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iancaldwell&dustinthomason.theruleoffour-第8部分

小说: iancaldwell&dustinthomason.theruleoffour 字数: 每页4000字

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 〃A birthday suit for my birthday;〃 she says; looking me up and down。 Her eyes are glowing。 〃So this is why you didn't call。〃
 As Katie backs into the room I see Paul fixated on the camera in her hand; a Pentax with a telephoto lens almost as long as her forearm。
 〃What's that for?〃 Gil asks when Katie turns to put the camera on a bookshelf。
 〃Taking shots for the Prince;〃 she says。 〃Maybe they'll print one this time。〃
 This must be why she's not running。 Katie has been trying all year to get a photo on the front page of the Daily Princetonian; but the seniority system has worked against her。 Now she's turned the tables。 Only freshmen and sophomores have rooms in Holder; and hers overlooks the entire courtyard。
 〃Where's Charlie?〃 she asks。
 Gil shrugs; staring down through the window。 〃Out there playing grab…ass with Will Clay。〃
 Katie returns to me; still smiling。 〃How long did it take you to plan this?〃
 I falter。
 〃Days;〃 Gil improvises; when I can't think of a way to explain that this whole performance wasn't for her。 〃Maybe a week。〃
 〃Impressive;〃 Katie says。 〃The weathermen didn't know it would start snowing until this morning。〃
 〃Hours;〃 Gil revises。 〃Maybe a day。〃
 Her eyes never leave me。 〃So let me guess。 You need a change of clothes。〃
 〃We need three。〃
 Katie retreats to her closet and says; 〃Must be pretty chilly out there。 Looks like the cold was starting to get to you guys。〃
 Paul looks at her as if she can't possibly mean what he thinks。 〃Is there a phone I could use?〃 he asks; gathering his wits。
 Katie points at a cordless on the desk。 I move across the room and press up against her; pushing her into the closet。 She tries to shake me off; but when I press too hard; both of us fall onto the rows of shoes; high heels in all the wrong places。 It takes a second to untangle ourselves; and I stand up expecting moans from Paul and Gil。 But their focus is elsewhere。 Paul is in the corner; whispering into the phone; while Gil peers out the window。 At first I think Gil's looking for Charlie。 Then I see the proctor in his line of sight; speaking into his radio as he approaches。
 〃Hey; Katie;〃 Gil says; 〃we don't need matching outfits here。 Anything works。〃
 〃Relax;〃 she says; ing back with handfuls of clothing on hangers。 She lays out three pairs of sweatpants; two T…shirts; and a blue dress shirt I've been missing since March。 〃It's the best I can do on short notice。〃
 We throw ourselves into them。 Suddenly; from the entryway downstairs; the hiss of a hand radio cuts the air。 The outside door to the building thuds shut。
 Paul hangs up the phone。 〃I have to get to the library。〃
 〃You guys go out the back;〃 Katie says; voice quickening。 〃I'll deal with it。〃
 I take her hand as Gil thanks her for the clothes。
 〃I'll see you later?〃 she says to me; conjuring something in her eyes。 It's a look that always es with a smile now; because she can't believe I still fall for it。
 Gil groans and drags me out the door by my arm。 As we duck out of the building; I can hear Katie's voice calling down to the proctor。
 〃Officer! Officer! I need your help。 。 。 。〃
 Gil turns back; eyes trained on her room。 When he sees the proctor arrive in the crosshairs of Katie's leaded window; his expression lightens。 Before long; as we head into the piercing wind; Holder vanishes behind a curtain of snow。 Campus is nearly empty as we descend toward Dod; and any residue of the tunnels' heat seems to radiate away; washed off in tiny beads of snow that roll from my cheeks。 Paul walks slightly ahead of us; keeping a more purposeful pace。 The entire time; he doesn't speak a word。
 
 Chapter 4
 
 It was through a book that I met Paul。 We probably would've met anyway at Firestone Library; or in a study group; or in one of the literature classes we both took freshman year; so maybe there's nothing special about a book。 But when you consider that the one in question was five hundred years old; and that it was the same one my father had been studying before he died; the occasion somehow seems more momentous。
 The Hypnerotomachia Poliphili; which in Latin means 〃Poliphilo's Struggle for Love in a Dream;〃 was published around 1499 by a Venetian man named Aldus Manutius。 The Hypnerotomachia is an encyclopedia masquerading as a novel; a dissertation on everything from architecture to zoology; written in a style that even a tortoise would find slow。 It is the world's longest book about a man having a dream; and it makes Marcel Proust; who wrote the world's longest book about a man eating a piece of cake; look like Ernest Hemingway。 I would venture to guess that Renaissance readers felt the same way。 The Hypnerotomachia was a dinosaur in its own time。 Though Aldus was the greatest printer of his day; the Hypnerotomachia is a tangle of plots and characters connected by nothing but its protagonist; an allegorical everyman named Poliphilo。 The gist is simple: Poliphilo has a strange dream in which he searches for the woman he loves。 But the way it's told is so plicated that even most Renaissance scholars…the same people who read Plotinus while waiting for the bus…consider the Hypnerotomachia painfully; tediously difficult。
 Most; that is; except my father。 He marched through Renaissance historical studies to the beat of his own drum; and when the majority of his colleagues turned their backs on the Hypnerotomachia; he squared it in his sights。 He'd been converted to the cause by a professor named Dr。 McBee; who taught European history at Princeton。 McBee; who died the year before I was born; was a mousy man with elephant ears and small teeth who owed all of his success in the world to an effervescent personality and a canny sense of what made history worthwhile。 Though he wasn't much to look at; the little man stood tall in the world of the academy。 Every year his closing lecture on the death of Michelangelo filled the largest auditorium on campus with spectators and left college men wiping their eyes and reaching for their handkerchiefs。 Above all; McBee was a champion of the book that everyone else in his field ignored。 He believed there was something peculiar about the Hypnerotomachia; possibly something great; and he convinced his students to search for the old book's true meaning。
 One of them searched even more avidly than McBee could have hoped。 My father was an Ohio bookseller's son; and he arrived on campus the day after his eighteenth birthday; almost fifty years after F。 Scott Fitzgerald made it fashionable to be a midwestern boy at Princeton。 Much had changed since then。 The university was shedding its country club past; and in the spirit of the times; it was falling out of love with tradition。 The freshmen of my father's year were the last class required to attend chapel service on Sundays。 The year after he left; women arrived on campus for the first time as students。 WPRB; the college radio station; ushered them in to the sound of Handel's 〃Hallelujah Chorus。〃 My father liked to say that the spirit of his youth was best captured in Immanuel Kant's essay 〃What is Enlightenment?〃 Kant; in his mind; was like the Bob Dylan of the 1790s。
 That was my father's way: to erase the line in history beyond which everything seems stuffy and arcane。 Instead of timelines and great men; history to him was ideas and books。 He followed McBee's advice for two more years at Princeton; and after graduating he followed it all the way back west to the University of Chicago for a Ph。D。 on Renaissance Italy。 A year of fellowship work in New York ensued; until Ohio State offered him a tenure…track position teaching quattrocento history; and he leapt at the chance to go home。 My mother; an accountant whose tastes ran to Shelley and Blake; took up the bookselling business in Columbus after my grandfather retired; and between the two of them I was raised in the fold of bibliophiles; the way some children are raised in religion。
 At the age of four I was traveling to book conferences with my mother。 By six I knew the difference between parchment and vellum better than I knew a Fleer from a Topps。 Before my tenth birthday I had handled some half…dozen copies of the printing world's masterpiece; the Gutenberg Bible。 But I ca

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