登陆注册
37884800000002

第2章 ONE 1915-1917 MEGGIE 1(2)

Frank threw the shoe hissing into cold water and straightened his back; it didn't ache these days, so perhaps he was used to smithying. Not before time, his father would have said, after six months at it. But Frank knew very well how long it was since his introduction to the forge and anvil; he had measured the time in hatred and resentment. Throwing the hammer into its box, he pushed the lank black hair off his brow with a trembling hand and dragged the old leather apron from around his neck. His shirt lay on a heap of straw in the corner; he plodded across to it and stood for a moment staring at the splintering barn wall as if it did not exist, his black eyes wide and fixed. He was very small, not above five feet three inches, and thin still as striplings are, but the bare shoulders and arms had muscles already knotted from working with the hammer, and the pale, flawless skin gleamed with sweat. The darkness of his hair and eyes had a foreign tang, his full-lipped mouth and wide-bridged nose not the usual family shape, but there was Maori blood on his mother's side and in him it showed. He was nearly sixteen years old, where Bob was barely eleven, Jack ten, Hughie nine, Stuart five and little Meggie three. Then he remembered that today Meggie was four; it was December 8th. He put on his shirt and left the barn.

The house lay on top of a small hill about one hundred feet higher than the barn and stables. Like all New Zealand houses, it was wooden, rambling over many squares and of one story only, on the theory that if an earthquake struck, some of it might be left standing. Around it gorse grew everywhere, at the moment smothered in rich yellow flowers; the grass was green and luxuriant, like all New Zealand grass. Not even in the middle of winter, when the frost sometimes lay unmelted all day in the shade, did the grass turn brown, and the long, mild summer only tinted it an even richer green. The rains fell gently without bruising the tender sweetness of all growing things, there was no snow, and the sun had just enough strength to cherish, never enough to sap. New Zealand's scourges thundered up out of the bowels of the earth rather than descended from the skies. There was always a suffocated sense of waiting, an intangible shuddering and thumping that actually transmitted itself through the feet. For beneath the ground lay awesome power, power of such magnitude that thirty years before a whole towering mountain had disappeared; steam gushed howling out of cracks in the sides of innocent hills, volcanoes spurned smoke into the sky and the alpine streams ran warm. Huge lakes of mud boiled oilily, the seas lapped uncertainly at cliffs which might not be there to greet the next incoming tide, and in places the earth's crust was only nine hundred feet thick. Yet it was a gentle, gracious land. Beyond the house stretched an undulating plain as green as the emerald in Fiona Cleary's engagement ring, dotted with thousands of creamy bundles close proximity revealed as sheep. Where the curving hills scalloped the edge of the lightblue sky Mount Egmont soared ten thousand feet, sloping into the clouds, its sides still white with snow, its symmetry so perfect that even those like Frank who saw it every day of their lives never ceased to marvel.

It was quite a pull from the barn to the house, butFrank hurried because he knew he ought not to be going; his father's orders were explicit. Then as he rounded the corner of the house he saw the little group by the gorse bush.

Frank had driven his mother into Wahine to buy Meggie's doll, and he was still wondering what had prompted her to do it. She wasn't given to impractical birthday presents, there wasn't the money for them, and she had never given a toy to anyone before. They all got clothes; birthdays and Christmases replenished sparse wardrobes. But apparently Meggie had seen the doll on her one and only trip into town, and Fiona had not forgotten. When Frank questioned her, she muttered something about a girl needing a doll, and quickly changed the subject.

Jack and Hughie had the doll between them on the front path, manipulating its joints callously. All Frank could see of Meggie was her back, as she stood watching her brothers desecrate Agnes. Her neat white socks had slipped in crinkled folds around her little black boots, and the pink of her legs was visible for three or four inches below the hem of her brown velvet Sunday dress. Down her back cascaded a mane of carefully curled hair, sparkling in the sun; not red and not gold, but somewhere in between. The white taffeta bow which held the front curls back from her face hung draggled and limp; dust smeared her dress. She held the doll's clothes tightly in one hand, the other pushing vainly at Hughie.

"You bloody little bastards!"

Jack and Hughie scrambled to their feet and ran, the doll forgotten; when Frank swore it was politic to run.

"If I catch you flaming little twerps touching that doll again I'll brand your ****ty little arses!" Frank yelled after them. He bent down and took Meggie's shoulders between his hands, shaking her gently.

"Here, here there's no need to cry! Come on now, they've gone and they'll never touch your dolly again, I promise. Give me a smile for your birthday, eh?"

Her face was swollen, her eyes running; she stared at Frank out of grey eyes so large and full of tragedy that he felt his throat tighten. Pulling a dirty rag from his breeches pocket, he rubbed it clumsily over her face, then pinched her nose between its folds.

"Blow!"

She did as she was told, hiccuping noisily as her tears dried. "Oh, Fruh-Fruh-Frank, they too-too-took Agnes away from me!" She sniffled. "Her huh-huh-hair all failed down and she loh-loh-lost all the pretty widdle puh-puh-pearls in it! They all failed in the gruh-gruhgrass and I can't end them!"

The tears welled up again, splashing on Frank's hand; he stared at his wet skin for a moment, then licked the drops off.

同类推荐
  • History of the Peloponnesian War

    History of the Peloponnesian War

    The State of Greece from the earliest Times to the Commencement of the Peloponnesian War THUCYDIDES, an Athenian, wrote the history of the war between the Peloponnesians and the Athenians, beginning at the moment that it broke out
  • 殊师利所说般若波罗蜜经

    殊师利所说般若波罗蜜经

    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。
  • 大观茶论

    大观茶论

    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。
  • 瑜伽师地论释

    瑜伽师地论释

    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。
  • 说剑吟

    说剑吟

    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
  • 网游之一生江湖

    网游之一生江湖

    一个顶级杀手,在一次行动中身死却意外的发现自己的灵魂穿越到不知道多少年以后的世界,并附身到一个丑陋的青年身上。由于大势所趋不得不进入到一个以武侠为背景的游戏之中,在这里他找到了自己的真爱,为此不惜血战江湖....
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 同学请慢点走

    同学请慢点走

    讲述一段男主女主漫长的岁月,和最后在一起的故事!
  • 极品虐鬼系统

    极品虐鬼系统

    小农民得奇遇,热血嚣张泣鬼神,佳人相伴斩妖魔。新书(超神小村医)已发布,欢迎大家品读!
  • 解构时间

    解构时间

    如果全世界每周都会莫名消失5分钟,且人类不会留下任何记忆,这样会产生什么样的蝴蝶效应?人类想要跨越星际,目前的通讯技术可无法帮我们即时通讯。如果我们要面临毁灭,每个人每个组织每个国家会做怎样的选择?5分钟,星际即时通讯技术,人类的危机,它们都有什么关联?不定期更新。非网络口水文,所以别催我,每字每句我都要反复推敲,小说里人物关系千丝万缕,事件交错穿插,逻辑错综复杂,人性善恶难辨,而手仅一双,脑仅一个,且主业非写作。
  • 神界遗纪

    神界遗纪

    一段尘封的惊天往事,一段曲折的归故征程,世界的终极真相。
  • 宛湄传

    宛湄传

    昨日种种,皆成今我。她望向晋王世子景佑,笑道:“复仇,不过是走进一片森林,林深时见鹿罢了。”景佑回道:“深林雾浓。”庆熙三十二年,左都御史独女宛湄,一夜之间,遭受家族蒙冤,父兄贬谪。春夜梨花雨,被仇家之子云谓放走的她,活着成为了奸臣之女,佞臣之妹。三年后,晋王府中,王妃淑慎郡主新养的门客江浸月,衣褐素妆,束扇腰间,步步为营,带着那一夜雨打梨花的记忆,义无反顾地,走进了复仇的深林。已有事,后必有。日光下,无新事。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 重生:夫人至尊

    重生:夫人至尊

    上一世,她是尚书千金,才倾天下。父亲骄纵,庶母温厚,长姐婉约,长兄呵护。她以为自己就是那天上月,人中凤。一场论辩,她选中了他做夫君。从此吟诗作对,如胶似漆。直到她临产,最爱的他八抬大轿娶妻,眼睁睁看着她被灌堕胎药。产下足月死婴,浑身是血的她被庶母拒之门外,长兄为她请了大夫,哄她喝下毒药。临死前,长姐狞笑着踩着她残破的身体。她才明白恩爱无双不过是彻头彻尾的一场笑话,家人的宠爱不过是逢场作戏。她的死,完全是蓄谋已久的一场阴谋。一朝重生,重回十岁。小小年纪,心怀诡谲,步步为营。她发誓要那些利用她欺骗她的人,挫骨扬灰。仇恨的火焰吞噬下,一切成为焦土……
  • 最受读者喜爱的美文(3册)(选题报告1)

    最受读者喜爱的美文(3册)(选题报告1)

    美文是文学中的一枝奇葩,是在纸上跳跃的心灵文字。阅读古今中外的经典美文,不仅能够开阔眼界,增长知识,更能够在精神上获得启迪和昭示。作家以自身的生活经历和对人生的感悟创作了无数优秀的美文经典,在人类灿烂的文明史上描绘了一幅幅耀眼夺目的篇章,是人类永恒的印迹。