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第24部分(第1页)

Roy Delfiness story was only one of many; I grew up in a tradition of miracles and healings。 I grew up believing in gris…gris; as well (only; up in the hills we said it to rhyme with kiss…kiss): stump…water for warts; moss under your pillow to ease the heartache of lost love; and; of course; what we used to call haints … but I did not believe John Coffey was a gris…gris man。 I had looked into his eyes。 More important; I had felt his touch。 Being touched by him was like being touched by some strange and wonderful doctor。

I helped it; didnt I?

That kept chiming in my head; like a snatch of song you cant get rid of; or words youd speak to set a spell。

I helped it; didnt I?

Except he hadnt。 God had。 John Coffeys use of 〃I〃 could be chalked up to ignorance rather than pride; but I knew … believed; at least … what I had learned about healing in those churches of Praise Jesus; The Lord Is Mighty; piney…woods amen corners much beloved by my twenty…two…year…old mother and my aunts: that healing is never about the healed or the healer; but about Gods will。 For one to rejoice at the sick made well is normal; quite the expected thing; but the person healed has an obligation to then ask why … to meditate on Gods will; and the extraordinary lengths to which God has gone to realize His will。

What did God want of me; in this case? What did He want badly enough to put healing power in the hands of a child…murderer? To be on the block; instead of at home; sick as a dog; shivering in bed with the stink of sulfa running out of my pores? Perhaps; I was maybe supposed to be here instead of home in case Wild Bill Wharton decided to kick up more dickens; or to make sure Percy Wetmore didnt get up to some foolish and potentially destructive piece of fuckery All right; then。 So be it。 I would keep my eyes open … and my mouth shut; especially about miracle cures。

No one y looking and sounding better; Id been telling the world I was getting better; and until that very day Id honestly believed it。 I had even told Warden Moores that I was on the mend。 Delacroix had seen something; but I thought he would keep his mouth shut; too (probably afraid John Coffey would throw a spell on him if he didnt)。 As for Coffey himself; hed probably already forgotten it。 He was nothing but a conduit; after all; and there isnt a culvert in the world that remembers the water that flowed through it once the rain has stopped。 So I resolved to keep my mouth pletely shut on the subject; with never an idea of how soon Id be telling the story; or who Id be telling it to。

But I was curious about my big boy; and theres no sense not admitting it。 After what had happened to me there in his cell; I was more curious than ever。

4。

Before leaving that night; I arranged with Brutal to cover for me the next day; should I e in a little late; and when I got up the following morning; I set out for Tefton; down in Trapingus County。

〃Im not sure I like you worrying so much about this fellow Coffey;〃 my wife said; handing me the lunch shed put up for me…Janice never believed in roadside hamburger stands; she used to say there was a bellyache waiting in every one。 〃Its not like you; Paul。〃

〃Im not worried about him;〃 I said。 〃Im curious; thats all。〃

〃In my experience; one leads to the other;〃 Janice said tartly; then gave me a good; hearty kiss on the mouth。 〃You look better; at least; Ill say that。 For awhile there; you had me nervous。 Waterworks all cured up?〃

〃All cured up;〃 I said; and off I went; singing songs like 〃e; Josephine; in My Flying Machine〃 and Were in the Money〃 to keep myself pany。

I went to the offices of the Tefton Intelligencer first; and they told me that Burt Hammersmith; the fellow I was looking for; was most likely over at the county courthouse。 At the courthouse they told me that Hammersmith had been there but had left when a burst waterpipe had closed down the main proceedings; which happened to be a rape trial (in the pages of the Intelligencer the crime would be referred to as 〃assault on a woman;〃 which was how such things were done in the days before Ricki Lake and Carnie Wilson came on the scene)。 They guessed hed probably gone on home。 I got some directions out a dirt road so rutted and narrow I just about didnt dare take my Ford up it; and there I found my man。 Hammersmith had written most of the stories on the Coffey trial; and it was from him I found out most of the details about the brief manhunt that had ted Coffey in the first place。 The details the Intelligencer considered too gruesome to print is what I mean; of course。

Mrs。 Hammersmith was a young woman with a tired; pretty face and hands red from lye soap。 She didnt ask my business; just led me through a small house fragrant with the smell of baking and onto the back porch; where her husband sat with a bottle of pop in his hand and an unopened copy of Liberty magazine on his lap。 There was a small; sloping backyard; at the foot of it; two little ones were squabbling and laughing over a swing。 From the porch; it was impossible to tell their sexes; but I thought they were boy and girl。 Maybe even twins; which cast an interesting sort of light on their fathers part; peripheral as it had been; in the Coffey trial。 Nearer at hand; set like an island in the middle of a turdstudded patch of bare; beatup…looking ground; was a doghouse。 No sign of Fido; it was another unseasonably hot day; and I guessed he was probably inside; snoozing。

〃Burt; yew…all got you a cumpny;〃 Mrs。 Hammersmith said。

〃Allright;〃 he said。 He glanced at me; glanced at his wife; then looked back at his kids; which was where his heart obviously lay。 He was a thin man … almost painfully thin; as if he had just begun to recover from a serious illness … and his hair had started to recede。 His wife touched his shoulder tentatively with one of her red; wash…swollen hands。 He didnt look at it or reach up to touch it; and after a moment she took it back。 It occurred to me; fleetingly; that they looked more like brother and sister than husband and wife … hed gotten the brains; shed gotten the looks; but neither of them had escaped some underlying resemblance; a heredity that could never be escaped。 Later; going home; I realized they didnt look alike at all; what made them seem to was the aftermath of stress and the lingering of sorrow。 Its strange how pain marks our faces; and makes us look like family。

She said; 〃Yew…all want a cold drink; Mr。 … ?〃

〃Its Edgebe;〃 I said。 〃Paul Edgebe。 And thank you。 A cold drink would be wonderful; maam。〃

She went back inside。 I held out my hand to Hammersmith; who gave it a brief shake。 His grip was limp and cold。 He never took his eyes off the kids down at the bottom of the yard。

〃Mr。 Hammersmith; Im E Block superintendent at Cold Mountain State Prison。 Thats…〃

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