登陆注册
37884800000138

第138章 FIVE 1938-1953 FEE(1)

Not wanting anyone to know of her return, Meggie rode out to Drogheda on the mail truck with old Bluey Williams, Justine in a basket on the seat beside her. Bluey was delighted to see her and eager to know what she had been doing for the last four years, but as they neared the homestead he fell silent, divining her wish to come home in peace.

Back to brown and silver, back to dust, back to that wonderful purity and spareness North Queensland so lacked. No profligate growth here, no hastening of decay to make room for more; only a slow, wheeling inevitability like the constellations. Kangaroos, more than ever. Lovely little symmetrical wilgas, round and matronly, almost coy. Galahs, soaring in pink waves of undersides above the truck. Emus at full run. Rabbits, hopping out of the road with white powder puffs lashing cheekily. Bleached skeletons of dead trees in the grass. Mirages of timber stands on the far curving horizon as they came across the Dibban-Dibban plain, only the unsteady blue lines across their bases to indicate that the trees weren't real. The sound she had so missed but never thought to miss, crows carking desolately. Misty brown veils of dust whipped along by the dry autumn wind like dirty rain. And the grass, the silver- beige grass of the Great Northwest, stretching to the sky like a benediction.

Drogheda, Drogheda! Ghost gums and sleepy giant pepper trees a-hum with bees. Stockyards and buttery yellow sandstone buildings, alien green lawn around the big house, autumn flowers in the garden, wallflowers and zinnias, asters and dahlias, marigolds and calendulas, chrysanthemums, roses, roses. The gravel of the backyard, Mrs. Smith standing gaping, then laughing, crying, Minnie and Cat running, old stringy arms like chains around her heart. For Drogheda was home, and here was her heart, for always. Fee came out to see what all the fuss was about. "Hello, Mum. I've come home."

The grey eyes didn't change, but in the new growth of her soul Meggie understood. Mum was glad; she just didn't know how to show it. "Have you left Luke?" Fee asked, taking it for granted that Mrs. Smith and the maids were as entitled to know as she was herself. "Yes. I shall never go back to him. He didn't want a home, or his children, or me."

"Children?"

"Yes. I'm going to have another baby."

Oohs and aahs from the servants, and Fee speaking her judgment in that measured voice, gladness underneath.

"If he doesn't want you, then you were right to come home. We can look after you here."

Her old room, looking out across the Home Paddock, the gardens. And a room next door for Justine, the new baby when it came. Oh, it was so good to be home!

Bob was glad to see her, too. More and more like Paddy, he was becoming a little bent and sinewy as the sun baked his skin and his bones to dryness. He had the same gentle strength of character, but perhaps because he had never been the progenitor of a large family, he lacked Paddy's fatherly mien. And he was like Fee, also. Quiet, self-contained, not one to air his feelings or opinions. He had to be into his middle thirties, Meggie thought in sudden surprise, and still he wasn't married. Then Jack and Hughie came in, two duplicate Bobs without his authority, their shy smiles welcoming her home. That must be it, she reflected; they are so shy, it is the land, for the land doesn't need articulateness or social graces. It needs only what they bring to it, voice- less love and wholehearted fealty.

The Cleary men were all home that night, to unload a truck of corn Jims and Patsy had picked up from the AMLANDF in Gilly.

"I've never seen it so dry, Meggie," Bob said. "No rain in two years, not a drop. And the bunnies are a bigger curse than the kangas; they're eating more grass than sheep and kangas combined. We're going to try to hand-feed, but you know what sheep are."

Only too well did Meggie know what sheep were. Idiots, incapable of understanding even the rudiments of survival. What little brain the original animal had ever possessed was entirely bred out of these woolly aristocrats. Sheep wouldn't eat anything but grass, or scrub cut from their natural environment. But there just weren't enough hands to cut scrub to satisfy over a hundred thousand sheep.

"I take it you can use me?" she asked.

"Can we! You'll free up a man's hands for scrubcutting, Meggie, if you'll ride the inside paddocks the way you used to."

True as their word, the twins were home for good. At fourteen they quit Riverview forever, couldn't head back to the black-oil plains quickly enough. Already they looked like juvenile Bobs, Jacks and Hughies, in what was gradually replacing the old-fashioned grey twill and flannel as the uniform of the Great Northwest grazier: white moleskin breeches, white shirt, a flat-crowned grey felt hat with a broad brim, and ankle-high elastic-sided riding boots with flat heels. Only the handful of half-caste aborigines who lived in Gilly's shanty section aped the cowboys of the American West, in high-heeled fancy boots and ten-gallon Stetsons. To a black-soil plainsman such gear was a useless affectation, a part of a different culture. A man couldn't walk through the scrub in high-heeled boots, and a man often had to walk through the scrub. And a ten-gallon Stetson was far too hot and heavy. The chestnut mare and the black gelding were both dead; the stables were empty. Meggie insisted she was happy with a stock horse, but Bob went over to Martin King's to buy her two of his part-thoroughbred hacks coma creamy mare with a black mane and tail, and a leggy chestnut gelding. For some reason the loss of the old chestnut mare hit Meggie harder than her actual parting from Ralph, a delayed reaction; as if in this the fact of his going was more clearly stated. But it was so good to be out in the paddocks again, to ride with the dogs, eat the dust of a bleating mob of sheep, watch the birds, the sky, the land.

同类推荐
  • 禅林宝训顺朱

    禅林宝训顺朱

    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。
  • 百佛名经

    百佛名经

    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。
  • 佛说龙施菩萨本起经

    佛说龙施菩萨本起经

    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。
  • 如来独证自誓三昧经

    如来独证自誓三昧经

    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。
  • 聘礼

    聘礼

    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
  • 憨匪君莫笑

    憨匪君莫笑

    梁城小吃街卖油饼的小混混儿,怎么就这么好命的在村头拉屎的时候捡到了一个浑身是血的太子爷。你说啥?让小爷我帮你东山再起?可以,先拜我为师,然后做一千个葱油饼作为回报。啥?公主喜欢我?不不不,我一心向佛,准备出家归隐山林。太子殿下,您已君临天下,就放了我吧。
  • 天使乡

    天使乡

    数十年的梦魇,诡异的魔域,共生的灵魂,失落的神殿……从圣诞节的那天开始,从事婚介行业的青年柳言就踏上了一条奇幻之旅。天使的叛变,墓冢的传说,神殿的使者……这一切又孰真孰假?
  • 快穿之宿主浪翻天

    快穿之宿主浪翻天

    大魔头顾筱晓终于离开了,没人知道她去了哪里…在所有人欢庆的时候,大魔头回来了…身边还跟着个大大BOSS
  • 神奇宝贝悠然人生

    神奇宝贝悠然人生

    少年被钉子刺到脚到异世界带着以前金手指改过的精灵和一个系统开始当咸鱼了
  • 封魂之师

    封魂之师

    她是隐秘世家钟家的后人钟黎,怀揣寻回哥哥的梦想孤独前行,一段不明不白的文字,让她身不由己陷入历史的漩涡,当年是谁逼宫篡位夺了谁家天下,当年又是谁宠信优伶灭了国,又是谁昏庸残暴只为等谁…………现代科幻的光芒一齐交织,上古者,谁的天下,会为谁丧其至宝,不负荣华?
  • 都市至尊龙神

    都市至尊龙神

    一个不幸少年,受宿命感召。一场护花的拼死恶斗,将他引入了古老家族的斗争,身边出现的种种怪象,将他推向了早已注定的宿命,上古的劫数降临,他以无畏之心披荆斩棘、力挽乾坤!
  • 墨尔本,幸福未眠

    墨尔本,幸福未眠

    初识时,她赤足狂奔于街头,身上的米色斜肩小礼服耀花了路人的眼,却换不来他的退让同情~再见时,他是受伤被劫的落魄款爷,她声带受损却助人为乐~世界上从来不曾存在过什么巧合,若真的发生了,那么我们愿意相信那是缘份~
  • 狼极

    狼极

    一介狼妖方卫,自青狼谷中横空出世,崛起于江湖,称雄于大荒。踏遍山河,俯临天下,以狼之意志,傲视乾坤!敌妖斗魔,战王杀皇,我以我血弑天下,睥睨于四方!饮仇敌之血,屠尽域中魑魅魍魉!狼神令一出,天下谁敢不服?…………新书《狼极》求收藏,求推荐!求点击,求书评!求一切!Iamsohappy……
  • 云阙

    云阙

    乱世民国中的爱情,相遇中,离别时,是缘还是劫,如何分的清楚!本文分为上卷云之霖下卷朝之翎剧情慢热,整体偏虐,但保证圆满!
  • 永别了,武器

    永别了,武器

    一战期间,美国青年弗雷德里克·亨利作为一名志愿人员来到意大利前线,担任一个战地救护队的中尉,与英国护士凯瑟琳相识。在一次执行任务的过程中,亨利负了伤,被送往米兰医院疗养,而凯瑟琳也恰巧被调到这里工作。意外重逢加上凯瑟琳对亨利的悉心照料,两人陷入热恋。伤愈之后,重返前线的亨利对战争的残酷认识得愈发深刻,为了逃脱对所谓“擅离职守”军官的处置,他毅然脱离了部队,与凯瑟琳会合,两人一起逃往瑞士。不幸的是,短暂的幸福时光后,凯瑟琳在难产中去世,婴儿也窒息而亡,将亨利孤独地留在世上。