登陆注册
20790600000018

第18章 Amalia's Punishment

“But a little while after that we were inundated from all sides with questions about the letter affair;friends and enemies, acquaintances and strangers came, our best friends were quickest to leave, Lasemann, usually slow and dignified, came in looking as though he merely wanted to check the dimensions of the room, one look around and he was finished, it looked like some awful children's game as Lasemann ran off and Father freed himself from several others and ran after him as far as the threshold of the house and then gave up, Brunswick came and gave Father notice, he wanted to set up his own shop, he said this quite honestly, a clever man, who knew how to seize the moment, the customers came and began to search through Father's storeroom for the boots they had brought for repair, Father first tried to change the customers'minds—all of us helped as best we could—then gave up and quietly helped people look, line after line in the order book was crossed out, the leather supplies that had been left with us were returned, debts were paid, all this was done without the slightest quarrel, people were happy to be able to break off the connection with us quickly, completely, even at some loss to themselves, that wasn't an issue. And then, finally, as might have been expected, Seemann, chief of the fire company, came, I can still see the scene before my eyes, Seemann, tall and strong, but somewhat stooped and tubercular,always serious—he is quite incapable of laughter—stands before my father, whom he admired and to whom once in a cordial moment he held out the prospect of a post as a deputy chief, but now he's supposed to inform Father of his dismissal by the association and request the return of his diploma.The customers in the house just then dropped what they were doing and gathered in a tight circle round the two men.Seemann cannot speak, keeps tapping Father on the shoulder as though determined to tap from him the words that he himself ought to say but cannot find.He laughs the whole time, probably trying to calm himself and everyone else somewhat, but since he cannot laugh and since nobody has ever heard him laugh, nobody realizes that it is actually laughter.But from this day on Father is too tired and despondent to be able to help Seemann, he even seems too tired to try to understand what's happening.Indeed, we were all despondent, but since we were young we couldn't imagine such a total collapse, we kept thinking that somewhere in the long line of visitors someone would finally come and get it all to stop, make everything go back to the way it was.In our foolishness we considered Seemann just the right person for this.We waited in suspense for a clear statement to emerge from the constant laughter.What was so funny anyhow, surely only the stupid injustice being inflicted on us.Chief, Chief, go and finally tell these people, we thought as we pressed around him, but this merely elicited the oddest gestures from him.Finally, responding not to our secret wishes but to encouraging or annoyed shouts from the customers, he did begin to speak.But we still had hope.He began with great praise for Father.Called him a jewel of the association, an unsurpassable model for the new recruits, an indispensable member whose departure would almost destroy the association.All this was quite fine, had he only ended there.But he went on.If the association had nevertheless resolved to ask Father for his resignation, though only provisionally, the seriousness of the reasons forcing this step on the association should be easily discernible.Perhaps things wouldn't necessarily have gone so far had it not been for Father's brilliant achievements at the previous day's festival, and yet it was precisely those achievements that had attracted official attention, the association was in the spotlight and had to be even more concerned about its purity than before.And then when the messenger was insulted, the association could find no other way out, and he, Seemann, had undertaken the difficult task of reporting it.Father shouldn't make this even more difficult for him.How glad Seemann was to have finally come out with this, indeed so satisfied that he was no longer exaggeratedly considerate, and simply pointed to the diploma hanging on the wall, waving his finger.Father nodded and went to get it, but with his shaking fingers he couldn't lift it off the hook, I climbed on a chair to help.And that was that, he did not even take the diploma from the frame but gave it to Seemann as it was.Then he sat down in a corner, not moving, no longer speaking to anyone, we ourselves had to deal with the customers as best we could.”“And where in all this do you see the influence of the Castle?”K.asked.“It doesn't seem to have intervened yet.What you have told me up to now is nothing more than the mindless timidity of the people, their delight in someone else's plight, their fickleness in friendship, exactly the sort of thing one finds everywhere, and then in your father's case—or so it seems to me—there is a certain pettiness, for, after all, what did the diploma amount to?Confirmation of his talents, but those he kept;if they made him indispensable, then so much the better, for the only way he could really have made things difficult for the chief would have been to throw the diploma at his feet before he could say another word.It seems significant to me that you haven't mentioned Amalia;Amalia, the one to blame for all this, probably stood quietly in the background, observing the havoc.”“No, no,”said Olga,“nobody should be blamed for this, nobody could behave any differently, it was all due to the influence of the Castle.”“The influence of the Castle,”repeated Amalia, who had entered unobserved from the courtyard, their parents had long since gone to bed,“telling Castle stories?Still sitting here together?But you wanted to leave right away, K.,and now it's almost ten.Do you even care about such stories?There are people here who feed on such stories, they sit together as you sit here, regaling one another, but you do not strike me as one of them.”“Yes I am,”said K.,“I am indeed one of them, whereas I am not greatly taken by those who do not concern themselves with such stories and simply make others concern themselves with them.”“Well, yes,”said Amalia,“but people are interested in different ways, I once heard of a young man whose mind was taken up day and night with thoughts of the Castle, he neglected everything else, people feared for his ordinary faculty of reason since all his faculties were always up at the Castle, but in the end it turned out that it wasn't actually the Castle he was thinking of but only the daughter of a scullery maid at the offices, he got her, and then all was fine again.”“I would like that man, I think,”said K.“As for your liking that man,”said Amalia,“I'm not so sure about that, but you might like his wife.Now don't let me disturb you, but I am going to bed and have to extinguish the lights because of our parents, they fall fast asleep right away, but in an hour their real sleep is over and then even the slightest glimmer will disturb them.Good night.”And indeed everything went dark right away, Amalia was most likely arranging a place to sleep on the floor by her parents'bed.“Who is this young man she spoke of,”K.asked.“I don't know,”said Olga,“perhaps Brunswick, though it doesn't quite fit him, or perhaps someone else.It isn't easy to understand exactly what she is saying, for one doesn't know whether she is speaking ironically or seriously, it's mostly serious, but sounds ironic.”“Stop interpreting everything!”said K.“How did you grow so heavily dependent on her, then?Was this already the case before the great misfortune?Or only afterwards?And don't you ever wish you were independent of her?And are there any rational reasons for your dependence on her?She is the youngest, and as such she must obey.She is the one, whether guilty or innocent, who brought the misfortune on the family.Instead of begging each of you all over again for forgiveness every day, she carries her head higher than everybody else, doesn't look after anything other than your parents—and then only barely, as an act of mercy—refuses to be initiated into anything, as she herself puts it, and when she finally does speak to you, she is‘mostly serious, but sounds ironic.'Or perhaps she rules through the beauty you sometimes mention.Well, you three greatly resemble one another, but the trait that distinguishes her from the two of you certainly isn't to her advantage, and even on first seeing her I was scared off by the blank loveless look in her eyes.And though she is indeed the youngest, not a trace of it can be detected in her outward appearance, she has the ageless look of women who scarcely age, but who were scarcely ever young either.You see her every day, you don't even notice the severity of her features.That's why I too, if I think about it, cannot take Sortini's affection seriously, perhaps he merely wanted to punish her with the letter rather than actually summon her.”“I don't want to talk about Sortini,”said Olga,“anything is possible with those gentlemen from the Castle, no matter how beautiful or ugly the particular girl happens to be.But as for the rest, you're completely mistaken about Amalia.Look, I have no particular reason for winning you over to Amalia's side, and if I try to do so, it's only for your sake.Amalia somehow was the cause of our misfortune, that is certain, but even Father, who was after all most seriously affected by the misfortune and could never keep his language under control, especially at home, even Father never spoke a word of reproach to Amalia, not even in the worst of times.And that wasn't, say, because he approved of Amalia's action;how could he, an admirer of Sortini's, approve of it, let alone show the slightest understanding, for he would surely have been glad to sacrifice himself and all his possessions for Sortini, though not in the way it had actually happened, namely, on account of Sortini's likely anger.His likely anger, for we heard no more from Sortini;if until then he had been withdrawn, from now on it was as if he didn't exist anymore.And you should have seen Amalia then!We all knew that there would be no express punishment.People simply withdrew.The people here as well as at the Castle.While we did of course notice the villagers'withdrawal, there was no noticeable reaction from the Castle.We hadn't noticed the Castle's caring beforehand, so how could we now notice a complete change.The silence was the worst.And by no means the villagers'withdrawal, which had not been undertaken out of any particular conviction, they probably had no serious reservations about us, their present contempt had not yet emerged, it was only out of fear that they had done so, and then they sihiply waited to see how matters would turn out.We still had no fear of hardship either, all the debtors had paid, the settlements had been favorable, relatives secretly supplied the food we lacked, that was easy, it was harvest time, but we had no fields and nobody would give us work anywhere, and so for the first time in our lives we were virtually condemned to idleness.And then we sat together behind closed windows in the July and August heat.Nothing happened.No summons, no news, no visitors, nothing.”“Well,”said K.,“since nothing happened and no express punishment was to be expected, what did you fear?What sort of people are you at all!”“How should I explain this to you?”said Olga.“We weren't afraid of anything to come, we were only suffering from present circumstances and were in the middle of being punished.The villagers even expected that we would come back, that Father would reopen his workshop, and that Amalia, who could sew extremely beautiful clothes, if only for the most genteel, would come to take new orders, and indeed all of the villagers regretted what they had done;when a respected family in the village is suddenly cut off completely, that is to everyone's disadvantage in some way or other;they broke with us, they thought they were only doing their duty, and in their place we would have behaved no differently.And they didn't really know what it was all about, all they knew was that the messenger had gone back to the Gentlemen's Inn, his hand filled with scraps of paper, Frieda had seen him go out and come back, had exchanged a few words with him and immediately spread what she discovered, but she certainly didn't do so out of hostility toward us but simply out of duty, a duty that under similar circumstances anyone else would have had to assume too.And of course, as I said, the villagers would have greatly favored a happy solution to the entire affair.If we had suddenly appeared with the news that all was now fine again, that the affair had, say, simply been a misunderstanding which had been completely cleared up, or that it was indeed an offense but had through its very commission been rectified, or that we had through our connections at the Castle succeeded in having the affair dismissed—even this would have been enough for the villagers—they would definitely have received us again with open arms, there would have been kissing, embracing, celebrations, I have sometimes seen that kind of thing with other people.But it wouldn't even have been necessary to have such news;if we had only gone and presented ourselves of our own accord, taken up our old connections again without wasting a word about the letter affair, that would have been enough, everyone would have gladly stopped talking about the matter, for in addition to fear it was the painful embarrassment of the matter that had made them break with us, simply so that they would no longer have to hear anything about the matter or speak about it or think of it or be in any way touched by it.If Frieda had disclosed the matter, she had done so not because she took pleasure in it but in order to protect herself and everyone else from it, to notify the community that a certain incident had taken place in our house which one should be most careful to stay away from.The issue here was not us as a family but rather the actual affair, and we came into it only because of the affair in which we had become involved.So if we had simply come out again, let the past rest, shown through our behavior that we had overcome the matter, regardless of how, and if the public had been thus persuaded that whatever the entire matter might have been about, it would never be discussed again, even then everything would have been fine, we would have encountered the same old helpfulness everywhere;even if we had only partly forgotten the matter, they would have understood this and helped us to forget it entirely.Instead we sat at home.I'm not sure what we were waiting for, probably for Amalia's decision, she had that morning seized the leadership of the family and kept a tight grip on it.Without recourse to special actions, orders, or pleas, almost solely by means of silence.The rest of us, though, had much to discuss, there was ceaseless whispering from morning until evening, and sometimes Father in a sudden attack of fright called me and I spent half the night by his bedside.Or sometimes we sat together, myself and Barnabas, who at first showed little understanding of the entire matter and ardently demanded explanations, always the same ones, he must have known that the untroubled years expected by others of his age no longer existed for him, we sat together, K,like the two of us now, and forgot that night had come and morning again.Mother was the weakest of us, no doubt because she had endured not only our shared sorrows but each individual sorrow, and so with horror we observed in her changes which, we suspected, awaited our entire family.Her favorite spot was the corner of a settee, we no longer have it, it's in Brunswick's large parlor, she sat there, either—one couldn't tell which it was—dozing or, as her moving lips seemed to suggest, conducting lengthy conversations with herself.So it was only natural that we should have gone on discussing the letter affair from all angles, in all its certain details and uncertain possibilities, constantly outdoing ourselves in an effort to devise ways to achieve a favorable solution, this was all quite natural and unavoidable, but not good, and indeed we kept getting more and more mired in the very thing we wanted to escape from.And however excellent these ideas, what use were they, none could be carried out without Amalia, they were only preliminary deliberations, meaningless because the results never even reached Amalia, and if they had, they would have met with nothing but silence.Well, fortunately I understand Amalia better now than I did then.She bore more than the rest of us, it's incomprehensible that she bore it and is still living among us today.Mother did perhaps bear all our sufferings, but she bore them because they had befallen her and didn't bear them for long;one cannot say that she still somehow bears these sorrows today, and even then her mind was confused.But Amalia not only bore the sorrow, she also had the sense to see through it, we saw only the consequences, she saw the cause, we hoped for some little remedy or other, she knew everything had already been decided, we had to whisper, she merely had to keep silent, she stood face to face with the truth and lived and endured this life then as now.How much better things were for us in all our misery than for her.Still, we had to leave our house, Brunswick moved in, they allotted us this cottage, and in several trips we brought our property here in a handcart, Barnabas and myself pulling, Father and Amalia helping out behind, Mother, whom we had brought here first, always greeted us, sitting on a crate, with low wails.But I remember that even during those strenuous journeys—which were humiliating, since we often met harvest wagons whose occupants fell silent on seeing us and looked away—we, Barnabas and I, couldn't refrain from discussing our worries and our plans, sometimes we came to a stop as we spoke and it took Father's‘Hey'to remind us of our duty.But even after the move all those discussions did not change our life except that we now gradually began to feel the poverty.The subsidies from our relatives ceased, our means were almost exhausted, and just then the contempt, as you know it, began to develop.People noticed that we hadn't the strength to extricate ourselves from the letter affair and held this very much against us, it wasn't that they underestimated the grave nature of our fate, although they did not know exactly what it was;if we had overcome this they would certainly have honored us accordingly, but since we hadn't succeeded, they made definitive what they had done only temporarily till then, they banished us from all circles, knowing that they themselves probably wouldn't have withstood the test any better, but that it was all the more necessary to make a complete break with us.Then they no longer spoke of us as people, our family name never came up again;if they had to talk about us they called us after Barnabas, the most innocent among us;even our cottage fell into disrepute, and if you examine yourself you'll have to admit that on first arriving here you too thought that you noticed the justification for this contempt;later when people began coming to see us again, they turned up their noses at the most trivial things, for instance that the little oil lamp was hanging over the table.Where else should it hang if not over the table, but to them that was intolerable.Yet if we hung the lamp elsewhere, it still didn't lessen their aversion.Everything that we were and possessed met with the same contempt.”

同类推荐
  • 莫念我

    莫念我

    这个家庭有一个比她大三岁的儿子——莫逸。从小到大,莫家的人就偏爱莫小念,而常常忽略了莫逸,尽管如此,莫小念却和莫逸有了比亲兄妹之间更深厚的亲情。莫逸有一个长达五年的女朋友祁雪,祁雪因为莫逸不会接手其父亲的公司,觉得没有继续交往的价值并与之分手,而后便和同校一个优秀的男生顾凡交往,给莫逸的借口便是莫逸和莫小念在乱伦,因为这惨无人道的分手借口,莫逸故意和莫小念疏离起来。
  • 秦腔

    秦腔

    小说以贾平凹生长于斯的故乡棣花街为原型,通过一个叫清风街的地方近二十年来的演变和街上芸芸众生的生老病死、悲欢离合生动地表现了中国社会的历史转型给农村带来的震荡和变化。小说采取疯子引生的视角来叙述。清风街有两家大户:白家和夏家,白家早已衰败,因此夏家家族的变迁演便成了清风街、陕西乃至中国农村的象征……
  • 蚀心绝恋1

    蚀心绝恋1

    他是名不经传、一无所有的穷小子。她是名门望族、活色生香的富家小姐。可与生俱来的强势,让他义无反顾夺取她的一切,倾尽全力想方设法对她宠入骨、爱入心,使她为他沉沦,付出一切。即使她为了拯救家族利益,不得不与他人许下婚约,不得不抛弃他,与他分手,但她对他的爱也从未停止,还愈发地深。他忍住愤恨,即便央求也是如此霸道,“芊芊,我再给你一次机会,收回刚才的话,不然你会后悔,一定会后悔,这辈子休想我再爱你,休想我再记住你。”
  • 金麻雀获奖作家文丛 凌鼎年卷

    金麻雀获奖作家文丛 凌鼎年卷

    自从生命在地球上形成以来,新物种的生成和老物种的消失,本来是一种自然现象。但由于各种原因,目前地球上物种的消失速度大大地加快了。本书旨在唤起人们对自然、对动物的保护意识,认识物种、保护物种,让后代继承一个万物昌盛、生机勃勃的世界。
  • 你属于黑夜,我属于你

    你属于黑夜,我属于你

    你属于黑夜,我属于你。意外破碎的花盆、女教师猝死事件,令一桩被埋没15年的骇人旧案渐渐浮出水面!一个是直觉力敏锐、有侦探天赋的轻熟女记者,一个是帅气温柔却背负着沉重秘密的便利店夜班值日生,两个原本不相干的年轻人,因为深夜便利店奇妙相遇,命运的齿轮悄然开始重合……
热门推荐
  • 败者的地平线

    败者的地平线

    二十五年前,日本最大的电子集团的总裁水名浩司的长子,在一场晚宴上杀死了一个小婴儿。事件被警方以“意外事故”定性结案。十五年后,水名浩司在一起空难中遇害。仅仅相隔一个月,水名浩司的前妻在大阪的一家高级酒店的客房中被杀害。半年过后,水名浩司的私人律师惨死在自家的别墅之内。二零一零年,经营状况良好的水名集团,突然在美国陷入了一场足以使之破产的诉讼纠纷。而最有动机报复水名集团的人,却早在多年之前“自杀身亡”。警方经过了十年的调查,至今无法锁定凶手。而这一连串事件背后的主谋,竟然就是那个最不可能的人……如果迄今为止的人生,只是一场残酷的骗局?如果现存的生活,就是个无法逃脱的牢笼?
  • 怪医高手

    怪医高手

    天才特招生?不止!哥还使得一手好医术,武功出众,人见人爱。美女老师,江湖胭脂虎;少妇房东,携财求良人;艳丽校花,主动求勾搭。看张重用医术武功,走出一条怪而不凡,奇特风骚的道路……
  • 九天九地之至尊决

    九天九地之至尊决

    冷血杀神林阳被一阵白光带着穿越了,更让他没想到的是穿越后,自己竟然得到了宇宙第一法决。最后林阳抓狂了,法决里面竟然有个法灵,而且法灵还可以带着林阳穿梭于个个位面。于是一场位面穿梭之旅开始了……
  • 且为苍生

    且为苍生

    她,一身红衣,舞技非凡;一指止琴,仙姿卓卓;一技医术,能治百病;一跃轻功,快如疾风。纵有万千姿态面容,他却一眼认出:“那样一双灵动的眼睛这辈子也就见到一双而已。”抚琴感叹,这十八年的日子,一半在年幼中随意挥霍,一半在与莫大将军斗争。总算等到了喜欢的人,有了生活的目标,却又嫁了一个“玉神人”,跳进另一个麻烦洞中。她只是想要自由自在地生活,为何能惹一身的是非?四季温暖,不如亲情凉薄。乱世浮沉,人心飘渺。人生在世,且为心中的苍生罢了。——————————————精彩语段:十三岁的莫缓归。莫缓归:“下贱?或许更适合你那高高在上的爹爹和明知丈夫过错一再容忍欺瞒的娘亲。如果我是下三滥的野种,你也一样。不同的是,你将下三滥推至最高的尊崇。而我一辈子都不会。”莫彩衣划伤她的脸:“不准说爹娘的坏话!你这个坏人!”血如雨柱:“不是我不能杀你,而是不想。我要你记得,你们莫家所有人都欠我的。有朝一日,必定一同偿还。”“哇哇哇……”************十八岁的莫缓归。百里锦叶闪动琥珀色的眸子:“姑娘的眼睛生地灵秀,是否曾见过面?”莫缓归心中暗自一喜:“能与公子相识,不胜荣幸。姑娘喊得生疏,唤随心便是。”“随心人如其名,一切顺心而定。百里锦叶倒是冒昧了。”“公子唤我随心,我便唤你锦叶,这样才显得公平,听得也顺畅些。你说是不,锦叶?”“……”“是。”*************默璞调侃道:“缓儿这是在忏悔平日对我的不好?”“嗯。”转头嗓音阴阴,“你觉得我对你不好?”“哈哈,缓儿上当了!”……莫缓归问:“我这人是不是特自私?”“是,你是自私,谁人不自私。可六月不在乎这些,我也不在乎。”*************卫苍生温柔一笑:“这是夫人的钗么?平常不见你戴。”莫缓归:“我天天都戴,你十天不见一面的,还平常呢。你知道什么!”“夫人是在怪为夫平日太冷漠吗?那为夫需改过,日日伴夫人左右。”
  • 综漫之恶魔的觉醒

    综漫之恶魔的觉醒

    看恶魔主角如何搅动风云,在新鬼泣,鬼泣,火影,fate留下自己的足迹,改变一段段剧情,迎来自己的进化。
  • 那些年我们追忆的时光

    那些年我们追忆的时光

    我以为错过了时光,却发现错过了你,我以为拥抱便是承诺,喜欢便是在一起,到头来才发现一切只是我自己的意淫,那些年我们追忆的时光。
  • 若是温暖有声音

    若是温暖有声音

    若是温暖有声音天使般的巨星爱上危险的卧底特工她觉得自己一直都只是这美丽世界里的孤儿,孤单,寂寞,寒冷。一旦和温暖相遇,便注定要溃不成军。麦琳超级明星又是SK集团的千金,却患有一种罕见的疾病叫寒冷病。有一天她遇见威梵,她看似简单的打工仔,她觉得她遇上了她的温暖。威梵却是要生活在影子里的人。威梵深爱麦琳,救她于水火,差点为她死去。却无法只做她的温暖。因为他为了揭开麦琳父亲的家族企业SK集团的惊天秘密而来,背负使命,要生活在黑暗里。她能等到乌云散尽,他走出黑暗,只做她的温暖的那一天吗?
  • 重生之弃妇桃花开

    重生之弃妇桃花开

    不分日夜辛苦赚钱供养到大学毕业的丈夫背信弃义的另娶富家千金,一朝变成弃妇的苏袖被害得失去了七个月大的孩子,葬送了自己的命!带着尚未开启的金手指重生,苏袖咬紧牙关拼了命的往上爬,只为报复那些曾经伤害过她的人。复仇路上,所有阻挠她的障碍全都必须清除!
  • 网游之大神乃是出家人

    网游之大神乃是出家人

    他是娱乐圈里说一不二的超级巨星,他是公司新签约的小白艺人。他是网游里的小白,他却是《江湖》里属性精分的反无间大神。巨星的秘密却被小白撞破。小白的属性被他慢慢发掘。沈妄然,等你平安回来。
  • 神魔传

    神魔传

    古老相传,独孤家族,世代为神,其姓氏不得出现在尘世间,若闻之,必杀。凡尘之千百姓氏,千奇百怪,多不胜多。然,其中也并无“独孤”之姓氏。然而,四大皇朝御用《姓氏锦书》在某一天,竟突然金光大作……