太子爷小说网 > 英语电子书 > osc.am2.redprophet >

第64节

osc.am2.redprophet-第64节

小说: osc.am2.redprophet 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



they'd have to settle for President someday。 Yet in the meantime they could not forget Ta…Kumsaw; and rumors spread that he was alive somewhere; crippled by his wounds; waiting to get healed up and lead a great Red invasion from across the Mizzipy; from the swamps of the South; or from some secret hidden fastness in the Appalachee Mountains。
  
  ***
  
  All through the battle Alvin worked with all his might to keep Ta…Kumsaw alive。 As each new bullet tore through flesh; Alvin mended broken arteries; trying to hold Ta…Kumsaw's blood inside him。 The pain he had no time for; but Ta…Kumsaw seemed not to mind the savage injuries he took。 Alvin crouched down in his hiding place between a standing tree and a fallen one; his eyes closed; watching Ta…Kumsaw only with his inward eyes; seeing his flesh from the inside out。 Alvin saw none of the images that would haunt Ta…Kumsaw's legends。 Alvin never even noticed as bullets sent a spray of leaf bits and chips of wood falling on him。 He even took a sharp stinging bullet in the back of his left hand and hardly felt it; he was concentrating so hard on keeping Ta…Kumsaw on his feet。
  But one thing Alvin saw: Beyond the edges of his vision; just out of reach; there was the Unmaker like a transparent shadow; shimmering fingers slicing through the wood。 Ta…Kumsaw; him Alvin could heal。 But who could heal the greenwood? Who could heal the tearing apart of tribe from tribe; Red from Red? All that Ta…Kumsaw had built was shivered apart in that single fraction of an hour; and all Alvin could do was keep a single man alive。 A great man; true; a man who had changed the world; who had built something; even if it was something that in the end led to more harm and suffering; Ta…Kumsaw was a builder; and yet even as Alvin saved his life; he knew that Ta…Kumsaw's building days were done。 Likely enough the Unmaker didn't begrudge Alvin his friend's life。 What was Ta…Kumsaw; pared to what the Unmaker was consuming at this feast? Just like Taleswapper had said so long ago; the Unmaker could tear down; eat through; use up; and crush things faster than any one man could ever hope to build。
  All the time; though Alvin scarcely noticed where Ta…Kumsaw was what with worrying about what was going on inside him; the Red man circled Alvin's hiding place like he was a dog tied to a tree; winding around and getting closer and closer。 So when the bullets finally became too much for Alvin and the blood flowed so fast from dozens of wounds that Alvin couldn't stanch them all; it was into Alvin's sheltered place that Ta…Kumsaw fell; sprawling across Alvin's body; knocking the wind out of the boy
  Alvin scarce heard the search go on around him。 He was too busy healing wounds; binding up torn flesh; connecting severed nerves and straighterung broken bones。 In desperation to save Ta…Kumsaw's life he opened his eyes and cut into the Red man's flesh with his own flint knife; prying bullets out and then healing up where he had cut。 And all the time it was like the smoke gathered above them; making it impossible for anyone to see into the little sheltered place where the Unmaker had got Alvin holed up in hiding。
  It was afternoon next day when Alvin awoke。 Ta…Kumsaw lay beside him; weak and spent; but whole。 Alvin was filthy and itchy and he had to void himself; gingerly he pulled himself out from under Ta…Kumsaw; who felt so light; as if he was half made of air。 The smoke was gone now; but Alvin still felt invisible; walking around in broad daylight dressed like a Red man。 He could hear drunken singing from the American camp near the ruins of Detroit。 Stray smoke still drifted through the trees。 And everywhere Alvin walked were the bodies of Red men cast like wet straw on the forest floor。 It stank of death。
  Alvin found a brook and drank; trying not to imagine some dead body lying in it upstream。 He washed his face and hands; dipped his head into the water to cool his brain; the way he used to do at home after a hard day's work。 Then he went back to wake Ta…Kumsaw and bring him here to drink。
  Ta…Kumsaw was already awake。 Already standing over the body of a fallen friend。 His head was tipped back; his mouth open; as if he uttered a cry so deep and loud that human ears couldn't hear the sound of it; could only feel the earth trembling with the vibration of the shout。 Alvin ran to him and flung his arms around him; clinging to him like the child he was; only it was Alvin doing the forting; Alvin whispering; 〃You done your best; you done all that could be done。〃
  And Ta…Kumsaw answered not at all; though his silence was an answer; too; like as if he was saying; I'm alive; which means I didn't do enough。
  They walked away in the afternoon; not even bothering to conceal themselves。 Some White men later woke up with hangovers; swearing they saw visions of Ta…Kumsaw and the Renegado Boy walking through the corpses of the Red army; but nobody paid them mind。 And what did it matter? Ta…Kumsaw wasn't no danger to the Whites now。 He'd broken against them like a great wave; but they stood against him; he thought to shatter them; but they broke him and his people into spray; and if some drops of it still clung; what did that matter? They had no power anymore。 It was all spent in one brutal; futile blow。
  Alvin spoke not a word to Ta…Kumsaw all the way south to the headwaters of the My…Ammy; and Ta…Kumsaw spoke nary a word to him as they dug out a canoe together。 Alvin made the wood soft in the right places; so it took scarce half an hour; and another half hour to shape a good paddle。 Then they dragged the canoe to the river's edge。 Only with the canoe half in the water did Ta…Kumsaw stop and turn to Alvin; reach out a hand and touch his face。 〃If all White men were true like you; Alvin; I would never have been their enemy。〃
  And as Alvin watched Ta…Kumsaw paddle steadily down the river out of sight; it occurred to him that it just didn't feel like Ta…Kumsaw had lost。 It was as if the battle wasn't about Ta…Kumsaw。 It was about White men; and their worthiness to have this land。 They might think they won; they might think the Red man slunk away or bowed his head in defeat; but in fact it was the White man who lost; because when Ta…Kumsaw paddled down the Wobbish to the Hio; down the Hio to the Mizzipy; and crossed the fogs of the river to the other side; he was taking the land with him; the greensong; what the White man had won with so much blood and dishonesty was not the living land of the Red man; but the corpse of that land。 It was decay that the White man won。 It would turn to dust in his hands; Alvin knew it。
  But I'm a White man; not a Red; whatever anybody might say。 And rotting underfoot or not; this land is all the land we have; and our people all the people that we've got。 So Alvin walked along the shore of the Wobbish; heading downriver; knowing that where the Tippy…Canoe discharged itself into the larger stream; there he'd find his pa and ma; his brothers and his sisters; all a…waiting there to find out what had happened to him in the year since he set out to bee a prentice blacksmith back at Hatrack River。
  
  
  Chapter 19  Homeing
  
  Napoleon did not wear irons on his way back to France。 He slept in the second cabin; and ate at table with Governor La Fayette; who was only too glad to have him。 In the hot afternoons of the Atlantic crossing; La Fayette confided all his plans of revolution to Napoleon; his dearest friend; and Napoleon offered helpful advice on bow to make the revolution go much faster and more effectively。
  〃The best thing about all these sad events;〃 said La Fayette the day the lookout first spied the coast of Bretagne; 〃is that we are friends now; and the revolution is assured of success because you are a part of it。 To think that once I mistrusted you; figuring you to be a tool of the King。 A tool of Charles! But soon all France will know you for the hero that you are; and blame the King and Freddie for the sacking of Detroit。 All that territory in the hands of Protestants and savages; while we are here to offer a better way; a truer leadership to the people of France。 Ah; Napoleon; I have yearned for such a man as you through all my years of planning for democracy。 All we have needed; we Feuillants; was a leader; a man who could guide us; a man who could lead France to true freedom。〃 And La Fayette sighed and sank deeper into the cushions of his chair。
  Through all this Napoleon listened with satisfaction; yes; but also sadness。 For he had thought that La Fayette was immune to his charm because of some great inward strength。 Now he knew that it was only a foolish amulet; that La Fayette was like any ordinary man when it came to resisting Napoleon; and now that the amulet lay buried in a mass grave outside Detroit; no doubt still chained to the moldering vertebrae of Frederic de Maurepas; Napoleon knew that he would never find his equal in this world; unless it was God himself; or Nature。 There would be no man to deny him; that much was sure。 So he listened to La Fayette's babbling with a wistful longing for the kind of man he once thought La Fayette could be。
  The men on deck bustled and hurried and made ten thousand clumbing noises

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 1

你可能喜欢的