查看完整版本: [小说原稿]断背山

Aimita 2005-12-31 10:44 PM

[小说原稿]断背山

断背山

◎安妮.普露(Annie Proulx)

译◎宋瑛堂

他们生长在贫苦的小农场上,在怀俄明州的对角线两端——杰克·崔斯特住在蒙大拿州边界的闪电平原镇,恩尼司· 岱玛老家则在犹他州边界附近的圣吉,两人皆为高中中辍生,是毫无前途的乡下男孩。两人的言谈举止皆不甚文雅,对艰苦生活安之若素。恩尼司由兄姐带大,因为小时父母开车途经死马路上唯一弯道,不慎翻车,双双身亡,留下现金二十四元以及双抵押的农场。十四岁那年他申请设限驾驶执照,得以从农场开车一小时到高中上课。他原本希望当“梭福摩(二年级学生),觉得这称呼带有某种高贵气质,无奈小卡车尚未撑到第二年即告停摆,使他不得不投入农场工作。

一九六三年他认识杰克·崔斯特 ,当时恩尼司已与艾玛·比尔斯订婚。杰克与恩尼司皆自称正在存钱买一小块地;以恩尼司而言,他的存款总数是装了两张五元纸钞的烟草罐。那年春天,两人为生活所逼,从事任何工作都无所谓,因此分别至农牧就业中心报名,中心将两人分类为牧人与营地看管人,安排他们至讯诺以北同一处牧羊农场。夏天的牧草地位于断背山高海拔无林带,隶属森林处。这是杰克.崔斯特上断背山的第二个夏天,而恩尼司则是首度上山。两人皆未满二十。

两人在空气污浊的小货柜屋办公室里见面,在散放文件的桌子前握手。桌上文件字迹潦草,胶木烟灰缸里的烟蒂满溢。软百叶窗歪斜,三角形的白光因此得以进入,工头的手影伸进白光中。乔.阿吉瑞鬈发如浪,呈烟灰色,中分,对他们表达个人见解。

「森林处在配地上有指定扎营地。营地可以设在距离放羊吃草两哩的地方。被野兽拖走的情形很严重,晚上没人就近看守。我要营地看管人待在森林处指定的主营地,不过『牧羊人』」──他以手刀指向杰克──「偷偷在羊群里搭个三角形小帐篷,别离开视线范围,睡在里面。早晚餐在营地吃,不过一定得『跟羊群睡在一起』,百分之百,『不准生火』,千万『不能留下证据』。三角形小帐篷每早收好,以免森林处过来东张西望。带几条狗去。去年夏天被拖走的几乎有百分之二十五。不希望再发生。『你,』」他对恩尼司说,看着对方一头乱发、疤痕累累的大手、破烂的牛仔裤、缺钮扣的衬衫,「每礼拜五中午十二点,带着你下礼拜的单子和驴子到桥头,有人会开小卡车载用品过去。」

他们找到一间酒吧,灌了整个下午的啤酒。满头鬈发与爽朗爱笑的杰克似乎让人看了顺眼,但以他矮小的身材而言,臀部却有点分量,微笑时显露出暴牙,没有严重到张嘴可以构到瓶颈里的爆米花,却足以令人侧目。他向往牛仔竞技生涯,皮带系了较小型的牛仔扣环,但他的皮靴磨损见底,破洞已到无可修补的程度。他一心只想外出打拚,只要不留在闪电平原,任何地方都没问题。

具备鹰钩鼻与窄脸的恩尼司,仪容不甚整洁,肩膀前凸导致胸部稍微内凹如穴,瘦小的上泶罱ㄔ诳ǔ咝蔚拈L腿上,身体肌肉发达,行动敏捷,天生适合骑马与打斗。他的反射作用快到不寻常的地步,远视情况严重以致不喜欢阅读哈姆雷马鞍型录以外的读物。

哐蚩ㄜ回B着唏R拖车行驶至小路开端,他们在森林处设置的平台上搭起大帐篷,也固定了厨房与餐盒。第一夜两人同睡营地,杰克已开始抱怨乔.阿吉瑞「跟羊睡不准生火」的命令,只不过翌晨他不多话,乖乖为枣红母马置鞍。

清晨在琉璃橙色中破晓,底下有一条胶状淡绿衬托。煤灰色的巨大山影缓缓转淡,最后转为与恩尼司煮早餐营火冒出的烟同色。寒风变得和煦,聚集成堆的圆石与散乱的土块乍然抛出铅笔长度的阴影,底下大群梁木松形成灰暗的孔雀石板。

白天时,恩尼司往大山谷另一方眺望,有时候会见到杰克,小小一点在高地草原上行走,状若昆虫在桌布上移动;晚上杰克待在漆黑的帐篷里,将恩尼司视为夜火,是巨大黑色山影的一粒红色火花。

这天接近傍晚时,杰克慢条斯理走过来,喝下两瓶放在帐篷阴影处湿袋里冷藏的啤酒,吃了两碗炖肉,吃了四颗恩尼司硬如石头的软圆饼,一罐桃子,卷了一根烟,欣赏日落。

「上下班,我一天要花四个钟头哩,」他闷闷不乐地说:「过来吃早餐,回去赶羊,晚上把它们安顿好,回来吃晚餐,回去看羊,晚上有一半时间睡得不安不稳,经常跳起来注意有没有郊狼。我有权利在这里过夜。阿吉瑞没权利逼我。」

「要不要交换?」恩尼司说。「放羊我可不在意。我也不在意到那边睡。」

「重点不是这个。重点是,我们俩都应该待在这个帐篷里。那个可恶的三角形小帐篷有猫尿骚味,甚至比猫尿更难闻。」

「想跟我换的话没关系。」

「先警告你哟,半夜可要起床十几次检查有没有郊狼。我很乐意跟你换班,可是我煮的东西很难吃。开罐头倒开得不错。」

「你的手艺不会比我更烂吧。说真的,我没关系的。」

两人以黄色煤油灯消磨了一小时的夜色。十时左右恩尼司骑上擅长走夜路的雪茄蒂,穿越水亮点点的霜气走回牧羊地,带着吃剩的软圆饼、一罐果酱与一罐咖啡粉,供隔天充饥,省了一趟路,可以待到晚餐再回来。

「天刚亮就射中一头郊狼,」隔夜他告诉杰克,一面以热水泼脸,以肥皂揉出泡沫,希望剃刀仍利。杰克在一旁削马铃薯。「好大一条杂种。鸟蛋跟苹果一样大。我敢说一定吃掉了几头小羊。看样子连骆驼都吃得下去。热水你要不要?多得是。」

「全给你好了。」

「这样的话,我构得着的地方全要洗了。」他边说边脱下皮靴与牛仔裤(没穿衬裤,没穿袜子,杰克注意到),绿色洗澡毛巾啪啪打在身上,溅得营火滋滋作响。

两人围着火堆吃晚餐,气氛愉快,一人一罐豆子,同享炸马铃薯与一夸脱威士忌,背靠圆木坐着,靴底与牛仔裤铜铆钉发烫,你递我接地喝着威士忌,而熏衣草色天空的色彩褪尽,冷风下沉,两人继续喝酒抽烟,不时起身小便,火光使弧形流水反射出光点;继续添柴延续话题;聊聊马匹与牛仔竞技,驯牛比赛,摔出的外伤内伤;两个月前长尾鲨潜水艇失联,最后几分钟一定如何如何;彼此养过、熟识的狗;冷风;杰克老家父母苦撑的农场;恩尼司爸妈几年前过世后结束农场经营;哥哥住在讯诺,姐姐已婚,住在凯斯白。杰克说,他父亲几年前曾是风云一时的骑牛士,却守口如瓶,从未给过杰克只字建议,杰克上场骑牛时,从未前去捧场,不过小时候父亲曾让他骑绵羊。恩尼司说,他有兴趣的骑术是多于八秒钟的骑乘,说得有点道理。杰克说,钱也很重要,而恩尼司不得不赞同。两人尊重彼此看法,很高兴在无人现身之境有人相伴。恩尼司逆风骑马回羊群途中,四面一片变化莫测、醉意朦胧的月光,心想自己从未如此开心过,感觉可以伸手刨出月球白色的部分。

这年夏天期间,他们不断拔营,将羊群赶到别处牧草地;羊群与新营地的距离愈来愈远,晚上骑马回营的时间也愈来愈长。恩尼司安步当车,双眼睁开睡觉,但离开羊群的时数也不断延长。杰克以口琴吹出哀嚎粗浊的音乐。恩尼司的歌喉沙哑动人。

「回去看那堆臭羊太晚了,」恩尼司醉醺醺说。他四脚着地,冷风飕飕,月亮指出时间已过凌晨二时。牧地石头闪现白绿,冷酷无情的风吹在草地上,刮得营火直不起腰,接着又隆一隆火,捧成黄丝绶带。

「这里多一条毛毯,我帮你铺在这里,你打个盹,天一亮你再骑马过去。」杰克说:「火势一小,会冻得你哎哎叫。最好进帐篷睡。」

「我大概不会有什幺感觉。」然而他踉跄走在帆布下,脱下皮靴,在铺地布上打呼一阵子,之后牙齿互撞声吵醒了杰克。

「拜托老天爷,别再磨牙了,给我滚进来。床垫够大。」杰克以睡意惺忪的烦躁嗓音说。床垫够大够暖,不一会儿两人的亲密程度显着加强。无论是修补围篱或花钱,恩尼司的行事风格总是全速前进,当杰克抓住他左手过来碰勃起的阴茎时,他连碰也不想碰,霍然推开对方的手,仿佛碰到热火一般,接着跪坐地上,松开皮带,拽下长裤,拖杰克过来,让他四肢着地,然后借助天然润滑液与些许唾液进入他体内,从未做过却不需检索使用手册。两人默默进行,唯一声响只有几下骤然吸气声以及杰克憋气说,「要走火了……」随后静止,倒地,熟睡。

恩尼司在红色晨曦里清醒,长裤仍落在膝盖处,头疼欲裂,而杰克的臀部紧挨着他;两人绝口不提,却知道这年夏天接下来的时光将如何度过。去他奶奶的绵羊。

他们没料错。两人从未讨论性爱,只是顺其自然,起初只在晚上帐篷内办事,后来在烈日蒸烤的光天化日之下,夜晚在营火照射之下,快速,粗鲁,大笑,闷哼,制造不少声响,却一个字也不愿说,只有一次恩尼司说,「我才不是同性恋。」杰克也脱口而出,说,「我也不是。就这幺一次。是我俩的事,别人管不着。」高山上,唯有他俩翱翔在欣快刺骨的空气中,俯视老鹰的背部,以及山下平原上爬动的车辆灯光,飘浮于俗事之上,远离夜半驯良农场犬的吠叫声。

他们自认隐形,殊不知乔.阿吉瑞某日以十乘四十二的双眼望远镜观看了十分钟。

初雪下得早,才八月十三日,已累积了一尺深,但不久后积雪迅速融化。隔周乔.阿吉瑞派人上山通知他们下山,另有一场更大的暴风雪从太平洋直扑而来,因此两人收拾起猎物,赶羊下山,石头在脚跟边滚动,紫云由西推挤而来,降雪前夕的金属味逼着他们前进。高山上恶魔能量沸腾,覆上薄薄的碎云光,大风梳整青草,吹得受伤的高山矮曲树与细长岩片发出野兽般低鸣。下坡时,恩尼司感觉自己以慢动作下坠,垂直下坠,全无回头的余地。

「明年夏天还来吗?」杰克在街上问恩尼司,一脚已踏上自己的绿色小卡车。阵阵迅风吹得寒冷无比。

「大概不来了。」尘土如云扬起,空气充满细沙而朦胧,他眯着眼睛。「我跟你说过,艾玛和我今年十二月结婚。想搞个农场。你呢?」他移开原本看着杰克下颔的视线。最后一天恩尼司对他用力挥拳,打得他瘀青。

「要是没有更好的机会出现,考虑回老爹的地方,冬天帮他忙,春天大概会去德州吧。如果征兵令没到的话。」

「好吧,这样的话,那就后会有期了。」疾风吹得一只空饲料袋沿街滚动,最后夹在他的卡车底下。

「好,」杰克说。两人握手,彼此捶肩一下,随后两人站离四十尺之遥,不知道怎幺办,只好朝相反方向驶开。开不到一哩远,恩尼司感觉有人一手接一手拉出他内脏,一次一码长。他停车路边,在回旋而下的新雪之中想吐却吐不出东西。他感觉极为难过,花了好长一段时间心情才逐渐平复。  

断背山之后第四年夏天,六月间恩尼司收到杰克.崔斯特寄来的平信,是他四年来首度获得对方的音讯。

「朋友,老早就想写信给你。希望你收得到。听说你住在大河镇。我二十四日路过,希望能请你喝杯啤酒。可能的话请回信,让我知道到时候你会在。」

寄件地址是德州巧崔斯。恩尼司回信:「那还用说。」附上他在大河镇的地址。

当天早上晴朗炎热,中午前西方推挤过来几朵白云,卷动些许闷热的空气。恩尼司穿上最称头的衬衫,白底粗黑条纹,不知道杰克几时抵达,因此干脆请整天假,来回踱步,不时向下了望尘封苍白的马路。艾玛提议带朋友到刀叉餐厅共进晚餐,天气好热,不方便在家开伙,如果能找到人带小孩的话……但恩尼司说他不如自己跟杰克出去喝个醉。他说,杰克不喜欢上馆子,一面回想起圆木上摇摇晃晃的罐头,肮脏的汤匙伸进伸出舀着冷豆子。

下午五、六时,雷声隆隆,熟悉的绿色老卡车开进来,他看见杰克下车,百经折磨的牛仔帽往后倾仄。一股灼热的悸动烫着了恩尼司,他站在楼梯歇脚处,走出家门后关上门。杰克一次两阶阔步上楼。两人抓住彼此肩膀,使劲拥抱,压得几乎断气,不住说着:狗娘养的,狗娘养的,随后,宛如插对钥匙转动锁制栓一般油然,两人四唇交接,力道之强,杰克的门牙咬出了血,帽子掉落地板,短须摩擦出沙沙声,唾液泉涌,此时家门打开,艾玛朝外观望数秒,看到恩尼司紧绷的肩膀,关上门,两人仍紧紧相扣,胸部、鼠蹊、大腿、小腿皆密不透风,彼此踩住对方脚趾,最后为了呼吸而分开时,不轻易表现感情的恩尼司说出他对爱马与爱女的昵称,小亲亲。

家门再度开启,艾玛站在狭窄的光线中。

他又能说什幺?「艾玛,这位是杰克.崔斯特,杰克,这位是我太太艾玛。」他的胸口上下起伏。他嗅得到杰克──强烈熟悉的体味混杂有烟味、麝香汗味与青草似的微微甜味,同时也闻到高山奔流的寒意。「艾玛,」他说,「杰克跟我,已经有四年没见面了。」彷佛可以解释一切。他很庆幸楼梯歇脚处光线闇淡,不必转身背对她,以防她瞧见胯下春秋。

「是啊,」艾玛压低嗓门说。她看见了她刚才看见的情景。她身后的客厅里,闪电将窗户照亮成挥舞的白床单,婴儿哭了起来。

「你有小孩啦?」杰克说。他抖动的手擦过恩尼司的手,电流在两人之间窜过。

「两个女儿,」恩尼司说。「艾玛二世和法兰芯。爱到不行。」艾玛的嘴唇抽动。

「我生了个儿子,」杰克说。「八个月大。跟你说,我在巧崔斯娶了个可爱的德州小妞,露琳。」从两人站立的地板震动情形来判断,恩尼司可以感觉到杰克发抖得多厉害。

「艾玛,」他说。「杰克和我要出去喝一杯。晚上可能不回家了,会一直聊一直喝。」

「是啊,」艾玛边说边从口袋取出一元纸钞。恩尼司猜太太准备叫他买包香烟,希望提醒他早点回家。

「幸会,」杰克说。他颤抖得像跑得筋疲力竭的马。

「恩尼司──」艾玛以苦情的嗓音说,但丈夫并未因此减缓下楼的脚步。他回头呼喊,「艾玛,想抽烟,卧室那件蓝衬衫口袋有几根。」

他们开着杰克的卡车离去,买了一瓶威士忌,不到二十分钟双双住进午睡汽车旅馆开始震动床铺。几把冰雹摇得窗户哗哗响,随后下起雨来,湿滑的风不停撞击隔壁房间未关妥的门,整夜不停歇。

房间充满精液、香烟、汗水、威士忌的气息,也充满了旧地毯与酸干草、马鞍皮革、粪便与廉价肥皂的臭味。恩尼司呈大字形躺着,力气用尽,全身湿透,大口呼吸,仍呈半勃起状态。杰克学鲸鱼喷水用力吐出白烟,说,「老天爷,一定是那段时间骑马,功夫才练得这幺厉害。这件事不谈不行。我对天发誓,不知道我俩会再来──好吧,我的确知道。所以才来这里。我他妈的本来就知道。一路开到时速表最高限度,就希望早点到。」

「我不知道你死到哪里去了,」恩尼司说。「四年了。差不多准备忘掉你了。我猜那次揍了你一下,让你不高兴了。」

「朋友,」杰克说,「我跑去德州参加牛仔竞技。所以才遇见露琳。看看那张椅子。」

污脏的橙色椅子背后,他看见皮带扣环晶莹闪闪。「骑牛?」

「对。那年赚了他妈的三千块。穷到没力。除了牙刷之外,全部不得不跟别的牛仔借。德州走透透。一半时间躺在那辆贱车下面修理。我从来没想过会输。露琳?她家钱可多着咧。她老爸有钱。做农机买卖的生意。当然不肯让女儿动他财产的脑筋,而且他恨我恨到骨子里,所以现在不太顺利,不过等到有一天──」

「往好的地方看,日子自然会过得愈来愈好。没加入陆军吗?」

「他们用不上我。我压坏了几节脊椎。还有压迫性骨折,臂骨这边,骑牛时不是老是用大腿来支撑吗?──每次骑牛,手臂就多弯一点。跟你说,骑完后痛得要死。断了一条腿。哎,时机歹歹,跟我爹那时代不一样了。以前是有钱人上大学,受训当邉订T。现在想参加牛仔竞技,没钱去不成了。除非露琳老爸翘辫子,否则再怎幺说也不肯给我一分钱。现在我骑牛骑出心得了,永远不会被放在候补名单上。其它的原因还有。我想趁自己还能走路的时候退出。」

恩尼司将杰克的手拉来自己嘴边,吸了一口香烟,吐气。「你呀,我看还壮得像头牛似的。你知道吗,我坐在这里拚命想,我到底是不是──?我知道自己不是。我是说,我们两个都有老婆孩子,对不对?我喜欢跟女人搞,没错,可是耶稣老天啊,跟这个却没得比。我从没想到要找另一个男的,只不过肯定是想着你打了有一百次手枪了。你有跟别的男人做过吗?杰克?」

「当然没有,」杰克说。杰克最近不打手枪,而且骑的不只是牛。「你也知道。断背山那段,你我都有很深的感触,绝对还没结束。我们非想想办法不行,看看接下来怎幺办。」

「那年夏天,」恩尼司说。「我们领到钱、分手之后,我肚子痛得很厉害,不得不靠边停车,想吐却吐不出来,还以为在杜柏瓦那餐厅吃坏肚子了。花了大概一年我才想通,当初不应该让你从眼前走掉。想通了,太晚也太迟了。」

「朋友,」杰克说。「我们给自己捅出篓子了。非想办法不行了。」

「想得出办法才怪,」恩尼司说。「我是说啊,杰克,我花了几年的工夫建立起一个家。我爱两个女儿。艾玛呢?这不是她的错。你也有儿子和老婆,在德州有个家。你和我一见面成那副德性」──他摆头朝自己公寓的方向指去──「抓狂似地粘成一团,两人在一起的时候还像话吗?那种事情找错地方乱来,肯定死路一条。这事用砝K也绑不住。我害怕得不得了。」

杰克说:「你听好。我在想啊,跟你讲算了,如果你和我一起弄个小农场来经营,养几头母牛和小牛做做小本生意,加上你的马,生活一定会很美满。」

「慢着、慢着。那样可行不通。我们没办法开农场。我自己有自己的家要顾,被自己的圈子套住,跑不掉了。以前,老家附近有两个老头,一起开农场,俄尔和瑞奇,每次老爸看见他们都不忘批评一两句。尽管他们是直来直往的老汉,还是被人当作笑柄。我那时才多大,九岁吧,有人发现俄尔死在灌溉圳里。有人拿了轮胎撬棒打他,勾住他,抓着他老二拖着走,拖到老二断掉,只剩一块血淋淋的烂肉。轮胎撬棒打得他全身像是烧焦的蕃茄一样,鼻子因为被拖在砂石上,拖到被磨平了。」

「你看到了?」

「老爸硬要我看。带我过去。我和哥哥。爸看了大笑。拜托,就我所知,那是他干的好事。要是他还活着,现在探头进房门看,绝对会回去拿他的轮胎橇棒。两个男的同居?算了吧。我认为比较行得通的办法,是偶尔聚在一起,躲在鸟不拉屎的地方──」

    「多久才算偶尔一次?」杰克说。「他妈的四年一次吗?」

年复一年,两人的足迹遍及高海拔草地与山地排水区,骑马远赴大角山脉、药弓山脉,走访加勒亭山脉、猫头鹰溪等南端,也到过布立杰—铁顿山脉、弗黎早等山脉,到过盐河山脉,多次深入风河区,也去过母山、乐壤弥山脉,却从未重返断背山。

一九八三年五月,他们在一串冰封的无名高地小湖间度过寒冷的几天,然后走到对岸冰雹河流域。

恩尼司说,他目前在讯诺的司道麦农场照顾母牛与小牛,当地有个女人在狼耳酒吧兼差,恩尼司对她有好感,但是两人苦无进展,而且她有些问题恩尼司不愿沾上边。杰克说他在巧崔斯搞上了附近农场主人的老婆,过去几个月来他外出时提心吊胆,唯恐不是被露琳枪毙,就是死在农场主人枪下。恩尼司笑了笑,说他活该。杰克说他过得还可以,但还是很想念恩尼司,有时候郁闷之余打小孩出气。

马儿在营火光线范围外的黑暗中嘶笑。恩尼司一手搂住杰克,拉他过来身边,说他一个月见自己女儿一次,小艾玛十七岁,生性害羞,高瘦如竹竿;法兰芯是个精力充沛的小不点。杰克悄悄将冰手伸入恩尼司双腿间,说他担心自己儿子得了阅读困难症之类的毛病,毫无疑问,看书时怎幺看就是不对劲,已经十五岁了还几乎不识字。做爸爸的他认为显而易见,而可恶的露琳却不愿承认,假装儿子没问题,拒绝带他去看医生。他妈的答案是什幺,他也不知道。钱是露琳的,发号施令的人也是她。

「我以前想生个儿子,」恩尼司边说边解开钮扣,「却一直生女儿。」

「儿子女儿我都不要,」杰克说。「可惜他妈的全部心想事不成。到我手里的,全都不是我想要的东西。」他没有起身,直接将枯木投进火坑,火星随着他们的实话与谎言飞起,灼烫的几粒火点降落手上脸上,并非第一次。两人滚进泥土中。有件事恒久不变:他俩偶一为之的交合,电火灼烁,却因感受时光流逝而蒙上阴影,时间永远不够,永远不够。  

一两天后,他们回到山径起点的停车场,恩尼司探头进杰克车窗,说出整星期憋着不说的话,表示他必须等到十一月咦呒倚蟆五_始喂冬季饲料前才有休假的机会。

「十一月。搞什幺?不是说好八月见?我们不是说八月,说好九天、十天。天啊,恩尼司!干嘛不早说?你有他妈的一整个礼拜,却一个字也没讲。而且,干嘛老找这种冷不拉咙奶鞖猓课覀儜挠胂朕k法。我们应该往南走。应该找机会去墨西哥才对。」

「墨西哥?杰克,我这个人你也知道。我所谓的旅行,顶多是绕着咖啡壶找壶柄而已。而且我整个八月都得开捆干草机。杰克,开心一点嘛。十一月可以打猎啊,打一头漂亮的麋鹿。我看能不能再向老罗借到小屋。那年我们玩得多开心。」

「你知道吗,朋友,这种情况我不满意也不能接受。你以前说走就走。现在要见你一面,简直像晋见教宗一样难。」

「杰克,我不干活不行。以前我说辞就辞。你娶了个有钱的老婆,有份好工作。口袋空空的日子,不记得了吗?听说过子女抚养金吧?我已经付了好几年,还得付个好几年。告诉你,这份工作我没办法辞。也没办法请假。……不然,你有更好的点子吗?」

「以前有过。」口气刻薄,充满指责意味。

恩尼司不发一语,缓缓直起上身,揉揉额头;拖车里有匹马在跺脚。他走向自己的卡车,一手搭在拖车上,说着只有马儿听得见的话,转身以审慎从容的步调走回来。

「杰克,你去过墨西哥吗?」想搞就去墨西哥。他听说过风言风语。现在他动手割开杰克内心的围篱,进入格杀勿论区。

「去过啊,怎幺没有?你到底想他妈的怎样?」多年来不断准备迎接此刻,来得迟而不期然。

「杰克,这件事我非跟你说一遍不行,而且我不是说着玩的,」恩尼司说,「我不懂的东西很多,万一懂了,可能小命也没了。」

「我看你听懂不懂,」杰克说:「而且我只说这幺一次。告诉你,我们本来可以一起过不错的生活,好得不得了的生活。你却不愿意,恩尼司,结果我们现在只有断背山。所有东西都以断背山为基础。断背山是我们拥有的一切,他妈的一切,如果你不知道别的部分,我希望这一点你至少能懂。二十年来,我们在一起的次数,你给我算算看。量一量你套在我身上的狗绳有多长,再来问我有没有去过墨西哥,然后再告诉我,想得到却几乎永远摸不着会害我送掉小命。我有多难受,你根本一点概念也没有。我不是你。我没办法靠高海拔一年干炮一、两次过活。你对我太重要了,恩尼司,你这个贱货婊子养大的杂种。要是我知道怎幺戒掉你就好了。」

宛若冬日温泉蒸腾而起的大团雾气,多年未曾出口的言语以及此刻难以出口的话──承认、宣布、羞惭、愧疚、恐惧──团团包围住两人。恩尼司仿佛遭子弹射中心脏,脸色灰白,皱纹深刻,露出苦笑,双眼紧闭,拳头紧握,双腿朝下凹陷,以膝盖着地。

「天啊,」杰克说:「恩尼司?」在他下卡车前,一面猜测是心脏病发或怒火难遏滥烧,恩尼司再度站起,如同衣架打直,打开上锁的车子,然后再度弯曲成原形。两人几乎将一切扭转至原位,因为两人所言并无新意。没有结束,没有开始,也没有解决任何事。  

断背山上那年遥远的夏天,其中一段令杰克回忆、渴望起来既难以压抑也无法理解。当时恩尼司朝他身后靠近,抱住他,以沉默的拥抱满足了某种共享而无关性爱的饥渴。

两人如此在营火前站立良久,火焰抛出微红光块,两具肉体的阴影结合为一根紧靠岩石矗立的梁柱。时间一分分流逝,由恩尼司口袋里的圆表滴答告知,由逐渐燃烧成炭的树枝点明。星光在营火上方层层热流中破浪前进。恩尼司的呼吸缓和寂静,悄声呓语,在点点火星中前后微微摆动,杰克则毗倚平稳的心跳上,低哼震动恰似微弱电流,令杰克以站姿入睡,而此睡非彼睡,而是昏沉失神之感。最后恩尼司挖掘出童年母亲在世时对他说的一段话,尽管生锈了,仍派得上用场。他说,「该上床了,牛仔。我该走了。好了,别学马儿站着睡啦,」说着摇摇杰克,推他一下,自己步入黑暗中。杰克听见他上马时马刺颤动声,听到「明天见」,以及马儿颤抖的鼻息,马蹄磨石的声响。

那次睡意沉重的拥抱,后来在杰克记忆中凝结固化,成为两人分隔两地、刻苦难捱生活中唯一毫无造作、迷醉入魔、至福充盈的时刻。这段往事百毒不侵,甚至知道了以下这件事也难以动摇:恩尼司当时不愿面对面拥抱他,是不想看到或感觉到拥抱的对象是杰克。也许吧,他心想,他们从未发展出更进一步的关系。顺其自然,顺其自然吧。

事发后数月恩尼司才得知,因为他捎给杰克一张明信片,告诉他看来十一月才走得开,结果明信片被退回,盖上「身故」两字。他拨了杰克在巧崔斯的电话。先前他只致电杰克一次,是在艾玛与他离婚之后,当时杰克误解了打电话给他的原因,开车一千两百哩北上却空欢喜一场。不会有事的,杰克会接听,他非接听不可。然而接听的人不是他,而是露琳。露琳说,谁呀?你是谁?恩尼司再度说明身分后,她以平稳的嗓音说,对,杰克在小路上开车,胎圈不知因何受损而漏气,换胎时发生爆炸,胎框炸到他的脸,打伤了鼻子与下颔,因此失去意识,朝天躺下,等到有人发现时,他早已溺死在自己的鲜血里。

不对,他心想,一定是有人拿轮胎撬棒打死他的。

「杰克以前常提到你,」她说。「你常跟他去钓鱼或是打猎,我知道。本来想通知你的,」她说,「可是我不确定你的姓名和地址。杰克把多数朋友的地址记在脑子里。太惨了。他才三十九岁。」

「下葬在你那边吗?」他想咒骂露琳让杰克死在土路上。

细小的德州口音循着电话线匍匐前行。「我们帮他立个碑。他以前说希望能火化,骨灰撒在断背山上。我不知道在哪里。所以照他的意思火化了,一半埋葬在这里,另一半寄给他爸妈。我本来以为断背山在他老家附近。不过我了解杰克,所谓的断背山可能只是他想象出来的地方,有蓝鸫歌唱,威士忌像泉水涌出。」

「有一年夏天,我们上断背山放过羊……」恩尼司说。他几乎无法言语。

「是嘛,他说那才是他最喜欢的地方。我以为他指的是喝酒的地方。上山去喝威士忌。他酒喝得好凶。」

「他爸妈还住在闪电平原吗?」

「当然罗。一直住到老死为止。我从没跟他们见过面。葬礼时他们也不过来。你自己跟他们联络。要是能实现他的愿望,我猜他们会很感激你的。」

毫无疑问的是,她虽客套,细小的嗓音却冰冷如雪。

前往闪电平原途经荒凉乡野,路过十数个废弃农场,在平原上间隔八至十英哩,眼睛无神的房屋呆坐杂草中,兽栏衰颓。邮箱写着约翰.C.崔斯特。他家农场寒酸窄小,枝叶繁茂的大戟有占领成功之势。牲口距离太远,他无法看清状况如何,只知道是白头黑牛。棕色粉饰灰泥屋矮小,正面有道门廊,两上两下共四间房厅。

恩尼司与杰克的父亲坐在餐桌前。杰克的母亲身材粗大,动作小心,彷佛刚动过手术。她说,「想喝杯咖啡吗?要不要来一块樱桃蛋糕?」

「谢谢你,夫人,请给我一杯咖啡,蛋糕暂时不必了。」

老父静静坐着,双手交握在塑胶桌布上,以愠怒、知情的神态直盯恩尼司。恩尼司从他身上看出,他这种人并非不常见,是硬要当整个池塘老大公鸭的类型。他从父母身上看不出杰克有太多相似之处,深吸一口气。

「我对杰克感到非常难过。难以形容。我好久以前就认识他了。我过来是想让你们知道,他妻子说他希望骨灰能撒在断背山,如果想让我带上山去,我会感到很光荣的。」

一片沉寂。恩尼司清清喉咙,却不再多说。

老人说,「断背山在哪里我知道。他以为自己太特别,老家贱坟地配不上他啊。」

杰克的母亲置若罔闻,说,「他生前每年回家,在德州结婚以后也照常回来,帮老爹在农场干活一个礼拜,修修门,割割草的。我把他的房间维持像他小时候的模样,我认为他很感激。你想上楼参观的话请别客气。」

老人开口生气地说,「这里找不到帮手。杰克以前常说,『恩尼司.岱玛,总有一天我要带他过来,好好整顿一下这个该死的农场。』 他有个半生不熟的点子,说你们两个准备搬过来,盖间小木屋,帮我管管这个农场,弄得像样一点。后来今年春天,他说有人愿意跟他过来,盖个房子,帮我管理农场,是他在德州经营农场的邻居。他准备跟老婆离婚,搬回这里住。他那时这样说的。不过杰克说归说,成真的点子不多。」

现在总算证实是轮胎撬棒了。他起身说,没错,我想参观杰克的房间,一面回想起杰克谈过父亲的往事。杰克割过包皮,老爸却没有;杰克察觉父子生理上的差异,是在一个激动的场合。他说,他当时三、四岁,上厕所总是晚一步,手忙脚乱想解开钮扣,拉起马桶座,而且马桶太高,往往导致尿液四溅。老爸对此很不高兴,这一次更是大发雷霆。「天啊,他揍得我惨兮兮,把我打得跌到浴室地板上,拿皮带抽我。我还以为会被他打死。后来他说,『想知道尿得到处都是的感觉吗?我来教你,』说着掏出来,尿得我全身都是,湿透透,然后丢给我毛巾,叫我擦地板,脱掉我的衣服,在浴缸里洗,也洗毛巾。我又哀嚎又哭得眼睛红肿。不过在他对着我浇水的时候,我看到他身上多了一小块我没有的肉。我发现自己像是割过耳尖或是烙印过,和老爸不一样。从此就没办法认同他。」

杰克的卧房在陡峭的楼梯顶端,往上爬时有独特的韵律。他的房间狭小闷热,午后烈日从西方窗户攻进,打在靠墙的儿童窄床,沾有墨水的书桌以及木椅,床铺上方有座手工削制的木架,上面摆了一把BB枪。窗外面对的是往南延伸的砂石路,而恩尼司这时倏然想到,这是杰克童年唯一认得的一条路。床边墙上贴了一张古老的杂志相片,是某个黑发电影明星,肤色转为紫红。他听得见杰克的母亲在楼下打开水龙头装满开水壶,放在炉子上,低声问了老人一个问题。

杰克的衣柜空间狭窄,架了一根横向木杆,以串了绳子的褪色大花帘布开合,以隔开房间其它部分。衣柜里挂了两件牛仔裤,熨出折线,整齐折迭好,放在铁丝衣架上方,衣柜底有一双磨损的包装工皮靴,他隐约有印象。衣柜北端墙壁有个小小的凹陷处,可稍微隐藏东西。这里挂着一件衬衫,因长久挂在铁钉上而僵硬。他从铁钉上取下衣服。是杰克在断背山穿的旧衬衫。衣袖上的干血是恩尼司的鼻血。在断背山最后一天下午,两人展现软骨功胡抓乱扭,杰克不慎以膝盖撞击恩尼司鼻子,血流不止,沾得两人身上血迹斑斑。杰克以袖子止住鼻血,然而恩尼司却忽然一跃而起,挥拳击昏好意疗伤的杰克,让杰克如天使般平躺在野生耧斗花丛上,双翼合胸。

衬衫拿在手中感觉沉重,后来恩尼司才发现里面另有一件衬衫,衣袖小心穿过杰克衬衫袖子内部。这件是恩尼司的格子衬衫,很久以前误以为洗衣服时弄丢了,如今沾了泥土的衬衫,口袋裂了,钮扣掉了,被杰克偷来藏在自己的衬衫里,一对衬衫宛若两层皮肤,一层裹住另一层,合为一体。他以脸重压布料,慢慢以口鼻吸气,盼能嗅到微乎其微的烟味与高山鼠尾草,以及杰克咸中带甜的体臭,然而衬衫并无真正气味,唯有记忆中的气息,是凭空想像的断背山的力量。

    断背山已成空影,硕果仅存的,握在他双手中。

Annette 2006-1-1 04:34 PM

很美好的故事。。。  人性是永远的话题

爱斯基摩兔子 2006-1-2 09:12 AM

好久么看到A了,一闪现就带来这么好的东西。
谢谢咯,收起来慢慢看

yolanta 2006-2-2 02:48 AM

已经看过片子了~拍得不错~不过那两个男主角好象还是不太习惯同性之间的性爱~动作有点生硬

Nibelunge 2006-2-2 03:06 AM

[quote]原帖由 [i]yolanta[/i] 于 2006-2-2 02:48 发表
已经看过片子了~拍得不错~不过那两个男主角好象还是不太习惯同性之间的性爱~动作有点生硬 [/quote]

哇,这个都能看出来!好强!嘻嘻

星野 2006-2-2 08:23 PM

还是英文原著最有感觉~
虽然我也想试者翻出来
不过感觉那种感情总也用不了最合适的次来形容
所以
建议看原版

PS:少一段原文第一段翻译

[[i] 本帖最后由 星野 于 2006-2-2 20:24 编辑 [/i]]

Astrid 2006-2-4 08:59 PM

这种文章要看原版才能才能体会出其中的感觉。
电影将小说还原得蛮好的

米米tori托利 2006-2-8 11:58 AM

AI??好久不见:):)
有机会在xixi的论坛上慢慢聊.

赎罪魅影 2006-2-9 11:16 PM

哪买得到这书啊??我好想在中国买到啊!!!!!!!!!

unicorn 2006-2-9 11:57 PM

我前几天逛书店看到了
还是有点贵
等SPECIAL OFFER来了再说
不过花4磅买了本CONSTANT GARDENER
很开心。

米米tori托利 2006-2-10 03:10 PM

[quote]原帖由 [i]unicorn[/i] 于 2006-2-9 23:57 发表
我前几天逛书店看到了
还是有点贵
等SPECIAL OFFER来了再说
不过花4磅买了本CONSTANT GARDENER
很开心。 [/quote]

===uni你知道广州的英文小说多少钱吗??
至少200.
我这种穷学生......每次看到那些建筑设计的画册就心酸....唉....

突然发现AI是31号那天发的帖子,哈哈.
AI,多到xixi的小论坛上玩哈,看我签名.

Aimita 2006-2-14 11:10 PM

好久没来了,终于战胜了网速这个恶魔啊恶魔!
终于见到Tori了,消失了这么久,初三还顺利吗?好好加油。
有空会去xixi那里看你们的  =)

回星野,我是从别的地方转过来,趁着电影上映,发上来应个景,对原文没有研究,所以,很惭愧,说不上什么。感谢指正。
其实,我还是那个意见,就是好的作品是不拘于语言限制的。虽然在翻译的过程中会丢失一小部分的东西,比如语言上的一些韵味,但如果除此之外再品味不出点别的什么,那这样的作品也不值得一读。
是由此生发的,自说自话。

问RY和uni好

ljsh1405 2006-2-17 11:43 AM

这个电影很感人的~~~~

unicorn 2006-2-20 06:26 AM

我看了电影了
对它的感觉并不强烈。我觉得可能有4个原因,排名不分先后阿。
1 我先看了munich,对我的教育意义很大,而且这是第一步让我思考得这么深刻的电影。所以brokeback mountain比munich,分量不够。虽然真爱感人至深,但是munich所探讨的问题在当今更为重要。
2 没有字母听得很辛苦。所以不是那种100%享受的看着电影。
3 我喝了好大一杯pepsi...所以片子的最后一小时,我只想着,快结束快结束...而且我也不愿意中途去...因为不想miss掉可能的重要细节。
4 国内对它的评价太高了,所以实际和expectation有差别。


bbm迷不要打我。就因为我这个说法,已经被人鄙视了。=(

unicorn 2006-2-20 06:35 AM

英文版:
Brokeback Mountain

pdf下载:[url]http://www.hi-pda.com/forum/attachment.php?aid=300496[/url]

Ennis Del Mar wakes before five, wind rocking the trailer, hissing in around the aluminum door and window frames. The shirts hanging on a nail shudder slightly in the draft. He gets up, scratching the grey wedge of belly and pubic hair, shuffles to the gas burner, pours leftover coffee in a chipped enamel pan; the flame swathes it in blue. He turns on the tap and urinates in the sink, pulls on his shirt and jeans, his worn boots, stamping the heels against the floor to get them full on. The wind booms down the curved length of the trailer and under its roaring passage he can hear the scratching of fine gravel and sand. It could be bad on the highway with the horse trailer. He has to be packed and away from the place that morning. Again the ranch is on the market and they've shipped out the last of the horses, paid everybody off the day before, the owner saying, "Give em to the real estate shark, I'm out a here," dropping the keys in Ennis's hand. He might have to stay with his married daughter until he picks up another job, yet he is suffused with a sense of pleasure because Jack Twist was in his dream.

The stale coffee is boiling up but he catches it before it goes over the side, pours it into a stained cup and blows on the black liquid, lets a panel of the dream slide forward. If he does not force his attention on it, it might stoke the day, rewarm that old, cold time on the mountain when they owned the world and nothing seemed wrong. The wind strikes the trailer like a load of dirt coming off a dump truck, eases, dies, leaves a temporary silence.

They were raised on small, poor ranches in opposite corners of the state, Jack Twist in Lightning Flat up on the Montana border, Ennis del Mar from around Sage, near the Utah line, both high school dropout country boys with no prospects, brought up to hard work and privation, both rough-mannered, rough-spoken, inured to the stoic life. Ennis, reared by his older brother and sister after their parents drove off the only curve on Dead Horse Road leaving them twenty-four dollars in cash and a two-mortgage ranch, applied at age fourteen for a hardship license that let him make the hour-long trip from the ranch to the high school. The pickup was old, no heater, one windshield wiper and bad tires; when the transmission went there was no money to fix it. He had wanted to be a sophomore, felt the word carried a kind of distinction, but the truck broke down short of it, pitching him directly into ranch work.
In 1963 when he met Jack Twist, Ennis was engaged to Alma Beers. Both Jack and Ennis claimed to be saving money for a small spread; in Ennis's case that meant a tobacco can with two five-dollar bills inside. That spring, hungry for any job, each had signed up with Farm and Ranch Employment -- they came together on paper as herder and camp tender for the same sheep operation north of Signal. The summer range lay above the tree line on Forest Service land on Brokeback Mountain. It would be Jack Twist's second summer on the mountain, Ennis's first. Neither of them was twenty.
They shook hands in the choky little trailer office in front of a table littered with scribbled papers, a Bakelite ashtray brimming with stubs. The venetian blinds hung askew and admitted a triangle of white light, the shadow of the foreman's hand moving into it. Joe Aguirre, wavy hair the color of cigarette ash and parted down the middle, gave them his point of view.
"Forest Service got designated campsites on the allotments. Them camps can be a couple a miles from where we pasture the sheep. Bad predator loss, nobody near lookin after em at night. What I want, camp tender in the main camp where the Forest Service says, but the HERDER" -- pointing at Jack with a chop of his hand -- "pitch a pup tent on the q.t. with the sheep, out a sight, and he's goin a SLEEP there. Eat supper, breakfast in camp, but SLEEP WITH THE SHEEP, hunderd percent, NO FIRE, don't leave NO SIGN. Roll up that tent every mornin case Forest Service snoops around. Got the dogs, your .30-.30, sleep there. Last summer had goddamn near twenty-five percent loss. I don't want that again. YOU," he said to Ennis, taking in the ragged hair, the big nicked hands, the jeans torn, button-gaping shirt, "Fridays twelve noon be down at the bridge with your next week list and mules. Somebody with supplies'll be there in a pickup." He didn't ask if Ennis had a watch but took a cheap round ticker on a braided cord from a box on a high shelf, wound and set it, tossed it to him as if he weren't worth the reach. "TOMORROW MORNIN we'll truck you up the jump-off." Pair of deuces going nowhere.
They found a bar and drank beer through the afternoon, Jack telling Ennis about a lightning storm on the mountain the year before that killed forty-two sheep, the peculiar stink of them and the way they bloated, the need for plenty of whiskey up there. He had shot an eagle, he said, turned his head to show the tail feather in his hatband. At first glance Jack seemed fair enough with his curly hair and quick laugh, but for a small man he carried some weight in the haunch and his smile disclosed buckteeth, not pronounced enough to let him eat popcorn out of the neck of a jug, but noticeable. He was infatuated with the rodeo life and fastened his belt with a minor bull-riding buckle, but his boots were worn to the quick, holed beyond repair and he was crazy to be somewhere, anywhere else than Lightning Flat.
Ennis, high-arched nose and narrow face, was scruffy and a little cave-chested, balanced a small torso on long, caliper legs, possessed a muscular and supple body made for the horse and for fighting. His reflexes were uncommonly quick and he was farsighted enough to dislike reading anything except Hamley's saddle catalog.
The sheep trucks and horse trailers unloaded at the trailhead and a bandy-legged Basque showed Ennis how to pack the mules, two packs and a riding load on each animal ring-lashed with double diamonds and secured with half hitches, telling him, "Don't never order soup. Them boxes a soup are real bad to pack." Three puppies belonging to one of the blue heelers went in a pack basket, the runt inside Jack's coat, for he loved a little dog. Ennis picked out a big chestnut called Cigar Butt to ride, Jack a bay mare who turned out to have a low startle point. The string of spare horses included a mouse-colored grullo whose looks Ennis liked. Ennis and Jack, the dogs, horses and mules, a thousand ewes and their lambs flowed up the trail like dirty water through the timber and out above the tree line into the great flowery Meadows and the coursing, endless wind.
They got the big tent up on the Forest Service's platform, the kitchen and grub boxes secured. Both slept in camp that first night, Jack already bitching about Joe Aguirre's sleep-with-the-sheep-and-no-fire order, though he saddled the bay mare in the dark morning without saying much. Dawn came glassy orange, stained from below by a gelatinous band of pale green. The sooty bulk of the mountain paled slowly until it was the same color as the smoke from Ennis's breakfast fire. The cold air sweetened, banded pebbles and crumbs of soil cast sudden pencil-long shadows and the rearing lodgepole pines below them massed in slabs of somber malachite.
During the day Ennis looked across a great gulf and sometimes saw Jack, a small dot moving across a high meadow as an insect moves across a tablecloth; Jack, in his dark camp, saw Ennis as night fire, a red spark on the huge black mass of mountain.

Jack came lagging in late one afternoon, drank his two bottles of beer cooled in a wet sack on the shady side of the tent, ate two bowls of stew, four of Ennis's stone biscuits, a can of peaches, rolled a smoke, watched the sun drop.
"I'm commutin four hours a day," he said morosely. "Come in for breakfast, go back to the sheep, evenin get em bedded down, come in for supper, go back to the sheep, spend half the night jumpin up and checkin for coyotes. By rights I should be spendin the night here. Aguirre got no right a make me do this."
"You want a switch?" said Ennis. "I wouldn't mind herdin. I wouldn't mind sleepin out there."
"That ain't the point. Point is, we both should be in this camp. And that goddamn pup tent smells like cat piss or worse."
"Wouldn't mind bein out there."
"Tell you what, you got a get up a dozen times in the night out there over them coyotes. Happy to switch but give you warnin I can't cook worth a sh*t. Pretty good with a can opener."
"Can't be no worse than me, then. Sure, I wouldn't mind a do it."
They fended off the night for an hour with the yellow kerosene lamp and around ten Ennis rode Cigar Butt, a good night horse, through the glimmering frost back to the sheep, carrying leftover biscuits, a jar of jam and a jar of coffee with him for the next day saying he'd save a trip, stay out until supper.
"Shot a coyote just first light," he told Jack the next evening, sloshing his face with hot water, lathering up soap and hoping his razor had some cut left in it, while Jack peeled potatoes. "Big son of a bitch. Balls on him size a apples. I bet he'd took a few lambs. Looked like he could a eat a camel. You want some a this hot water? There's plenty."
"It's all yours."
"Well, I'm goin a warsh everthing I can reach," he said, pulling off his boots and jeans (no drawers, no socks, Jack noticed), slopping the green washcloth around until the fire spat.
They had a high-time supper by the fire, a can of beans each, fried potatoes and a quart of whiskey on shares, sat with their backs against a log, boot soles and copper jeans rivets hot, swapping the bottle while the lavender sky emptied of color and the chill air drained down, drinking, smoking cigarettes, getting up every now and then to piss, firelight throwing a sparkle in the arched stream, tossing sticks on the fire to keep the talk going, talking horses and rodeo, roughstock events, wrecks and injuries sustained, the submarine Thresher lost two months earlier with all hands and how it must have been in the last doomed minutes, dogs each had owned and known, the draft, Jack's home ranch where his father and mother held on, Ennis's family place folded years ago after his folks died, the older brother in Signal and a married sister in Casper. Jack said his father had been a pretty well known bullrider years back but kept his secrets to himself, never gave Jack a word of advice, never came once to see Jack ride, though he had put him on the woolies when he was a little kid. Ennis said the kind of riding that interested him lasted longer than eight seconds and had some point to it. Money's a good point, said Jack, and Ennis had to agree. They were respectful of each other's opinions, each glad to have a companion where none had been expected. Ennis, riding against the wind back to the sheep in the treacherous, drunken light, thought he'd never had such a good time, felt he could paw the white out of the moon.
The summer went on and they moved the herd to new pasture, shifted the camp; the distance between the sheep and the new camp was greater and the night ride longer. Ennis rode easy, sleeping with his eyes open, but the hours he was away from the sheep stretched out and out. Jack pulled a squalling burr out of the harmonica, flattened a little from a fall off the skittish bay mare, and Ennis had a good raspy voice; a few nights they mangled their way through some songs. Ennis knew the salty words to "Strawberry Roan." Jack tried a Carl Perkins song, bawling "what I say-ay-ay," but he favored a sad hymn, "Water-Walking Jesus," learned from his mother who believed in the Pentecost, that he sang at dirge slowness, setting off distant coyote yips.
"Too late to go out to them damn sheep," said Ennis, dizzy drunk on all fours one cold hour when the moon had notched past two. The meadow stones glowed white-green and a flinty wind worked over the meadow, scraped the fire low, then ruffled it into yellow silk sashes. "Got you a extra blanket I'll roll up out here and grab forty winks, ride out at first light."
"Freeze your ass off when that fire dies down. Better off sleepin in the tent."
"Doubt I'll feel nothin." But he staggered under canvas, pulled his boots off, snored on the ground cloth for a while, woke Jack with the clacking of his jaw.
"Jesus Christ, quit hammerin and get over here. Bedroll's big enough," said Jack in an irritable sleep-clogged voice. It was big enough, warm enough, and in a little while they deepened their intimacy considerably. Ennis ran full-throttle on all roads whether fence mending or money spending, and he wanted none of it when Jack seized his left hand and brought it to his erect cock. Ennis jerked his hand away as though he'd touched fire, got to his knees, unbuckled his belt, shoved his pants down, hauled Jack onto all fours and, with the help of the clear slick and a little spit, entered him, nothing he'd done before but no instruction manual needed. They went at it in silence except for a few sharp intakes of breath and Jack's choked "gun's goin off," then out, down, and asleep.
Ennis woke in red dawn with his pants around his knees, a top-grade headache, and Jack butted against him; without saying anything about it both knew how it would go for the rest of the summer, sheep be damned.
As it did go. They never talked about the sex, let it happen, at first only in the tent at night, then in the full daylight with the hot sun striking down, and at evening in the fire glow, quick, rough, laughing and snorting, no lack of noises, but saying not a goddamn word except once Ennis said, "I'm not no queer," and Jack jumped in with "Me neither. A one-shot thing. Nobody's business but ours." There were only the two of them on the mountain flying in the euphoric, bitter air, looking down on the hawk's back and the crawling lights of vehicles on the plain below, suspended above ordinary affairs and distant from tame ranch dogs barking in the dark hours. They believed themselves invisible, not knowing Joe Aguirre had watched them through his 10x42 binoculars for ten minutes one day, waiting until they'd buttoned up their jeans, waiting until Ennis rode back to the sheep, before bringing up the message that Jack's people had sent word that his uncle Harold was in the hospital with pneumonia and expected not to make it. Though he did, and Aguirre came up again to say so, fixing Jack with his bold stare, not bothering to dismount.
In August Ennis spent the whole night with Jack in the main camp and in a blowy hailstorm the sheep took off west and got among a herd in another allotment. There was a damn miserable time for five days, Ennis and a Chilean herder with no English trying to sort them out, the task almost impossible as the paint brands were worn and faint at this late season. Even when the numbers were right Ennis knew the sheep were mixed. In a disquieting way everything seemed mixed.
The first snow came early, on August thirteenth, piling up a foot, but was followed by a quick melt. The next week Joe Aguirre sent word to bring them down -- another, bigger storm was moving in from the Pacific -- and they packed in the game and moved off the mountain with the sheep, stones rolling at their heels, purple cloud crowding in from the west and the metal smell of coming snow pressing them on. The mountain boiled with demonic energy, glazed with flickering broken-cloud light, the wind combed the grass and drew from the damaged krummholz and slit rock a bestial drone. As they descended the slope Ennis felt he was in a slow-motion, but headlong, irreversible fall.
Joe Aguirre paid them, said little. He had looked at the milling sheep with a sour expression, said, "Some a these never went up there with you." The count was not what he'd hoped for either. Ranch stiffs never did much of a job.

"You goin a do this next summer?" said Jack to Ennis in the street, one leg already up in his green pickup. The wind was gusting hard and cold.
"Maybe not." A dust plume rose and hazed the air with fine grit and he squinted against it. "Like I said, Alma and me's gettin married in December. Try to get somethin on a ranch. You?" He looked away from Jack's jaw, bruised blue from the hard punch Ennis had thrown him on the last day.
"If nothin better comes along. Thought some about going back up to my daddy's place, give him a hand over the winter, then maybe head out for Texas in the spring. If the draft don't get me."
"Well, see you around, I guess." The wind tumbled an empty feed bag down the street until it fetched up under his truck.
"Right," said Jack, and they shook hands, hit each other on the shoulder, then there was forty feet of distance between them and nothing to do but drive away in opposite directions. Within a mile Ennis felt like someone was pulling his guts out hand over hand a yard at a time. He stopped at the side of the road and, in the whirling new snow, tried to puke but nothing came up. He felt about as bad as he ever had and it took a long time for the feeling to wear off.

In December Ennis married Alma Beers and had her pregnant by mid-January. He picked up a few short-lived ranch jobs, then settled in as a wrangler on the old Elwood Hi-Top place north of Lost Cabin in Washakie County. He was still working there in September when Alma Jr., as he called his daughter, was born and their bedroom was full of the smell of old blood and milk and baby sh*t, and the sounds were of squalling and sucking and Alma's sleepy groans, all reassuring of fecundity and life's continuance to one who worked with livestock.
When the Hi-Top folded they moved to a small apartment in Riverton up over a laundry. Ennis got on the highway crew, tolerating it but working weekends at the Rafter B in exchange for keeping his horses out there. The second girl was born and Alma wanted to stay in town near the clinic because the child had an asthmatic wheeze.
"Ennis, please, no more damn lonesome ranches for us," she said, sitting on his lap, wrapping her thin, freckled arms around him. "Let's get a place here in town?"
"I guess," said Ennis, slipping his hand up her blouse sleeve and stirring the silky armpit hair, then easing her down, fingers moving up her ribs to the jelly breast, over the round belly and knee and up into the wet gap all the way to the north pole or the equator depending which way you thought you were sailing, working at it until she shuddered and bucked against his hand and he rolled her over, did quickly what she hated. They stayed in the little apartment which he favored because it could be left at any time.

The fourth summer since Brokeback Mountain came on and in June Ennis had a general delivery letter from Jack Twist, the first sign of life in all that time.
Friend this letter is a long time over due. Hope you get it. Heard you was in Riverton. Im coming thru on the 24th, thought Id stop and buy you a beer Drop me a line if you can, say if your there.
The return address was Childress, Texas. Ennis wrote back, you bet, gave the Riverton address.
The day was hot and clear in the morning, but by noon the clouds had pushed up out of the west rolling a little sultry air before them. Ennis, wearing his best shirt, white with wide black stripes, didn't know what time Jack would get there and so had taken the day off, paced back and forth, looking down into a street pale with dust. Alma was saying something about taking his friend to the Knife & Fork for supper instead of cooking it was so hot, if they could get a baby-sitter, but Ennis said more likely he'd just go out with Jack and get drunk. Jack was not a restaurant type, he said, thinking of the dirty spoons sticking out of the cans of cold beans balanced on the log.
Late in the afternoon, thunder growling, that same old green pickup rolled in and he saw Jack get out of the truck, beat-up Resistol tilted back. A hot jolt scalded Ennis and he was out on the landing pulling the door closed behind him. Jack took the stairs two and two. They seized each other by the shoulders, hugged mightily, squeezing the breath out of each other, saying, son of a bitch, son of a bitch, then, and easily as the right key turns the lock tumblers, their mouths came together, and hard, Jack's big teeth bringing blood, his hat falling to the floor, stubble rasping, wet saliva welling, and the door opening and Alma looking out for a few seconds at Ennis's straining shoulders and shutting the door again and still they clinched, pressing chest and groin and thigh and leg together, treading on each other's toes until they pulled apart to breathe and Ennis, not big on endearments, said what he said to his horses and daughters, little darlin.
The door opened again a few inches and Alma stood in the narrow light.
What could he say? "Alma, this is Jack Twist, Jack, my wife Alma." His chest was heaving. He could smell Jack -- the intensely familiar odor of cigarettes, musky sweat and a faint sweetness like grass, and with it the rushing cold of the mountain. "Alma," he said, "Jack and me ain't seen each other in four years." As if it were a reason. He was glad the light was dim on the landing but did not turn away from her.
"Sure enough," said Alma in a low voice. She had seen what she had seen. Behind her in the room lightning lit the window like a white sheet waving and the baby cried.
"You got a kid?" said Jack. His shaking hand grazed Ennis's hand, electrical current snapped between them.
"Two little girls," Ennis said. "Alma Jr. and Francine. Love them to pieces." Alma's mouth twitched.
"I got a boy," said Jack. "Eight months old. Tell you what, I married a cute little old Texas girl down in Childress -- Lureen." From the vibration of the floorboard on which they both stood Ennis could feel how hard Jack was shaking.
"Alma," he said. "Jack and me is goin out and get a drink. Might not get back tonight, we get drinkin and talkin."
"Sure enough," Alma said, taking a dollar bill from her pocket. Ennis guessed she was going to ask him to get her a pack of cigarettes, bring him back sooner.
"Please to meet you," said Jack, trembling like a run-out horse.
"Ennis -- " said Alma in her misery voice, but that didn't slow him down on the stairs and he called back, "Alma, you want smokes there's some in the pocket a my blue shirt in the bedroom."
They went off in Jack's truck, bought a bottle of whiskey and within twenty minutes were in the Motel Siesta jouncing a bed. A few handfuls of hail rattled against the window followed by rain and slippery wind banging the unsecured door of the next room then and through the night.

The room stank of semen and smoke and sweat and whiskey, of old carpet and sour hay, saddle leather, sh*t and cheap soap. Ennis lay spread-eagled, spent and wet, breathing deep, still half tumescent, Jack blowing forceful cigarette clouds like whale spouts, and Jack said, "Christ, it got a be all that time a yours ahorseback makes it so goddamn good. We got to talk about this. Swear to god I didn't know we was goin a get into this again -- yeah, I did. Why I'm here. I f*ckin knew it. Redlined all the way, couldn't get here fast enough."
"I didn't know where in the hell you was," said Ennis. "Four years. I about give up on you. I figured you was sore about that punch."
"Friend," said Jack, "I was in Texas rodeoin. How I met Lureen. Look over on that chair."
On the back of the soiled orange chair he saw the shine of a buckle. "Bullridin?"
"Yeah. I made three f*ckin thousand dollars that year. f*ckin starved. Had to borrow everthing but a toothbrush from other guys. Drove grooves across Texas. Half the time under that cunt truck fixin it. Anyway, I didn't never think about losin. Lureen? There's some serious money there. Her old man's got it. Got this farm machinery business. Course he don't let her have none a the money, and he hates my f*ckin guts, so it's a hard go now but one a these days -- "
"Well, you're goin a go where you look. Army didn't get you?" The thunder sounded far to the east, moving from them in its red wreaths of light.
"They can't get no use out a me. Got some crushed vertebrates. And a stress fracture, the arm bone here, you know how bullridin you're always leverin it off your thigh? -- she gives a little ever time you do it. Even if you tape it good you break it a little goddamn bit at a time. Tell you what, hurts like a bitch afterwards. Had a busted leg. Busted in three places. Come off the bull and it was a big bull with a lot a drop, he got rid a me in about three flat and he come after me and he was sure faster. Lucky enough. Friend a mine got his oil checked with a horn dipstick and that was all she wrote. Bunch a other things, f*ckin busted ribs, sprains and pains, torn ligaments. See, it ain't like it was in my daddy's time. It's guys with money go to college, trained athaletes. You got a have some money to rodeo now. Lureen's old man wouldn't give me a dime if I dropped it, except one way. And I know enough about the game now so I see that I ain't never goin a be on the bubble. Other reasons. I'm gettin out while I still can walk."
Ennis pulled Jack's hand to his mouth, took a hit from the cigarette, exhaled. "Sure as hell seem in one piece to me. You know, I was sittin up here all that time tryin to figure out if I was -- ? I know I ain't. I mean here we both got wives and kids, right? I like doin it with women, yeah, but Jesus H., ain't nothin like this. I never had no thoughts a doin it with another guy except I sure wrang it out a hunderd times thinkin about you. You do it with other guys? Jack?"
"sh*t no," said Jack, who had been riding more than bulls, not rolling his own. "You know that. Old Brokeback got us good and it sure ain't over. We got a work out what the f*ck we're goin a do now."
"That summer," said Ennis. "When we split up after we got paid out I had gut cramps so bad I pulled over and tried to puke, thought I ate somethin bad at that place in Dubois. Took me about a year a figure out it was that I shouldn't a let you out a my sights. Too late then by a long, long while."
"Friend," said Jack. "We got us a f*ckin situation here. Got a figure out what to do."
"I doubt there's nothin now we can do," said Ennis. "What I'm sayin, Jack, I built a life up in them years. Love my little girls. Alma? It ain't her fault. You got your baby and wife, that place in Texas. You and me can't hardly be decent together if what happened back there" -- he jerked his head in the direction of the apartment -- "grabs on us like that. We do that in the wrong place we'll be dead. There's no reins on this one. It scares the piss out a me."
"Got to tell you, friend, maybe somebody seen us that summer. I was back there the next June, thinkin about goin back -- I didn't, lit out for Texas instead -- and Joe Aguirre's in the office and he says to me, he says, 'You boys found a way to make the time pass up there, didn't you,' and I give him a look but when I went out I seen he had a big-ass pair a binoculars hangin off his rearview." He neglected to add that the foreman had leaned back in his squeaky wooden tilt chair, said, Twist, you guys wasn't gettin paid to leave the dogs baby-sit the sheep while you stemmed the rose, and declined to rehire him. He went on, "Yeah, that little punch a yours surprised me. I never figured you to throw a dirty punch."
"I come up under my brother K.E., three years older'n me, slugged me silly ever day. Dad got tired a me come bawlin in the house and when I was about six he set me down and says, Ennis, you got a problem and you got a fix it or it's gonna be with you until you're ninety and K.E.'s ninety-three. Well, I says, he's bigger'n me. Dad says, you got a take him unawares, don't say nothin to him, make him feel some pain, get out fast and keep doin it until he takes the message. Nothin like hurtin somebody to make him hear good. So I did. I got him in the outhouse, jumped him on the stairs, come over to his pillow in the night while he was sleepin and pasted him damn good. Took about two days. Never had trouble with K.E. since. The lesson was, don't say nothin and get it over with quick." A telephone rang in the next room, rang on and on, stopped abruptly in mid-peal.
"You won't catch me again," said Jack. "Listen. I'm thinkin, tell you what, if you and me had a little ranch together, little cow and calf operation, your horses, it'd be some sweet life. Like I said, I'm gettin out a rodeo. I ain't no broke-dick rider but I don't got the bucks a ride out this slump I'm in and I don't got the bones a keep gettin wrecked. I got it figured, got this plan, Ennis, how we can do it, you and me. Lureen's old man, you bet he'd give me a bunch if I'd get lost. Already more or less said it -- "
"Whoa, whoa, whoa. It ain't goin a be that way. We can't. I'm stuck with what I got, caught in my own loop. Can't get out of it. Jack, I don't want a be like them guys you see around sometimes. And I don't want a be dead. There was these two old guys ranched together down home, Earl and Rich -- Dad would pass a remark when he seen them. They was a joke even though they was pretty tough old birds. I was what, nine years old and they found Earl dead in a irrigation ditch. They'd took a tire iron to him, spurred him up, drug him around by his dick until it pulled off, just bloody pulp. What the tire iron done looked like pieces a burned tomatoes all over him, nose tore down from skiddin on gravel."
"You seen that?"
"Dad made sure I seen it. Took me to see it. Me and K.E. Dad laughed about it. Hell, for all I know he done the job. If he was alive and was to put his head in that door right now you bet he'd go get his tire iron. Two guys livin together? No. All I can see is we get together once in a while way the hell out in the back a nowhere -- "
"How much is once in a while?" said Jack. "Once in a while ever four f*ckin years?"
"No," said Ennis, forbearing to ask whose fault that was. "I goddamn hate it that you're goin a drive away in the mornin and I'm goin back to work. But if you can't fix it you got a stand it," he said. "sh*t. I been lookin at people on the street. This happen a other people? What the hell do they do?"
"It don't happen in Wyomin and if it does I don't know what they do, maybe go to Denver," said Jack, sitting up, turning away from him, "and I don't give a flyin f*ck. Son of a bitch, Ennis, take a couple days off. Right now. Get us out a here. Throw your stuff in the back a my truck and let's get up in the mountains. Couple a days. Call Alma up and tell her you're goin. Come on, Ennis, you just shot my airplane out a the sky -- give me somethin a go on. This ain't no little thing that's happenin here."
The hollow ringing began again in the next room, and as if he were answering it, Ennis picked up the phone on the bedside table, dialed his own number.

A slow corrosion worked between Ennis and Alma, no real trouble, just widening water. She was working at a grocery store clerk job, saw she'd always have to work to keep ahead of the bills on what Ennis made. Alma asked Ennis to use rubbers because she dreaded another pregnancy. He said no to that, said he would be happy to leave her alone if she didn't want any more of his kids. Under her breath she said, "I'd have em if you'd support em." And under that, thought, anyway, what you like to do don't make too many babies.
Her resentment opened out a little every year: the embrace she had glimpsed, Ennis's fishing trips once or twice a year with Jack Twist and never a vacation with her and the girls, his disinclination to step out and have any fun, his yearning for low paid, long-houred ranch work, his propensity to roll to the wall and sleep as soon as he hit the bed, his failure to look for a decent permanent job with the county or the power company, put her in a long, slow dive and when Alma Jr. was nine and Francine seven she said, what am I doin hangin around with him, divorced Ennis and married the Riverton grocer.
Ennis went back to ranch work, hired on here and there, not getting much ahead but glad enough to be around stock again, free to drop things, quit if he had to, and go into the mountains at short notice. He had no serious hard feelings, just a vague sense of getting shortchanged, and showed it was all right by taking Thanksgiving dinner with Alma and her grocer and the kids, sitting between his girls and talking horses to them, telling jokes, trying not to be a sad daddy. After the pie Alma got him off in the kitchen, scraped the plates and said she worried about him and he ought to get married again. He saw she was pregnant, about four, five months, he guessed.
"Once burned," he said, leaning against the counter, feeling too big for the room.
"You still go fishin with that Jack Twist?"
"Some." He thought she'd take the pattern off the plate with the scraping.
"You know," she said, and from her tone he knew something was coming, "I used to wonder how come you never brought any trouts home. Always said you caught plenty. So one time I got your creel case open the night before you went on one a your little trips -- price tag still on it after five years -- and I tied a note on the end of the line. It said, hello Ennis, bring some fish home, love, Alma. And then you come back and said you'd caught a bunch a browns and ate them up. Remember? I looked in the case when I got a chance and there was my note still tied there and that line hadn't touched water in its life." As though the word "water" had called out its domestic cousin she twisted the faucet, sluiced the plates.
"That don't mean nothin."
"Don't lie, don't try to fool me, Ennis. I know what it means. Jack Twist? Jack Nasty. You and him -- "
She'd overstepped his line. He seized her wrist; tears sprang and rolled, a dish clattered.
"Shut up," he said. "Mind your own business. You don't know nothin about it."
"I'm goin a yell for Bill."
"You f*ckin go right ahead. Go on and f*ckin yell. I'll make him eat the f*ckin floor and you too." He gave another wrench that left her with a burning bracelet, shoved his hat on backwards and slammed out. He went to the Black and Blue Eagle bar that night, got drunk, had a short dirty fight and left. He didn't try to see his girls for a long time, figuring they would look him up when they got the sense and years to move out from Alma.

They were no longer young men with all of it before them. Jack had filled out through the shoulders and hams, Ennis stayed as lean as a clothes-pole, stepped around in worn boots, jeans and shirts summer and winter, added a canvas coat in cold weather. A benign growth appeared on his eyelid and gave it a drooping appearance, a broken nose healed crooked.
Years on years they worked their way through the high meadows and mountain drainages, horse-packing into the Big Horns, Medicine Bows, south end of the Gallatins, Absarokas, Granites, Owl Creeks, the Bridger-Teton Range, the Freezeouts and the Shirleys, Ferrises and the Rattlesnakes, Salt River Range, into the Wind Rivers over and again, the Sierra Madres, Gros Ventres, the Washakies, Laramies, but never returning to Brokeback.
Down in Texas Jack's father-in-law died and Lureen, who inherited the farm equipment business, showed a skill for management and hard deals. Jack found himself with a vague managerial title, traveling to stock and agricultural machinery shows. He had some money now and found ways to spend it on his buying trips. A little Texas accent flavored his sentences, "cow" twisted into "kyow" and "wife" coming out as "waf." He'd had his front teeth filed down and capped, said he'd felt no pain, and to finish the job grew a heavy mustache.

In May of 1983 they spent a few cold days at a series of little icebound, no-name high lakes, then worked across into the Hail Strew River drainage.
Going up, the day was fine but the trail deep-drifted and slopping wet at the margins. They left it to wind through a slashy cut, leading the horses through brittle branchwood, Jack, the same eagle feather in his old hat, lifting his head in the heated noon to take the air scented with resinous lodgepole, the dry needle duff and hot rock, bitter juniper crushed beneath the horses' hooves. Ennis, weather-eyed, looked west for the heated cumulus that might come up on such a day but the boneless blue was so deep, said Jack, that he might drown looking up.
Around three they swung through a narrow pass to a southeast slope where the strong spring sun had had a chance to work, dropped down to the trail again which lay snowless below them. They could hear the river muttering and making a distant train sound a long way off. Twenty minutes on they surprised a black bear on the bank above them rolling a log over for grubs and Jack's horse shied and reared, Jack saying "Wo! Wo!" and Ennis's bay dancing and snorting but holding. Jack reached for the .30-.06 but there was no need; the startled bear galloped into the trees with the lumpish gait that made it seem it was falling apart.
The tea-colored river ran fast with snowmelt, a scarf of bubbles at every high rock, pools and setbacks streaming. The ochre-branched willows swayed stiffly, pollened catkins like yellow thumbprints. The horses drank and Jack dismounted, scooped icy water up in his hand, crystalline drops falling from his fingers, his mouth and chin glistening with wet.
"Get beaver fever doin that," said Ennis, then, "Good enough place," looking at the level bench above the river, two or three fire-rings from old hunting camps. A sloping meadow rose behind the bench, protected by a stand of lodgepole. There was plenty of dry wood. They set up camp without saying much, picketed the horses in the meadow. Jack broke the seal on a bottle of whiskey, took a long, hot swallow, exhaled forcefully, said, "That's one a the two things I need right now," capped and tossed it to Ennis.
On the third morning there were the clouds Ennis had expected, a grey racer out of the west, a bar of darkness driving wind before it and small flakes. It faded after an hour into tender spring snow that heaped wet and heavy. By nightfall it turned colder. Jack and Ennis passed a joint back and forth, the fire burning late, Jack restless and bitching about the cold, poking the flames with a stick, twisting the dial of the transistor radio until the batteries died.
Ennis said he'd been putting the blocks to a woman who worked part-time at the Wolf Ears bar in Signal where he was working now for Stoutamire's cow and calf outfit, but it wasn't going anywhere and she had some problems he didn't want. Jack said he'd had a thing going with the wife of a rancher down the road in Childress and for the last few months he'd slank around expecting to get shot by Lureen or the husband, one. Ennis laughed a little and said he probably deserved it. Jack said he was doing all right but he missed Ennis bad enough sometimes to make him whip babies.
The horses nickered in the darkness beyond the fire's circle of light. Ennis put his arm around Jack, pulled him close, said he saw his girls about once a month, Alma Jr. a shy seventeen-year-old with his beanpole length, Francine a little live wire. Jack slid his cold hand between Ennis's legs, said he was worried about his boy who was, no doubt about it, dyslexic or something, couldn't get anything right, fifteen years old and couldn't hardly read, he could see it though goddamn Lureen wouldn't admit to it and pretended the kid was o.k., refused to get any bitchin kind a help about it. He didn't know what the f*ck the answer was. Lureen had the money and called the shots.
"I used a want a boy for a kid," said Ennis, undoing buttons, "but just got little girls."
"I didn't want none a either kind," said Jack. "But f*ck-all has worked the way I wanted. Nothin never come to my hand the right way." Without getting up he threw deadwood on the fire, the sparks flying up with their truths and lies, a few hot points of fire landing on their hands and faces, not for the first time, and they rolled down into the dirt. One thing never changed: the brilliant charge of their infrequent couplings was darkened by the sense of time flying, never enough time, never enough.
A day or two later in the trailhead parking lot, horses loaded into the trailer, Ennis was ready to head back to Signal, Jack up to Lightning Flat to see the old man. Ennis leaned into Jack's window, said what he'd been putting off the whole week, that likely he couldn't get away again until November after they'd shipped stock and before winter feeding started.
"November. What in hell happened a August? Tell you what, we said August, nine, ten days. Christ, Ennis! Whyn't you tell me this before? You had a f*ckin week to say some little word about it. And why's it we're always in the friggin cold weather? We ought a do somethin. We ought a go south. We ought a go to Mexico one day."
"Mexico? Jack, you know me. All the travelin I ever done is goin around the coffeepot lookin for the handle. And I'll be runnin the baler all August, that's what's the matter with August. Lighten up, Jack. We can hunt in November, kill a nice elk. Try if I can get Don Wroe's cabin again. We had a good time that year."
"You know, friend, this is a goddamn bitch of a unsatisfactory situation. You used a come away easy. It's like seein the pope now."
"Jack, I got a work. Them earlier days I used a quit the jobs. You got a wife with money, a good job. You forget how it is bein broke all the time. You ever hear a child support? I been payin out for years and got more to go. Let me tell you, I can't quit this one. And I can't get the time off. It was tough gettin this time -- some a them late heifers is still calvin. You don't leave then. You don't. Stoutamire is a hell-raiser and he raised hell about me takin the week. I don't blame him. He probly ain't got a night's sleep since I left. The trade-off was August. You got a better idea?"
"I did once." The tone was bitter and accusatory.
Ennis said nothing, straightened up slowly, rubbed at his forehead; a horse stamped inside the trailer. He walked to his truck, put his hand on the trailer, said something that only the horses could hear, turned and walked back at a deliberate pace.
"You been a Mexico, Jack?" Mexico was the place. He'd heard. He was cutting fence now, trespassing in the shoot-em zone.
"Hell yes, I been. Where's the f*ckin problem?" Braced for it all these years and here it came, late and unexpected.
"I got a say this to you one time, Jack, and I ain't foolin. What I don't know," said Ennis, "all them things I don't know could get you killed if I should come to know them."
"Try this one," said Jack, "and I'll say it just one time. Tell you what, we could a had a good life together, a f*ckin real good life. You wouldn't do it, Ennis, so what we got now is Brokeback Mountain. Everthing built on that. It's all we got, boy, f*ckin all, so I hope you know that if you don't never know the rest. Count the damn few times we been together in twenty years. Measure the f*ckin short leash you keep me on, then ask me about Mexico and then tell me you'll kill me for needin it and not hardly never gettin it. You got no f*ckin idea how bad it gets. I'm not you. I can't make it on a couple a high-altitude f*cks once or twice a year. You're too much for me, Ennis, you son of a whoreson bitch. I wish I knew how to quit you."
Like vast clouds of steam from thermal springs in winter the years of things unsaid and now unsayable -- admissions, declarations, shames, guilts, fears -- rose around them. Ennis stood as if heart-shot, face grey and deep-lined, grimacing, eyes screwed shut, fists clenched, legs caving, hit the ground on his knees.
"Jesus," said Jack. "Ennis?" But before he was out of the truck, trying to guess if it was heart attack or the overflow of an incendiary rage, Ennis was back on his feet and somehow, as a coat hanger is straightened to open a locked car and then bent again to its original shape, they torqued things almost to where they had been, for what they'd said was no news. Nothing ended, nothing begun, nothing resolved.

What Jack remembered and craved in a way he could neither help nor understand was the time that distant summer on Brokeback when Ennis had come up behind him and pulled him close, the silent embrace satisfying some shared and sexless hunger.
They had stood that way for a long time in front of the fire, its burning tossing ruddy chunks of light, the shadow of their bodies a single column against the rock. The minutes ticked by from the round watch in Ennis's pocket, from the sticks in the fire settling into coals. Stars bit through the wavy heat layers above the fire. Ennis's breath came slow and quiet, he hummed, rocked a little in the sparklight and Jack leaned against the steady heartbeat, the vibrations of the humming like faint electricity and, standing, he fell into sleep that was not sleep but something else drowsy and tranced until Ennis, dredging up a rusty but still useable phrase from the childhood time before his mother died, said, "Time to hit the hay, cowboy. I got a go. Come on, you're sleepin on your feet like a horse," and gave Jack a shake, a push, and went off in the darkness. Jack heard his spurs tremble as he mounted, the words "see you tomorrow," and the horse's shuddering snort, grind of hoof on stone.
Later, that dozy embrace solidified in his memory as the single moment of artless, charmed happiness in their separate and difficult lives. Nothing marred it, even the knowledge that Ennis would not then embrace him face to face because he did not want to see nor feel that it was Jack he held. And maybe, he thought, they'd never got much farther than that. Let be, let be.

Ennis didn't know about the accident for months until his postcard to Jack saying that November still looked like the first chance came back stamped DECEASED. He called Jack's number in Childress, something he had done only once before when Alma divorced him and Jack had misunderstood the reason for the call, had driven twelve hundred miles north for nothing. This would be all right, Jack would answer, had to answer. But he did not. It was Lureen and she said who? who is this? and when he told her again she said in a level voice yes, Jack was pumping up a flat on the truck out on a back road when the tire blew up. The bead was damaged somehow and the force of the explosion slammed the rim into his face, broke his nose and jaw and knocked him unconscious on his back. By the time someone came along he had drowned in his own blood.
No, he thought, they got him with the tire iron.
"Jack used to mention you," she said. "You're the fishing buddy or the hunting buddy, I know that. Would have let you know," she said, "but I wasn't sure about your name and address. Jack kept most a his friends' addresses in his head. It was a terrible thing. He was only thirty-nine years old."
The huge sadness of the northern plains rolled down on him. He didn't know which way it was, the tire iron or a real accident, blood choking down Jack's throat and nobody to turn him over. Under the wind drone he heard steel slamming off bone, the hollow chatter of a settling tire rim.
"He buried down there?" He wanted to curse her for letting Jack die on the dirt road.
The little Texas voice came slip-sliding down the wire. "We put a stone up. He use to say he wanted to be cremated, ashes scattered on Brokeback Mountain. I didn't know where that was. So he was cremated, like he wanted, and like I say, half his ashes was interred here, and the rest I sent up to his folks. I thought Brokeback Mountain was around where he grew up. But knowing Jack, it might be some pretend place where the bluebirds sing and there's a whiskey spring."
"We herded sheep on Brokeback one summer," said Ennis. He could hardly speak.
"Well, he said it was his place. I thought he meant to get drunk. Drink whiskey up there. He drank a lot."
"His folks still up in Lightnin Flat?"
"Oh yeah. They'll be there until they die. I never met them. They didn't come down for the funeral. You get in touch with them. I suppose they'd appreciate it if his wishes was carried out."
No doubt about it, she was polite but the little voice was cold as snow.

The road to Lightning Flat went through desolate country past a dozen abandoned ranches distributed over the plain at eight- and ten-mile intervals, houses sitting blank-eyed in the weeds, corral fences down. The mailbox read John C. Twist. The ranch was a meagre little place, leafy spurge taking over. The stock was too far distant for him to see their condition, only that they were black baldies. A porch stretched across the front of the tiny brown stucco house, four rooms, two down, two up.
Ennis sat at the kitchen table with Jack's father. Jack's mother, stout and careful in her movements as though recovering from an operation, said, "Want some coffee, don't you? Piece a cherry cake?"
"Thank you, ma'am, I'll take a cup a coffee but I can't eat no cake just now."
The old man sat silent, his hands folded on the plastic tablecloth, staring at Ennis with an angry, knowing expression. Ennis recognized in him a not uncommon type with the hard need to be the stud duck in the pond. He couldn't see much of Jack in either one of them, took a breath.
"I feel awful bad about Jack. Can't begin to say how bad I feel. I knew him a long time. I come by to tell you that if you want me to take his ashes up there on Brokeback like his wife says he wanted I'd be proud to."
There was a silence. Ennis cleared his throat but said nothing more.
The old man said, "Tell you what, I know where Brokeback Mountain is. He thought he was too goddamn special to be buried in the family plot."
Jack's mother ignored this, said, "He used a come home every year, even after he was married and down in Texas, and help his daddy on the ranch for a week fix the gates and mow and all. I kept his room like it was when he was a boy and I think he appreciated that. You are welcome to go up in his room if you want."
The old man spoke angrily. "I can't get no help out here. Jack used a say, 'Ennis del Mar,' he used a say, 'I'm goin a bring him up here one a these days and we'll lick this damn ranch into shape.' He had some half-baked idea the two a you was goin a move up here, build a log cabin and help me run this ranch and bring it up. Then, this spring he's got another one's goin a come up here with him and build a place and help run the ranch, some ranch neighbor a his from down in Texas. He's goin a split up with his wife and come back here. So he says. But like most a Jack's ideas it never come to pass."
So now he knew it had been the tire iron. He stood up, said, you bet he'd like to see Jack's room, recalled one of Jack's stories about this old man. Jack was dick-clipped and the old man was not; it bothered the son who had discovered the anatomical disconformity during a hard scene. He had been about three or four, he said, always late getting to the toilet, struggling with buttons, the seat, the height of the thing and often as not left the surroundings sprinkled down. The old man blew up about it and this one time worked into a crazy rage. "Christ, he licked the stuffin out a me, knocked me down on the bathroom floor, whipped me with his belt. I thought he was killin me. Then he says, 'You want a know what it's like with piss all over the place? I'll learn you,' and he pulls it out and lets go all over me, soaked me, then he throws a towel at me and makes me mop up the floor, take my clothes off and warsh them in the bathtub, warsh out the towel, I'm bawlin and blubberin. But while he was hosin me down I seen he had some extra material that I was missin. I seen they'd cut me different like you'd crop a ear or scorch a brand. No way to get it right with him after that."
The bedroom, at the top of a steep stair that had its own climbing rhythm, was tiny and hot, afternoon sun pounding through the west window, hitting the narrow boy's bed against the wall, an ink-stained desk and wooden chair, a b.b. gun in a hand-whittled rack over the bed. The window looked down on the gravel road stretching south and it occurred to him that for his growing-up years that was the only road Jack knew. An ancient magazine photograph of some dark-haired movie star was taped to the wall beside the bed, the skin tone gone magenta. He could hear Jack's mother downstairs running water, filling the kettle and setting it back on the stove, asking the old man a muffled question.
The closet was a shallow cavity with a wooden rod braced across, a faded cretonne curtain on a string closing it off from the rest of the room. In the closet hung two pairs of jeans crease-ironed and folded neatly over wire hangers, on the floor a pair of worn packer boots he thought he remembered. At the north end of the closet a tiny jog in the wall made a slight hiding place and here, stiff with long suspension from a nail, hung a shirt. He lifted it off the nail. Jack's old shirt from Brokeback days. The dried blood on the sleeve was his own blood, a gushing nosebleed on the last afternoon on the mountain when Jack, in their contortionistic grappling and wrestling, had slammed Ennis's nose hard with his knee. He had staunched the blood which was everywhere, all over both of them, with his shirtsleeve, but the staunching hadn't held because Ennis had suddenly swung from the deck and laid the ministering angel out in the wild columbine, wings folded.
The shirt seemed heavy until he saw there was another shirt inside it, the sleeves carefully worked down inside Jack's sleeves. It was his own plaid shirt, lost, he'd thought, long ago in some damn laundry, his dirty shirt, the pocket ripped, buttons missing, stolen by Jack and hidden here inside Jack's own shirt, the pair like two skins, one inside the other, two in one. He pressed his face into the fabric and breathed in slowly through his mouth and nose, hoping for the faintest smoke and mountain sage and salty sweet stink of Jack but there was no real scent, only the memory of it, the imagined power of Brokeback Mountain of which nothing was left but what he held in his hands.

In the end the stud duck refused to let Jack's ashes go. "Tell you what, we got a family plot and he's goin in it." Jack's mother stood at the table coring apples with a sharp, serrated instrument. "You come again," she said.
Bumping down the washboard road Ennis passed the country cemetery fenced with sagging sheep wire, a tiny fenced square on the welling prairie, a few graves bright with plastic flowers, and didn't want to know Jack was going in there, to be buried on the grieving plain.

A few weeks later on the Saturday he threw all Stoutamire's dirty horse blankets into the back of his pickup and took them down to the Quik Stop Car Wash to turn the high-pressure spray on them. When the wet clean blankets were stowed in the truck bed he stepped into Higgins's gift shop and busied himself with the postcard rack.
"Ennis, what are you lookin for rootin through them postcards?" said Linda Higgins, throwing a sopping brown coffee filter into the garbage can.
"Scene a Brokeback Mountain."
"Over in Fremont County?"
"No, north a here."
"I didn't order none a them. Let me get the order list. They got it I can get you a hunderd. I got a order some more cards anyway."
"One's enough," said Ennis.
When it came -- thirty cents -- he pinned it up in his trailer, brass-headed tack in each corner. Below it he drove a nail and on the nail he hung the wire hanger and the two old shirts suspended from it. He stepped back and looked at the ensemble through a few stinging tears.
"Jack, I swear -- " he said, though Jack had never asked him to swear anything and was himself not the swearing kind.

Around that time Jack began to appear in his dreams, Jack as he had first seen him, curly-headed and smiling and bucktoothed, talking about getting up off his pockets and into the control zone, but the can of beans with the spoon handle jutting out and balanced on the log was there as well, in a cartoon shape and lurid colors that gave the dreams a flavor of comic obscenity. The spoon handle was the kind that could be used as a tire iron. And he would wake sometimes in grief, sometimes with the old sense of joy and release; the pillow sometimes wet, sometimes the sheets.
There was some open space between what he knew and what he tried to believe, but nothing could be done about it, and if you can't fix it you've got to stand it.

米米tori托利 2006-2-24 10:47 PM

uni也来帖好东西了。。。哈哈。。。
大家都很忙,总之,暑假再见了!
同时也问RY好(虽然不是很熟,不过我也很认识的,哈哈。)

快到OSCAR颁奖礼了。。。。。总之那天我会守住香港明珠台不放的。

宛如 2006-2-25 01:25 AM

李安的电影瓦


A。。。你竟然在哈爱也混。。倒

米米tori托利 2006-2-25 08:32 PM

??楼上是AI的什么人吗?。。。。。

unicorn 2006-2-25 11:14 PM

没得看oscar!!!

哭。
叫妈妈录好了。
哭死我咯!!!!
原著bbm很好看,一个小时就可以看完的。
真的好好看亚!

疏松多孔疯馒头 2006-2-26 09:52 PM

我没耐心看书,但有看电影,不仅是两个男主角十分帅,而且情节吸引人,但李安怎么会拍出《卧虎藏龙》》这部破电影呢?太失望鸟
页: [1]
查看完整版本: [小说原稿]断背山