登陆注册
19612500000080

第80章 CHAPTER XIII(2)

Swollen, bruised, discolored, every feature had been beaten out of all semblance of familiarity. One eye was entirely closed, the other showed through a narrow slit of blood-congested flesh. One ear seemed to have lost most of its skin. The whole face was a swollen pulp. His right jaw, in particular, was twice the size of the left. No wonder his speech had been thick, was her thought, as she regarded the fearfully cut and swollen lips that still bled. She was sickened by the sight, and her heart went out to him in a great wave of tenderness. She wanted to put her arms around him, and cuddle and soothe him; but her practical judgment bade otherwise.

"You poor, poor boy," she cried. "Tell me what you want me to do first. I don't know about such things."

"If you could help me get my clothes off," he suggested meekly and thickly. "I got 'em on before I stiffened up."

"And then hot water--that will be good," she said, as she began gently drawing his coat sleeve over a puffed and helpless hand.

"I told you they was all thumbs," he grimaced, holding up his hand and squinting at it with the fraction of sight remaining to him.

"You sit and wait," she said, "till I start the fire and get the hot water going. I won't be a minute. Then I'll finish getting your clothes off."

From the kitchen she could hear him mumbling to himself, and when she returned he was repeating over and over:

"We needed the money, Saxon. We needed the money."

Drunken he was not, she could see that, and from his babbling she knew he was partly delirious.

"He was a surprise box," he wandered on, while she proceeded to undress him; and bit by bit she was able to piece together what had happened. "He was an unknown from Chicago. They sprang him on me. The secretary of the Acme Club warned me I'd have my hands full. An' I'd a-won if I'd been in condition. But fifteen pounds off without trainin' ain't condition, Then I'd been drinkin' pretty regular, an' I didn't have my wind."

But Saxon, stripping his undershirt, no longer heard him. As with his face, she could not recognize his splendidly muscled back.

The white sheath of silken skin was torn and bloody. The lacerations occurred oftenest in horizontal lines, though there were perpendicular lines as well.

"How did you get all that?" she asked.

"The ropes. I was up against 'em more times than I like to remember. Gee! He certainly gave me mine. But I fooled 'm. He couldn't put me out. I lasted the twenty rounds, an' I wanta tell you he's got some marks to remember me by. If he ain't got a couple of knuckles broke in the left hand I'm a geezer.--Here, feel my head here. Swollen, eh? Sure thing. He hit that more times than he's wishin' he had right now. But, oh, what a lacin'!

What a lacin'! I never had anything like it before. The Chicago Terror, they call 'm. I take my hat off to 'm. He's some bear.

But I could a-made 'm take the count if I'd ben in condition an' had my wind.--Oh! Ouch! Watch out! It's like a boil!"

Fumbling at his waistband, Saxon's hand had come in contact with a brightly inflamed surface larger than a soup plate "That's from the kidney blows," Billy explained. "He was a regular devil at it. 'Most every clench, like clock work, down he'd chop one on me. It got so sore I was wincin' ... until I got groggy an' didn't know much of anything. It ain't a knockout blow, you know, but it's awful wearin' in a long fight. It takes the starch out of you."

When his knees were bared, Saxon could see the skin across the knee-caps was broken and gone.

"The skin ain't made to stand a heavy fellow like me on the knees," he volunteered. "An' the rosin in the canvas cuts like Sam Hill."

The tears were in Saxon's eyes, and she could have cried over the manhandled body of her beautiful sick boy.

As she carried his pants across the room to hang them up, a jingle of money came from them. He called her back, and from the pocket drew forth a handful of silver.

"We needed the money, we needed the money," he kept muttering, as he vainly tried to count the coins; and Saxon knew that his mind was wandering again.

It cut her to the heart, for she could not but remember the harsh thoughts that had threatened her loyalty during the week past.

After all, Billy, the splendid physical man, was only a boy, her boy. And he had faced and endured all this terrible punishment for her, for the house and tha furniture that were their house and furniture. He said so, now, when he scarcely knew what he said. He said "WE needed the money." She was not so absent from his thoughts as she had fancied. Here, down to the naked tie-ribs of his soul, when he was half unconscious, the thought of her persisted, was uppermost. We needed the money. WE!

The tears were trickling down her checks as she bent over him, and it seemed she had never loved him so much as now.

"Here; you count," he said, abandoning the effort and handing the money to her. "... How much do you make it?"

"Nineteen dollars and thirty-five cents."

"That's right ... the loser's end ... twenty dollars. I had some drinks, an' treated a couple of the boys, an' then there was carfare. If I'd a-won, I'd a-got a hundred. That's what I fought for. It'd a-put us on Easy street for a while. You take it an' keep it. It's better 'n nothin'."

In bed, he could not sleep because of his pain, and hour by hour she worked over him, renewing the hot compresses over his bruises, soothing the lacerations with witch hazel and cold cream and the tenderest of finger tips. And all the while, with broken intervals of groaning, he babbled on, living over the fight, seeking relief in telling her his trouble, voicing regret at loss of the money, and crying out the hurt to his pride. Far worse than the sum of his physical hurts was his hurt pride.

同类推荐
  • 显密圆通成佛心要集

    显密圆通成佛心要集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 君道

    君道

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 幻师颰陀神咒经

    幻师颰陀神咒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 诫初心学人文

    诫初心学人文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 淮海原肇禅师语录

    淮海原肇禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 祝酒辞与红白喜事致辞金典

    祝酒辞与红白喜事致辞金典

    本书分为上下两篇:上篇为祝酒辞。通过从酒的起源到祝酒辞的兴起、发展、演变,乃至最后成型,对祝酒辞进行了全方位阐述,希望读者了解祝酒辞的“前世今生”,并对酒文化有一个重新的认识。此外,还遴选出数百例题材丰富的祝酒实例。下篇为红白喜事致辞。书中对红白喜事的礼俗和红白喜事致辞的特色进行了详尽的讲解,同样选取了诸如婚礼、生日、节日、会议、商务庆典、送行、就职、升迁、升学、乔迁等多种不同场景的案例供参考。本书具有很强的阅读性和实用性。“一杯美酒,笑迎五湖四海宾客;一本奇书,恭奉千秋万代读者。”
  • 邻居的爱情

    邻居的爱情

    大灰狼和小白兔是邻居。有一天,大灰狼送了小白兔一盆薄荷,告诉她薄荷很香。小白兔红着眼睛点点头,她知道薄荷很香,也知道薄荷兔肉味道也不差。于是,当大灰狼打算把小白兔吃干抹净时,小白兔眼睛一闭,“来吧,早死早超生!”大灰狼莞尔,他家白兔怎么这么可爱!趁机先么一口,“我家白兔真乖!”小白兔对着手指流泪,“居然是先咬嘴巴!有本事来个痛快的啊!”大灰狼咬着她的兔耳朵,笑道,“你确定?”嘤嘤,好像哪里不太对劲儿啊~~~~
  • 孝道

    孝道

    考虑到孝道文化在青少年人格形成中的作用,编者从《孝经》、《三字经》、《弟子规》、《千字文》、《续神童诗》等古代蒙学经典读物里撷取了有关孝的精华内容,并辅以古代和现代关于孝的一些典故、文学作品等,对孝进行了梳理和解读,希望能让广大青少年对孝有一个新的认识,使孝道精华的思想得以发扬光大。
  • 婚谋不轨:台长,错情蚀骨

    婚谋不轨:台长,错情蚀骨

    电视台年会,为了扫清各路莺莺燕燕,她受台长指派,假扮台长的女朋友,必要时,还买了气球放到衣服里装怀孕,可事后,台长却将她桎梏在角落,咬着她的耳朵,声音性感、低哑地说:“宋熙,演戏要演全套啊,现在是全垒打时间!”“不行啊台长,我不行。”然-并-卵?宋熙觉得,这是她被第一任坑了后,又遇到的一个“巨坑”!跳还是不跳?五年前的一次意外,让他们有了火花碰撞,五年后的刻意经营,让她步步被圈到了他的“狼窝”。原以为他是她受伤后可以疗伤的依靠,却不想,他的爱,也有不可告人的秘密……一个身世扑朔迷离的孩子,牵扯出几个人的爱恨情仇,一张剪不断、理还乱的致命情网,勾缠着几个人的命运,谁能全身而退?谁又……葬身情网?
  • 网游之一统三界

    网游之一统三界

    自古强者皆风流.从来不为钱财愁。要问天下谁最牛.一剑劈开华山头。山外青山楼外楼.统领三界我主流。四方海角擎天柱.荡平天界我做主。现实中的平凡,不代表游戏中的→平凡。
  • 修神战之鬼战

    修神战之鬼战

    鬼界战乱起,地府乱魂出人间,无奈前世人鬼恩怨,再续情仇说。百年前,鬼灵王预感自己即将成神,巡游天下,发现阴尸鬼李继迁暗中积蓄,所图甚大,鬼灵王封印成神之日,将李继迁逼入极恶深渊。百年后,一对情侣惨死成鬼,分别代表着人间鬼界的阴尸和鬼灵,一场恩怨情仇再次展开······一个关于战争的传说,带我们了解不一样的战争世界,鬼界战争的传说,贯穿人间鬼界的不一样世界。
  • 过期爱情

    过期爱情

    —我开始怀疑在这个世界上还有什么是不会过期的?—我爱你,永不过期!十年前,他们是那冷漠家庭中两个相互取暖的人;十年后,他们是两个生活轨迹截然不同的两个人。命运的齿轮再次让他们相遇,一切是否还会回头。
  • 凌云武魂

    凌云武魂

    乡下铁匠卫骑,误入天火遗地,从此开启一段新的神话一手长枪比青霜,腰间弯弓新月样踏破千军复万马,天下何人敢拦君
  • 孤狼回忆录番外篇

    孤狼回忆录番外篇

    个人传记,描述了主人公的复杂历程,心态和成长的变化,孰对孰错。
  • 北里志

    北里志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。