登陆注册
26281500000037

第37章 TWO 1921-1928 Ralph(17)

He looked up, his black eyes glittering and wet like rained-upon coal. "I'll end up killing him," he said.

"If you do that, you'll kill me," said Fee, coming to sit upon the bed. "No, I'd free you!" he countered wildly, hopefully. "Frank, I can never be free, and I don't want to be free. I wish I knew where your blindness comes from, but I don't. It isn't mine, nor is it your father's. I know you're not happy, but must you take it out on me, and on Daddy? Why do you insist upon ****** everything so hard? Why?" She looked down at her hands, looked up at him. "I don't want to say this, but I think I have to. It's time you found yourself a girl, Frank, got married and had a family of your own. There's room on Drogheda. I've never been worried about the other boys in that respect; they don't seem to have your nature at all. But you need a wife, Frank. If you had one, you wouldn't have time to think about me."

He had turned his back upon her, and wouldn't turn around. For perhaps five minutes she sat on the bed hoping he would say something, then she sighed, got up and left.

After the shearers had gone and the district had settled into the semi-inertia of winter came the annual Gillanbone Show and Picnic Races. It was the most important event in the social calendar, and went on for two days. Fee didn't feel well enough to go, so Paddy drove Mary Carson into town in her Rolls-Royce without his wife to support him or keep Mary's tongue in its silent position. He had noticed that for some mysterious reason Fee's very presence quelled his sister, put her at a disadvantage. Everyone else was going. Under threat of death to behave themselves, the boys rode in with Beerbarrel Pete, Jim, Tom, Mrs. Smith and the maids in the truck, but Frank left early on his own in the model-T Ford. The adults of the party were all staying over for the second day's race meeting; for reasons known best to herself, Mary Carson declined Father Ralph's offer of accommodation at the presbytery, but urged Paddy to accept it for himself and Frank. Where the two stockmen and Tom, the garden roustabout, stayed no one knew, but Mrs. Smith, Minnie and Cat had friends in Gilly who put them up. It was ten in the morning when Paddy deposited his sister in the best room the Hotel Imperial had to offer; he made his way down to the bar and found Frank standing at it, a schooner of beer in his hand.

"Let me buy the next one, old man," Paddy said genially to his son. "I've got to take Auntie Mary to the Picnic Races luncheon, and I need moral sustenance if I'm going to get through the ordeal without Mum." Habit and awe are harder to overcome than people realize until they actually try to circumvent the conduct of years; Frank found he could not do what he longed to do, he could not throw the contents of his glass in his father's face, not in front of a bar crowd. So he downed what was left of his beer at a gulp, smiled a little sickly and said, "Sorry, Daddy, I've promised to meet some blokes down at the showground."

"Well, off you go, then. But here, take this and spend it on yourself. Have a good time, and if you get drunk don't let your mother find out." Frank stared at the crisp blue five-pound note in his hand, longing to tear it into shreds and fling them in Paddy's face, but custom won again; he folded it, put it in his fob pocket and thanked his father. He couldn't get out of the bar quickly enough.

In his best blue suit, waistcoat buttoned, gold watch secured by a gold chain and a weight made from a nugget off the Lawrence goldfields, Paddy tugged at his celluloid collar and looked down the bar for a face he might recognize. He had not been into Gilly very often during the nine months since he arrived on Drogheda, but his position as Mary Carson's brother and heir apparent meant that he had been treated very hospitably whenever he had been in town, and that his face was well remembered. Several men beamed at him, voices offered to shout him a beer, and he was soon in the middle of a comfortable little crowd; Frank was forgotten.

Meggie's hair was braided these days, no nun being willing (in spite of Mary Carson's money) to attend to its curling, and it lay in two thick cables over her shoulders, tied with navy-blue ribbons. Clad in the sober navy-blue uniform of a Holy Cross student, she was escorted across the lawn from the convent to the presbytery by a nun and handed over to Father Ralph's housekeeper, who adored her.

"Och, it's the wee bairn's bonnie Hielan' hair," she explained to the priest once when he questioned her, amused; Annie wasn't given to liking little girls, and had deplored the presbytery's proximity to the school. "Come now, Annie! Hair's inanimate; you can't like someone just because of the color of her hair," he said, to tease her.

"Ah, week she's a puir wee lassie-skeggy, ye ken."

He didn't ken at all, but he didn't ask her what "skeggy" meant, either, or pass any remarks about the fact that it rhymed with Meggie. Sometimes it was better not to know what Annie meant, or encourage her by paying much attention to what she said; she was, in her own parlance, fey, and if she pitied the child he didn't want to be told it was because of her future rather than her past.

Frank arrived, still trembling from his encounter with his father in the bar, and at a loose end.

"Come on, Meggie, I'll take you to the fair," he said, holding out his hand.

"Why don't I take you both?" Father Ralph asked, holding out his. Sandwiched between the two men she worshipped, and hanging on to their hands for dear life, Meggie was in seventh heaven. The Gillanbone showground lay on the banks of the Barwon River, next door to the racecourse. Though the floods were six months gone, the mud had not completely dried, and the eager feet of early comers had already pulped it to a mire. Beyond the stalls of sheep and cattle, pigs and goats, the prime and perfect livestock competing for prizes, lay tents full of handicrafts and cooking. They gazed at stock, cakes, crochetedshawls, knitted baby clothes, embroidered tablecloths, cats and dogs and canaries.

同类推荐
  • 元始天尊说得道了身经

    元始天尊说得道了身经

    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。
  • 旧唐书

    旧唐书

    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。
  • 玉箓资度午朝仪

    玉箓资度午朝仪

    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。
  • 新菩萨经

    新菩萨经

    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。
  • 凤城琐录

    凤城琐录

    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。
热门推荐
  • TF之我们的十年

    TF之我们的十年

    他们,在机场相遇,擦出了火花。。。。。。后面的故事请在小说中阅读。。。。。。
  • 超脱大道

    超脱大道

    碎裂的大道。一群挣扎的人。为争夺一线生机。苟延在残破的大道下。超脱!超脱!超脱!!!只有超脱才能结束这个宿命!只有超脱才能执掌这个轮回!只有超脱才能重开这个大道!
  • 暖心校草是我哥

    暖心校草是我哥

    我叫叶沫依,我有一个暖心校草哥哥,还有一个死对头是另一个校草~
  • 秋树叶

    秋树叶

    很久以前就见过春天落下的枯树叶,它在繁花似绵的春天枯萎;它在生机昂然的时节飘落。不是萧索的秋风吹落了它,不是初冬的寒气冷冻了它。它的枯落正是新生命的开始,是命运的转折。夏启欣的命运正如那些春天的秋树叶,他在朝气蓬勃的年龄经厉了一次生命的枯萎他被迫做了变性手术后,曾经绝望过,甚至自杀过。但少数的枯叶并不损于生命之树的旺盛。他经历了人生的低谷不仅没有枯萎,反而找到了他一生的真爱。人说:“有失必有得。”
  • 无欲狂魔

    无欲狂魔

    无欲狂魔,一怒惊天地,一哭泣鬼神,却无欲无求,喜平淡生活。天地轮转,斗转星移,非长生者,终将逝去。苍茫大地,大国雄起,教派林立,怪才尽出,纷争不断,谁将称雄?大劫将至,无欲狂魔,坠落世间,故事就从这里开始……
  • 造化文学

    造化文学

    吞噬了100多为华夏先贤的精神力和大量的知识,董亮一觉醒来发现自己处在空间夹缝,来到了一个秦云大陆的地方,这个世界一切由天网管理,人们对天网的依赖达到百分之九十以上,来自地球的董亮利用自己的知识如何一步步提升自己的精神力,如何学到梦寐以求的五星功法,传播地球华夏文化?一切都在《造化文学》
  • 我的妖孽女总监

    我的妖孽女总监

    叶麒,外人都称呼他为魔王,高高在上的他却被迫接受了契约婚礼。面对千金大小姐的倒贴,女总裁的倾心不值一顾,奈何老婆却冷若冰霜。看一个佣兵之王,如何在不和谐的家庭里面左右逢源,做好妻管严……
  • 星际之辉煌

    星际之辉煌

    在星际2即将出现的今天,我谨以此书献给那些曾经为星际1而放弃了许多的朋友们!这是一群关于星际的人,这是一个关于星际梦想的故事。
  • 堂东老劝破家子弟

    堂东老劝破家子弟

    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。
  • 左手婚姻,右手爱情

    左手婚姻,右手爱情

    虽然她心中难忘Michael,还是嫁给了一穷二白的蒋杰。此时她才知道Michael深爱她,为她放弃了回国的机会,但为时已晚。婚后,楚颜慢慢的真心依恋上蒋杰。蒋杰事业有起色,两人生活很和睦,但蒋杰母亲——一个东北农村老太太却十分难缠。蒋母要求楚颜辞职在家生孩子,楚颜坚决不愿意。在婆媳不停爆发的争端中,楚颜总是被蒋杰呵斥,心生不满。偶然的机会她又遇见了Michael,她的感情将如何抉择……