文/伊麗莎白·利文斯頓 譯/鄧志輝
The Last Chapter
文/伊麗莎白·利文斯頓 譯/鄧志輝
Their marriage was no fairy tale.他們的婚姻絕非童話。
“I love you, Bob.”
“I love you, too, Nancy.”It was 2 a.m. and I was hearing my parents’ voices through the thin wall separating my bedroom from theirs.Their loving reassurances were sweet,touching—and surprising.
[2]My parents married on September 14, 1940, after a brief courtship. She was nearing 30 and knew it was time to start a family. The handsome, well-educated man who came by the office where she worked looked like a good bet. He was captivated by her figure, her blue eyes.The romance didn’t last long.
[3]Seeds of difference sprouted1sprout出現(xiàn)。almost immediately. She liked to travel;he hated the thought. He loved golf; she did not. He was a Republican, she an ardent2ardent熱烈的;殷切的。Democrat. They fought at the bridge table, at the dinner table, over money, over the perceived failings33 failing缺點(diǎn),短處。of their respective in-laws. To make matters worse, they owned a business together, and the everyday frustrations of life at the of fi ce came to roost4roost棲息;安歇。at home.
[4]There was a hope that they would change once they retired, and the furious winds did calm somewhat, but what remained steeled5steel使冷酷無情。itself into bright, hard bitterness. “I always thought we’d...”my mother would begin, before launching into a precise listing of my father’s faults. The litany6litany冗長(zhǎng)而枯燥的陳述。was recited so often,I can reel it off7reel off流暢地講;一口氣說。by heart today. As he listened, my father would mutter angry threats and curses. It was a miserable duet8duet二重奏;二重唱。.
[5]It wasn’t the happiest marriage,but as their 60th anniversary approached, my sister and I decided to throw a party. Sixty years was a long time, after all; why not try to make the best of things? We’d provide the cake,the balloons, the toasts, and they’d abide by one rule: no fi ghting.
[6]The truce9truce停戰(zhàn);休戰(zhàn)。was honored. We had a wonderful day. In hindsight it was an important celebration, because soon after, things began to change for my parents. As debilitating10debilitating使衰弱的。dementia11dementia癡呆。settled in, their marriage was about the only thing they wouldn’t lose.
[7]It began when their memories started to fade. Added to the frequent house-wide hunts for glasses and car keys were the groceries left behind on the counter, notices of bills left unpaid.Soon my parents couldn’t remember names of friends, then of their grandchildren. Finally they didn’t remember that they had grandchildren.
[8]These crises would have at one time set them at each other’s throats,but now they acted as a team, helping each other with searches, consoling each other with “Everyone does that”or “It’s nothing; you’re just tired.” They found new roles―bolstering12bolster支持。each other against the fear of loss.
[9]Financial control was the next thing to go. For all of their marriage,my parents stubbornly kept separate accounts. Sharing being unthinkable,they’d devised financial arrangements so elaborate they could trigger13trigger引起。war at any time. He, for example, was to pay for everything outside the house, she for whatever went on inside. The whopays dilemma was so complex for one trip that they finally gave up traveling en-tirely.
[10]I took over the books. Now no one knew how things got paid; no one saw how the columns that spelled their fortunes compared. Next I hired a housekeeper. Cooking and cleaning,chores my mother had long complained about, were suddenly gone. Finally―on doctors’ orders―we cleared the house of alcohol, the fuel that turned more than one quarrel into a raging fi re.
[11]You could say my parents’ lives had been whittled away14whittle away逐漸削減。, that they could no longer engage in the business of living. But at the same time, something that had been buried deep was coming up and taking shape. I saw it when my father came home after a brief hospital stay.
[12]We’d tried to explain my father’s absence to my mother, but because of her memory, she could not keep it in her head why he had disappeared. She asked again and again where he was,and again and again we told her. And each day her anxiety grew.
[13]When I fi nally brought him home,we opened the front door to see my mother sitting on the sofa. As he stepped in the room, she rose with a cry. I stayed back as he slowly walked toward her and she toward him. As they approached each other on legs rickety15rickety不結(jié)實(shí)的;要散架的。with age, her hands fl uttered over his face. “Oh, there you are,” she said. “There you are.”
[14]I don’t doubt that if my mother and father magically regained their old vigor, they’d be back fi ghting. But I now see that something came of all those years of shared days—days of sitting at the same table, waking to the same sun,working and raising children together.Even the very fury they lavished on each other was a brick in this unseen creation,a structure that reveals itself increasingly as the world around them falls apart.
[15]In the early morning I once again heard the voices through the wall.
“Where are we?” my father asked.
“I don’t know,” my mother replied softly.
How lucky they are, I thought, to have each other. ■
“我愛你,鮑勃?!?/p>
“我也愛你,南希?!?/p>
凌晨2點(diǎn),我聽著父母的聲音從一墻之隔的他們的臥室里傳過來。他們之間愛的承諾甜蜜而觸人心弦——卻也頗有些令人意外。
[2]我父母于1940年9月14日結(jié)婚,之前只經(jīng)歷了短暫的戀愛。當(dāng)時(shí)她年近30,深感已到了成家的時(shí)候,而恰好出現(xiàn)在她辦公室的這位男士長(zhǎng)相英俊,又受過良好教育,看上去是個(gè)很不錯(cuò)的選擇;他則傾心于她曼妙的身姿和湛藍(lán)的雙眸。只是這份浪漫并未持久。
[3]分歧的種子幾乎立刻就萌芽了。她熱愛旅行,他卻想到旅行就厭煩;他愛打高爾夫,她卻對(duì)高爾夫毫無熱情;他是共和黨人,她卻是熱心的民主黨擁躉。他們開始爭(zhēng)吵:打橋牌時(shí)吵,用餐時(shí)吵,為錢吵,為對(duì)方家人令人失望而吵。更糟糕的是,他倆還共同經(jīng)營(yíng)一家公司,所以工作中的種種煩惱都留待回家后統(tǒng)一發(fā)作了。
[4]我們?cè)谕麄兺诵莺髸?huì)發(fā)生改變。的確——退休后,兩人間的狂風(fēng)暴雨有所平息,然而未曾平息的那一點(diǎn)余留卻被淬煉成尖銳辛酸的苦怨。母親總是會(huì)這樣開頭:“我一直以為咱們會(huì)……”,然后逐條列舉父親的過失。她喋喋不休的次數(shù)實(shí)在太多,時(shí)至今日我還能一口氣重復(fù)出她的那些話。父親聽她嘮叨時(shí)會(huì)咕噥著發(fā)出憤怒的威脅和咒罵,那真是一場(chǎng)折磨人的二重奏。
[5]雖然父母的婚姻算不上最美滿,但在他們結(jié)婚60周年紀(jì)念日來臨之際,我和妹妹決定舉辦一個(gè)慶賀聚會(huì)。畢竟,60年可不算短,何不接受現(xiàn)狀,好好珍惜呢?我們會(huì)準(zhǔn)備好蛋糕、氣球、致辭,他們只要遵守一條規(guī)則就行:不準(zhǔn)吵架。
[6]他們做到了。當(dāng)天大家過得非常開心。回想起來,那次慶祝意義重大,因?yàn)橹蟛痪茫改赣H的情況開始發(fā)生變化:他們患了老年癡呆癥,隨著癥狀日益嚴(yán)重,婚姻關(guān)系幾乎成了唯一一件他們忘不掉的事。
[7]初期時(shí),他們的癥狀表現(xiàn)為記憶逐漸衰退。先是頻繁地滿屋子找眼鏡、找車鑰匙,然后是買東西忘拿、賬單忘付;很快他們從記不得朋友的名字發(fā)展到記不得孫輩的名字;最后他們根本記不起自己有過孫子女。
[8]若在以前,這類事早會(huì)讓他倆對(duì)彼此怒不可遏,現(xiàn)在兩人卻仿佛一個(gè)團(tuán)隊(duì):互相幫著找東西,相互安慰說“大家都這樣”“沒事兒,你只是有點(diǎn)累”。他們進(jìn)入了新的角色,即:互相支持,共同對(duì)抗記憶漸失所帶來的恐懼之心。
[9]接下來,他們失去了財(cái)務(wù)管理能力。在此之前,父母一直固執(zhí)地堅(jiān)持各管各的錢。對(duì)他們而言,共享絕無可能,因此兩人制定了一系列財(cái)務(wù)處理?xiàng)l例,太過精細(xì)繁瑣,幾乎隨時(shí)可能引發(fā)一場(chǎng)戰(zhàn)爭(zhēng)。例如,條例規(guī)定父親應(yīng)負(fù)責(zé)家以外的一切開支,母親則負(fù)責(zé)所有家內(nèi)開銷,結(jié)果,一旦外出旅行,“究竟該誰付什么賬”的問題就變得極其復(fù)雜,后來他們只好徹底放棄了旅行。
[10]于是由我接過了賬本?,F(xiàn)在他倆沒人了解家里賬單如何支付,沒人見過各自名下賬目有何變化。接著我雇了一個(gè)管家,負(fù)責(zé)做飯和清掃,這些是母親多年來一直抱怨不已的家務(wù)瑣事,現(xiàn)在一下子都不再需要她操心了。再后來,我們遵醫(yī)囑清理了家中所有藏酒——這東西曾不止一次火上澆油,將小爭(zhēng)小吵升級(jí)為怒火萬丈。
[11]你當(dāng)然不妨說,我父母已然生命質(zhì)量不再,已無力繼續(xù)經(jīng)營(yíng)生活之道。但與此同時(shí),以前被深埋于生活表象之下的某樣?xùn)|西正漸漸浮現(xiàn)和顯形——對(duì)此我曾親眼目睹,當(dāng)時(shí)父親經(jīng)過一次短暫的住院治療,剛剛從醫(yī)院返回家中。
[12]在那之前我們一直努力向母親說明父親不在家的原因,但是她衰退的記憶使她無法記住這一點(diǎn),所以她一遍又一遍地反復(fù)詢問他在哪,我們則一遍又一遍地向她解釋,可她的焦慮還是與日俱增。
[13]到我終于接父親出院回家的那天,我們打開前門,看見母親正坐在沙發(fā)上。父親走進(jìn)屋里,母親驚呼著站了起來。我退到一邊,看著父親緩緩地向她走過去,她也向他迎過來;我看著他們邁著因年邁所致的蹣跚步履走近對(duì)方,母親伸手摩挲父親的臉龐,不住地說:“哦,你在這兒,你在這兒?。 ?/p>
[14]我完全相信,倘若我父母能神奇地重獲舊日活力,他們一定還會(huì)像當(dāng)初一樣吵架。但我現(xiàn)在明白,他們?cè)餐冗^的歲月—— 一起坐在同一張桌邊、醒來看見同一片朝陽、一起工作、一起撫養(yǎng)子女的那些歲月——已經(jīng)孕育出某樣?xùn)|西。即便是互相之間拋灑的怨憤也是在為這個(gè)看不見的構(gòu)造添磚加瓦。周遭世界在他們的感知中日漸支離破碎時(shí),這一結(jié)構(gòu)也日漸清晰地自我呈現(xiàn)。
[15]清晨的時(shí)候,我再次聽到墻壁那頭傳來聲音:
“我們這是在哪?”父親問。
“我也不知道?!蹦赣H輕柔地回答。
我心里說,他們能這樣彼此相伴,是何等幸運(yùn)?。?□
末章
ByElizabeth Livingston
(譯者曾獲第五屆“《英語世界》杯”翻譯大賽一等獎(jiǎng))