Eagle in the Sky - Smith Wilbur - Страница 34
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waved him to a chair.
Why don't you answer me? David was becoming angry, and the Brig slumped
into a chair across the large bare room, with its severe monastic
furnishings of books and archaeological relics.
I couldn't tell you yesterday, David, she asked me not to. I'm sorry.
What is it? David was fully alarmed now.
She had to have time to think, to make up her mind. The Brig stood up
again and began to pace, his footsteps echoing hollowly on the bare
wooden floor, pausing every now and then to touch one of the pieces of
ancient statuary, caressing it absently as he talked, as though to draw
comfort from it.
David listened quietly, occasionally shaking his head as though to deny
that what he was hearing was the truth.
So you see it is permanent, final, without hope. She is blind, David,
totally blind. She has gone into a dark world of her own where nobody
else can follow her Where is she? I want to go to her, David whispered,
but the Brig ignored the request and went on steadily.
She wanted time to make her decision, and I gave it to her. Last night,
after the funeral, I went back to her and she was ready. She had faced
it, come to terms with it, and she had decided how it must be I want to
see her, David repeated. I want to talk to her. Now the Brig looked at
him and the bleakness in his eyes faded, his voice dropped, becoming
gruff with compassion.
No, David. That was her decision. You will not see her again. For you
she is dead. Those were her words.
Tell him I am dead, but he must only remember me when I was alive David
interrupted him, jumping to his feet. Where is she, damn you? His
voice was shaking. I want to see her now. He crossed swiftly to the
door and jerked it open, but the Brig went on. She is not here. 'Where
is she? David turned back. I cannot tell you. I swore a solemn oath
to her. 'I'll find her You might, if you search carefully, but you will
forfeit any respect or love she may have for you, the Brig went on
remorselessly. Again I will give you her exact words. "Tell him that I
charge him on our love, on all we have ever been to each other, that he
will let me be, that he will not come looking for me. " Why, but why?
David demanded desperately. Why does she reject me? She knows that she
is altered beyond all hope or promise. She knows that what was before
can never be again. She knows that she can never be to you again what
you have a right to expect - he stopped David's protest with an angry
chopping gesture of his hand. Listen to me, she knows that it cannot
endure. She can never be your wife now. You are too young, too vital,
too arrogant- David stared at him - she knows that it will begin to
spoil. In a week, a month, a year perhaps, it will have died. You will
be trapped, tied to a blind woman. She doesn't want that. She wants it
to die now, swiftly, mercifully, not to drag on Stop it, David shouted.
Stop it, damn you. That's enough. He stumbled to the chair and fell
into it. They were silent for a while, David crouched in the chair with
his face buried in his hands. The Brig standing before the narrow
window casement, the early morning light catching the fierce old
warrior's face.
She asked me to make you promise - he hesitated, and David looked up at
him, - to promise that you would not try to find her. No. David shook
his head stubbornly.
The Brig sighed. If you refused, I was to tell you this she said you
would understand, although I don't, she said that in Africa there is a
fierce and beautiful animal called the sable antelope, and sometimes one
of them is wounded by a hunter or mauled by a lion The words were as
painful as the cut of a whiplash, and David remembered himself saying
them to her once when they were both young and strong and invulnerable.
Very well, he murmured at last, if that's what she wants, then I promise
not to try and find her, though I don't promise not to try and convince
her she is wrong. I Perhaps it would be best if you left Israel, the
Brig told him. Perhaps you should go back to where you came from and
forget all of this ever happened. David paused, considering this a
moment, before he answered, No, all I have is here. I will stay here
Good. The Brig accepted the decision. You are always welcome in this
house. Thank you, sir, said David and went out to where the Mercedes
was parked. He let himself into the house on Malik Street, and saw
instantly that someone had been there before him.
He walked slowly into the living-room; the books were gone from the
olive-wood table, the Kadesh painting no longer hung above the leather
couch. In the bathroom he opened the wall cabinet and all her toilet
articles had been removed, the rows of exotic bottles, the tubes and
pots, even the slot for her toothbrush beside his was empty.
Her cupboard was bare, the dresses gone, the shelves blank, every trace
of her swept away, except for the lingering scent of her perfume on the
air, and the ivory lace cover upon the bed.
He went to the bed and sat upon it, stroking the fine lace-work,
remembering how it had been.
There was the hard outline of something thin and square upon the pillow,
beneath the cover. He turned back the lace and picked up the thin green
book.
This year, in Jerusalem. It had been left there as a parting gift The
title swam and went misty before his eyes. It was all he had left of
her.
it seemed as though the slaughter at Em Karem was the signal for a fresh
upsurge of hostility and violence throughout the Middle East. A planned
escalation of international tensions, as the Arab nations rattled their
impressive, oil-purchased, array of weaponry and swore once more to
leave not a single Jew in the land they still called Palestine.
There were savage and merciless attacks on soft targets, ill-protected
embassies and consulates around the world, letter bombs, and night
ambushes on school buses in isolated areas.
Then the provocations grew bolder, more directly aimed at the heart of
Israel. Border infringements, commando-style raids, violations of air
space, shellings, and a threatening gathering and massing of armed might
along the long vulnerable frontiers of the wedge-shaped territories of
the tiny land.
The Israelis waited, praying for peace, but girl for war.
Day after day, month after month, David and Joe flew to maintain that
degree of expertise, where instinct and instantaneous reaction
superseded conscious thought and reasoned action.
At those searing speeds beyond sound, it was only this training that
swung the advantage from one combat team to another. Even the superior
reaction times of these carefully hand-picked young men were unequal to
the tasks of bringing their mighty machines into effective action, where
latitudes of error were measured in hundredths of a second, until they
had attained this extra-sensory perfection.
To seek out, to recognize, to close, to destroy, and to disengage, it
was a total preoccupation that blessedly left little time for brooding
and sorrow.
Yet the sorrow and anger, that David and Joe shared, seemed doubly to
arm them. Their vengeance was allconsuming.
Soon they joined that select half-dozen strike teams that Desert Flower
called to undertake the most delicate of sorties. Again and again they
were ordered into combat, and each time the confidence that Command had
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