登陆注册
19307300000038

第38章 CABIN FEVER IN THE WORST FORM(1)

Bud Moore woke on a certain morning with a distinct and well-defined grouch against the world as he had found it; a grouch quite different from the sullen imp of contrariness that had possessed him lately. He did not know just what had caused the grouch, and he did not care. He did know, however, that he objected to the look of Cash's overshoes that stood pigeon-toed beside Cash's bed on the opposite side of the room, where Bud had not set his foot for three weeks and more. He disliked the audible yawn with which Cash manifested his return from the deathlike unconsciousness of sleep. He disliked the look of Cash's rough coat and sweater and cap, that hung on a nail over Cash's bunk. He disliked the thought of getting up in the cold--and more, the sure knowledge that unless he did get up, and that speedily, Cash would be dressed ahead of him, and starting a fire in the cookstove. Which meant that Cash would be the first to cook and eat his breakfast, and that the warped ethics of their dumb quarrel would demand that Bud pretend to be asleep until Cash had fried his bacon and his hotcakes and had carried them to his end of the oilcloth-covered table.

When, by certain well-known sounds, Bud was sure that Cash was eating, he could, without loss of dignity or without suspicion of making any overtures toward friendliness, get up and dress and cook his own breakfast, and eat it at his own end of the table.

Bud wondered how long Cash, the old fool, would sulk like that Not that he gave a darn--he just wondered, is all. For all he cared, Cash could go on forever cooking his own meals and living on his own side of the shack. Bud certainly would not interrupt him in acting the fool, and if Cash wanted to keep it up till spring, Cash was perfectly welcome to do so. It just showed how ornery a man could be when he was let to go. So far as he was concerned, he would just as soon as not have that dead line painted down the middle of the cabin floor.

Nor did its presence there trouble him in the least. Just this morning, however, the fact of Cash's stubbornness in keeping to his own side of the line irritated Bud. He wanted to get back at the old hound somehow--without giving in an inch in the mute deadlock. Furthermore, he was hungry, and he did not propose to lie there and starve while old Cash pottered around the stove.

He'd tell the world he was going to have his own breakfast first, and if Cash didn't want to set in on the cooking, Cash could lie in bed till he was paralyzed, and be darned.

At that moment Cash pushed back the blankets that had been banked to his ears. Simultaneously, Bud swung his feet to the cold floor with a thump designed solely to inform Cash that Bud was getting up. Cash turned over with his back to the room and pulled up the blankets. Bud grinned maliciously and dressed as deliberately as the cold of the cabin would let him. To be sure, there was the disadvantage of having to start his own fire, but that disagreeable task was offset by the pleasure he would get in messing around as long as he could, cooking his breakfast. He even thought of frying potatoes and onions after he cooked his bacon. Potatoes and onions fried together have a lovely tendency to stick to the frying pan, especially if there is not too much grease, and if they are fried very slowly. Cash would have to do some washing and scraping, when it came his turn to cook. Bud knew just about how mad that would make Cash, and he dwelt upon the prospect relishfully.

Bud never wanted potatoes for his breakfast. Coffee, bacon, and hotcakes suited him perfectly. But just for meanness, because he felt mean and he wanted to act mean, he sliced the potatoes and the onions into the frying pan, and, to make his work artistically complete, he let them burn and stick to the pan,--after he had his bacon and hotcakes fried, of course!

He sat down and began to eat. And presently Cash crawled out into the warm room filled with the odor of frying onions, and dressed himself with the detached calm of the chronically sulky individual. Not once did the manner of either man betray any consciousness of the other's presence. Unless some detail of the day's work compelled them to speech, not once for more than three weeks had either seemed conscious of the other.

Cash washed his face and his hands, took the side of bacon, and cut three slices with the precision of long practice. Bud sopped his last hotcake in a pool of syrup and watched him from the corner of his eyes, without turning his head an inch toward Cash.

His keenest desire, just then, was to see Cash when he tackled the frying pan.

But Cash disappointed him there. He took a pie tin off the shelf and laid his strips of bacon on it, and set it in the oven;which is a very good way of cooking breakfast bacon, as Bud well knew. Cash then took down the little square baking pan, greased from the last baking of bread, and in that he fried his hot cakes. As if that were not sufficiently exasperating, he gave absolutely no sign of being conscious of the frying pan any more than he was conscious of Bud. He did not overdo it by whistling, or even humming a tune--which would have given Bud an excuse to say something almost as mean as his mood. Abstractedness rode upon Cash's lined brow. Placid meditation shone forth from his keen old blue-gray eyes.

The bacon came from the oven juicy-crisp and curled at the edges and delicately browned. The cakes came out of the baking pan brown and thick and light. Cash sat down at his end of the table, pulled his own can of sugar and his own cup of sirup and his own square of butter toward him; poured his coffee, that he had made in a small lard pail, and began to eat his breakfast exactly as though he was alone in that cabin.

A great resentment filled Bud's soul to bursting, The old hound! Bud believed now that Cash was capable of leaving that frying pan dirty for the rest of the day! A man like that would do anything! If it wasn't for that claim, he'd walk off and forget to come back.

同类推荐
  • Lazy Tour of Two Idle Apprentices

    Lazy Tour of Two Idle Apprentices

    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。
  • 三坟

    三坟

    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。
  • 易經証釋

    易經証釋

    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。
  • 雁门集

    雁门集

    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。
  • 株林野史

    株林野史

    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。
热门推荐
  • 画聊斋主人

    画聊斋主人

    《画聊斋主人》书友群:579590550苏家大少爷死而复生,画聊斋主人巧妙夺魂。一个是笃信科学反迷信的西洋学子,一个是斩妖除魔的阴阳师。一个跳脱张扬,一个沉着冷静。本是不同世界的两个人,天命相连,不可离之。携手破除妖魔鬼怪阴谋阳谋,一起抽丝剥茧干翻为祸人间的财神殿。
  • 萌夏——无法绽放的花蕾

    萌夏——无法绽放的花蕾

    踏入高中,一切的新颖生活让高一新生们倍感快乐,可随着日子的推增,愉悦也随之减退。成熟、焦虑、理智等取代了往昔的稚嫩、感性...本作融入了高中生真实生活的一面和虚幻的一面,涌出了他们内心中翻滚的情感世界。他们对世界了理解、对感情的理解注定是长者们以予否定的,但长者们却永远不知道他们以他们的成熟抹杀了青年人们的真挚...王子喧和思雨是刚刚步入高中生活的两个学生,从第一次偶遇开始便注定了他们将结识在一起...经过王子喧不懈的努力,最终他和思雨走到了一起,但因为自身的自傲却无意间触动了周可欣对王子喧进行报复的心理,她利用思雨同父异母的弟弟最终拆散了王子喧和思雨刚刚建立起的爱情……
  • 暴虐

    暴虐

    “我不是好人,只顺应本心!”——有意也罢、无意也罢,灾难之日,他总归自取灭亡。然而,他又回来了。一个对人狠对自己更狠的疯子、一个站在食物链顶端的男人,究竟会给这个同样疯狂的世界带来怎样的变化呢?只有他自己对此拭目以待。
  • 掌灯人

    掌灯人

    在通往幽冥的通道处,由十八根蜡烛照亮了整个通道。一旦有其中一根熄灭,那么整个幽冥与人间,便会接连发生惨案。王城,一个普通专科毕业的青年,迫于生活无奈,选择了一件维护路灯的工作。而在他上班的第一天,同福路深处便点亮了十八盏路灯……
  • 凯触不可及的光

    凯触不可及的光

    不喜勿喷!你就像光让我触碰不到,而上天把我们放在了一起,你是众目睽睽之中的星星,我是众目睽睽之下小小的四叶草,但我也许很幸福!小凯我永远爱你!!!
  • 枯朽之刃

    枯朽之刃

    奥汀大陆中央神殿的幽暗深渊传来阵阵愤怒的咆哮声。仅有几处微弱烛光燃耗着的宽恕神殿上,掌握着大陆至高权利的大祭司不禁打了个寒颤。每天2更
  • 别样守护:吸血鬼恋人

    别样守护:吸血鬼恋人

    千雪有着令无数吸血鬼疯狂的美味血液,在一次被吸血鬼攻击中得到了吸血鬼尊贵王族殿下的守护,从此她和吸血鬼的关系变得微妙了起来。在充满诡异的校园人类和吸血鬼能否和平共存在一所学校?千雪的命运又将在吸血鬼和吸血鬼猎人之间的对抗中发生怎样的变化?阴谋重重的黑暗笼罩下光明是否会重现?她又将收获怎样别样的爱情?
  • 无量本源

    无量本源

    源战天下,一朝风云再起。豪门子弟,资源甚多,为何天才会陨落?千古轮回,乾坤逆转,天地变色,烽烟尽燃。但陨落的天才为何能再出现?万千本源,一招翻手灭天,一招覆手灭世!天才再现,共追无量本源。战火再现!
  • 手执山海

    手执山海

    有妖欲打通冥界,人族护卫、秦国皇子阻止,和个怀心思的妖、神二族少女结伴同行
  • 重生之英雄联盟在都市

    重生之英雄联盟在都市

    当瓦罗兰大陆破碎~所有英雄都在星界游神-巴德,死时留下的星际通道下逃出升天,跟随着主角普普通通的生活在现代都市!