are the lowest forms of life, lower than the slugs. I gave his ball-bag a 360-degree twist. Those are the people you need to worry about."
Alsana shook her head and waved Neena off with a hand. "Can't you understand? I worry about
my son being taken away from me. I have lost one already. Six years I have not seen Magid. Six
years. And I see these people, these Chaffinches and they spend more time with Millat than I do.
Can you understand that, at least?"
Neena sighed, fiddled with a button on her top, and then,
seeing the tears forming in her auntie's
eyes, conceded a silent nod.
"Millat and Irie often go round there for dinner," said Clara quietly. "And Alsana, well, your
auntie and I were wondering.. . if once you could go with them you look young, and you seem
young, and you could go and '
"Report back," finished Neena, rolling her eyes. "Infiltrate the enemy. That poor family they've
no idea who they're messing with, have they? They're under surveillance and they don't even know
it. It's like the bloody Thirty-nine Steps."
"Niece-of-Shame: yes or no?"
Neena groaned. "Yes, Auntie. Yes, if I must." "Much appreciated," said Alsana, finishing her
tea.
Now, it wasn't that Joyce was a homophobe. She liked gay men. And they liked her. She had
even inadvertently amassed a little gay fan club in university, a group of men who saw her as a kind
of Barbra Streisand/Bette Davis/ Joan Baez
hybrid and met once a month to cook her dinner and
admire her dress sense. So Joyce couldn't be homophobic. But gay women .. . something confused
Joyce about gay women. It wasn't that she disliked them. She just couldn't
comprehend them. Joyce
understood why men would love men; she had
devoted her life to
loving men, so she knew how it
felt. But the idea of women
loving women was so far from Joyce's cognitive understanding of the
world that she couldn't process it. The idea of them. She just didn't get it. God knows, she'd made
the effort. During the seventies she dutifully read The Well of Loneliness and Our Bodies Ourselves
(which had a small chapter); more recently she had read and watched Oranges Are Not the Only
Fruit, but none of it did her any good. She wasn't offended by it. She just couldn't see the point. So
when Neena turned up for dinner, arm in arm with Maxine, Joyce just sat staring at the two of them
over the starter (pulses on rye bread), utterly fixated. She was rendered dumbstruck for the first
twenty minutes, leaving the rest of the family to go through the Chalfen
routine minus her own vital
bit-part. It was a little like being hypnotized or sitting in a dense cloud, and through the mist she
heard snippets of dinner conversation continuing without her.
"So, always the first Chalfen question: what do you do?"
"Shoes. I make shoes."
"Ah. Mmm. Not the material of sparkling conversation, I fear. What about the beautiful lady?"
"I'm a beautiful lady of
leisure. I wear the shoes she makes."
"Ah. Not in college, then?"
"No, I didn't bother with college. Is that OK?"
Neena was equally
defensive. "And before you ask, neither did I."
"Well, I didn't mean to
embarrass you '
"You didn't."
"Because it's no real surprise ... I know you're not the most
academic family in the world." Joyce knew things were going badly, but she couldn't find her tongue to smooth it out. A million
dangerous double entendres were sitting at the back of her throat, and, if she opened her mouth
even a slit (I), she feared one of them was going to come out. Marcus, who was always oblivious to
causing offence, chundled on happily. "You two are terrible temptations for a man."
"Are we."
"Oh, dykes always are. And I'm sure certain gentlemen would have half a chance though you'd
probably take beauty over
intellect, I suspect, so there go my chances."
"You seem
awfully certain of your
intellect, Mr. Chalfen."
"Shouldn't I be? I am terribly clever, you know."
Joyce just kept looking at them, thinking: Who relies on whom? Who teaches whom? Who
improves whom? Who pollinates and who nurtures?
"Well, it's great to have another Iqbal round the table, isn't it, Josh?"
I'm a Begum, not an Iqbal/ said Neena.
"I can't help thinking," said Marcus, unheeding, 'that a Chalfen man and an Iqbal woman would
be a hell of a mix. Like Fred and Ginger. You'd give us sex and we'd give you sensibility or
something. Hey? You'd keep a Chalfen on his toes you're as fiery as an Iqbal. Indian passion. Funny
thing about your family: first generation are all loony tunes, but the second generation have got
heads just about straight on their shoulders."
"Umm, look: no one calls my family loony, OK? Even if they are. I'll call them loony."
"Now, you see, try to use the language properly. You can say "no one calls my family loony",
but that's not a correct statement. Because people do and will. By all means say, "I don't want
people to, etc." It's a small thing, but we can all understand each other better when we don't abuse
terms and phrases."
Then, just as Marcus was reaching into the oven to pull out the main course (chicken hot pot
Joyce's mouth opened and for some
inexplicable reason this came out: "Do you use each other's
breasts as pillows?"
Neena's fork, which was heading for her mouth, stopped just as it reached the tip of her nose.
Millat choked on a piece of
cucumber, trie struggled to bring her lower jaw back into alliance with
the upper. Maxine began to
giggle.
But Joyce wasn't going to go purple. Joyce was descended from the kind of bloody-minded
women who continued through the African swamps even after the bag-carrying natives had
dropped their load and turned back, even when the white men were leaning on their guns and
shaking their heads. She was cut of the same cloth as the frontier ladies who, armed with only a
bible, a shotgun and a net curtain,
coolly took out the brown men moving forwards from the
horizon towards the plains. Joyce didn't know the meaning of backing down. She was going to
stand her ground.
"It's just, in a lot of Indian poetry, they talk about using breasts for pillows, downy breasts,
pillow breasts. I just just just wondered, if white sleeps on brown, or, as one might expect, brown
sleeps on white? Extending the the the pillow metaphor, you see, I was just wondering which .. .
way The silence was long, broad and malingering. Neena shook her head in disgust and dropped her
cutlery on to her plate with a
clatter. Maxine tapped her fingers on the tablecloth, marking out a
nervous "William Tell'. Josh looked like he might cry.
Finally, Marcus threw his head back, clapped his hands and let out an enormous Chalfen guffaw. "I've been
wanting to ask that all night. Well done, Mother Chalfen!"
And so for the first time in her life Neena had to admit that her auntie was absolutely right.
"You wanted a report, so here's a full report: crazy, nut so raisins short of a fruitcake, rubber walls,
screaming-mad basket-cases. Every bloody one of them."
Alsana nodded, open-mouthed, and asked Neena to repeat for the third time the bit during
dessert when Joyce, serving up a trifle, had inquired whether it was difficult for Muslim women to
bake while wearing those long black sheets didn't the arm bits get covered in cake mixture? Wasn't
there a danger of
setting yourself alight on the gas hobs?
"Bouncing off the walls," concluded Neena.
But, as is the way with these things, once
confirmation had arrived nobody knew quite what to
do with the information. Me and Millat were sixteen and never tired of telling their
respectivemothers that they were now of the legal age for various activities and could do whatever, whenever.
Short of putting locks on the doors and bars on the windows, Clara and Alsana were
powerless. If
anything, things got worse. Irie spent more time than ever immersing herself in Chalfenism. Clara
noticed her wincing at her own father's conversation, and frowning at the middlebrow tabloid Clara
curled up with in bed. Millat disappeared from home for weeks at a time, returning with money that
was not his and an accent that modulated wildly between the rounded tones of the Chalfens and the
street talk of the KEVIN clan. He infuriated Samad beyond all reason. No, that's wrong. There was
a reason. Millat was neither one thing nor the other, this or that, Muslim or Christian, Englishman
or Bengali; he lived for the in between, he lived up to his middle name, Zulfikar, the
dashing of two
swords:
"How many times," Samad growled, after watching his son purchase the autobiography of Malcolm X, 'is it necessary to say thank you in a single transaction? Thank you when you hand the book over, thank you when she receives it, thank you
when she tells you the price, thank you when you sign the cheque, thank you when she takes it!
They call it English
politeness when it is simply
arrogance. The only being who deserves this kind
of thanks is Allah himself!"
And Alsana was once again caught between the two of them,
tryingdesperately to find the
middle ground. "If Magid was here, he'd sort you two out. A lawyer's mind, he'd make things
straight." But Magid wasn't here, he was there, and there was still not enough money to change the
situation.
Then the summer came and with it exams. Me came in just behind Chalfen the Chubster, and
Millat did far better than anyone, including he, had expected. It could only be the Chalfen influence,
and Clara, for one, felt a little ashamed of herself. Alsana just said, "Iqbal brains. In the end, they
triumph," and
decided to mark the occasion with a joint Iqbal/Jones
celebration barbecue to be held
on Samad's lawn.
Neena, Maxine, Ardashir, Shiva, Joshua, aunties, cousins, Irie's friends, Millat's friends, KEVIN
friends and the headmaster, all came and made merry (except for KEVIN, who formed a circle in
one corner) with paper cups filled with cheap Spanish bubbly.
It was going well enough until Samad spotted the ring of folded arms and green bow-ties. "What are they doing here? Who let in the infidels?"
"Well, you're here, aren't you?" sniped Alsana, looking at the three empty cans of Guinness
Samad had already got through, the hotdog juice dribbling down his chin. "Who's casting the first
stone at a barbecue?"
Samad glared and lurched away with Archie to admire their shared handiwork on the
reconstructed shed. Clara took the opportunity to pull Alsana aside and ask her a question.
Alsana stamped a foot in her own coriander. "No! No way at
all. What should I thank her for? If he did well, it was because of his own brains. Iqbal brains.
Not once, not once has that long-toothed Chaffinch even condescended to telephone me. Wild
horses will have to drag my dead body, lady."
"But... I just think it would be a nice idea to go and thank her for all the time she's spent with
the children ... I think maybe we misjudged her '
"By all means, go, Lady Jones, go if you like," said Alsana scornfully. "But as for me, wild
horses, wild horses could not do it."
"And that's Dr. Solomon Chalfen, Marcus's grandfather. He was one of the few men who would
listen to Freud when everybody in Vienna thought they had a
sexual deviant on their hands. An
incredible face he has, don't you think? There's so much wisdom in it. The first time Marcus
showed me that picture, I knew I wanted to marry him. I thought: if my Marcus looks like that at
eighty I'll be a very lucky girl!"
Clara smiled and admired the daguerreotype. She had so far admired eight along the
mantelpiece with Me trailing
sullenly behind her, and there were at least as many left to go.
"It's a grand old family, and if you don't find it too presumptuous, Clara is "Clara" all right?"
"Clara's fine, Mrs. Chalfen."
Irie waited for Joyce to ask Clara to call her Joyce.
"Well, as I was
saying, it's a grand old family and if you don't find it too presumptuous I like to
think of Irie as a kind of addition to it, in a way. She's just such a remarkable girl. We've so enjoyed
having her around."
"She's enjoyed being around, I think. And she really owes you a lot. We all do."
"Oh no, no, no. I believe in the Responsibility of Intellectuals besides which, it's been a joy.
Really. I hope we'll still see her, even though the exams are over. There's still A-levels, if nothing else!"
"Oh, I'm sure she'd come anyway. She talks about you all the time. The Chalfens this, the
Chalfens that.. ."
Joyce clasped Clara's hands in her own. "Oh, Clara, I am pleased. And I'm pleased we've finally
met as well. Oh now, I hadn't finished. Where were we oh yes, well here are Charles and Anna
great-uncles and aunts long buried, sadly. He was a psychiatrist yes, another one and she was a
plant biologist woman after my own heart."
Joyce stood back for a minute, like an art critic in a gallery, and put her hands on her hips. "I
mean, after a while, you've got to suspect it's in the genes, haven't you? All these brains. I mean,
nurture just won't explain it. I mean, will it?"
"Er, no," agreed Clara. "I guess not."
"Now, out of interest I mean, I really am curious which side do you think Me gets it from, the
Jamaican or the English?" Clara looked up and down the line of dead white men in starched collars, some monocled, some
uniformed, some sitting in the bosom of their family, each member manacled into position so the
camera could do its slow business. They all reminded her a little of someone. Of her own
grandfather, the
dashing Captain Charlie Durham, in his one extant photograph: pinched and pale,
looking defiantly at the camera, not so much having his picture taken as forcing his image upon the
acetate. What they used to call a Muscular Christian. The Bowden family called him Whitey. Djam
fool bwoy taut he owned every ting he touched.
"My side," said Clara tentatively. "I guess the English in my side. My grandfather was an
Englishman, quite la di da, I've been told. His child, my mother, was born during the Kingston
earthquake, 1907.1 used to think maybe the
rumble knocked the Bowden brain cells into place 'cos
we been doing pretty well since then!"
Joyce saw that Clara was expecting a laugh and quickly supplied one.
"But seriously, it was probably Captain Charlie Durham. He taught my grandmother all she
knew. A good English education. Lord knows, I can't think who else it could be."
"Well, how fascinating! It's what I say to Marcus it 15 the genes, whatever he says. He says I'm
a simplifier, but he's just too theoretical. I'm proven right all the time!"
As the front door closed behind her, Clara bit her own lip once more, this time in
frustration and
anger. Why had she said Captain Charlie Durham? That was a
downright lie. False as her own
white teeth. Clara was smarter than Captain Charlie Durham. Hortense was smarter than Captain
Charlie Durham. Probably even Grandma Ambrosia was smarter than Captain Charlie Durham.
Captain Charlie Durham wasn't smart. He had thought he was, but he wasn't. He sacrificed a
thousand people because he wanted to save one woman he never really knew. Captain Charlie
Durham was a no-good djam fool bwoy.
关键字:
White Teeth生词表:
- poorly [´puəli] a.不舒服的 ad.贫穷地 四级词汇
- dissolution [,disə´lu:ʃən] n.溶解;取消;解除 四级词汇
- disappearance [,disə´piərəns] n.消失;失踪 六级词汇
- legacy [´legəsi] n.遗产;传代物 六级词汇
- doorstep [´dɔ:step] n.门阶 六级词汇
- biting [´baitiŋ] a.刺痛的;尖利的 六级词汇
- overwhelming [,əuvə´welmiŋ] a.压倒的;势不可挡的 四级词汇
- mischievous [´mistʃivəs] a.有害的;淘气的 四级词汇
- happening [´hæpəniŋ] n.事件,偶然发生的事 四级词汇
- trying [´traiiŋ] a.难堪的;费劲的 四级词汇
- socially [´səuʃəli] ad.社交上;社会上 六级词汇
- malicious [mə´liʃəs] a.恶意的;预谋的 六级词汇
- touching [´tʌtʃiŋ] a.动人的 prep.提到 四级词汇
- cardboard [´kɑ:dbɔ:d] n.纸板;卡纸 四级词汇
- taking [´teikiŋ] a.迷人的 n.捕获物 六级词汇
- incompetent [in´kɔmpitənt] a.不称职的 六级词汇
- brandy [´brændi] n.白兰地酒 四级词汇
- forefinger [´fɔ:,fiŋgə] n.食指 六级词汇
- plaything [´plei,θiŋ] n.玩具;玩物 四级词汇
- hypocrite [´hipəkrit] n.伪善者;伪君子 六级词汇
- speaking [´spi:kiŋ] n.说话 a.发言的 六级词汇
- holding [´həuldiŋ] n.保持,固定,存储 六级词汇
- calling [´kɔ:liŋ] n.点名;职业;欲望 六级词汇
- familiarity [fə,mili´æriti] n.熟悉;新近;随便 六级词汇
- utility [ju:´tiliti] n.有用 a.有各种用途的 四级词汇
- defective [di´fektiv] a.有缺陷的;有瑕疵的 四级词汇
- testament [´testəment] n.契约,誓约;遗嘱 四级词汇
- devoted [di´vəutid] a.献身…的,忠实的 四级词汇
- upstairs [,ʌp´steəz] ad.在楼上 a.楼上的 四级词汇
- comely [´kʌmli] a.秀丽的;文雅的 四级词汇
- poster [´pəustə] n.招贴;贴标语的人 六级词汇
- einstein [´ainstain] n.爱因斯坦 六级词汇
- armchair [´ɑ:mtʃeə] n.扶手椅 四级词汇
- spiral [´spaiərəl] a.螺纹的 n.螺旋(管) 四级词汇
- staircase [´steəkeis] n.楼梯 =stairway 四级词汇
- swedish [´swi:diʃ] a.瑞典人 n.瑞典语 四级词汇
- triumphant [trai´ʌmfənt] a.胜利的;洋洋得意的 四级词汇
- extended [iks´tendid] a.伸长的;广大的 六级词汇
- prostrate [´prɔstreit, prɔ´streit] a.俯伏的 vt.弄倒 四级词汇
- theatrical [θi´ætrikəl] a.戏院的;戏剧(性)的 四级词汇
- embryo [´embriəu] n.胚胎;萌芽时期 六级词汇
- approximate [ə´prɔksimit] a.近似的 v.接近 四级词汇
- target [´tɑ:git] n.靶子;目标;指标 四级词汇
- terminal [´tə:minəl] n.终点(站) a.末端的 四级词汇
- vertical [´və:tikəl] a.垂直的 n.垂直线 四级词汇
- cartoon [kɑ:´tu:n] n.漫画;(电影)卡通片 六级词汇
- crafty [´krɑ:fti] a.狡猾的 六级词汇
- rivalry [´raivəlri] n.竞争;竞赛;敌对 六级词汇
- biological [,baiə´lɔdʒikəl] a.生物学(上)的 六级词汇
- imperative [im´perətiv] a.紧急的 n.命令式 四级词汇
- reluctantly [ri´lʌktəntli] a.不情愿地;勉强地 四级词汇
- reproduction [,ri:prə´dʌkʃən] n.繁殖;翻版;再现 四级词汇
- policy [´pɔlisi] n.政策;权谋;保险单 四级词汇
- version [´və:ʃən, ´və:rʒən] n.翻译;说明;译本 四级词汇
- diverse [dai´və:s] a.完全不同的 六级词汇
- deliberation [dilibə´reiʃ(ə)n] n.仔细考虑;商量 四级词汇
- consolidate [kən´sɔlideit] v.巩固;合并;联合 四级词汇
- displeasure [dis´pleʒə] n.不高兴,不快,生气 四级词汇
- medieval [,medi´i:vəl] a.中古的;中世纪的 四级词汇
- uneasiness [ʌn´i:zinis] n.不安,担忧;不自在 四级词汇
- covert [kʌvət] a.隐藏的 n.隐藏处 六级词汇
- wanting [´wɔntiŋ, wɑ:n-] a.短缺的;不足的 六级词汇
- middle-class [´midlmæn] a.中产阶级的 六级词汇
- apology [ə´pɔlədʒi] n.道歉(的话);辩解 四级词汇
- triumphantly [trai´ʌmfəntli] ad.胜利地;洋洋得意地 四级词汇
- blackberry [´blækbəri] n.黑莓 四级词汇
- hybrid [´haibrid] n.杂种;混合物 六级词汇
- defensive [di´fensiv] a.&n.防御(的) 四级词汇
- academic [,ækə´demik] a.学术的 n.大学学生 四级词汇
- intellect [´intilekt] n.智力;有才智的人 四级词汇
- inexplicable [,inik´splikəbəl] a.难以理解的 六级词汇
- cucumber [´kju:kʌmbə] n.黄瓜 四级词汇
- giggle [´gigəl] v.&n.傻笑 六级词汇
- coolly [´ku:li] ad.冷(静地),沉着地 四级词汇
- setting [´setiŋ] n.安装;排字;布景 四级词汇
- confirmation [,kɔnfə´meiʃən] n.证实;证据;确认 四级词汇
- respective [ri´spektiv] a.各自的,各个的 四级词汇
- powerless [´pauələs] a.软弱的;无资源的 六级词汇
- dashing [´dæʃiŋ] a.勇猛的;生气勃勃的 六级词汇
- politeness [pə´laitnis] n.礼貌;文雅;温和 六级词汇
- arrogance [´ærəgəns] n.傲慢;自大 六级词汇
- vienna [vi´enə] n.维也纳 四级词汇
- sexual [´sekʃuəl] a.性(欲)的 六级词汇
- sullenly [´sʌlənli] ad.不高兴地 六级词汇
- frustration [frʌs´treiʃən] n.挫折,阻挠 六级词汇
- downright [´daunrait] a.直率的 ad.彻底 六级词汇