June 26, 2007

 

Ghosts are not those headless or bleeding creatures that would spring out of no where to spook you, neither were they going to vaporize into the shapeless and gooey monsters in the starlight. Ghosts reside in your mind and everyone has some. If you claim a total absence of ghosts, you are either lying or a no-brainer, because ghosts are like human memories – you just can’t efface them. They keep on accumulating until you are dead or become a vegetable.

 

Like memories, not all ghosts are horrendous. Sometimes, they are not bad at all. The prom night, a bunch of roses on St. Valentine’s Day, the kiss from mom and dad, your final ascent to nomenklatura and even the first shit-storm after your constipation hit a whopper could all be counted in as ghosts. But there are those grotesque ghosts, the ghosts that haunt you all the way through your life. It could be a juicy-as-a-peach gossip on you or a bad hair style that brought about a ripple effect ruining your career.

 

For Jeffrey McReynolds, the gruesome ghost was his late grandma.

 

Again, it wasn’t about how an arthritis-stricken old lady paced creakily along a corridor or how a bloating corpse slowly swung her left leg out of the bathtub’s brim and tailed you to the door whose knob was stuck firmly. It was more on the spiritual level. Jeffrey’s grandma made a clone of herself in Jeffrey’s flesh. This was even more terrifying in that the ghost for Jeffrey was blood running in his body, plasma stored in his cells and tissues, and piths sealed in the bones.

 

“So, Andy’s idle hand is on his left knee.” Jeffrey said, “Big deal?”

 

Jeffrey’s eyes remained on the dish in front of him, a non-smile on the face and there was a trace of provocation in his voice.

 

Seated next to Jeffrey, Andy looked flummoxed enough to be awkward, for his fast-processing brains couldn’t produce any plausible answer for his best friend’s out-of-the-blue comment. What’s worse, he didn’t even know who Jeffrey was talking to and what he would be referring to.

 

(So, I’ve been keeping my idle hand below the table since Stone Age. Big deal?)

 

Andy’s eyes were fumbling for clues around the square dining table. Facing him were Jeffrey’s parents whose eyes looked as blurred as his own. Then to his left, he found Jeffrey calm like the sea before a storm. Jeffrey’s grandparents sat face to face across the table, each dominating one side. He moved his eyes to grandpa next to Jeffrey and got nothing; the old man was sipping wine from a little cup. His pupils were focusing on the nectar, not in the least interested in the loaded commentary. Feeling a chill down his spine, Andy unwillingly turned to his immediate left where Jeffrey’s grandma was sitting.

 

Andy tried his best to avoid making any noise from turning his head because for that moment, the entire dining room was quiet as a graveyard. But finally, Andy got a good shot of the old women. She was smiling her trademark beatific smile, like some sort of Buddha.

 

But Andy felt inexplicably sick, because too many ingredients were kneaded into that smile – sarcasm, compromise, indifference and mostly annoyingly, fear. There was fear in the smile. It was the fear of a magician whose tricks went ballistic in front of a large audience. It was the fear of a double agent who got prosecution from both sides. It was more like the fear of a king who had just had his kingdom overwhelmed.

 

Andy gave up. He couldn’t understand and he didn’t need to understand. Jeffrey was his best friend, but he was not stupid enough to pry every piece of information. He knew everyone has a restricted zone in his brains and that could be real ugly when deciphered.  

posted on 2007-06-27 00:31 祝晓光 阅读(808) 评论(0)  编辑  收藏 网摘收藏

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祝晓光
上海新东方 新概念二册,三册主讲教师。
毕业于吉林省东北师范大学,化学专业,副修生物专业。在2002年21世纪杯全国英语演讲比赛,2002年CCTV杯全国英语演讲比赛,2003年FLTRP全国英语辩论比赛,2003年和2004年BBC广播杯全国英语演讲比赛中取得优异成绩。2004世界英文大专辩论赛官方代表队员。以优秀成绩通过大学所有级别的英语考试,持有北外的翻译资格证书,高级商务英语资格证书(BEC Higher)。