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双语·剧院风情 第二十二章

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2022年06月17日

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Chapter 22

But she woke early next morning, at six, and began to think of Tom. She repeated to herself all she had said to him and all he had said to her. She was harassed and unhappy. Her only consolation was that she had carried the rupture through with so careless a gaiety that he could not guess how miserable he had made her.

She spent a wretched day, unable to think of anything else, and angry with herself because she could not put Tom out of her mind. It would not have been so bad if she could have confided her grief to a friend. She wanted someone to console her, someone to tell her that Tom was not worth troubling about and to assure her that he had treated her shamefully. As a rule she took her troubles to Charles or to Dolly. Of course Charles would give her all the sympathy she needed, but it would be a terrible blow to him, after all he had loved her to distraction for twenty years, and it would be cruel to tell him that she had given to a very ordinary young man what he would gladly have sacrificed ten years of his life for. She was his ideal and it would be heartless on her part to shatter it. It certainly did her good at that moment to be assured that Charles Tamerley, so distinguished, so cultured, so elegant, loved her with an imperishable devotion. Of course Dolly would be delighted if she confided in her. They had not seen much of one another lately, but Julia knew that she had only to call up and Dolly would come running. Even though she more than suspected the truth already she'd be shocked and jealous when Julia made a clean breast of it, but she'd be so thankful that everything was over, she'd forgive. It would be a comfort to both of them to tear Tom limb from limb. Of course it wouldn't be very nice to admit that Tom had chucked her, and Dolly was so shrewd, she would never get away with the lie that she had chucked him. She wanted to have a good cry with somebody, and there didn't seem to be any reason for it if she had made the break herself. It would be a score for Dolly, and however sympathetic she was it was asking too much of human nature to expect that she would be altogether sorry that Julia had been taken down a peg or two. Dolly had always worshipped her. She wasn't going to give her a peep at her feet of clay.

“It almost looks as if the only person I can go to is Michael,” she giggled. “But I suppose it wouldn't do.”

She knew exactly what he would say.

“My dear girl, I'm really not the sort of feller you ought to come to with a story like that. Damn it all, you put me in a very awkward position. I flatter myself I'm pretty broad-minded, I may be an actor, but when all's said and done I am a gentleman, and well, I mean, I mean it's such damned bad form.”

Michael did not get home till the afternoon, and when he came into her room she was resting. He told her about his weekend and the result of his matches. He had played very well, some of his recoveries had been marvellous, and he described them in detail.

“By the way, what about that girl you saw last night, is she any good?”

“I really think she is, you know. She's very pretty. You're sure to fall for her.”

“Oh, my dear, at my time of life. Can she act?”

“She's inexperienced of course, but I think she's got it in her.”

“Oh, well, I'd better have her up and give her the once-over. How can I get hold of her?”

“Tom's got her address.”

“I'll phone him right away.”

He took off the receiver and dialled Tom's number. Tom was in and Michael wrote down the address on a pad.

The conversation went on.

“Oh, my dear old chap, I'm sorry to hear that. What rotten luck!”

“What's the matter?” asked Julia.

He motioned her to be quiet.

“Oh, well, I don't want to be hard on you. Don't you worry. I'm sure we can come to some arrangement that will be satisfactory to you.” He put his hand over the receiver and turned to Julia. “Shall I ask him to dinner next Sunday?”

“If you like.”

“Julia says, will you come and dine on Sunday? Oh, I'm sorry. Well, so long, old man.”

He put down the receiver.

“He's got a date. Is the young ruffian having an affair with this girl?”

“He assures me not. He respects her. She's a colonel's daughter.”

“Oh, she's a lady.”

“I don't know that that follows,” said Julia acidly. “What were you talking to him about?”

“He says they've cut his salary. Bad times. He wants to give up the flat.” Julia's heart gave a sudden sickening beat. “I've told him not to worry. I'll let him stay there rent free till times improve.”

“I don't know why you should do that. After all it was a purely business arrangement.”

“It seems rather tough luck on a young chap like that. And you know he's very useful to us; if we want an extra man we can always call upon him, and it's convenient having him round the corner when I want someone to play golf with me. It's only twenty-five pounds a quarter.”

“You're the last person I should expect to see indulge in indiscriminate generosity.”

“Oh, don't you be afraid, if I lose on the swings I'll get back on the roundabouts.”

The masseuse came in and put an end to the conversation. Julia was thankful that it would soon be time to go down to the theatre and so put an end for a while to the misery of that long day; when she got back she would take a sleeping-draught again and so get some hours of forgetfulness. She had a notion that in a few days the worst of her pain would be over; the important thing was to get through them as best she could. She must distract her mind. When she left for the theatre she told the butler to ring up Charles Tamerley and see if she could lunch with him at the Ritz next day.

He was extraordinarily nice at luncheon. His look, his manner, bespoke the different world he lived in, and she felt a sudden abhorrence for the circle in which on Tom's account she had moved during the last year. He spoke of politics, of art, of books; and peace entered into her soul. Tom had been an obsession and she saw now that it had been hurtful; but she would escape from it. Her spirits rose. She did not want to be alone, she knew that even though she went home after lunch she would not sleep, so she asked Charles if he would take her to the National Gallery. She could give him no greater pleasure; he liked to talk about pictures and he talked of them well. It took them back to the old days when she had made her first success in London and they used to spend so many afternoons together, walking in the park or sauntering through museums. The day after that she had a matnée and the next a lunch-party, but when they separated they arranged to lunch again together on the Friday and go to the Tate.

A few days later Michael told her that he had engaged Avice Crichton.

“She has the looks for the part, there's no doubt about that, and she'll be a good contrast to you. I'm taking her acting on the strength of what you said.”

Next morning they rang through from the basement to say that Mr. Fennell was on the telephone. It seemed to her that her heart stopped beating.

“Put him through.”

“Julia, I wanted to tell you, Michael has engaged Avice.”

“Yes, I know.”

“He told her he was engaging her on what you'd told him. You are a brick.”

Julia, her heart now beating nineteen to the dozen, made an effort to control her voice.

“Oh, don't talk such nonsense,” she answered gaily. “I told you it would be all right.”

“I'm awfully glad it's fixed up. She's accepted the part on what I've told her about it. Ordinarily she won't take anything unless she's read the play.”

It was just as well he could not see Julia's face when she heard him say this. She would have liked to answer tartly that it was not their habit when they engaged small-part actresses to let them read the play, but instead she said mildly:

“Well, I think she'll like it, don't you? It's quite a good part.”

“And you know, she'll play it for all it's worth. I believe she'll make a sensation.”

Julia took a long breath.

“It'll be wonderful, won't it? I mean, it may make her.”

“Yes, I've told her that. I say, when am I going to see you again?”

“I'll phone you, shall I? It's such a bore, I'm terribly full of engagements for the next few days.”

“You're not going to drop me just because…”

She gave a low, rather hoarse chuckle, that chuckle which so delighted audiences.

“Don't be so silly. Oh lord, there's my bath running. I must go and have it. Good-bye, my sweet.”

She put down the receiver. The sound of his voice! The pain in her heart was unendurable. Sitting up in her bed she rocked to and fro in an agony.

“What shall I do? What shall I do?”

She had thought she was getting over it, and now that brief, silly conversation had shown her that she loved him as much as ever. She wanted him. She missed him every minute of the day. She could not do without him.

“I shall never get over it,” she moaned.

Once again the theatre was her only refuge. By an ironic chance the great scene of the play in which she was then acting, the scene to which the play owed its success, showed the parting of two lovers. It was true that they parted from a sense of duty; and Julia, in the play, sacrificed her love, her hopes of happiness, all that she held dear, to an ideal of uprightness. It was a scene that had appealed to her from the beginning. She was wonderfully moving in it. She put into it now all the agony of her spirit; it was no longer the broken heart of a character that she portrayed but her own. In ordinary life she tried to stifle a passion that she knew very well was ridiculous, a love that was unworthy of the woman she was, and she steeled herself to think as little as possible of the wretched boy who had wrought such havoc with her; but when she came to this scene she let herself go. She gave free rein to her anguish. She was hopeless with her own loss, and the love she poured out on the man who was playing opposite to her was the love she still felt, the passionate, devouring love, for Tom. The prospect of the empty life that confronted the woman of the play was the prospect of her own empty life. There was at least that solace, she felt she had never played so magnificently.

“My God, it's almost worth while to suffer so frightfully to give such a performance.”

She had never put more of herself into a part.

One night a week or two later when she came into her dressing-room at the end of the play, exhausted by all the emotion she had displayed, but triumphant after innumerable curtain calls, she found Michael sitting there.

“Hulloa? You haven't been in front, have you?”

“Yes.”

“But you were in front two or three days ago.”

“Yes, I've sat through the play for the last four nights.”

She started to undress. He got up from his chair and began to walk up and down. She gave him a glance and saw that he was frowning slightly.

“What's the matter?”

“That's what I want to know.”

She gave a start. The thought flashed through her mind that he had once more heard something about Tom.

“Why the devil isn't Evie here?” she asked.

“I told her to get out. I've got something to say to you, Julia. It's no good your flying in a temper. You've just got to listen.”

A cold shiver ran down her spine.

“Well, what is it?”

“I heard something was up and I thought I'd better see for myself. At first I thought it was just an accident. That's why I didn't say anything till I was quite sure. What's wrong with you, Julia?”

“With me?”

“Yes. Why are you giving such a lousy performance?”

“Me?” That was the last thing she expected to hear him say. She faced him with blazing eyes. “You damned fool, I've never acted better in my life.”

“Nonsense. You're acting like hell.”

Of course it was a relief that he was talking about her acting, but what he was saying was so ridiculous that, angry as she was, she had to laugh.

“You blasted idiot, you don't know what you're talking about. Why, what I don't know about acting isn't worth knowing. Everything you know about it I've taught you. If you're even a tolerable actor, it's due to me. After all, the proof of the pudding's in the eating. D'you know how many curtain calls I got tonight? The play's never gone better in all its run.”

“I know all about that. The public are a lot of jackasses. If you yell and scream and throw yourself about you'll always get a lot of damned fools to shout themselves silly. Just barn-storming, that's what you've been doing the last four nights. It was false from beginning to end.”

“False? But I felt every word of it.”

“I don't care what you felt, you weren't acting it. Your performance was a mess. You were exaggerating; you were over-acting; you didn't carry conviction for a moment. It was about as rotten a piece of ham-acting as I've ever seen in my life.”

“You bloody swine, how dare you talk to me like that? It's you the ham.”

With her open hand she gave him a great swinging blow on the face. He smiled.

“You can hit me, you can swear at me, you can yell your head off, but the fact remains that your acting's gone all to hell. I'm not going to start rehearsing Nowadays with you acting like that.”

“Find someone who can act the part better than I can then.”

“Don't be silly, Julia. I may not be a very good actor myself, I never thought I was, but I know good acting from bad. And what's more there's nothing about you I don't know. I'm going to put up the notices on Saturday and then I want you to go abroad. We'll make Nowadays our autumn production.”

The quiet, decisive way in which he spoke calmed her. It was true that when it came to acting Michael knew everything there was to know about her.

“Is it true that I'm acting badly?”

“Rottenly.”

She thought it over. She knew exactly what had happened. She had let her emotion run away with her; she had been feeling, not acting. Again a cold shiver ran down her spine. This was serious. It was all very fine to have a broken heart, but if it was going to interfere with her acting…no, no, no. That was quite another pair of shoes. Her acting was more important than any love affair in the world.

“I'll try and pull myself together.”

“It's no good trying to force oneself. You're tired out. It's my fault, I ought to have insisted on your taking a holiday long ago. What you want is a good rest.”

“What about the theatre?”

“If I can't let it, I'll revive some play that I can play in. There's Hearts Are Trumps. You always hated your part in that.”

“Everyone says the season's going to be wonderful. You can't expect much of a revival, with me out of the cast; you won't make a penny.”

“I don't care a hang about that. The only thing that matters is your health.”

“Oh, Christ, don't be so magnanimous,” she cried. “I can't bear it.”

Suddenly she burst into a storm of weeping.

“Darling!”

He took her in his arms and sat her down on the sofa with himself beside her. She clung to him desperately.

“You're so good to me, Michael, and I hate myself. I'm a beast, I'm a slut, I'm just a bloody bitch. I'm rotten through and through.”

“All that may be,” he smiled, “but the fact remains that you're a very great actress.”

“I don't know how you can have the patience you have with me. I've treated you foully. You've been too wonderful and I've sacrificed you heartlessly.”

“Now, dear, don't say a lot of things that you'll regret later. I shall only bring them up against you another time.”

His tenderness melted her and she reproached herself bitterly because for years she had found him so boring.

“Thank God, I've got you. What should I do without you?”

“You haven't got to do without me.”

He held her close and though she sobbed still she began to feel comforted.

“I'm sorry I was so beastly to you just now.”

“Oh, my dear.”

“Do you really think I'm a ham actress?”

“Darling, Duse couldn't hold a candle to you.”

“Do you honestly think that? Give me your hanky. You never saw Sarah Bernhardt, did you?”

“No, never.”

“She ranted like the devil.”

They sat together for a little while, in silence, and Julia grew calmer in spirit. Her heart was filled with a great love for Michael.

“You're still the best-looking man in England,” she murmured at last. “No one will ever persuade me to the contrary.”

She felt that he drew in his belly and thrust out his chin, and it seemed to her rather sweet and touching.

“You're quite right. I'm tired out. I feel low and miserable. I feel all empty inside. The only thing is to go away.”

第二十二章

第二天六点,朱莉娅一醒来就开始想念汤姆。她回忆她对汤姆说的一切,以及他对她说的一切。她感到厌烦又不快。唯一的安慰便是她淡漠轻松地处理了他们的关系破裂这件事,他不会猜到他让她多么痛苦。

整整一天她都非常难过,无法思考其他事情,她因为自己无法停止想念汤姆而生自己的闷气。如果她能将自己的痛苦和一个朋友倾诉一下,也不至于像现在这样难以忍受。她想要有人来安慰她,有人来告诉她,汤姆根本不值得她挂念,并且让她确信汤姆对她非常不好。以往她会向查尔斯或多莉倾诉。查尔斯当然会给予她所有想要的同情,但这对他打击太大,毕竟,他已经深爱了她二十年,如果告诉他,她将他乐意牺牲十年生命而换来的东西给了一个资质平平的年轻人,这太残酷了。她是他的理想女人,粉碎了这个形象她就太无情了。此刻,能得到如此高贵、有教养、优雅、爱她爱得至死不渝的查尔斯·泰默利的安慰一定会让她好过许多。当然,如果她向多莉吐露心声,多莉会觉得受宠若惊。近来她们没怎么见面,但朱莉娅知道,只要她给多莉打电话,多莉就会过来。即使多莉已经猜到了事实,但当朱莉娅和盘托出后,多莉也会被震惊并感到嫉妒,同时感谢一切都已经结束了,多莉会原谅她。将汤姆碎尸万段对她俩来说都是种安慰。当然,承认汤姆玩弄了她不是什么光彩的事,多莉很精明,她不可能被朱莉娅对汤姆说的那些谎话糊弄。她想对着什么人大哭一场,但如果是她主动选择结束,也就没有哭的理由。这将使多莉赢得一分,而且无论多莉怎样同情,你总不能对人性抱有奢望,以为她真会因朱莉娅的威风受挫而感到遗憾。多莉一向崇拜她。朱莉娅不愿让她窥见自己的弱点。

“看起来唯一能选择的人就只有迈克尔了,”她咯咯地笑着说,“但我想这也不行。”

她知道他会怎么说。

“我亲爱的姑娘,我真的不应该是你这种故事的倾诉对象。该死,你把我放在一个非常尴尬的位置。我自觉我是一个胸襟开阔的人,我或许是个演员,但说到底我是个绅士,我的意思,我的意思是,这事儿太不堪了。”

直到下午迈克尔才回到家,当他进入朱莉娅的房间时,她正在休息。他告诉她有关他周末的事情,以及他的比赛结果。他打得很好,有几局挽回得很出色,他把挽回的情形讲得非常详细。

“顺便问一句,昨晚你去看的那个女孩怎么样?她演得好吗?”

“我确实这么认为,你知道。她很漂亮。你肯定会喜欢上她。”

“哦,我亲爱的,在我这个年纪,不会喜欢上什么人了。她有演技吗?”

“当然,她缺乏经验,但我觉得她有天赋。”

“哦,好吧,我最好让她来一下,亲自看一看。我怎么能联系到她?”

“汤姆有她的地址。”

“那我现在就打给他。”

他拿起电话,拨通了汤姆的号码。汤姆接了电话,迈克尔把地址写在一张纸上。

对话仍在继续。

“哦,我的老伙计,很遗憾听到这消息。运气太差了!”

“怎么了?”朱莉娅问道。

他让她别说话。

“好吧,我不想对你太严格。别担心。我确定我们能想出个让你满意的安排。”他用手捂住话筒,转向朱莉娅,“我要邀请他下周日来吃晚餐吗?”

“如果你想的话。”

“朱莉娅说,周日你能来一起吃晚餐吗?哦,真遗憾。好吧,再见,老朋友。”

他挂掉了电话。

“他有约会。这个小流氓跟那女孩有一腿?”

“他跟我保证没有。他尊重她。她是个上校的女儿。”

“哦,她是个淑女。”

“我竟然不知道他俩有牵连,”朱莉娅尖酸地说道,“你刚才跟他在说什么?”

“他说他们给他减了工资。市场不景气。他不想租那套公寓了。”朱莉娅的心脏突然一阵狂跳。“我让他别担心。我会让他免费住着直到行情好转。”

“我不知道你为什么要这么做。毕竟,这纯粹是生意上的安排。”

“对像他那样的年轻家伙来讲,运气实在不好。而且你知道他对我们有用;如果我们宴会差一个人的话,总是可以招呼他过来,而且当我想让人陪着打高尔夫的时候,他就在附近,这很方便。一个季度就二十五英镑而已。”

“我真想不到你这个人竟会这样盲目地慷慨起来。”

“哦,别担心,我会失之东隅,收之桑榆的。”

此时,女按摩师到了,他们的对话就此结束。朱莉娅庆幸不久就会去剧院,可以暂时结束漫漫一日的痛苦;当她从剧院返回家里时,会再喝一点安眠药水,从而获得几个小时的短暂遗忘。她觉得几天后最痛苦的时期就会过去了;最重要的是咬紧牙关挺过这段时间。她必须分散一下自己的注意力。当她出门前往剧院时,她让男仆打电话给查尔斯·泰默利,看他明天是否有空陪她在丽兹饭店共进午餐。

午餐的时候查尔斯异常殷勤。他的仪表、举止都彰显着他属于不同于汤姆的世界,顿时,她对去年因为汤姆而进入的圈子感到一阵厌恶。他谈论政治、艺术和书籍;于是,她的灵魂平静下来。她对汤姆只是一时迷恋,她现在明白那是害人的;她打算从那段感情中逃离出来。她打起精神。她不想一个人待着,她知道即使午餐后她回到家中也无法入睡,于是她问查尔斯能否带她去国家美术馆。这让查尔斯感到莫大的愉悦;他喜欢谈论画,并且讲得头头是道。这让他们回到她在伦敦初露头角的旧时光,那时他们一起共度了许多下午时光,在公园里漫步,或是在博物馆里闲逛。第二天,她有日场表演,之后一天她参加了午餐聚会,而当他们分开时又约定周五一起午餐,然后去泰特美术馆。

几天后,迈克尔告诉她,他已经聘用了艾维斯·克赖顿。

“她的长相满足角色需求,这一点毫无疑问,她会和你形成鲜明的对比。我是听了你的推荐才录用她的。”

第二天早晨,仆人从地下室打电话上来说有芬内尔先生的电话。她的心脏似乎停止了跳动。

“把电话接上来。”

“朱莉娅,我要告诉你,迈克尔聘用了艾维斯。”

“是的,我知道。”

“他对艾维斯说是听了你的推荐才聘用她的。你太够义气了。”

这会儿朱莉娅的心跳剧烈地加快了,她竭力控制住自己的声音。

“哦,别说傻话啦,”她欢欣地回答,“我早对你说没问题的。”

“我很高兴这一切都定下来了。她基于我告诉她的情况,已经接受了那个角色。一般情况下她不读剧本是不会接受任何角色的。”

朱莉娅听到汤姆这样说的时候,幸亏汤姆没有看到此刻她的脸。她本想尖刻地回答,聘用这种小角色演员时从来不会让他们读剧本,但她温柔地说道:

“好吧,我觉得她会喜欢的,难道你不这么认为?那是很不错的角色。”

“而且你知道,她会尽全力演好这个角色的。我相信她会引起轰动的。”

朱莉娅深吸一口气。

“太棒了,不是吗?我是说,这个角色可能让她成名。”

“是的,我已经跟她说了这些。我说,我什么时候再去见你?”

“我会打电话给你,好吗?太可恶了,接下来几天我的日程全部都是约会。”

“你不会丢下我就因为……”

她发出一阵低沉而沙哑的笑声,那种让观众很开心的笑声。

“别犯傻。哦,上帝,我的浴缸正在放水。我必须去看看。再见,我亲爱的。”

她放下电话。他的声音!她内心的痛苦简直无法忍受。她坐在床上,在痛苦中来回晃着身子。

“我该怎么做?我该怎么做?”

她以为她已经过了这道坎,但刚才那通简短愚蠢的对话表明,她对他的爱没有丝毫减弱。她想要他。她一天到晚无时无刻不在思念他。她不能没有他。

“我可能永远忘不掉他了。”她哀号道。

剧院再一次成为她唯一的庇护所。让人觉得讽刺的是,她正在演的戏里最精彩的那一场,也是让这部戏获得成功的那一场,正是两个情人的分手戏。他们出于责任感而分手;而朱莉娅,在剧中,为了正义而牺牲了她的爱,她获得幸福的希望以及她所热爱的一切。这是一场从一开始就非常吸引她的戏。她演得感人至深。她把她精神中所有的痛苦之情都置于这场戏的表演中;她所演的不再是一个伤心的角色,而是她自己的。在现实生活中,她竭力遏制这种非常可笑的激情,这爱情配不上她这样的女人,她强迫自己尽量不去想这个给她带来严重创伤的穷小子;但当她演这段戏的时候就放任自己。她丝毫没有控制自己的痛苦。她对自己失去的感到绝望,她对演她情人的男人所倾注的爱是她对汤姆仍旧怀有的狂热而炽烈的爱。剧中的女主角面临的空虚生活的前景正是她自己的空虚生活的前景。但至少让人安慰的是,她感到自己从未演得如此美妙动人。

“我的天,能展现这样的表演,所受的痛苦也值了。”

她从未这样多地将自我融入一个角色。

一两周后的一晚,她在演出结束后回到化妆间,因她刚刚所表达的情感而筋疲力尽,同时又因无数次的返场谢幕而感到扬扬得意,她发现迈克尔在那儿坐着。

“哈喽?你刚才不会也在观看吧?”

“是的。”

“但你两三天前刚看过。”

“是的,我已经连看了四个晚上了。”

她开始脱衣服。迈克尔从椅子上起身,在房间里来回走动。朱莉娅看了他一眼,发现他微微皱着眉头。

“怎么了?”

“那正是我想知道的。”

她心里一惊,脑子里闪过迈克尔可能听到了更多关于汤姆和她的流言的念头。

“伊维为什么不在这里?”她问道。

“我让她出去了。我有些事情要跟你说,朱莉娅。你大发脾气有什么用?你得听我说。”

一阵冷战刺痛她的脊梁。

“好吧,你想说什么?”

“我听到了一些事情,我想我最好自己来看看。起初我以为只是个意外。因此在我确定之前什么都没说。你怎么了,朱莉娅?”

“我怎么了?”

“是的。为什么你表演得这么糟糕?”

“我?”朱莉娅完全没有想到迈克尔会跟她说这个。她满眼怒火地看着迈克尔,“你可真笨,我从未演得像现在这样好过。”

“胡扯。你演得糟糕透了。”

当然,听到他说的是她的演技后,朱莉娅松了口气,但迈克尔所说的太可笑了,即使她感到非常愤怒,也不由得大笑。

“你这该死的白痴,你根本不知道你在说什么。哼,关于表演,我不知道的都是不值得我去知道的东西;你知道的都是拜我所赐。如果你还算个说得过去的演员的话,那也得归功于我。毕竟,‘布丁好不好,吃了才知道’。你晓得我今天谢幕多少次?这部戏演到现在,还从没这样精彩过。”

“这些我全知道。观众都是些蠢货。如果你大喊大叫,手舞足蹈,总会有一堆可恶的傻瓜朝你愚蠢地喊来喊去。过去四个晚上,你所进行的就是假模假式的游说表演。从头到尾都太假了。”

“太假了?但我对剧中的台词每个字都深有体会。”

“我不管你的感受是什么,你并没有在表现它们。你的表演一团乱。你在夸张;你演过了;你的表演一刻都不能让人信服。这简直是我一生中看到的最糟糕最过火的表演。”

“你太让人讨厌了,你怎么敢这么说我?你才是假模假式的演员。”

她张开手,重重地给了迈克尔一巴掌。他笑了。

“你可以打我,你可以骂我,你可以喊破喉咙,但事实是你的表演烂到地狱了。我不打算以你现在的表演开始彩排《当今时代》。”

“那你去找一个能演得比我更好的人来彩排吧。”

“别犯傻,朱莉娅。我自己可能不是个好演员,我也从来没有这么认为过,但我分得清好的表演和坏的表演。而且,我对你再了解不过了。我打算星期六张贴布告,然后我想让你出国。我们会在秋季的时候推出《当今时代》。”

迈克尔沉静坚定的语气让朱莉娅平静下来。确实,当说到演戏,迈克尔知道有关朱莉娅的一切。

“我演得真的那么糟吗?”

“非常糟。”

她思索了一下。她知道哪里出了问题。她让自己的感情随她一起放逐;她是在感受而不是在演戏。又是一阵寒战贯穿她的脊梁。这是个严重问题。心碎无所谓,但是不能让破碎的心来影响演戏……不,不,不。这是两码事。她的表演比世界上任何一桩恋爱都更重要。

“我会试着控制我自己。”

“强迫自己也没什么用。你太累了。是我的错,我早就应该带你去度假。你需要的就是好好休息。”

“剧院怎么办?”

“如果不能把它租出去,我会重新上演一部我能出演的剧,比如《红桃是王牌》。你总是讨厌那部剧里你的角色。”

“所有人都说这个演出季会非常棒。没有我的演员阵容,你休想一部旧剧能有多大成功;你一分钱都挣不到。”

“我一点都不在乎。唯一要紧的就是你的健康。”

“哦,上帝,请不要再这么宽容了,”她喊道,“我承受不起。”

突然间,朱莉娅哭了起来。

“亲爱的。”

迈克尔抱着朱莉娅,让她和自己并排坐在沙发上。她绝望地紧紧抱着迈克尔。

“你对我太好了,迈克尔,我恨自己。我太坏了,我是个荡妇,我是个可恶的婊子。我从里到外都糟糕透了。”

“就算你说的都是对的,”迈克尔微笑道,“但这掩盖不了你是个好演员的事实。”

“我不知道你是怎么做到对我如此耐心。我待你太卑鄙无耻了。你待我太好了,而我却无情地牺牲了你。”

“现在,宝贝,别再说你以后会后悔的话了。下次我就会提起它们与你作对。”

他的温柔融化了她,她为自己这么多年来觉得他无聊至极而狠狠责骂自己。

“感谢上帝,我拥有你。没了你我该怎么办?”

“你不会没有我的。”

他紧紧地抱着她,虽然她还在哭泣,但已开始感到慰藉。

“很抱歉刚才对你那么恶劣。”

“哦,亲爱的。”

“你真的觉得我是个假模假式的女演员?”

“哦,亲爱的,杜丝都没法跟你相提并论。”

“你真的那么认为?给我你的小手帕。你从来没见过萨拉·伯恩哈特的戏,是不是?”

“是的,没有。”

“她欢嚷吵闹得可厉害呢。”

他们默默地坐了一会儿,朱莉娅渐渐地平静下来。她的心里充满了对迈克尔深沉的爱。

“你依然是全英国最好看的男人,”最后她喃喃说道,“谁也不能让我改变这个想法。”

她感到迈克尔缩回了肚皮,挺起了他的下巴,这在她看来非常可爱、动人。

“你说得很对。我很累。我情绪不好,苦不堪言。我只觉得心里一片空虚。唯一的办法是走开一阵。”

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