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第92章

sk.everythingseventual-第92章

小说: sk.everythingseventual 字数: 每页4000字

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  That'll change after my book; Mike thought; sipping his drink。
  '…and there are no ghost…tours with stops at the Hotel Dolphin; although they do tour through the Sherry…Netherland; the Plaza; and the Park Lane。 We have kept 1408 as quiet as possible 。 。 。 although; of course; the history has always been there for a researcher who is both lucky and tenacious。'
  Mike allowed himself a small smile。
  'Veronique changed the sheets;' Olin said。 'I acpanied her。 You should feel flattered; Mr。 Enslin; it's almost like having your night's linen put on by royalty。 Veronique and her sister came to the Dolphin as chambermaids in 1971 or '72。 Vee; as we call her; is the Hotel Dolphin's longest…running employee; with at least six years' seniority over me。 She has since risen to head housekeeper。 I'd guess she hadn't changed a sheet in six years before today; but she used to do all the turns in 1408…she and her sister…until about 1992。 Veronique and Celeste were twins; and the bond between them seemed to make them 。 。 。 how shall I put it? Not immune to 1408; but its equal 。 。 。 at least for the short periods of time needed to give a room a light turn。'
  'You're not going to tell me this Veronique's sister died in the room; are you?'
  'No; not at all;' Olin said。 'She left service here around 1988; suffering from ill health。 But I don't rule out the idea that 1408 may have played a part in her worsening mental and physical condition。'
  'We seem to have built a rapport here; Mr。 Olin。 I hope I don't snap it by telling you I find that ridiculous。'
  Olin laughed。 'So hardheaded for a student of the airy world。'
  'I owe it to my readers;' Mike said blandly。
  'I suppose I simply could have left 1408 as it is anyway during most of its days and nights;' the hotel manager mused。 'Door locked; lights off; shades drawn to keep the sun from fading the carpet; coverlet pulled up; doorknob breakfast menu on the bed 。 。 。 but I can't bear to think of the air getting stuffy and old; like the air in an attic。 Can't bear to think of the dust piling up until it's thick and fluffy。 What does that make me; persnickety or downright obsessive?'
  'It makes you a hotel manager。'
  'I suppose。 In any case; Vee and Cee turned that room…very quick; just in and out…until Cee retired and Vee got her first big promotion。 After that; I got other maids to do it in pairs; always picking ones who got on well with each other…'
  'Hoping for that bond to withstand the bogies?'
  'Hoping for that bond; yes。 And you can make fun of the room 1408 bogies as much as you want; Mr。 Enslin; but you'll feel them almost at once; of that I'm confident。 Whatever there is in that room; it's not shy。
  'On many occasions…all that I could manage…I went with the maids; to supervise them。' He paused; then added; almost reluctantly; 'To pull them out; I suppose; if anything really awful started to happen。 Nothing ever did。 There were several who had weeping fits; one who had a laughing fit…I don't know why someone laughing out of control should be more frightening than someone sobbing; but it is…and a number who fainted。 Nothing too terrible; however。 I had time enough over the years to make a few primitive experiments…beepers and cell…phones and such…but nothing too terrible。 Thank God。' He paused again; then added in a queer; flat tone: 'One of them went blind。'
  'What?'
  'She went blind。 Rommie Van Gelder; that was。 She was dusting the top of the television; and all at once she began to scream。 I asked her what was wrong。 She dropped her dustrag and put her hands over her eyes and screamed that she was blind 。 。 。 but that she could see the most awful colors。 They went away almost as soon as I got her out through the door; and by the time I got her down the hallway to the elevator; her sight had begun to e back。'
  'You're telling me all this just to scare me; Mr。 Olin; aren't you? To scare me off。'
  'Indeed I am not。 You know the history of the room; beginning with the suicide of its first occupant。'
  Mike did。 Kevin O'Malley; a sewing machine salesman; had taken his life on October 13; 1910; a leaper who had left a wife and seven children behind。
  'Five men and one woman have jumped from that room's single window; Mr。 Enslin。 Three women and one man have overdosed with pills in that room; two found in bed; two found in the bathroom; one in the tub and one sitting slumped on the toilet。 A man hanged himself in the closet in 1970…'
  'Henry Storkin;' Mike said。 'That one was probably accidental 。 。 。 erotic asphyxia。'
  'Perhaps。 There was also Randolph Hyde; who slit his wrists; and then cut off his genitals for good measure while he was bleeding to death。 That one wasn't erotic asphyxiation。 The point is; Mr。 Enslin; that if you can't be swayed from your intention by a record of twelve suicides in sixty…eight years; I doubt if the gasps and fibrillations of a few chambermaids will stop you。'
  Gasps and fibrillations; that's nice; Mike thought; and wondered if he could steal it for the book。
  'Few of the pairs who have turned 1408 over the years care to go back more than a few times;' Olin said; and finished his drink in a tidy little gulp。
  'Except for the French twins。'
  'Vee and Cee; that's true。' Olin nodded。
  Mike didn't care much about the maids and their 。 。 。 what had Olin called them? Their gasps and fibrillations。 He did feel mildly rankled by Olin's enumeration of the suicides 。 。 。 as if Mike was so thick he had missed; not the fact of them; but their import。 Except; really; there was no import。 Both Abraham Lincoln and John Kennedy had vice presidents named Johnson; the names Lincoln and Kennedy had seven letters; both Lincoln and Kennedy had been elected in years ending in 60。 What did all of these coincidences prove? Not a damned thing。
  'The suicides will make a wonderful segment for my book;' Mike said; 'but since the tape recorder is off; I can tell you they amount to what a statistician resource of mine calls 'the cluster effect。''
  'Charles Dickens called it 'the potato effect;'' Olin said。
  'I beg your pardon?'
  'When Jacob Marley's ghost first speaks to Scrooge; Scrooge tells him he could be nothing but a blob of mustard or a bit of underdone potato。'
  'Is that supposed to be funny?' Mike asked; a trifle coldly。
  'Nothing about this strikes me as funny; Mr。 Enslin。 Nothing at all。 Listen very closely; please。 Vee's sister; Celeste; died of a heart attack。 At that point; she was suffering mid…stage Alzheimer's; a disease which struck her very early in life。'
  'Yet her sister is fine and well; according to what you said earlier。 An American success story; in fact。 As you are yourself; Mr。 Olin; from the look of you。 Yet you've been in and out of room 1408 how many times? A hundred? Two hundred?'
  'For very short periods of time;' Olin said。 'It's perhaps like entering a room filled with poison gas。 If one holds one's breath; one may be all right。 I see you don't like that parison。 You no doubt find it overwrought; perhaps ridiculous。 Yet I believe it's a good one。'
  He steepled his fingers beneath his chin。
  'It's also possible that some people react more quickly and more violently to whatever lives in that room; just as some people who go scuba…diving are more prone to the bends than others。 Over the Dolphin's near…century of operation; the hotel staff has grown ever more aware that 1408 is a poisoned room。 It has bee part of the house history; Mr。 Enslin。 No one talks about it; just as no one mentions the fact that here; as in most hotels; the fourteenth floor is actually the thirteenth 。 。 。 but they know it。 If all the facts and records pertaining to that room were available; they would tell an amazing story 。 。 。 one more unfortable than your readers might enjoy。
  'I should guess; for example; that every hotel in New York has had its suicides; but I would be willing to wager my life that only in the Dolphin have there been a dozen of them in a single room。 And leaving Celeste Romandeau aside; what about the natural deaths in 1408? The so…called natural deaths?'
  'How many have there been?' The idea of so…called natural deat

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