《The Shining 原版小说》

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The Shining 原版小说- 第91部分


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building。 Masterton; part owner now but still walking with the patented shuffle 
he had adopted back before World War II; was pushing a bin of lettuces into the 
high; dark building。 
  Hallorann pushed the button that lowered the passenger side window and 
hollered: 〃Those avocadoes is too damn high; you cheapskate!〃 
  Masterton looked back over his shoulder; grinned widely enough to expose all 
three gold teeth; and yelled back; 〃And I know exactly where you can put em; my 
good buddy。〃 
  〃Remarks like that I keep track of; bro。〃 
  Masterton gave him the finger。 Hallorann returned the pliment。 
  〃Get your cukes; did you?〃 Masterton asked。 
  〃I did。〃 
  〃You e back early tomorrow; I gonna give you some of the nicest new 
potatoes you ever seen。〃 
  〃I send the boy;〃 Hallorann said。 〃You in up tonight?〃 
  〃You supplyin the juice; bro?〃 
  〃That's a big ten…four。〃 
  〃I be there。 You keep that thing off the top end goin home; you hear me? Every 
cop between here an St。 Pete knows your name。〃 
  〃You know all about it; huh?〃 Hallorann asked; grinning。 
  〃I know more than you'll ever learn; my man。〃 
  〃Listen to this sassy nigger。 Would you listen?〃 
  〃Go on; get outta here fore I start throwin these lettuces。〃 
  〃Go on an throw em。 I'll take anything for free。〃 
  Masterton made as if to throw one。 Hallorann ducked; rolled up the window; and 
drove on。 He was feeling fine。 For the last half hour or so he had been smelling 
oranges; but he didn't find that queer。 For the last half hour he had been in a 
fruit and vegetable market。 
  It was 4:30 p。m。; EST; the first day of December; Old Man Winter settling his 
frostbitten rump firmly onto most of the country; but down here the men wore 
open…throated shortsleeve shirts and the women were in light summer dresses and 
shorts。 On top of the First Bank of Florida building; a digital thermometer 
bordered with huge grapefruits was flashing 79° over and over。 Thank God for 
Florida; Hallorann thought; mosquitoes and all。 
  In the back of the limo were two dozen avocados; a crate of cucumbers; ditto 
oranges; ditto grapefruit。 Three shopping sacks filled with Bermuda onions; the 
sweetest vegetable a loving God ever created; some pretty good sweet peas; which 
would be served with the entree and e back uneaten nine times out of ten; and 
a single blue Hubbard squash that was strictly for personal consumption。 
  Hallorann stopped in the turn lane at the Vermont Street light; and when the 
green arrow showed he pulled out onto state highway 219; pushing up to forty and 
holding it there until the town began to trickle away into an exurban sprawl of 
gas stations; Burger Kings; and McDonalds。 It was a small order today; he could 


 
 
have sent Baedecker after it; but Baedecker had been chafing for his chance to 
buy the meat; and besides; Hallorann never missed a chance to bang it back and 
forth with Frank Masterton if he could help it。 Masterton might show up tonight 
to watch some TV and drink Hallorann's Bushmill's; or he might not。 Either way 
was all right。 But seeing him mattered。 Every time it mattered now; because they 
weren't young anymore。 In the last few days it seemed he was thinking of that 
very fact a great deal。 Not so young anymore; when you got up near sixty years 
old (or tell the truth and save a lie — past it) you had to start thinking about 
stepping out。 You could go anytime。 And that had been on his mind this week; not 
in a heavy way but as a fact。 Dying was a part of living。 You had to keep tuning 
in to that if you expected to be a whole person。 And if the fact of your own 
death was hard to understand; at least it wasn't impossible to accept。 
  Why this should have been on his mind he could not have said; but his other 
reason for getting this small order himself was so he could step upstairs to the 
small office over Frank's Bar and Grill。 There was a lawyer up there now (the 
dentist who had been there last year had apparently gone broke); a young black 
fellow named McIver。 Hallorann had stepped in and told this McIver that he 
wanted to make a will; and could McIver help him out? Well; McIver asked; how 
soon do you want the document? Yesterday; said Hallorann; and threw his head 
back and laughed。 Have you got anything plicated in mind? was McIver's next 
question。 Hallorann did not。 He had his Cadillac; his bank account — some nine 
thousand dollars — a piddling checking account; and a closet of clothes。 He 
wanted it all to go to his sister。 And if your sister predeceases you? McIver 
asked。 Never mind; Hallorann said。 If that happens; I'll make a new will。 The 
document had been pleted and signed in less than three hours — fast work for a 
shyster — and now resided in Hallorann's breast pocket; folded into a stiff blue 
envelope with the word WILL on the outside in Old English letters。 
  He could not have said why he had chosen this warm sunny day when he felt so 
well to do something he had been putting off for years; but the impulse had e 
on him and he hadn't said no。 He was used to following his hunches。 
  He was pretty well out of town now。 He cranked the limo up to an illegal sixty 
and let it ride there in the left…hand lane; sucking up most of the Petersburg… 
bound traffic。 He knew from experience that the limo would still ride as solid 
as iron at ninety; and even at a hundred and twenty it didn't seem to lighten up 
much。 But his screamin days were long gone。 The thought of putting the limo up 
to a hundred and twenty on a straight stretch only scared him。 He was getting 
old。 
  (Jesus; those oranges smell strong。 Wonder if they gone over?) 
  Bugs splattered against the window。 He dialed the radio to a Miami soul 
station and got the soft; wailing voice of Al Green。 
 
    〃What a beautiful time we had together; 
    Now it's getting late and we must leave each other。。。〃 
 
  He unrolled the window; pitched his cigarette butt out; then rolled it further 
down to clear out the smell of the oranges。 He tapped his fingers against the 
wheel and hummed along under his breath。 Hooked over the rearview mirror; his 
St。 Christopher's medal swung gently back and forth。 


 
 
  And suddenly the smell of oranges intensified and he knew it was ing; 
something was ing at him。 He saw his own eyes in the rearview; widening; 
surprised。 And then it came all at once; came in a huge blast that drove out 
everything else: the music; the road ahead; his own absent awareness of himself 
as a unique human creature。 It was as if someone had put a psychic gun to his 
head and shot him with a 。45 caliber scream。 
  (!!! OH DICK OH PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE E!!!) 
  The limo had just drawn even with a Pinto station wagon driven by a man in 
workman's clothes。 The workman saw the limo drifting into his lane and laid on 
the born。 When the Cadillac continued to drift he snapped a look at the driver 
and saw a big black man bolt upright behind the wheel; his eyes looking vaguely 
upward。 Later the workman told his wife that he knew it was just one of those 
niggery hairdos they were all wearing these days; but at the time it had looked 
ju

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