登陆注册
26281500000187

第187章 six 1954-1965 Dane(19)

What had happened to the boy in the frozen terror of Russia did not produce a soulless caricature of a man; rather it arrested the growth of softness and sweetness in him, and threw into high relief other qualities he possessed-intelligence, ruthlessness, determination. A man who has nothing to lose has everything to gain, and a man without feelings cannot be hurt. Or so he told himself. In actual fact, he was curiously similar to the man he had met in Rome in 1943; like Ralph de Bricassart he understood he did wrong even as he did it. Not that his awareness of the evil in him stopped him for a second; only that he paid for his material advancement in pain and self-torment. To many people it might not have seemed worth the price he paid, but to him it was worth twice the suffering. One day he was going to run Germany and make it what he had dreamed, he was going to scotch the

Aryan Lutheran ethic, shape a broader one. Because he couldn't promise to cease sinning he had been refused absolution in the confessional several times, but somehow he and his religion muddled through in one piece, until accumulated money and power removed him so many layers beyond guilt he could present himself repentant, and be shriven.

In 1955, one of the richest and most powerful men in the new West Germany and a fresh face in its Bonn parliament, he went back to Rome. To seek out Cardinal de Bricassart, and show him the end result of his prayers. What he had imagined that meeting might be he could not afterward remember, for from beginning to end of it he was conscious of only one thing: that Ralph de Bricassart was disappointed in him. He had known why, he hadn't needed to ask. But he hadn't expected the Cardinal's parting remark: "I had prayed you would do better than I, for you were so young. No end is worth any means. But I suppose the seeds of our ruin are sown before our births."

Back in his hotel room he had wept, but calmed after a while and thought: What's past is done with; for the future I will be as he hoped. And sometimes he succeeded, sometimes he failed. But he tried. His friendship with the men in the Vatican became the most precious earthly thing in his life, and Rome became the place to which he fled when only their comfort seemed to stand between himself and despair. Comfort. Theirs was a strange kind. Not the laying on of hands, or soft words. Rather a balm from the soul, as if they understood his pain.

And he thought, as he walked the warm Roman night after depositing Justine in her pension, that he would never cease to be grateful to her. For as he had watched her cope with the ordeal of that afternoon interview, he had felt a stirring of tenderness. Bloody but unbowed, the little monster. She could match them every inch of the way; did they realize it? He felt, he decided, what he might have felt on behalf of a daughter he was proud of, only he had no daughter. So he had stolen her from Dane, carried her off to watch her aftermath reaction to that overpowering ecclesiasticism, and to the Dane she had never seen before; the Dane who was not and could not ever be a full-hearted part of her life.

The nicest thing about his personal God, he went on, was that He could forgive anything; He could forgive Justine her innate godlessness and himself the shutting down of his emotional powerhouse until such time as it was convenient to reopen it. Only for a while he had panicked, thinking he had lost the key forever. He smiled, threw away her cigarette. The key. . . . Well, sometimes keys had strange shapes. Perhaps it needed every kink in every curl of that red head to trip the tumblers; perhaps in a room of scarlet his God had handed him a scarlet key.

A fleeting day, over in a second. But on looking at his watch he saw it was still early, and knew the man who had so much power now that His Holiness lay near death would still be wakeful, sharing the nocturnal habits of his cat. Those dreadful hiccups filling the small room at Castel Gandolfo, twisting the thin, pale, ascetic face which had watched beneath the white crown for so many years; he was dying, and he was a great Pope. No matter what they said, he was a great Pope. If he had loved his Germans, if he still liked to hear German spoken around him, did it alter anything? Not for Rainer to judge that.

But for what Rainer needed to know at the moment, Castel Gandolfo was not the source. Up the marble stairs to the scarlet-and-crimson room, to talk to Vittorio Scarbanza, Cardinal di Contini-Verchese. Who might be the next Pope, or might not. For almost three years now he had watched those wise, loving dark eyes rest where they most liked to rest; yes, better to seek the answers from him than from Cardinal de Bricassart.

"I never thought I'd hear myself say it, but thank God we're leaving for Drogheda," said Justine, refusing to throw a coin in the Trevi Fountain. "We were supposed to take a look at France and Spain; instead we're still in Rome and I'm as unnecessary as a navel. Brothers!"

"Hmmm, so you deem navels unnecessary? Socrates was of the same opinion, I remember," said Rainer.

"Socrates was? I don't recollect that! Funny, I thought I'd read most of Plato, too." She twisted to stare at him, thinking the casual clothes of a holidaymaker in Rome suited him far better than the sober attire he wore for Vatican audiences.

"He was absolutely convinced navels were unnecessary, as a matter of fact. So much so that to prove his point he unscrewed his own navel and threw it away."

Her lips twitched. "And what happened?"

"His toga fell off."

"Hook! Hook!" She giggled. "Anyway, they didn't wear togas in Athens then. But I have a horrible feeling there's a moral in your story." Her face sobered. "Why do you bother with me, Rain?"

"Stubborn! I've told you before, my name is pronounced Ryner, not Rayner." "Ah, but you don't understand," she said, looking thoughtfully at the twinkling streams of water, the dirty pool loaded with dirty coins. "Have you ever been to Australia?"

同类推荐
  • 经咫

    经咫

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 明宪宗宝训

    明宪宗宝训

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Amateur

    The Amateur

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 辽海丹忠录

    辽海丹忠录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 元诗纪事

    元诗纪事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 花千骨之花月洞天

    花千骨之花月洞天

    花千骨偷盗神器,私放妖神和南无月待在花月洞天,此后又逃出洞天,白子画又是怎么想的?花千骨又将怎么样?
  • 超能少年丫头,我爱你

    超能少年丫头,我爱你

    “诺翊枭!”一个企业遍布全球的17岁天才少年怎么到她面前就是一个“诺三岁”了?“怎么?灵璐儿?”少年魅惑的紫眸盯着她。这还不是因为那个祖辈上留下来的婚约,让这对本来是青梅竹马的少男少女成了未婚的“夫妻”。灵璐儿表示非常无语。在这个勾心斗角的豪门圈子,他们由青梅竹马渐渐成长为一对在众人面前随时随地撒狗粮的“模范夫妻”……
  • 单机版瓦洛兰

    单机版瓦洛兰

    因为一场异类凶杀案,方白穿越到单机版的瓦罗兰大陆,这是一个只有他是玩家,剩下的全是NPC的世界,在与英雄们的互动交锋中,他渐渐成长。拜亚索为师,习御风剑术;与劫交锋,获暗影传承;取百家精粹,成一己高峰。更关键的是,当他梦醒时,发现自己居然把单机版瓦罗兰大陆的技能和物品带到了现实中。
  • 魔幻异界大陆

    魔幻异界大陆

    …宇宙另一端,神秘魔幻异大陆。闷油瓶男主祈枫异世穿越,获得异界大陆金手指“绝世白魔法”看闷油瓶男主,如何开挂保护基友和异界妹纸,寻找前世记忆。
  • 刀震寰宇

    刀震寰宇

    用剑的不一定是主角,成仙的也不一定是赢家。在天算与人算交错的纷扰世界,走上巅峰往往也是坠落深谷,能脚踏一条平路,已是修行者们不敢奢望的梦想。姜楚本来是在走一条平路,但前面突然拐了个弯,他走过去后发现,那是一条看似宽阔堂皇却隐伏着荆棘陷阱的阴沟险道。他不在乎地走了过去,更不在乎会走到哪里。所谓空寂者,涅槃乘己;清静者,羽化登仙;真我者,心魔不朽。这些大境界都太遥远了,自己只是一个人,无论走到哪里,都是一个人。那就像个人一样,一直,一直走下去吧。
  • 傲世邪皇

    傲世邪皇

    穿越到崇尚斗技的异世大陆,却没有修炼斗技的能力,一次偶然的奇遇,竟让他的斗技范围进阶速度超越天才级的存在!飞速的进步,惊险的奇遇,非凡的能力,恐怖的斗技,赋予他万年的使命。从血泊中走来的英雄,注定要傲视九重天!
  • CEO老婆不易做

    CEO老婆不易做

    修真界天才楼小妖因缘际会到了现代,不仅没有被穿越的“后遗症”击倒,而且还得遇“良人”。难道现在流行救人一命就要以身相许吗?拜托他是男的好不好?“老婆,这是我们全部家当,你收好。”魏延一脸宠溺的看着楼小妖。后者,难道他又想双修吗?魏延:“老婆,我真的很爱你,你知不知道我在说什么?”楼小妖:“知道,我也喜欢你”送来的玉石!
  • 我和她们与十二重世界

    我和她们与十二重世界

    [轻喜剧、恋爱、后宫、网游、战斗、剧情]这是一场可怕阴谋,所有的玩家都被困在游戏“十二重世界”中,只有打败十二个使徒才能回到现实世界中……在十二重世界冒险的我,与她们相遇、并肩战斗,上演一场场青春轻喜剧,踏上返回现实世界的征程。官群:512796156
  • 再世:月染钟璃

    再世:月染钟璃

    前世,嫁入夫家四年,她为讨好夫婿,尽百般所能。却又不知,丈夫与妹妹狼狈为奸。阎王殿,阎王不肯收她。再世,她发现,自己并不是常人,她拥有着神之能力。再世,她巅峰回归。上辈子的仇,我会一样样的讨回来。你们等着吧。怎奈势单力薄,却不料,高傲世子竟肯出手相帮。原因无他。。。。。
  • 玄天剑魂

    玄天剑魂

    九霄大陆上古时代,魔族崛起,与人界的大战一触即发,人族不敌死伤无数,青龙、白虎、朱雀、玄武神兽一族纷纷出世却深受魔族重创。就在人族绝望之时,凭空出现一名强大的神秘男子引用禁忌魂技封印魔主万载使其轮回,神秘男子自此消失,没有人知道他来自何处,去往何处!人族修炼需要自身觉醒的兵魂,兵魂又分为天,地,人三级,废柴余歌却是无品级兵魂,被世人耻笑,但在他十五岁那年,身体突然住进一个神秘男子。自此余歌身怀绝世魂技,踏破九霄!