登陆注册
20052400000002

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 shitty 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
  • 偶谭

    偶谭

    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。
  • 明伦汇编官常典河使部

    明伦汇编官常典河使部

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 摩利支菩萨略念诵法

    摩利支菩萨略念诵法

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 邓析子

    邓析子

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说息诤因缘经

    佛说息诤因缘经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 一个啤酒主义者的独白

    一个啤酒主义者的独白

    一个爱喝酒的男人在北京、深圳等地漫游,在两个女人之间纠缠,在一个又一个酒桌上感悟人生。主人公“不合规矩”地生活着,并用酣畅的语言表露“不合规矩”的内心。我们见面而很少说话,因为我们足在摇滚乐中见;我们见面可以说很多话但却什么都记不住,因为我们是在酒后地。但我们必须要相见,因为我们已小会独处,我们已不会安静。爱情只是啤酒产生的泡沫,生活如此强大,青春如此深刻!
  • 异兽

    异兽

    本就是一个好吃懒做的性子,各种麻烦却接踵而至。肩负着不同寻常的使命,到最后却要与自己的使命背道而驰。造化弄人,命运多舛。
  • 虚洲记

    虚洲记

    平静的虚洲大陆因为暴君噬渊的横空出世而燃起连绵的烽火,野心勃勃的五大势力摩拳擦掌准备最后一搏。寒冰之力,炎火之力,雷霆之力,飓风之力,巫蛊之力,究竟哪一派能最终一统天下?毁天灭世的权杖之石,形形色色的边缘部族,神失其鹿,天下共逐之!一个襁褓之中背负家仇国恨的婴儿,在一支神秘大军的护卫下,开始走向大争之世的舞台中央......
  • EXO狼族美少年

    EXO狼族美少年

    阴差阳错下,本来的女猪脚被五哒一气之下到了sm公司,并混在十二只狼族美少年之间,于是乎,就开始了一段搞笑的爱情故事。宠宠宠!除了宠,还是宠!!!
  • 一个精神病儿的精彩人生

    一个精神病儿的精彩人生

    内容简介他心中有个鬼,一个信仰杀戮的鬼。他有四个好朋友,四个见过人间百态,经过生死离别的好朋友。所以他来了,带着一颗充满杀戮的心,带着朋友们的心愿来到了繁华都市。一个精神病儿的传奇一生让人嫉妒的一生让人热血沸腾的一生
  • 随缘小店

    随缘小店

    灵台本无物,何处惹尘埃、一梦一天境,缘来浑然成。浊浪红尘笑,随来烟茫茫。本是同心来,但求顺路去。
  • 首席推理师

    首席推理师

    萧耐为了徐娅而浪费了自己四年的青春去拼命打工供她上大学,最后得到的却只是分手二字。他土?他穷?他没有前途?饱受打击的他决定绝地反击,却苦于找不到开始反击的出路。这时,一个一身黑衣,还戴了顶黑色礼帽的神秘男子出现在了他的面前。他说,“如果想证明你自己的话,就来我们推理界吧。”从此,走失案,抢劫案,杀人案……各种大小案件不停出现在他的身边。他发誓,他会用实力告诉全世界所有曾经瞧不起他的人。他萧耐,绝对不是可以小看的!“你好,我是推理界的首席推理师——萧耐。”
  • 蓝波湾

    蓝波湾

    谁发明了青春只有感伤?谁发明了少年就该忧郁?在一个偌大城市最偏远的地方,有一群人,用他们自己存在的方式抒写着真正的年少轻狂他们没有征服当今社会的高学历,甚至没有吸引更多人眼球的闪光点,他们唯一拥有的,只有被这个时代嘲笑的理想与信仰那片土地上,嬉笑怒骂下有着的,是我们日渐成熟的青春岁月一个人,与一个湾的故事,这个人也是你
  • 自创时代

    自创时代

    这是一个创造新时代的史诗级计划,参与计划的人数达上百万,那么究竟会如何呢?ps:本书虽然写法有些另类,但点进来看一看,说不定会喜欢。”
  • 诛邪志

    诛邪志

    两晋之世,战争频繁不止,百姓命如草芥的乱世,各类妖邪亦大肆横行。驱鬼诛邪是她的使命,也是她的宿命,穿越而来的她更明白,有时人心之恶更胜妖邪。而历经沧桑的她,本已心如死水,却意外地遇到了他,此后生活将......波澜壮阔。自小便有阴阳眼的他,逃不开,也躲不掉与鬼邪相缠,满山拜师傅,结果师傅让鬼给叼了去......好不容易遇见一个可以保护自己的人,还不狠狠傍上,绝不撒手?晋时名士风:不必须奇才,但使常得无事,痛饮酒,熟读《离骚》,便可称名士。