THE MONTANA sunset
lay between two mountains like a gigantic bruise from which dark arteries
spread themselves over a poisoned sky. An immense distance under the sky
crouched the village of Fish, minute, dismal, and forgotten. There were twelve
men, so it was said, in the village of Fish, twelve somber and inexplicable
souls who sucked a lean milk from the almost literally bare rock upon which a
mysterious populatory force had begotten them. They had become a race apart, these
twelve men of Fish, like some species developed by an early whim of nature,
which on second thought had abandoned them to struggle and extermination.
Out of the blue-black bruise in
the distance crept a long line of moving lights upon the desolation of the
land, and the twelve men of Fish gathered like ghosts at the shanty depot to
watch the passing of the seven o'clock train, the Transcontinental Express from
Chicago. Six times or so a year the Transcontinental Express, through some
inconceivable jurisdiction, stopped at the village of Fish, and when this
occurred a figure or so would disembark, mount into a buggy that always
appeared from out of the dusk, and drive off toward the bruised sunset. The
observation of this pointless and preposterous phenomenon had become a sort of
cult among the men of Fish. To observe, that was all; there remained in them
none of the vital quality of illusion which would make them wonder or
speculate, else a religion might have grown up around these mysterious visitations.
But the men of Fish were beyond all religion--the barest and most savage tenets
of even Christianity could gain no foothold on that barren rock--so there was
no altar, no priest, no sacrifice; only each night at seven the silent
concourse by the shanty depot, a congregation who lifted up a prayer of dim,
anaemic wonder.
On this June night, the Great
Brakeman, whom, had they deified any one, they might well have chosen as their
celestial protagonist, had ordained that the seven o'clock train should leave
its human (or inhuman) deposit at Fish. At two minutes after seven Percy
Washington and John T. Unger disembarked, hurried past the spellbound, the
agape, the fearsome eyes of the twelve men of Fish, mounted into a buggy which
had obviously appeared from nowhere, and drove away.
Tłumaczenie
Tłumaczenie
Brak komentarzy:
Prześlij komentarz