhibition.Such was the certainty of the audience,as well as its excitement and favoritism,that it failed to take notice that the Mexican still stayed on his feet.It forgot Rivera.It rarely saw him,so closely was he enveloped in Danny's man-eating attack.A minute of this went by,and two minutes.Then,in a separation,it caught a clear glimpse of the Mexican.His lip was cut,his nose was bleeding.As he turned and staggered into a clinch,the welts of oozing blood,from his contacts with the ropes,showed in red bars.a(chǎn)cross his back.But what the audience did not notice was that his chest was not heaving and that his eyes were coldly burning as ever.Too many aspiring champions,in the cruel welter of the training camps,had practiced this man-eating attack on him.He had learned to live through for a compensation of from half a dollar a go up to fifteen dollars a week—a hard school,and he was schooled hard.

Then happened the amazing thing.The whirling,blurring mix-up ceased suddenly.Rivera stood alone.Danny,the redoubtable Danny,lay on his back.His body quivered as consciousness strove to return to it.He had not staggered and sunk down,nor had he gone over in a long slumping fall.The right hook of Rivera had dropped him in midair with the abruptness of death.The referee shoved Rivera back with one hand,and stood over the fallen gladiator counting the seconds.It is the custom of prize-fighting audiences to cheer a clean knock-down blow.But this audience did not cheer.The thing had been too unexpected.It watched the toll of the seconds in tense silence,and through this silence the voice of Roberts rose exultantly:

“I told you he was a two-handed fighter!”

By the fifth second,Danny was rolling over on his face,and when seven was counted,he rested on one knee,ready to rise after the count of nine and before the count of ten.If his knee still touched the floor at “ten,”he was considered “down,”and also “out.”The instant his knee left the floor,he was considered “up,”and in that instant it was Rivera's right to try and put him down again.Rivera took no chances.The moment that knee left the floor he would strike again.He circled around,but the referee circled in between,and Rivera knew that the seconds he counted were very slow.All Gringos were against him,even the referee.

At “nine”the referee gave Rivera a sharp thrust back.It was unfair,but it enabled Danny to rise,the smile back on his lips.Doubled partly over,with arms wrapped about face and abdomen,he cleverly stumbled into a clinch.By all the rules of the game the referee should have broken it,but he did not,and Danny clung on like a surf-battered barnacle and moment by moment recuperated.The last minute of the round was going fast.If he could live to the end,he would have a full minute in his corner to revive.And live to the end he did,smiling through all desperateness and extremity.

“The smile that won't come off!”somebody yelled,and the audience laughed loudly in its relief.

“The kick that Greaser's got is something God-awful,”Danny gasped in his corner to his adviser while his handlers worked frantically over him.

The second and third rounds were tame.Danny,a tricky and consummate ring general,stalled and blocked and held on,devoting himself to recovering from that dazing first-round blow.In the fourth round he was himself again.Jarred and shaken,nevertheless his good condition had enabled him to regain his vigor.But he tried no man-eating tactics.The Mexican had proved a tartar.Instead,he brought to bear his best fighting powers.In tricks and skill and experience he was the master,and though he could land nothing vital,he proceeded scientifically to chop and wear down his opponent.He landed three blows to Rivera's one,but they were punishing blows only,and not deadly.It was the sum of many of them that constituted deadliness.He was respectful of this two-handed dub with the amazing short-arm kicks in both his fists.

In defense,Rivera developed a disconcerting straight-left.Again and again,attack after attack he straight-lefted away from him with accumulated damage to Danny's mouth and nose.But Danny was protean.That was why he was the coming champion.He could change from style to style of fighting at will.He now devoted himself to infighting.In this he was particularly wicked,and it enabled him to avoid the other's straight-left.Here he set the house wild repeatedly,capping it with a marvelous lock-break and lift of an inside uppercut that raised the Mexican in the air and dropped him to the mat.Rivera rested on one knee,making the most of the count,and in the soul of him he knew the referee was counting short seconds on him.

Again,in the seventh,Danny achieved the diabolical inside uppercut.He succeeded only in staggering Rivera,but,in the ensuing moment of defenseless helplessness,he smashed him with another blow through the ropes.Rivera's body bounced on the heads of the newspaper men below,and they boosted him back to the edge of the platform outside the ropes.Here he rested on one knee,while the referee raced off the seconds.Inside the ropes,through which he must duck to enter the ring,Danny waited for him.Nor did the referee intervene or thrust Danny back.

The house was beside itself with delight.

“Kill 'm,Danny,kill 'm!”was the cry.

Scores of voices took it up until it was like a war-chant of wolves.

Danny did his best,but Rivera,at the count of eight,instead of nine,came unexpectedly through the ropes and safely into a clinch.Now the referee worked,tearing him away so that he could be hit,giving Danny every advantage that an unfair referee can give.

But Rivera lived,and the daze cleared from his brain.It was all of a piece.They were the hated Gringos and they were all unfair.And in the worst of it visions continued to flash and sparkle in his brain—long lines of railroad track that simmered across the desert;rurales and American constables;prisons and calabooses;tramps at water tanks—all the squalid and painful panorama of his odyssey after Rio Blanca and the strike.And,resplendent and glorious,he saw the great,red Revolution sweeping across his land.The guns were there before him.Every hated face was a gun.It was for the guns he fought.He was the guns.He was the Revolution.He fought for all Mexico.

The audience began to grow incensed with Rivera.Why didn't he take the licking that was appointed him?Of course he was going to be licked,but why should he be so obstinate about it?Very few were interested in him,and they were the certain,definite percentage of a gambling crowd that plays long shots.Believing Danny to be the winner,nevertheless they had put their money on the Mexican at four to ten and one to three.More than a trifle was up on the point of how many rounds Rivera could last.Wild money had appeared at the ringside proclaiming that he could not last seven rounds,or even six.The winners of this,now that their cash risk was happily settled,had joined in cheering on the favorite.

Rivera refused to be licked.Through the eighth round his opponent strove vainly to repeat the uppercut.In the ninth,Rivera stunned the house again.In the midst of a clinch he broke the lock with a quick,lithe movement,and in the narrow space between their bodies his right lifted from the waist.Danny went to the floor and took the safety of the count.The crowd was appalled.He was being bested at his own game.His famous right-uppercut had been worked back on him.Rivera made no attempt to catch him as he arose at “nine.”The referee was openly blocking that play,though he stood clear when the situation was reversed and it was Rivera who desired to rise.

Twice in the tenth,Rivera put through the right-uppercut,lifted from waist to opponent's chin.Danny grew desperate.The smile never left his face,but he went back to his man-eating rushes.Whirlwind as he would,he could not damage Rivera,while Rivera,through the blur and whirl,dropped him to the mat three times in succession.Danny did not recuperate so quickly now,and by the eleventh round he was in a serious way.But from then till the fourteenth he put up the gamest exhibition of his career.He stalled and blocked,fought parsimoniously,and strove to gather strength.Also,he fought as foully as a successful fighter knows how.Every trick and device he employed,butting in the clinches with the seeming of accident,pinioning Rivera's glove between arm and body,heeling his glove on Rivera's mouth to clog his breathing.Often,in the clinches,through his cut and smiling lips he snarled insults unspeakable and vile in Rivera's ear.Everybody,from the referee to the house,was with Danny and was helping Danny.And they knew what he had in mind.Bested by this surprise-box of an unknown,he was pinning all on a single punch.He offered himself for punishment,fished,and feinted,and drew,for that one opening that would enable him to whip a blow through with all his strength and turn the tide.As another and greater fighter had done before him,he might do—a right and left,to solar plexus and across the jaw.He could do it,for he was noted for the strength of punch that remained in his arms as long as he could keep his feet.

Rivera's seconds were not half-caring for him in the intervals between rounds.Their towels made a showing,but drove little air into his panting lungs.Spider Hagerty talked advice to him,but Rivera knew it was wrong advice.Everybody was against him.He was surrounded by treachery.In the fourteenth round he put Danny down again,and himself stood resting,hands dropped at side,while the referee counted.In the other corner Rivera had been noting suspicious whisperings.He saw Michael Kelly make his way to Roberts and bend and whisper.Rivera's ears were a cat's,desert-trained,and he caught snatches of what was said.He wanted to hear more,and when his opponent arose he maneuvered the fight into a clinch over against the ropes.

“Got to,”he could hear Michael,while Roberts nodded.“Danny's got to win—I stand to lose a mint—I've got a ton of money covered—my own—If he lasts the fifteenth I'm bust—The boy'll mind you.Put something across.”

And thereafter Rivera saw no more visions.They were trying to job him.Once again he dropped Danny and stood resting,his hands at his side.Roberts stood up.

“That settled him,”he said.“Go to your corner.”

He spoke with authority,as he had often spoken to Rivera at the training quarters.But Rivera looked hatred at him and waited for Danny to rise.Back in his corner in the minute interval,Kelly,the promoter,came and talked to Rivera.

“Throw it,damn you,”he rasped in a harsh low voice.“You gotta lay down,Rivera.Stick with me and I'll make your future.I'll let you lick Danny next time.But here's where you lay down.”

Rivera showed with his eyes that he heard,but he made neither sign of assent nor dissent.

“Why don't you speak?”Kelly demanded angrily.

“You lose,anyway,”Spider Hagerty supplemented.“The referee'll take it away from you.Listen to Kelly,and lay down.”

“Lay down,kid,”Kelly pleaded,“and I'll help you to the championship.”

Rivera did not answer.

“I will,so help me,kid.”

At the strike of the gong Rivera sensed something impending.The house did not.Whatever it was it was there inside the ring with him and very close.Danny's earlier surety seemed returned to him.The confidence of his advance frightened Rivera.Some trick was about to be worked.Danny rushed,but Rivera refused the encounter.He side-stepped away into safety.What the other wanted was a clinch.It was in some way necessary to the trick.Rivera backed and circled away,yet he knew,sooner or later,the clinch and the trick would come.Desperately he resolved to draw it.He made as if to effect the clinch with Danny's next rush.Instead,at the last instant,just as their bodies should have come together,Rivera darted nimbly back.And in the same instant Danny's corner raised a cry of foul.Rivera had fooled them.The referee paused irresolutely.The decision that trembled on his lips was never uttered,for a shrill,boy's voice from the gallery piped,“Raw work!”

Danny cursed Rivera openly,and forced him,while Rivera danced away.Also,Rivera made up his mind to strike no more blows at the body.In this he threw away half his chance of winning,but he knew if he was to win at all it was with the outfighting that remained to him.Given the least opportunity,they would lie a foul on him.Danny threw all caution to the winds.For two rounds he tore after and into the boy who dared not meet him at close quarters.Rivera was struck again and again;he took blows by the dozens to avoid the perilous clinch.During this supreme final rally of Danny's the audience rose to its feet and went mad.It did not understand.All it could see was that its favorite was winning after all.

“Why don't you fight?”it demanded wrathfully of Rivera.“You're yellow!You're yellow!”“Open up,you cur!Open up!”“Kill 'm,Danny!Kill 'm!”“You sure got 'm!Kill 'm!”

In all the house,bar none,Rivera was the only cold man.By temperament and blood he was the hottest-passioned there;but he had gone through such vastly greater heats that this collective passion of ten thousand throats,rising surge on surge,was to his brain no more than the velvet cool of a summer twilight.

Into the seventeenth round Danny carried his rally.Rivera,under a heavy blow,drooped and sagged.His hands dropped helplessly as he reeled backward.Danny thought it was his chance.The boy was at,his mercy.Thus Rivera,feigning,caught him off his guard,lashing out a clean drive to the mouth.Danny went down.When he arose,Rivera felled him with a down-chop of the right on neck and jaw.Three times he repeated this.It was impossible for any referee to call these blows foul.

“Oh,Bill!Bill!”Kelly pleaded to the referee.

“I can't,”that official lamented back.“He won't give me a chance.”

Danny,battered and heroic,still kept coming up.Kelly and others near to the ring began to cry out to the police to stop it,though Danny's corner refused to throw in the towel.Rivera saw the fat police captain starting awkwardly to climb through the ropes,and was not sure what it meant.There were so many ways of cheating in this game of the Gringos.Danny,on his feet,tottered groggily and helplessly before him.The referee and the captain were both reaching for Rivera when he struck the last blow.There was no need to stop the fight,for Danny did not rise.

“Count!”Rivera cried hoarsely to the referee.

And when the count was finished,Danny's seconds gathered him up and carried him to his corner.

“Who wins?”Rivera demanded.

Reluctantly,the referee caught his gloved hand and held it aloft.

There were no congratulations for Rivera.He walked to his corner unattended,where his seconds had not yet placed his stool.He leaned backward on the ropes and looked his hatred at them,swept it on and about him till the whole ten thousand Gringos were included.His knees trembled under him,and he was sobbing from exhaustion.Before his eyes the hated faces swayed back and forth in the giddiness of nausea.Then he remembered they were the guns.The guns were his.The Revolution could go on.

墨西哥人 4

利維拉上臺的時候,幾乎沒有人注意。歡迎他的,只是稀稀拉拉的幾聲鼓掌,冷淡、勉強。沒有觀眾相信他會贏,都覺得他只不過是一只落在強大的丹尼手中的待宰羔羊。另一方面,觀眾們感到有點失望。他們原本指望能看到丹尼·沃德和比利·卡瑟的激烈對決,而今卻必須委屈自己,看這個初出茅廬的小孩子出洋相。還有,他們在丹尼身上押了二對一,甚至三對一的賭注,以此表示他們對這種變動的不滿。觀眾下賭注,歷來都是投在自己喜歡的選手身上。

這個墨西哥小子坐在他的那個角落里等待開場。時間在一分鐘一分鐘地被拖延著。丹尼故意讓他等著,雖說是老把戲了,但用在初上場的新手身上卻屢試不爽。新手傻坐在那里,焦慮油然而生,看著那些冷酷無情、吞云吐霧的觀眾,心里的恐懼感會一點點增加。但這一次,這種老把戲卻失敗了。羅伯茲說得對,利維拉可不是好對付的。他比任何一個選手都從容不迫、泰然自若,比任何一個選手都有膽量,壓根就沒有慌亂的跡象。連他自己的那個角落里也彌漫著他必敗的氣息,可這些對他毫無影響。他的助手是幾個素不相識的美國佬,都是些窩囊廢,拳擊賽上的不得志者,既無尊嚴又無本事。他們一個個垂頭喪氣,鐵了心認為他們這一方必輸無疑。

“現(xiàn)在你可要當(dāng)心點,”領(lǐng)頭的助手斯巴德·哈格蒂提醒他說,“凱利交代過,讓你盡量把時間拖長一些。要不然,媒體會大做文章,說這又是一場狗屁比賽,在洛杉磯抹黑這場比賽?!?/p>

當(dāng)時的情況沒有一樣對利維拉是有利的,但他全然不當(dāng)回事。他鄙視拳擊賽,認為這是可惡的美國人搞的一種可恨的把戲。他初入此行,在訓(xùn)練場給別人當(dāng)“剁肉的砧板”(3),只是因為肚子餓的緣故。后來參加比賽取得了驕人的戰(zhàn)績,他也全然不當(dāng)回事。他痛恨拳擊比賽。直到加入了委員會以后,他才為了籌集資金樂于與人交手,因為他覺得這樣掙錢比較容易。按說,在自己厭惡的行業(yè)取得成功者,他并非第一人。

對于這場比賽,他沒有考慮過多,只知道必須取勝,不允許有其他的后果。在他的身后有一種力量在推動著他,使他抱有必勝的信心,而這種力量是在場的觀眾做夢也想不到的。丹尼·沃德參加比賽是為了賺錢,因為錢能夠使他在生活中順風(fēng)順水。而利維拉則是為了一種在心里熊熊燃燒的愿望和可怕的幻象。此刻,他孤單單地坐在賽臺的角落里,眼睛睜得大大的,一面等著他的那個詭計多端的對手,一面清清楚楚看到了一幕幕幻象,就好像是他已經(jīng)親身經(jīng)歷過此時此刻。

他看見了粉墻圍起的里奧布蘭科(4)水力發(fā)電站;看見了發(fā)電站的六千個工人,一個個忍饑挨餓、滿臉菜色,其中有七八歲的童工,每天要干很長時間的活,卻只能掙十美分;看見了臉色慘白如死人一般的染坊里的工人,記起曾聽父親把這種染房叫作“自殺洞”,進去做一年工就會死掉;看見了他家的那個小庭院,母親在那里煮飯和操持繁重的家務(wù),還會抽空跑過來摟摟他、親親他;看見了他那大胡子、虎背熊腰的父親——天下最慈愛的父親,他心胸開闊,愛所有的人,心里充溢著對母親以及在庭院墻角玩耍的小家伙們的愛。想當(dāng)年,他的姓名并不是菲力普·利維拉,而是隨父母的姓費爾南德斯,名叫胡安。后來,他自己把姓名改了,因為他發(fā)現(xiàn)費爾南德斯是那些警察局長和憲兵所痛恨的姓。

魁梧的、好心腸的華金·費爾南德斯父親呀!這位父親在利維拉看到的幻象里占有重要的位置。當(dāng)年,利維拉并不了解自己的父親,后來回憶往事,才對父親產(chǎn)生了深刻的理解。他仿佛看見父親在那個小印刷所里排文字,看見他趴在堆滿雜物的桌子旁奮筆疾書,寫下一行行充滿激情的文字;看見工人們在天黑的時候借著夜色摸到他家來,偷偷摸摸的,像干什么壞事似的,跟他的父親促膝交談,談上很長時間,而他這個少不更事的孩子則躺在角落里,時常偷聽他們的談話。

此時,斯巴德·哈格蒂的話似從很遠的地方飄了過來:“千萬不要一開局就被打趴下。這是老板的命令。挨打就挨打,堅持住,最后才能有點錢掙。”

時間過去十分鐘了,他仍坐在他的那個角落里,還是不見丹尼的身影——看來,丹尼要把他的那套鬼把戲玩到極致。

利維拉記憶的長河開了閘門,往事如河水涌現(xiàn)而來。那一次,里奧布蘭科的工人為了聲援在普埃布拉(5)舉行罷工的兄弟們,自己也舉行了罷工,或者說是老板不愿滿足工人們的要求而導(dǎo)致了停工。工人們饑餓難忍,紛紛進山找野果、樹根和野菜充饑,結(jié)果吃得肚子疼,胃如刀絞。接著,噩夢接踵而至——就在公司倉庫門前的空地上,成千上萬饑餓的工人遭到槍擊。羅薩里奧·馬蒂尼茲將軍率領(lǐng)迪亞斯的軍隊對工人大開殺戒,槍口不停噴出死亡的火焰,似乎永遠也不會停止似的,工人血流成河,仿佛只有用鮮血才能洗刷掉這些工人所造下的“罪孽”。那是一個多么可怕的夜晚?。∷匆娨惠v輛敞篷車上,遇害工人的尸體堆積如山,準備運往韋拉克魯斯(6),拋進海里喂鯊魚。他爬到恐怖的死人堆上,尋呀找呀,終于找見了他的父母,發(fā)現(xiàn)他們被剝光了衣服,渾身血肉模糊。母親當(dāng)時的樣子他記得尤其清楚——母親被幾十具尸體壓在底下,只露出來一張臉。耳邊又響起了迪亞斯士兵的槍聲,他急忙跳到地上,就像一只遭到獵人追趕的幼獸一樣跑掉了。

正在遐想之際,他的耳邊響起了山呼海嘯般的歡呼聲,只見丹尼·沃德在一群訓(xùn)練員和助手的簇擁下從中央通道正走過來。全場觀眾為之沸騰,熱烈歡迎他們這位必勝無疑的英雄。人們一邊倒,都擁護他、贊美他。當(dāng)他得意揚揚地鉆過繩子走上比賽臺時,就連利維拉的助手也興奮了起來,甚至說見到他有點高興。他臉上掛著永不消失的招牌式微笑,笑啊笑的,鼻子、眼全在笑,就連眼角的魚尾紋和眼珠子都在笑。如此和藹可親的拳擊手,你就是找遍天下恐怕也找不到第二個。他的臉仿佛就是一幅宣揚善心和友誼的流動廣告牌。他好像跟所有的人都認識,隔著繩子和他的朋友們說笑,打招呼。那些坐得遠一點的,也都抑制不住崇拜的心情,高聲喊著:“你好,丹尼!”這一充溢著歡快氣氛的歡迎式足足持續(xù)了五分鐘。

利維拉被冷落在那里,觀眾誰也不去注意他,仿佛他不存在似的。斯巴德·哈格蒂俯下身子,把他那張浮腫的臉湊到利維拉的跟前說:“別害怕。記住老板的命令,必須挺住,萬不可倒下去。假如你倒下去,我們奉命在身,非得在更衣室里揍死你不可。明白嗎?你必須拼死一搏?!?/p>

比賽場響起了雷鳴般的掌聲。但見丹尼橫穿臺子朝著利維拉走了過來。他彎下腰,用雙手握住利維拉的右手,熱忱地搖了幾下,把他那張笑開了花的臉和利維拉的臉貼得很近。他落落大方的運動員風(fēng)范贏得了觀眾陣陣的喝彩——他向?qū)κ直憩F(xiàn)出的是兄弟般的友誼。隨后,他的嘴唇動了幾下,觀眾聽不見他說的是什么,都以為他在善意地鼓勵對方,于是又是一陣喝彩。只有利維拉聽見了他那張掛滿了笑容的嘴壓低聲音惡狠狠地說出的話:

“你這個墨西哥小兔崽子,我要把你的屎都打出來?!?/p>

利維拉紋絲不動,他甚至都沒有站起來,只是用眼神表達著內(nèi)心的仇恨。

“站起來,你這條狗!”身后有個人隔著繩子喊道。

觀眾嫌他缺乏運動員的風(fēng)度,發(fā)出了一陣噓聲,可他依舊一動不動。丹尼穿過臺子回到自己的角落時,人群又爆發(fā)出了歡呼喝彩聲。

丹尼一脫下衣服,便引來了一片興奮的贊嘆聲。他的身體堪稱完美,柔韌性十足,強健而有力,顯得精神抖擻,皮膚白嫩、細膩,跟女人一樣。動作優(yōu)雅,富于彈性,擁有強大的力量。他前后參賽幾十場,已展示了自己的虎威。幾乎所有的體育雜志都刊登過他的照片。

而斯巴德·哈格蒂扒下利維拉的套頭毛衣時,聽到的則是一片噓聲。由于皮膚黝黑,利維拉顯得很瘦。他也有肌肉,但是和對手的肌肉相比,是不具可比性的。但觀眾疏于觀察,看不到他厚實的胸膛,也想象不到他那肌肉的纖維是何等堅韌,想象不到那肌肉瞬間會產(chǎn)生怎樣的爆發(fā)力,不知道他身體的每一個部分都受到精密的神經(jīng)系統(tǒng)的操縱,可以在賽場上將他變?yōu)橐慌_出色的戰(zhàn)斗機器。在觀眾的眼里,他只是一個棕色皮膚的十八歲的年輕人,一副孩子似的身材。丹尼則完全不同,他是一個二十四歲的男子漢,呈現(xiàn)的是成年人的身材。裁判一聲令下,二人走到臺子中央,站在一起,這時這種對比就更加鮮明了。

利維拉注意到羅伯茲就坐在報社記者的背后,好像比平日醉得還厲害,舌頭僵硬,說話更慢了。

“你可別亂了方寸,利維拉,”羅伯茲慢聲慢調(diào)地說,“他打不死你,記住就是了。一開始,他會猛攻猛打,你可別亂了陣腳。你只需穩(wěn)住陣腳,扭住他,由他打吧,反正也要不了你的性命。你就權(quán)當(dāng)自己是訓(xùn)練場上的陪練員,挨幾下打怕什么?!?/p>

利維拉就像是沒聽見似的。

“這個小東西老是陰沉著臉,”羅伯茲對坐在他旁邊的一個男子嘟噥了一句,“對人總是愛答不理的?!?/p>

利維拉沉浸在回憶中,面無表情,沒有顯露出往常的那種仇恨神色。他眼睛里只看得到無數(shù)的來復(fù)槍——一眼望去,從跟前一直到貴賓席,觀眾的每一張面孔都幻化成了一支來復(fù)槍。接著,他又看見了漫長的墨西哥邊境,那兒寸草不生,烈日當(dāng)空,熱得難受,聚集著一群群衣衫襤褸的人,眼巴巴盼望著拿到槍支。

他回到自己的那個角落,站在那兒等待著。他的助手鉆過繩子下了臺子,順手將帆布矮凳也拿了下去。在四方形的拳擊臺的對角,丹尼正虎視眈眈地看著他。鑼聲一響,戰(zhàn)斗拉開了序幕。觀眾高興得大呼小叫。他們從未見過如此激動人心的序幕。報紙上說得很對:這是一場復(fù)仇之戰(zhàn)。丹尼求戰(zhàn)心切,三步兩步就躥過了四分之三的距離,恨不得一口將這個墨西哥小屁孩吞進肚里。他左一拳右一拳,不知打了多少拳,雙臂揮動如飛輪在轉(zhuǎn),大有摧枯拉朽的架勢。利維拉無處躲藏,全無招架之功,被那位拳壇老將從四面八方打來的暴風(fēng)驟雨般的拳頭所淹沒。他立腳不穩(wěn),被打得靠在了繩子上,裁判將他們分開,緊接著又被打得靠在了上面。

這不像是拳擊賽,簡直就是殺戮,一場血腥的屠殺。任何觀眾,特別是那些下賭注的人,一開局就激動到了極點。丹尼的確拿出了看家本事,表現(xiàn)出了他的八面威風(fēng)??赡苁?

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