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A Walk to Remember 作者:尼古拉斯·斯帕克斯 美国)

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Chapter 11

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Id dressed sharply for the occasion, by the way, with a jacket and tie. "May I come in?”

I knocked at the door, and he looked up with interest, as if he expected another member of the congregation, then furrowed his brow when he saw that it was me.

My breath was coming out in little puffs.

"Will you promise to tell me the truth from now on? I mean always?”

As soon as I said the words, though, Jamie bowed her head and started to cry, leaning her body into mine. I wrapped my arms around her, wondering what was wrong. She was thin, and I realized for the first time that my arms went all the way around her. Shed lost weight, even in the last week and a half, and I remembered that shed barely touched her food earlier. She kept crying into my chest for what seemed like a long time. I wasnt sure what to think, or even if she felt the same way I did. Even so, I didnt regret the words. The truth is always the truth, and Id just promised her that I would never lie again.

Nowadays the place has some of the most expensive beachfront property in the entire state, but back then it was mainly sand dunes nestled against the Maritime National Forest.

It was actually my moms idea to take Jamie out someplace special. A couple of days before, on one of those days Jamie was wearing her hair in a bun, I talked to my mom about the things I was going through.

"Well, what have you tried so far?”

He looked up, surprised I was still there. "Im sorry for those things I used to do when I was younger, and Im sorry that I didnt always treat Jamie the way she should have been treated. But from now on, things will change. I promise you that.”

"Because," she finally said softly, "Im very sick, Landon.”

"No, sir.”

It was crowded by the time we arrived, and all around us people were enjoying themselves. On New Years people dressed fashionably, and we were the only two teenagers in the place. I didnt think we looked too out of place, though.

"Do you think Im strange, too?" she asked me.

"Will you do me a favor, though?”

He seemed to look right through me. It wasnt enough.

"Going to her house is a nice thing to do, but its not the most romantic thing there is. You should do something that will really let her know how you feel about her.”

We started walking again. As we moved down the street, I glanced at her hand, which was looped through mine, and I saw a large bruise just below her ring finger. I had no idea where it had come from, since it hadnt been there the day before. For a second I thought it might have been caused by me, but then I realized that I hadnt even touched her there.

I adjusted myself nervously in the chair. "Well, sir, I wanted to ask you something.”

My mom smiled. "I mean that young girls, even Jamie, like to be made to feel special.”

I put my finger beneath her chin, lifting her head up and making her look at me again. "Youre a wonderful person, Jamie. Youre beautiful, youre kind, youre gentle . . . youre everything that Id like to be. If people dont like you, or they think youre strange, then thats their problem.”

Dinner was delicious-we both ordered the sea bass and salads, and when the waiter finally removed our plates, the music started up. We had an hour left before I had to take her home, and I offered her my hand.

"Hello, Landon," he said wearily.

His door was partially open, and I saw him sitting behind his desk, spectacles propped on his nose. He was looking over some papers-they looked almost financial-and I figured he was trying to figure out the church budget for the following year. Even ministers had bills to pay.

Ill never forget that day because of how quiet she had been, and I had the funny feeling all day long that something important was on her mind.

I ran my hand through my hair and gave her one of those looks. "You mean before now?”

"Im fine," she said, regaining her composure and keeping the subject on track.

"What happened to your money in the bank?”

"Have you ever been in love?" she asked me.

I watched the breeze gently moving her hair, and I knew that it was no time to pretend I was something that I actually wasnt.

"Actually, I have," I said finally.

I thought about it. "People have different reasons," I said vaguely, doing my best not to go any further.

The concept was so absolutely foreign that I couldnt comprehend what she was trying to say.

"Yes," I finally answered. It hurt me to say it.

"People think Im strange, dont they," she finally said, breaking the silence.

"You cant be in love with me, Landon," she said through red and swollen eyes.

"I wouldnt do that to her," I said.

"Absolutely.”

He looked even more tired than usual, and I assumed he wasnt feeling well.

It was a few days before the new year, and Jamie and I were standing at the Iron Steamer Pier in Pine Knoll Shores. To get there, wed had to cross the bridge that spans the Intracoastal Waterway and drive a little way down the island.

There was a pianist and a singer, too, not every night or even every weekend, but on holidays when they thought the place would be full. I had to make reservations, and the first time I called they said they were filled, but I had my mom call them, and the next thing you knew, something had opened up. I guess the owner needed a favor from my father or something, or maybe he just didnt want to make him angry, knowing that my grandfather was still alive and all.

The following day I went to the church. I knew that Hegbert would be in his office. I hadnt asked Jamie yet because I figured she would need his permission, and for some reason I wanted to be the one who asked. I guess it had to do with the fact that Hegbert hadnt exactly been welcoming me with open arms when I visited. Whenever hed see me coming up the walkway-like Jamie, he had a sixth sense about it-hed peek out the curtains, then quickly pull his head back behind them, thinking that I hadnt seen him. When I knocked, it would take a long time for him to answer the door, as if he had to come from the kitchen.

Her eyes were still fixed on the ocean. I think she thought I was talking about Angela, but looking back, Id realized that what Id felt for Angela was totally different from what I was feeling right now.

Jamie seemed disheartened, and we walked a little farther in silence.

He sighed. "Is that all?" he said.

She stopped me suddenly and looked right at me. "Are you lying to me right now?”

"Are you okay, Jamie?" I finally asked.

He took off his spectacles and wiped them with his handkerchief before putting them back on. I could tell he was taking a moment to think about it.

"I love you, Jamie," I said to her. "Youre the best thing that ever happened to me.”

I was in love, and the feeling was even more wonderful than I ever imagined it could be.

"I figured I might have been," I said.

She looked out the window and stared at a boat that was passing by the restaurant, its lights blazing. For a moment she seemed lost in wonder. "Its beautiful here," she said.

"Will your parents be joining you?" he asked.

"How did you know it was love?" she asked me.

"Shes all I think about, Mom," I confessed. "I mean, I know she likes me, but I dont know if she feels the same way that I do.”

"We can be friends, we can see each other . . . but youcant love me.”

"But I do," I said, thinking she didnt believe me.

"This is wonderful," she said to me. "Thank you for asking me.”

Jamie may not have been all that experienced with boys, but to tell you the truth, she was playing me like a harp.

Jamie had never been to Flauvins before, and it took her just a few minutes to take it all in. She seemed nervously happy, and I knew right away that my mom had made the right suggestion.

"Yes, sir. I wanted to ask if it would be all right with you if I took her to dinner on New Years Eve.”

Hed look at me for a long moment, then sigh deeply and shake his head before finally saying hello.

Jamie wasnt simply the ministers daughter, someone who read the Bible and did her best to help others. Jamie was also a seventeen-year-old girl with the same hopes and doubts that I had. At least, thats what I assumed, until she finally told me.

I sighed, and my mom sat in silence while I explained what I had done. When I finished, a look of quiet satisfaction crossed her face, as if she, too, knew I was finally growing up.

"I see," she said softly. I waited for her to add something else, but she didnt, and I came to another sudden realization.

The wayshe said it made me ache more than I thought it would. We were almost at her house before I stopped her and held her close to me. I kissed her, and when we pulled apart, she looked down at the ground.

"I suppose," was all I could say. I felt a little queasy.

"What do you mean?”

"No," I said defensively, wondering where this was going. "I promise that from now on, Ill always tell you the truth.”

He turned from me and looked out the window, watching as the winter sun tried to force its way through the clouds. It was a gray day, cold and bitter.

I picked her up right on schedule. Though I hadnt asked her to wear her hair down, shed done it for me. Silently we drove over the bridge, down the waterfront to the restaurant. When we got to the hostess stand, the owner himself appeared and walked us to our table. It was one of the better ones in the place.

"A few times. My mother and father like to come here sometimes when my father comes home from Washington.”

Of course, spending time with Jamie also meant doing the things she enjoyed as well. Though I wouldnt go to her Bible study class-I didnt want to look like an idiot in front of her-we did visit the orphanage twice more, and each time we went there, I felt more at home. Once, though, wed had to leave early, because she was running a slight fever. Even to my untrained eyes, it was clear that her face was flushed.

We held hands while we waited for dinner, and Jamie and I talked about some of the things that had happened in the past few months. She laughed when we talked about the homecoming dance, and I finally admitted the reason Id asked her in the first place. She was a good sport about it-she sort of laughed it off cheerfully-and I knew that shed already figured it out on her own.

"I dont have any money left," I said to her dejectedly. Though my family was wealthy and gave me an allowance, they never gave me more if I ran through it too quickly. "It builds responsibility," my father said, explaining it once.

After New Years we spent the next week and a half together, doing the things that young couples did back then, though from time to time she seemed tired and listless. We spent time down by the Neuse River, tossing stones in the water, watching the ripples while we talked, or we went to the beach near Fort Macon.

My mom suggested buying some perfume, and though I knew that Jamie would probably be happy to receive it, it didnt sound right to me. For one thing, since Hegbert didnt allow her to wear makeup-with the single exception being the Christmas play-I was sure she couldnt wear perfume. I told my mom as much, and that was when shed suggested taking her out to dinner.

"Are you okay?" I asked, concerned.

She nodded and turned toward the ocean, her eyes getting that far-off look again. Shed been doing that a lot lately. I let it go on for a while before the silence sort of got to me.

"So are you," I answered.

Even though it was winter, the ocean the color of iron, it was something that both of us enjoyed doing. After an hour or so Jamie would ask me to take her home, and wed hold hands in the car. Sometimes, it seemed, she would almost nod off before we even got home, while other times she would keep up a stream of chatter all the way back so that I could barely get a word in edgewise.

"People think Im strange, dont they?" she asked again.

On New Years Eve I took Jamie out to dinner. It was the very first real date shed ever been on, and we went to a small waterfront restaurant in Morehead City, a place called Flauvins. Flauvins was the kind of restaurant with tablecloths and candles and five different pieces of silverware per setting. The waiters wore black and white, like butlers, and when you looked out the giant windows that completely lined the wall, you could watch moonlight reflecting off the slowly moving water.

"Have you been here before?”

"I love her," I said finally, and when I said it, his attention focused on me again.

He nodded slightly, and I entered the office. He motioned for me to sit in the chair across from his desk.

"Sure," I said.

"Hello, Reverend Sullivan," I said politely. "Do you have a moment?”

"Reverend Sullivan?”

I asked Jamie an hour later. The first thing she said was that she didnt think she could go, but I told her that Id already spoken to her father. She seemed surprised, and I think it had an effect on how she viewed me after that. The one thing I didnt tell her was that it looked almost as though Hegbert had been crying as Id made my way out the door. Not only didnt I understand it completely, I didnt want her to worry. That night, though, after talking to my mom again, she provided me with a possible explanation, and to be honest, it made perfect sense to me. Hegbert must have come to the realization that his daughter was growing up and that he was slowly losing her to me. In a way,I hoped that was true.

Jamie blushed. "You dont mean that.”

During the next two days, for instance, she wore her hair in a bun again.

In the grayish glow of a cold winter day, I could see her lower lip begin to tremble. Mine was doing the same thing, and I suddenly realized that my heart was speeding up as well. I looked in her eyes, smiling with all the feeling I could muster, knowing that I couldnt keep the words inside any longer.

It was the first time Id ever said the words to another person besides a member of my immediate family. When Id imagined saying it to someone else, Id somehow thought it would be hard, but it wasnt. Id never been more sure of anything.

"Yes, sir," I said. "Ill bring her home any time youd need me to.”

I was walking her home from Cecils Diner on the Saturday before school started up again, a day blustery with a fierce, biting wind. A noreaster had been blowing in since the previous morning, and while we walked, wed had to stand close to each other to stay warm. Jamie had her arm looped through mine, and we were walking slowly, even more slowly than usual, and I could tell she wasnt feeling well again. She hadnt really wanted to go with me because of the weather, but Id asked her because of my friends. It was time, I remember thinking, that they finally knew about us. The only problem, as fate would have it, was that no one else was at Cecils Diner. As with many coastal communities, things were quiet on the waterfront in the middle of winter.

"People at school.”

"Youre a great kisser," I said, giving her hand a squeeze.

"Does she mean that much to you?" she asked.

"Why?" she asked innocently. "Did I do it wrong?" She didnt look like shed be too upset if Id said yes, but it wouldnt have been the truth.

Jamie thought about my answer before smiling faintly.

"Well, Ive been going to her house every day to visit," I said.

"I know you do," he answered sadly, "but I dont want to see her hurt." Even though I must have been imagining it, I thought I saw his eyes begin to water.

I said it like James Dean would have, the way Eric had told me to say it if a girl ever asked me that question. Eric was pretty slick with girls.

"Who do you mean?" I asked, even though I knew the answer.

Somehow, when I said it, I knew that Id come to regret it.

He stared at me, studying me before he finally spoke. "Does it have to do with Jamie?" he asked.

At first we were the only ones on the floor, everyone watching us as we glided around the floor. I think they all knew how we were feeling about each other, and it reminded them of when they were young, too. I could see them smiling wistfully at us. The lights were dim, and when the singer began a slow melody, I held her close to me with my eyes closed, wondering if anything in my life had ever been this perfect and knowing at the same time that it hadnt.

"Have her home by ten," he finally said, as though he knew hed made the wrong decision.

"Yes," I said quietly, "I do.”

"So what? Youll take a few days . . .”

She was quiet as we walked, and I knew that she was thinking of a way to tell me something. I didnt expect her to start the conversation as she did.

I guess Jamie had seen those movies, too. With Jamie, Id come to realize, I always seemed to be going from high to low and back to high again in less time than it takes to swat a mosquito. I wasnt quite sure if I liked that part of our relationship yet, though to be honest, it kept me on my toes. I was still feeling off balance as I thought about her question.

I took a deep breath.

My mom put her hand on my knee. Even though she wasnt a great homemaker and sometimes stuck it to me, like I said earlier, she really was a sweet lady.

"Youre the first boy Ive ever kissed," she said to me.

I thought about that for a moment, a little confused. Wasnt that what I was trying to do?

She began to cry even harder. "Im sorry," she whispered to me through her ragged sobs. "Im so, so sorry. . . .”

"Im serious, Landon," she said, tossing me a sidelong glance.

It took another long moment for her to stop crying, and in time she looked up at me. She kissed me gently, almost like the breath of a passerby on a city street, then ran her finger over my cheek.

"Would you want to take me again?" she teased.

I kissed her cheek as I squeezed her arm a little tighter to me. She winced, and I could tell that Id hurt her somehow.

"Why not?" I shouted hoarsely, not understanding any of this.

Instead of answering, she changed the subject.

"But why, exactly? Is it because of my father? Or is it because I try to be nice to people?”

"What can I do for you?" he asked.

"Yes," I said quietly.

"Please dont say that," she said to me. "Please . . .”

"Why?" She looked almost despondent.

"No, they dont," I lied.

"My pleasure," I said sincerely.

"Anything," I said.

A sad smile crossed her face, and I knew right then what she was trying to tell me. Her eyes never left mine as she finally said the words that numbed my soul.

I smiled and wanted to thank him, though I didnt. I could tell that he wanted to be alone. When I glanced over my shoulder on my way out the door, I was puzzled to see his face in his hands.

"Let me worry about that," she said softly. "You just find out if shed like to go and if Reverend Sullivan will allow it. If she can, well find a way to make it happen. I promise.”

I didnt want anything to do with this.

"Then I dont think that will be possible. But thank you for asking my permission first." He looked down at the papers, making it clear it was time for me to leave. I stood from my chair and started toward the door. As I was about to go, I faced him again.

We kissed again, too, though not every time we were together, and I didnt even think of trying to make it to second base. There wasnt any need to. There was something nice when I kissed her, something gentle and right, and that was enough for me. The more I did it, the more I realized that Jamie had been misunderstood her entire life, not only by me, but by everyone.

"Im dying, Landon.”

"Whyre you sorry?" I asked, suddenly desperate to understand what was bothering her. "Is it because of my friends and what theyll say? I dont care anymore-I really dont." I was reaching for anything, confused and, yes-scared.

"Well," I said seriously, "you know its love when all you want to do is spend time with the other person, and you sort of know that the other person feels the same way.”

My throat suddenly went dry.

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