饭饭TXT > 海外名作 > 《黑暗塔系列(英文版)》作者:[美]斯蒂芬·金【7部完结】 > Dark Tower V---Wolves of the Calla.txt

第 49 页

作者:美-斯蒂芬·金 当前章节:15414 字 更新时间:2026-6-22 03:06

hope grew. He thought it increasingly likely that this pretty middle-aged wife with her small breasts and salt-

and-pepper hair had a hunter's heart. Not a gunslinger's heart, but at this point he would settle for a few

hunters—a few killers—male or female.

She marched toward the barn. When they were fifty yards from the stuffy-guys flanking the barn door,

Roland touched her shoulder and made her stop.

"Nay," she said, "this is too far."

"I've seen you fling as far and half again," her husband said, and stood firm in the face of her angry look. "So

I have."

"Not with a gunslinger from the Line of Eld standing by my right elbow, you haven't," she said, but she stood

where she was.

Roland went to the barn door and took the grinning sharp-root head from the stuffy on the left side. He went

into the barn. Here was a stall filled with freshly picked sharproot, and beside it one of potatoes. He took one

of the potatoes and set it atop the stuffy-guy's shoulders, where the sharproot had been. It was a good-sized

spud, but the contrast was still comic; the stuffy-guy now looked like Mr. Tinyhead in a carnival show or

street-fair.

"Oh, Roland, no!" she cried, sounding genuinely shocked. "I could never!"

"I don't believe you," he said, and stood aside. "Throw."

For a moment he diought she wouldn't. She looked around for her husband. If Eisenhart had still been

standing beside her, Roland thought, she would have thrust the plate into his hands and run for the house and

never mind if he cut himself on it, either. But Vaughn Eisenhart had withdrawn to the foot of the steps. The

boys stood above him, Benny Slightman watching with mere interest, Jake with closer attention, his brows

drawn together and the smile now gone from his face.

"Roland, I—"

"None of it, missus, I beg. Your talk of leaping was all very fine, but now I'd see you do it. Throw."

She recoiled a little, eyes widening, as if she had been slapped. Then she turned to face the barn door and

drew her right hand above her left shoulder. The plate glimmered in the late light, which was now more pink

than red. Her lips had thinned to a white line. For a moment all the world held still.

"Riza!" she cried in a shrill, furious voice, and cast her arm forward. Her hand opened, the index finger

pointing precisely along the path the plate would take. Of all of them in the yard (the cowpokes had also

stopped to watch), only Roland's eyes were sharp enough to follow the flight of the dish.

True! he exulted. True as ever was!

The plate gave a kind of moaning howl as it bolted above the dirt yard. Less than two seconds after it had left

her hand, the potato lay in two pieces, one by the stuffy-guy's gloved right hand and the other by its left. The

plate itself stuck in the side of the barn door, quivering.

The boys raised a cheer. Benny hoisted his hand as his new friend had taught him, and Jake slapped him a

high five.

"Great going, sai Eisenhart!" Jake called.

"Good hit! Say thankya!" Benny added.

Roland observed the way the woman's lips drew back from her teeth at this hapless, well-meant praise—she

looked like a horse that has seen a snake. "Boys," he said, "I'd go inside now, were I you."

Benny was bewildered. Jake, however, took another look at Margaret Eisenhart and understood. You did

what you had to… and then the reaction set in. "Come on, Ben," he said.

"But—"

"Come on." Jake took his new friend by the shirt and tugged him back toward the kitchen door.

Roland let the woman stay where she was for a moment, head down, trembling with reaction. Strong color

still blazed in her cheeks, but everywhere else her skin had gone as pale as milk. He thought she was

struggling not to vomit.

He went to the barn door, grasped the plate at the grasping-place, and pulled. He was astounded at how much

effort it took before the plate first wiggled and then pulled loose. He brought it back to her, held it out. "Thy

tool."

For a moment she didn't take it, only looked at him with a species of bright hate. "Why do you mock me,

Roland? How do'ee know Vaughn took me from the Manni Clan? Tell us that, I beg."

It was the rose, of course—an intuition left by the touch of the rose—and it was also the tale of her face,

which was a womanly version of the old Henchick's. But how he knew what he knew was no part of this

woman's business, and he only shook his head. "Nay. But I do not mock thee."

Margaret Eisenhart abruptly seized Roland by the neck. Her grip was dry and so hot her skin felt feverish.

She pulled his ear to her uneasy, twitching mouth. He thought he could smell every bad dream she must have

had since deciding to leave her people for Calla Bryn Sturgis's big rancher.

"I saw thee speak to Henchick last night," she said. "Will'ee speak to him more? Ye will, won't you?"

Roland nodded, transfixed by her grip. The strength of it. The little puffs of air against his ear. Did a lunatic

hide deep down inside everyone, even such a woman as this? He didn't know.

"Good. Say thankya. Tell him Margaret of the Redpath Clan does fine with her heathen man, aye, fine still."

Her grip tightened. "Tell him she regrets nothing!. Will'ee do that for me?"

"Aye, lady, if you like."

She snatched the plate from him, fearless of its lethal edge. Having it seemed to steady her. She looked at him

from eyes in which tears swam, unshed. "Is it the cave ye spoke of with my Da'? The Doorway Cave?"

Roland nodded.

"What would ye visit on us, ye chary gunstruck man?"

Eisenhart joined them. He looked uncertainly at his wife, who had endured exile from her people for his sake.

For a moment she looked at him as though she didn't know him.

"I only do as ka wills," Roland said.

"Ka!" she cried, and her lip lifted. A sneer transformed her good looks to an ugliness that was almost

starding. It would have frightened the boys. "Every troublemaker's excuse! Put it up your bum with the rest

of the dirt!"

"I do as ka wills and so will you," Roland said.

She looked at him, seeming not to comprehend. Roland took the hot hand that had gripped him and squeezed

it, not quite to the point of pain.

"And so will you."

She met his gaze for a moment, then dropped her eyes. "Aye," she muttered. "Oh aye, so do we all." She

ventured to look at him again. "Will ye give Henchick my message?"

"Aye, lady, as I said."

The darkening dooryard was silent except for the distant call of a rustic The cowpokes still leaned at the

remuda fence. Roland ambled over to them.

"Evening, gents."

"Hope ya do well," one said, and touched his forehead.

"May you do better," Roland said. "Missus threw the plate, and she threw it well, say aye?"

"Say thankya," another of them agreed. "No rust on the missus."

"No rust," Roland agreed. "And will I tell you something now, gents? A word to tuck beneath your hats, as

we do say?"

They looked at him warily.

Roland looked up, smiled at the sky. Then looked back at them. "Set my watch and warrant on't. You might

want to speak of it. Tell what you saw."

They watched him cautiously, not liking to admit to this.

"Speak of it and I'll kill every one of you," Roland said. "Do you understand me?"

Eisenhart touched his shoulder. "Roland, surely—"

The gunslinger shrugged his hand off without looking at him. "Do you understand me?"

They nodded.

"And believe me?"

They nodded again. They looked frightened. Roland was glad to see it. They were right to be afraid. "Say

thankya."

"Say thanks," one of them repeated. He had broken a sweat.

"Aye," said the second.

"Thankya big-big," said the third, and shot a nervous stream of tobacco to one side.

Eisenhart tried again. "Roland, hear me, I beg—"

But Roland didn't. His mind was alight with ideas. All at once he saw thieir course with perfect clarity. Their

course on this side, at least. "Where's the robot?" he asked the rancher.

"Andy? Went in the kitchen with the boys, I think."

"Good. Do you have a stockline office in there?" He nodded toward the barn.

"Aye."

"Let's go there, then. You, me, and your missus."

"I'd like to take her into the house a bit," Eisenhart said. I'd like to take her anywhere that's away from you,

Roland read in his eyes.

"Our palaver won't be long," Roland said, and with perfect honesty. He'd already seen everything he needed.

SIX

The stockline office only had a single chair, the one behind the desk. Margaret took it. Eisenhart sat on a

footstool. Roland squatted on his hunkers with his back to the wall and his purse open before him. He had

shown them the twins' map. Eisenhart hadn't immediately grasped what Roland had pointed out (might not

grasp it even now), but the woman did. Roland thought it no wonder she hadn't been able to stay witü the

Manni. The Manni were peaceful. Margaret Eisenhart was not. Not once you got below her surface, at any

rate.

"You'll keep this to yourselves," he said.

"Or thee'll kill us, like our cowpokes?" she asked.

Roland gave her a patient look, and she colored beneath it.

"I'm sorry, Roland. I'm upset. It comes of throwing the plate in hot blood."

Eisenhart put an arm around her. This time she accepted it gladly, and laid her head on his shoulder.

"Who else in your group can throw as well as that?" Roland asked. "Any?"

"Zalia Jaffords," she said at once.

"Say true?"

She nodded emphatically. "Zalia could have cut that tater in two ten-for-ten, at twenty paces farther back."

"Others?"

"Sarey Adams, wife of Diego. And Rosalita Munoz."

Roland raised his eyebrows at that.

"Aye," she said. "Other than Zalia, Rosie's best." A brief pause. "And me, I suppose."

Roland felt as if a huge weight had rolled off his back. He'd been convinced they'd somehow have to bring

back weapons from New York or find them on the east side of the river. Now it looked as if that might not be

necessary. Good. They had other business in New York—business involving Calvin Tower. He didn't want to

mix the two unless he absolutely had to.

"I'd see you four women at the Old Fella's rectory-house. And just you four." His eyes flicked briefly to

Eisenhart, then back to Eisenhart's sai. "No husbands."

"Now wait just a damn minute," Eisenhart said.

Roland held up his hand. "Nothing's been decided yet."

"It's the way it's not been decided I don't care for," Eisenhart said.

"Hush a minute," Margaret said. "When would you see us?"

Roland calculated. Twenty-four days left, perhaps only twenty-three, and still much left to see. And there was

the thing hidden in the Old Fella's church, that to deal with, too. And the old Manni, Henchick…

Yet in the end, he knew, the day would come and things would play out with shocking suddenness. They

always did. Five minutes, ten at most, and all would be finished, for good or ill.

The trick was to be ready when those few minutes came around.

"Ten days from now," he said. "In the evening. I'd see the four of you in competition, turn and turn about."

"All right," she said. "That much we can do. But Roland… I'll not throw so much as a single plate or raise a

single finger against the Wolves if my husband still says no."

"I understand," Roland said, knowing she would do as he said, like it or not. When the time came they all

would.

There was one small window in the office wall, dirty and festooned with cobwebs but clear enough for them

to be able to see Andy marching across the yard, his electric eyes flashing on and off in the deepening

twilight. He was humming to himself.

"Eddie says robots are programmed to do certain tasks," he said. "Andy does the tasks you bid him?"

"Mostly, yes," Eisenhart said. "Not always. And he's not always around, ye ken."

"Hard to believe he was built to do no more than sing foolish songs and tell horoscopes," Roland mused.

"Perhaps the Old People gave him hobbies," Margaret Eisenhart said, "and now that his main tasks are gone

—lost in time, do ya ken—he concentrates on the hobbies."

"You think the Old People made him."

"Who else?" Vaughn Eisenhart asked. Andy was gone now, and the back yard was empty.

"Aye, who else," Roland said, still musing. "Who else would have the wit and the tools? But the Old People

were gone two thousand years before the Wolves began raiding into the Calla. Two thousand or more. So

what I'd like to know is who or what programmed Andy not to talk about them, except to tell you folks when

they're coming. And here's another question, not as interesting as that but still curious: why does he tell you

that much if he cannot—or will not—tell you anything else?"

Eisenhart and his wife were looking at each other, thunderstruck. They'd not gotten past the first part of what

Roland had said. The gunslinger wasn't surprised, but he was a little disappointed in them. Really, there was

much here that was obvious. If, that was, one set one's wits to work. In fairness to the Eisenharts, Jaffordses,

and Overholsers of the Calla, he supposed, straight thinking wasn't so easy when your babbies were at stake.

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