残忍而美丽的情谊:The Kite Runner 追风筝的人(212)
日期:2015-06-16 09:54
(单词翻译:单击)
IN THE DAYTIME, the hospital was a maze of teeming, angled hallways, a blur of blazing-white overhead fluorescence. I came to know its layout, came to know that the fourth-floor button in the east wing elevator didn’t light up, that the door to the men’s room on that same floor was jammed and you had to ram your shoulder into it to open it. I came to know that hospital life has a rhythm, the flurry of activity just before the morning shift change, the midday hustle, the stillness and quiet of the late-night hours interrupted occasionally by a blur of doctors and nurses rushing to revive someone. I kept vigil at Sohrab’s bedside in the daytime and wandered through the hospital’s serpentine corridors at night, listening to my shoe heels clicking on the tiles, thinking of what I would say to Sohrab when he woke up. I’d end up back in the ICU, by the whooshing ventilator beside his bed, and I’d be no closer to knowing.After three days in the ICU, they withdrew the breathing tube and transferred him to a ground-level bed. I wasn’t there when they moved him. I had gone back to the hotel that night to get some sleep and ended up tossing around in bed all night. In the morning, I tried to not look at the bathtub. It was clean now, someone had wiped off the blood, spread new floor mats on the floor, and scrubbed the walls. But I couldn’t stop myself from sitting on its cool, porcelain edge. I pictured Sohrab filling it with warm water. Saw him undressing. Saw him twisting the razor handle and opening the twin safety latches on the head, sliding the blade out, holding it between his thumb and forefinger. I pictured him lowering himself into the water, lying there for a while, his eyes closed. I wondered what his last thought had been as he had raised the blade and brought it down.I was exiting the lobby when the hotel manager, Mr. Fayyaz, caught up with me. “I am very sorry for you,” he said, “but I am asking for you to leave my hotel, please. This is bad for my business, very bad.”
I told him I understood and I checked out. He didn’t charge me for the three days I’d spent at the hospital. Waiting for a cab outside the hotel lobby, I thought about what Mr. Fayyaz had said to me that night we’d gone looking for Sohrab: The thing about you Afghanis is that... well, you people are a little reckless. I had laughed at him, but now I wondered. Had I actually gone to sleep after I had given Sohrab the news he feared most?When I got in the cab, I asked the driver if he knew any Persian bookstores. He said there was one a couple of kilometers south. We stopped there on the way to the hospital.SOHRAB’S NEW ROOM had cream-colored walls, chipped, dark gray moldings, and glazed tiles that might have once been white. He shared the room with a teenaged Punjabi boy who, I later learned from one of the nurses, had broken his leg when he had slipped off the roof of a moving bus. His leg was in a cast, raised and held bytongs strapped to several weights.Sohrab’s bed was next to the window, the lower half lit by the late-morning sunlight streaming through the rectangular panes. A uniformed security guard was standing at the window, munching on cooked watermelon seeds--Sohrab was under twenty-four hours-a-day suicide watch. Hospital protocol, Dr. Nawaz had informed me. The guard tipped his hat when he saw me and left the room.
Sohrab was wearing short-sleeved hospital pajamas and lying on his back, blanket pulled to his chest, face turned to the window. I thought he was sleeping, but when I scooted a chair up to his bed his eyelids fluttered and opened. He looked at me, then looked away. He was so pale, even with all the blood they had given him, and there was a large purple bruise in the crease of his right arm.
“How are you?” I said.
He didn’t answer. He was looking through the window at a fenced-in sandbox and swing set in the hospital garden. There was an arch-shaped trellis near the playground, in the shadow of a row of hibiscus trees, a few green vines climbing up the timber lattice. A handful of kids were playing with buckets and pails in the sand box. The sky was a cloudless blue that day, and I saw a tiny jet leaving behind twin white trails. I turned back to Sohrab. “I spoke to Dr. Nawaz a few minutes ago and he thinks you’ll be discharged in a couple of days. That’s good news, nay?”Again I was met by silence. The Punjabi boy at the other end of the room stirred in his sleep and moaned something. “I like your room,” I said, trying not to look at Sohrab’s bandaged wrists. “It’s bright, and you have a view.” Silence. A few more awkward minutes passed, and a light sweat formed on my brow, my upper lip. I pointed to the untouched bowl of green pea aush on his nightstand, the unused plastic spoon. “You should try to eat some thing. Gain your quwat back, your strength. Do you want me to help you?”He held my glance, then looked away, his face set like stone. His eyes were still lightless, I saw, vacant, the way I had found them when I had pulled him out of the bathtub. I reached into the paper bag between my feet and took out the used copy of the Shah namah I had bought at the Persian bookstore. I turned the cover so it faced Sohrab. “I used to read this to your father when we were children. We’d go up the hill by our house and sit beneath the pomegranate...” I trailed off. Sohrab was looking through the window again. I forced a smile. “Your father’s favorite was the story of Rostam and Sohrab and that’s how you got your name, I know you know that.” I paused, feeling a bit like an idiot. “Any way, he said in his letter that it was your favorite too, so I thought I’d read you some of it. Would you like that?”
Sohrab closed his eyes. Covered them with his arm, the one with the bruise.I flipped to the page I had bent in the taxicab. “Here we go,” I said, wondering for the first time what thoughts had passed through Hassan’s head when he had finally read the _Shahnamah_ for himself and discovered that I had deceived him all those times. I cleared my throat and read. “Give ear unto the combat of Sohrab against Rostam, though it be a tale replete with tears,” I began. “It came about that on a certain day Rostam rose from his couch and his mind was filled with forebodings. He bethought him...” I read him most of chapter 1, up to the part where the young warrior Sohrab comes to his mother, Tahmineh, the princess of Samen gan, and demands to know the identity of his father. I closed the book. “Do you want me to go on? There are battles coming up, remember? Sohrab leading his army to the White Castle in Iran? Should I read on?”
He shook his head slowly. I dropped the book back in the paper bag. “That’s fine,” I said, encouraged that he had responded at all. “Maybe we can continue tomorrow. How do you feel?”Sohrab’s mouth opened and a hoarse sound came out. Dr. Nawaz had told me that would happen, on account of the breathing tube they had slid through his vocal cords. He licked his lips and tried again. “Tired.”
“I know. Dr. Nawaz said that was to be expected--” He was shaking his head.
“What, Sohrab?”
白天,医院是一座纵横交错的走廊组成的迷宫,荧光灯在人们头顶放射出耀眼的光芒,弄得人迷迷糊糊。我弄清楚了它的结构,知道东楼电梯那颗四楼的按钮不会亮,明白同一层的男厕的门卡住了,你得用肩膀去顶才能把它打开。我了解到医院的生活有它的节奏:每天早晨换班之前匆匆忙忙,白天手忙脚乱,而深夜则寂静无声,偶然有一群医师和护士跑过,去抢救某个病患。白天我警惕地守在索拉博床前,晚上则在医院曲折的走廊游荡,倾听我的鞋跟敲击地面的声音,想着当索拉博苏醒过来我该跟他说什么。最后我会走回重症病房,站在他床边嘶嘶作响的呼吸机,依然一筹莫展。在重症病房度过三天之后,他们撤去了呼吸管道,把他换到一张低矮的病床。他们搬动他的时候我不在。那天晚上我回到旅馆,想睡一觉,最终却在床上彻夜辗转反侧。那天早晨,我强迫自己不去看浴缸。它现在干干净净,有人抹去血迹,地板上铺了新的脚踏垫,墙上也擦过了。可是我忍不住坐在它那冰凉的陶瓷边缘。我想像索拉博放满一缸水,看见他脱掉衣服,看见他转动刮胡刀的手柄,拨出刀头的双重安全插销,退出刀片,用食指和拇指捏住。我想像他滑进浴缸,躺了一会,闭上双眼。我在寻思他举起刀片划落的时候最后在想着什么。我走出大堂的时候,旅馆经理费亚兹先生在身后跟上。 “我很为你感到难过,”他说,“可是我要你搬离我的旅馆,拜托了。这对我的生意有影响,影响很大。”
我告诉我能理解,退了房。他没有收取我在医院度过的那三个晚上的房钱。在大堂门口等出租车的时候,我想起那天晚上费亚兹先生对我说过的:你们阿富汗人的事情……你们有些鲁莽。我曾对他大笑,但现在我怀疑。在把索拉博最担心的消息告诉他之后,我真的睡着了吗?男孩,后来我从某个护士那里听到,他从一辆开动的巴士车顶跌下来,摔断了腿。他上了石膏的腿抬起,由一些绑着砝码的夹子夹住。索拉博的病床靠近窗口,早晨的阳光从长方形的玻璃窗照射进来,落在病床的后半部上。窗边站着一个身穿制服的保安,嗑着煮过的西瓜子——医院给索拉博安排了 24小时的防止自杀看护。纳瓦兹大夫跟我说过,这是医院的制度。保安看到我,举帽致意,随后离开房间。
索拉博穿着短袖的病服,仰面躺着,毛毯盖到他胸口,脸转向窗那边。我以为他睡了,但当我将一张椅子拉到他床边时,他眼睑跳动,跟着睁开。他看看我,移开视线。尽管他们给他输了很多血,他脸色依然苍白,而且在他的臂弯有一大块淤伤。
“你还好吗?”我说。
他没回答,眼望向窗外,看着医院花园里面一个围着护栏的方形沙地和秋千架。运动场旁边有个拱形的凉棚,在一排木槿的树影之下,几株葡萄藤爬上木格子。几个孩子拿着铲斗和小提桶在沙地里面玩耍。那天天空万里无云,一碧如洗,我看见一架小小的喷气式飞机,拖着两道白色的尾巴。我转向索拉博:“我刚跟纳瓦兹大夫聊过,他说你再过几天就可以出院了,这是个好消息,对吧?”我遇到的又是沉默。病房那端,旁遮普男孩睡着翻了个身,发出几声呻吟。 “我喜欢你这间房,”我说,忍住不去看索拉博缠着绷带的手腕,“光线明亮,你还能看到外面的景色。”没有回应。又是尴尬的几分钟过去,丝丝汗水从我额头和上唇冒出来。他床头的柜子上摆着一碗没碰过的豌豆糊,一把没用过的塑料调羹,我指着它们说:“你应该试着吃些东西,才能恢复元气。要我喂你吃吗?”他看向我的眼睛,接着望开,脸上木无表情。我看见他的眼神依然黯淡空洞,就像我把他从浴缸里面拉出来时看到的那样。我把手伸进两腿之间的纸袋,拿出一本我在那间波斯文书店买来的《沙纳玛》旧书。我将封面转向索拉博。“我们还是小孩的时候,我经常读这些故事给你父亲听。我们爬上我们家后面的山丘,坐在石榴树下面……”我降低声音。索拉博再次望着窗外,我挤出笑脸。“你父亲最喜欢的是罗斯坦和索拉博的故事,你的名字就是从那儿来的,我知道你知道。”我停顿,觉得自己有点像个白痴,“反正,他在信里说你也最喜欢这个故事。所以我想我会念一些给你听,你会喜欢吗?”
索拉博闭上眼睛,将手臂放在它们上面,有淤伤的那只手臂。我翻到在出租车里面折好的那页。“我们从这里开始,”我说,第一次想到,当哈桑终于能自己阅读《沙纳玛》,发现我曾无数次欺骗过他的时候,他的脑子里转过什么念头呢?我清清喉咙,读了起来。“请听索拉博和罗斯坦战斗的故事,不过这个故事催人泪下。 ”我开始了,“话说某日,罗斯坦自躺椅起身,心里闪过不祥之兆。他忆起他……”我给他念了第一章的大部分,直到年轻的斗士索拉博去找他的妈妈,萨门干王国的公主拓敏妮,要求得知他的父亲姓甚名谁。我合上书。“你想我读下去吗?接下来有战斗场面,你记得吗?索拉博带领他的军队进攻伊朗的白色城堡?要我念下去吗?”
他慢慢摇头。我把书放回纸袋,“那好。”我说,为他终于有所反应而鼓舞。“也许我们可以明天再继续。你感觉怎样?”索拉博张开口,发出嘶哑的嗓音。纳瓦兹大夫跟我说过会有这样的情况,那是他们把呼吸管插进他的声带引发的。他舔舔嘴唇,又试一次。 “厌倦了。”
“我知道,纳瓦兹大夫说过会出现这种感觉……”他摇着头。
“怎么了,索拉博?”
I told him I understood and I checked out. He didn’t charge me for the three days I’d spent at the hospital. Waiting for a cab outside the hotel lobby, I thought about what Mr. Fayyaz had said to me that night we’d gone looking for Sohrab: The thing about you Afghanis is that... well, you people are a little reckless. I had laughed at him, but now I wondered. Had I actually gone to sleep after I had given Sohrab the news he feared most?When I got in the cab, I asked the driver if he knew any Persian bookstores. He said there was one a couple of kilometers south. We stopped there on the way to the hospital.SOHRAB’S NEW ROOM had cream-colored walls, chipped, dark gray moldings, and glazed tiles that might have once been white. He shared the room with a teenaged Punjabi boy who, I later learned from one of the nurses, had broken his leg when he had slipped off the roof of a moving bus. His leg was in a cast, raised and held bytongs strapped to several weights.Sohrab’s bed was next to the window, the lower half lit by the late-morning sunlight streaming through the rectangular panes. A uniformed security guard was standing at the window, munching on cooked watermelon seeds--Sohrab was under twenty-four hours-a-day suicide watch. Hospital protocol, Dr. Nawaz had informed me. The guard tipped his hat when he saw me and left the room.
Sohrab was wearing short-sleeved hospital pajamas and lying on his back, blanket pulled to his chest, face turned to the window. I thought he was sleeping, but when I scooted a chair up to his bed his eyelids fluttered and opened. He looked at me, then looked away. He was so pale, even with all the blood they had given him, and there was a large purple bruise in the crease of his right arm.
“How are you?” I said.
He didn’t answer. He was looking through the window at a fenced-in sandbox and swing set in the hospital garden. There was an arch-shaped trellis near the playground, in the shadow of a row of hibiscus trees, a few green vines climbing up the timber lattice. A handful of kids were playing with buckets and pails in the sand box. The sky was a cloudless blue that day, and I saw a tiny jet leaving behind twin white trails. I turned back to Sohrab. “I spoke to Dr. Nawaz a few minutes ago and he thinks you’ll be discharged in a couple of days. That’s good news, nay?”Again I was met by silence. The Punjabi boy at the other end of the room stirred in his sleep and moaned something. “I like your room,” I said, trying not to look at Sohrab’s bandaged wrists. “It’s bright, and you have a view.” Silence. A few more awkward minutes passed, and a light sweat formed on my brow, my upper lip. I pointed to the untouched bowl of green pea aush on his nightstand, the unused plastic spoon. “You should try to eat some thing. Gain your quwat back, your strength. Do you want me to help you?”He held my glance, then looked away, his face set like stone. His eyes were still lightless, I saw, vacant, the way I had found them when I had pulled him out of the bathtub. I reached into the paper bag between my feet and took out the used copy of the Shah namah I had bought at the Persian bookstore. I turned the cover so it faced Sohrab. “I used to read this to your father when we were children. We’d go up the hill by our house and sit beneath the pomegranate...” I trailed off. Sohrab was looking through the window again. I forced a smile. “Your father’s favorite was the story of Rostam and Sohrab and that’s how you got your name, I know you know that.” I paused, feeling a bit like an idiot. “Any way, he said in his letter that it was your favorite too, so I thought I’d read you some of it. Would you like that?”
Sohrab closed his eyes. Covered them with his arm, the one with the bruise.I flipped to the page I had bent in the taxicab. “Here we go,” I said, wondering for the first time what thoughts had passed through Hassan’s head when he had finally read the _Shahnamah_ for himself and discovered that I had deceived him all those times. I cleared my throat and read. “Give ear unto the combat of Sohrab against Rostam, though it be a tale replete with tears,” I began. “It came about that on a certain day Rostam rose from his couch and his mind was filled with forebodings. He bethought him...” I read him most of chapter 1, up to the part where the young warrior Sohrab comes to his mother, Tahmineh, the princess of Samen gan, and demands to know the identity of his father. I closed the book. “Do you want me to go on? There are battles coming up, remember? Sohrab leading his army to the White Castle in Iran? Should I read on?”
He shook his head slowly. I dropped the book back in the paper bag. “That’s fine,” I said, encouraged that he had responded at all. “Maybe we can continue tomorrow. How do you feel?”Sohrab’s mouth opened and a hoarse sound came out. Dr. Nawaz had told me that would happen, on account of the breathing tube they had slid through his vocal cords. He licked his lips and tried again. “Tired.”
“I know. Dr. Nawaz said that was to be expected--” He was shaking his head.
“What, Sohrab?”
白天,医院是一座纵横交错的走廊组成的迷宫,荧光灯在人们头顶放射出耀眼的光芒,弄得人迷迷糊糊。我弄清楚了它的结构,知道东楼电梯那颗四楼的按钮不会亮,明白同一层的男厕的门卡住了,你得用肩膀去顶才能把它打开。我了解到医院的生活有它的节奏:每天早晨换班之前匆匆忙忙,白天手忙脚乱,而深夜则寂静无声,偶然有一群医师和护士跑过,去抢救某个病患。白天我警惕地守在索拉博床前,晚上则在医院曲折的走廊游荡,倾听我的鞋跟敲击地面的声音,想着当索拉博苏醒过来我该跟他说什么。最后我会走回重症病房,站在他床边嘶嘶作响的呼吸机,依然一筹莫展。在重症病房度过三天之后,他们撤去了呼吸管道,把他换到一张低矮的病床。他们搬动他的时候我不在。那天晚上我回到旅馆,想睡一觉,最终却在床上彻夜辗转反侧。那天早晨,我强迫自己不去看浴缸。它现在干干净净,有人抹去血迹,地板上铺了新的脚踏垫,墙上也擦过了。可是我忍不住坐在它那冰凉的陶瓷边缘。我想像索拉博放满一缸水,看见他脱掉衣服,看见他转动刮胡刀的手柄,拨出刀头的双重安全插销,退出刀片,用食指和拇指捏住。我想像他滑进浴缸,躺了一会,闭上双眼。我在寻思他举起刀片划落的时候最后在想着什么。我走出大堂的时候,旅馆经理费亚兹先生在身后跟上。 “我很为你感到难过,”他说,“可是我要你搬离我的旅馆,拜托了。这对我的生意有影响,影响很大。”
我告诉我能理解,退了房。他没有收取我在医院度过的那三个晚上的房钱。在大堂门口等出租车的时候,我想起那天晚上费亚兹先生对我说过的:你们阿富汗人的事情……你们有些鲁莽。我曾对他大笑,但现在我怀疑。在把索拉博最担心的消息告诉他之后,我真的睡着了吗?男孩,后来我从某个护士那里听到,他从一辆开动的巴士车顶跌下来,摔断了腿。他上了石膏的腿抬起,由一些绑着砝码的夹子夹住。索拉博的病床靠近窗口,早晨的阳光从长方形的玻璃窗照射进来,落在病床的后半部上。窗边站着一个身穿制服的保安,嗑着煮过的西瓜子——医院给索拉博安排了 24小时的防止自杀看护。纳瓦兹大夫跟我说过,这是医院的制度。保安看到我,举帽致意,随后离开房间。
索拉博穿着短袖的病服,仰面躺着,毛毯盖到他胸口,脸转向窗那边。我以为他睡了,但当我将一张椅子拉到他床边时,他眼睑跳动,跟着睁开。他看看我,移开视线。尽管他们给他输了很多血,他脸色依然苍白,而且在他的臂弯有一大块淤伤。
“你还好吗?”我说。
他没回答,眼望向窗外,看着医院花园里面一个围着护栏的方形沙地和秋千架。运动场旁边有个拱形的凉棚,在一排木槿的树影之下,几株葡萄藤爬上木格子。几个孩子拿着铲斗和小提桶在沙地里面玩耍。那天天空万里无云,一碧如洗,我看见一架小小的喷气式飞机,拖着两道白色的尾巴。我转向索拉博:“我刚跟纳瓦兹大夫聊过,他说你再过几天就可以出院了,这是个好消息,对吧?”我遇到的又是沉默。病房那端,旁遮普男孩睡着翻了个身,发出几声呻吟。 “我喜欢你这间房,”我说,忍住不去看索拉博缠着绷带的手腕,“光线明亮,你还能看到外面的景色。”没有回应。又是尴尬的几分钟过去,丝丝汗水从我额头和上唇冒出来。他床头的柜子上摆着一碗没碰过的豌豆糊,一把没用过的塑料调羹,我指着它们说:“你应该试着吃些东西,才能恢复元气。要我喂你吃吗?”他看向我的眼睛,接着望开,脸上木无表情。我看见他的眼神依然黯淡空洞,就像我把他从浴缸里面拉出来时看到的那样。我把手伸进两腿之间的纸袋,拿出一本我在那间波斯文书店买来的《沙纳玛》旧书。我将封面转向索拉博。“我们还是小孩的时候,我经常读这些故事给你父亲听。我们爬上我们家后面的山丘,坐在石榴树下面……”我降低声音。索拉博再次望着窗外,我挤出笑脸。“你父亲最喜欢的是罗斯坦和索拉博的故事,你的名字就是从那儿来的,我知道你知道。”我停顿,觉得自己有点像个白痴,“反正,他在信里说你也最喜欢这个故事。所以我想我会念一些给你听,你会喜欢吗?”
索拉博闭上眼睛,将手臂放在它们上面,有淤伤的那只手臂。我翻到在出租车里面折好的那页。“我们从这里开始,”我说,第一次想到,当哈桑终于能自己阅读《沙纳玛》,发现我曾无数次欺骗过他的时候,他的脑子里转过什么念头呢?我清清喉咙,读了起来。“请听索拉博和罗斯坦战斗的故事,不过这个故事催人泪下。 ”我开始了,“话说某日,罗斯坦自躺椅起身,心里闪过不祥之兆。他忆起他……”我给他念了第一章的大部分,直到年轻的斗士索拉博去找他的妈妈,萨门干王国的公主拓敏妮,要求得知他的父亲姓甚名谁。我合上书。“你想我读下去吗?接下来有战斗场面,你记得吗?索拉博带领他的军队进攻伊朗的白色城堡?要我念下去吗?”
他慢慢摇头。我把书放回纸袋,“那好。”我说,为他终于有所反应而鼓舞。“也许我们可以明天再继续。你感觉怎样?”索拉博张开口,发出嘶哑的嗓音。纳瓦兹大夫跟我说过会有这样的情况,那是他们把呼吸管插进他的声带引发的。他舔舔嘴唇,又试一次。 “厌倦了。”
“我知道,纳瓦兹大夫说过会出现这种感觉……”他摇着头。
“怎么了,索拉博?”