FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275   276   277   278   279   280   281   282   283  
284   285   286   287   >>  
night---- Outside, they were at the shop again. The crowd's habit is to forget a thing quickly, once it is out of sight and hearing. But there had been something about that solitary cry which continued to bother them, even in memory. Where had it been? Where had it come from? And those who had stood nearest the cobbler-shop were heard again. They were certain now, dead certain. They could swear! In the end they broke down the door. If Boaz heard them he gave no sign. An absorption as complete as it was monstrous wrapped him. Kneeling in the glare of the lantern they had brought, as impervious as his own shadow sprawling behind him, he continued to shave the dead man on the floor. No one touched him. Their minds and imaginations were arrested by the gigantic proportions of the act. The unfathomable presumption of the act. As throwing murder in their faces to the tune of a jig in a barber-shop. It is a fact that none of them so much as thought of touching him. No less than all of them, together with all other men, shorn of their imaginations--that is to say, the expressionless and imperturbable creature of the Law--would be sufficient to touch that ghastly man. On the other hand, they could not leave him alone. They could not go away. They watched. They saw the damp, lather-soaked beard of that victimized stranger falling away, stroke by stroke of the flashing, heavy razor. The dead denuded by the blind! It was seen that Boaz was about to speak. It was something important he was about to utter; something, one would say, fatal. The words would not come all at once. They swelled his cheeks out. His razor was arrested. Lifting his face, he encircled the watchers with a gaze at once of imploration and of command. As if he could see them. As if he could read his answer in the expressions of their faces. "Tell me one thing now. Is it that _cachorra_?" For the first time those men in the room made sounds. They shuffled their feet. It was as if an uncontrollable impulse to ejaculation, laughter, derision, forbidden by the presence of death, had gone down into their boot-soles. "Manuel?" one of them said. "You mean _Manuel_?" Boaz laid the razor down on the floor beside its work. He got up from his knees slowly, as if his joints hurt. He sat down in his chair, rested his hands on the arms, and once more encircled the company with his sightless gaze. "Not Manuel. Manuel was a good boy. But tell me now, is
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275   276   277   278   279   280   281   282   283  
284   285   286   287   >>  



Top keywords:

Manuel

 

arrested

 

encircled

 

imaginations

 

continued

 

stroke

 

denuded

 

answer

 

falling

 

victimized


expressions

 

stranger

 

flashing

 
command
 

cheeks

 

swelled

 
Lifting
 
imploration
 

watchers

 

important


presence

 

slowly

 
joints
 

sightless

 

company

 

rested

 

shuffled

 

uncontrollable

 

sounds

 

impulse


ejaculation

 

laughter

 

derision

 

forbidden

 

soaked

 

cachorra

 

absorption

 

lantern

 

brought

 

impervious


Kneeling

 

complete

 

monstrous

 
wrapped
 

cobbler

 

nearest

 

forget

 

quickly

 
hearing
 
Outside