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

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作者:美-斯蒂芬·金 当前章节:15399 字 更新时间:2026-6-22 03:06

But Lennie kneels in front of him, the hardon in his pants all too visible, and the cavalry doesn't come. He

leans forward with the scalpel outstretched, and the cops don't come. Callahan can smell not garlic and

tomatoes on this one but sweat and cigarettes.

"Wait a second, Bill," George/Nort says, "I got an idea, let me draw it on for you first. I got a pen in my

pocket. "

"Fuck that," Lennie/Bill breathes. He stretches out the scalpel. Callahan can see the razor-sharp blade

trembling as the little man's excitement is communicated to it, and then it passes from his field of vision.

Something cold traces his brow, then turns hot, and Sherlock Holmes doesn't come. Blood pours into his

eyes, dousing his vision, and neither does James Bond Perry Mason Travis McGee Hercule Poirot Miss

Fucking Marple.

The long white face of Barlow rises in his mind. The vampire's hair floats around his head. Barlow reaches

out. "Come, false priest, "he's saying "learn of a true religion." There are two dry snapping sounds as the

vampire's fingers break off the arms of the cross his mother gave him.

"Oh you fuckin nutball," George/Nort groans, "that ain't a swastika, that's a fuckin cross/ Gimme that!"

"Stop it, Nort, gimme a chance, I ain't done!"

Squabbling over him like a couple of kids while his balls ache and his broken jaw throbs and his sight

drowns in blood. All those seventies-era arguments about whether or not God was dead, and Christ, look at

him! Just look at him! How could there be any doubt?

And that is when the cavalry arrives.

NINE

"What exactly do you mean?" Roland asked. "I would hear this part very well, Pere."

They were still sitting at the table on the porch, but the meal was finished, the sun was down, and Rosalita

had brought 'seners. Callahan had broken his story long enough to ask her to sit with them and so she had.

Beyond the screens, in the rectory's dark yard, bugs hummed, thirsty for the light.

Jake touched what was in the gunslinger's mind. And, suddenly impatient with all this secrecy, he put the

question himself: "Were we the cavalry, Pere?"

Roland looked shocked, then actually amused. Callahan only looked surprised.

"No," he said. "I don't think so."

"You didn't see them, did you?" Roland asked. "You never actually saw the people who rescued you."

"I told you the Hitler Brothers had a flashlight," Callahan said. "Say true. But these other guys, the

cavalry…"

TEN

Whoever they are, they have a searchlight. It fills the abandoned Washateria with a glare brighter than the

flash of the cheapie Polaroid, and unlike the Polaroid, it's constant. George/Nort and Lennie/Bill cover their

eyes. Callahan would cover his, if his arms weren't duct-taped behind him.

"Nort, drop the gun! Bill, drop the scalpel!" The voice coming from the huge light is scary because it's

scared. It's the voice of someone who might do damn near anything. "I'm gonna count to five and then I'm

gonna shoot the both of yez, which is what'chez deserve. "And then the voice behind the light begins to count

not slowly and portentously but with alarming speed. "Onetwothreefour—"It's as if the owner of the voice

wants to shoot, wants to hurry tip and get the bullshit formality over with. George/Nort and Lennie/Bill have

no time to consider their options. They throw down the pistol and the scalpel and the pistol goes off when it

hits the dusty lino, a loud BANG like a kid's toy pistol that's been loaded with double caps. Callahan has no

idea where the bullet goes. Maybe even into him. Would he even feel it if it did? Doubtful.

"Don't shoot, don't shoot!" Lennie/Bill shrieks. "We ain't, we ain't we ain't— "Ain't what? Lennie/Bill doesn't

seem to know.

"Hands up!" It's a different voice, but also coming from behind the sun-gun dazzle of the light. "Reach for the

sky! Right now, you momzers!"

Their hands shoot up.

"Nah, belay that," says the first one. They may be great guys, Callahan's certainly willing to put them on his

Christmas card list, but it's clear they've never done anything like this before. "Shoes off! Pants off! Now!

Right now! "

"What the fuck— " George/Nort begins. "Are you guys the cops ? If you're the cops, you gotta give us our

rights, ourfuckin Miranda— "

From behind the glaring light, a gun goes off. Callahan sees an orange flash of fire. Its probably a pistol, but

it is to the Hitler Brothers' modest barroom .32 as a hawk is to a hummingbird. The crash is gigantic,

immediately followed by a crunch of plaster and a puff of stale dust. George/Nort and Lennie/Bill both

scream. Callahan thinks one of his rescuers—probably the one who didn't shoot—also screams.

"Shoes off and pants off! Now! Now! You better have em off before I get to thirty, or you're dead.

Onetwothreefourfi—"

Again, the speed of the count leaves no time for consideration, let alone remonstrance. George/Nort starts to

sit down and Voice Number Two says: "Sit down and we'll kill you. "

And so the Hitler Brothers stagger around the knapsack, the Polaroid, the gun, and the flashlight like spastic

cranes, pulling off their footgear while Voice Number One runs his suicidally rapid count. The shoes come

off and the pants go down. George is a boxers guy while Lennie favors briefs of the pee-stained variety.

There is no sign of Lennie's hardon; Lennie's hardon has decided to take the rest of the night off.

"Now get out," Voice Number One says.

George faces into the light. His Yankees sweatshirt hangs down over his underwear shorts, which billow

almost to his knees. He's still wearing his fanny-pack. His calves are heavily muscled, but they are trembling.

And George's face is long with sudden dismayed realization.

"Listen, you guys, " he says, "if we go out of here without finishing this guy, they'll kill us. These are very bad

— "

"If you schmucks aren't out of here by the time I get to ten, " says Voice Number One, "I'll kill you myself."

To which Voice Number Two adds, with a kind of hysterical contempt: "Gai cocknif en yom, you cowardly

motherfuckers! Stay, get shot, who cares?"

Later, after repeating this phrase to a dozen Jews who only shake their heads in bewilderment, Callahan will

happen on an elderly fellow in Topeka who translates gai cocknif en yom for him. It means go shit in the

ocean.

Voice Number One starts reeling them off again: "Onetwothree-four—"

George/Nort and Lennie/Bill exchange a cartoon look of indecision, then bolt for the door in their

underwear. The big searchlight turns to follow them. They are out; they are gone.

"Follow, " Voice Number One says gruffly to his partner. "If they get the idea to turn back— "

"Yeahyeah, " says Voice Number Two, and he's gone.

The brilliant light clicks off. "Turn over on your stomach," says Voice Number One.

Callahan tries to tell him he doesn't think he can, that his balls now feel roughly the size of teapots, but all

that comes from his mouth is mush, because of his broken jaw. He compromises by rolling over on his left

side as far as he can.

"Hold still," says Voice Number One. "I don't want to cut you." It's not the voice of a man who does stuff like

this for a living. Even in his current state, Callahan can tell that. The guy's breathing in rapid wheezes that

sometimes catch in an alarming way and then start up again. Callahan wants to thank him. It's one thing to

save a stranger if you're a cop or a fireman or a lifeguard, he supposes. Quite another when you're just an

ordinary member of the greater public. And that's what his rescuer is, he thinks, both his rescuers, although

how they came so well prepared he doesn't know. How could they know the Hitler Brothers ' names ? And

exactly where were they waiting? Did they come in from the street, or were they in the abandoned

laundrymat the whole time? Other stuff Callahan doesn't know. And doesn't really care. Because someone

saved, someone saved, someone saved his life tonight, and that's the big thing, the only thing that matters.

George and Lennie almost had their hooks in him, din't they, dear, but the cavalry came at the last minute,

just like in a John Wayne movie.

What Callahan wants to do is thank this guy. Where Callahan wants to be is safe in an ambulance and on his

way to the hospital before the punks blindside the owner of Voice Number Two outside, or the owner of Voice

Number One has an excitement-induced heart attack. He tries and more mush comes out of his mouth.

Drunkspeak, what Rowan used to call gubbish. It sounds like fann-ou.

His hands are cut free, then his feet. The guy doesn't have a heart attack. Callahan rolls over onto his back

again, and sees a pudgy white hand holding the scalpel. On the third finger is a signet ring. It shows an open

book. Below it are the words Ex Libris. Then the searchlight goes on again and Callahan raises an arm over

his eyes. "Christ, man, why areyou doing that?"It comes out Cry-mah, I-oo oonnat, but the owner of Voice

Number One seems to understand.

"I should think that would be obvious, my wounded friend, " he says. "Should we meet again, I'd like it to be

for the first time. If we pass on the street, I would as soon go unrecognized. Safer that way. "

Gritting footsteps. The light is backing away.

"We're going to call an ambulance from the pay phone across the street—"

"No! Don't do that! What if they come back?" In his quite genuine terror, these words come out with perfect

clarity.

"We'll be watching," says Voice Number One. The wheeze is fading now. The guy's getting himself back under

control. Good for him. "I think it is possible that they'll come back, the big one was really quite distressed,

but if the Chinese are correct, I'm now responsible for your life. It's a responsibility I intend to live up to.

Should they reappear, I'll throw a bullet at them. Not over their heads, either. " The shape pauses. He looks

like a fairly big man himself. Got a gut on him, that much is for sure. "Those were the Hitler Brothers, my

friend. Do you know who I'm talking about?"

"Yes, " Callahan whispers. "And you won't tell me who you are ? "

"Better you not know," says Mr. Ex Libris.

"Do you know who I am?"

A pause. Gritting steps. Mr. Ex Libris is now standing in the doorway of the abandoned laundrymat. "No, "

he says. Then, "A priest. It doesn't matter."

"How did you know I was here?"

"Wait for the ambulance," says Voice Number One. "Don't try to move on your own. You've lost a lot of

blood, and you may have internal injuries."

Then he's gone. Callahan lies on the floor, smelling bleach and detergent and sweet departed fabric softener.

U wash or we wash, he thinks, either way it all comes kleen. His testicles throb and swell. His jaw throbs and

there's swelling there, too. He can feel his whole face tightening as the flesh puffs up. He lies there and waits

for the ambulance and life or the return of the Hitler Brothers and death. For the lady or the tiger. For

Diana's treasure or the deadly biter-snake. And some interminable, uncountable time later, red pulses of light

wash across the dusty floor and he knows this time it's the lady. This time it's the treasure.

This time it's life.

ELEVEN

"And that," Callahan said, "is how I ended up in Room 577 of that same hospital that same night."

Susannah looked at him, wide-eyed. "Are you serious?"

"Serious as a heart attack," he said. "Rowan Magruder died, I got the living shit beaten out of me, and they

slammed me back into the same bed. They must have had just about enough time to re-make it, and until the

lady came with the morphine-cart and put me out, I lay there wondering if maybe Magruder's sister might not

come back and finish what the Hitler Brothers had started. But why should such things surprise you? There

are dozens of these odd crossings in both our stories, do ya. Have you not thought about the coincidence of

Calla Bryn Sturgis and my own last name, for instance?"

"Sure we have," Eddie said.

"What happened next?" Roland asked.

Callahan grinned, and when he did, the gunslinger realized the two sides of the man's face didn't quite line

up. He'd been jaw-broke, all right. "The storyteller's favorite question, Roland, but I think what I need to do

now is speed my tale up a bit, or we'll be here all night. The important thing, the part you really want to hear,

is the end part, anyway."

Well, you may think so, Roland mused, and wouldn't have been surprised to know all three of his friends were

harboring versions of the same thought.

"I was in the hospital for a week. When they let me out, they sent me to a welfare rehab in Queens. The first

place they offered me was in Manhattan and a lot closer, but it was associated with Home—we sent people

there sometimes. I was afraid that if I went there, I might get another visit from the Hitler Brothers."

"And did you?" Susannah asked.

"No. The day I visited Rowan in Room 577 of Riverside Hospital and then ended up there myself was May

19th, 1981," Callahan said. "I went out to Queens in the back of a van with three or four other walking-

wounded guys on May 25th. I'm going to say it was about six days after that, just before I checked out and hit

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