登陆注册
37884800000122

第122章 FOUR 1933-1938 LUKE(32)

Down went the corners of her mouth again, up shone that tense, glittering fierceness with the tang of hate in it. "An image, a thought! A human image and thought! Yes, that's right, that's all I am to you! You're nothing but a romantic, dreaming fool, Ralph de Bricassart! You have no more idea of what life is all about than the moth I called you! No wonder you became a priest! You couldn't live with the ordinariness of life if you were an ordinary man any more than ordinary man Luke does!

"You say you love me, but you have no idea what love is; you're just mouthing words you've memorized because you think they sound good! What floors me is why you men haven't managed to dispense with us women altogether, which is what you'd like to do, isn't it? You should work out a way of marrying each other; you'd be divinely happy!" "Meggie, don't! Please don't!"

"Oh, go away! I don't want to look at you! And you've forgotten one thing about your precious roses, Ralph-they've got nasty, hooky thorns!" He left the room without looking back.

Luke never bothered to answer the telegram informing him he was the proud father of a five-pound girl named Justine. Slowly Meggie got better, and the baby began to thrive. Perhaps if Meggie could have managed to feed her she might have developed more rapport with the scrawny, bad-tempered little thing, but she had absolutely no milk in the plenteous breasts Luke had so loved to suck. That's an ironic justice, she thought. She dutifully changed and bottle-fed the red-faced, red-headed morsel just as custom dictated she should, waiting for the commencement of some wonderful, surging emotion. But it never came; she felt no desire to smother the tiny face with kisses, or bite the wee fingers, or do any of the thousand silly things mothers loved to do with babies. It didn't feel like her baby, and it didn't want or need her any more than she did it. It, it! Her, her! She couldn't even remember to call it her. Luddie and Anne never dreamed Meggie did not adore Justine, that she felt less for Justine than she had for any of her mother's younger babies. Whenever Justine cried Meggie was right there to pick her up, croon to her, rock her, and never was a baby drier or more comfortable. The strange thing was that Justine didn't seem to want to be picked up or crooned over; she quieted much faster if she was left alone.

As time went on she improved in looks. Her infant skin lost its redness, acquired that thin blue-veined transparency which goes so often with red hair, and her little arms and legs filled out to pleasing plumpness. The hair began to curl and thicken and to assume forever the same violent shade her grandfather Paddy had owned. Everyone waited anxiously to see what color her eyes would turn out to be, Luddie betting on her father's blue, Anne on her mother's grey, Meggie without an opinion. But Justine's eyes were very definitely her own, and unnerving to say the least. At six weeks they began to change, and by the ninth week had gained their final color and form. No one had even seen anything like them. Around the outer rim of the iris was a very dark grey ring, but the iris itself was so pale it couldn't be called either blue or grey; the closest description of the color was a sort of dark white. They were riveting, uncomfortable, inhuman eyes, rather blind-looking; but as time went on it was obvious Justine saw through them very well. Though he didn't mention it, Doc Smith had been worried by the size of her head when she was born, and kept a close watch on it for the first six months of her life; he had wondered, especially after seeing those strange eyes, if she didn't perhaps have what he still called water on the brain, though the textbooks these days were calling it hydrocephalus. But it appeared Justine wasn't suffering from any kind of cerebral dysfunction or malformation; she just had a very big head, and as she grew the rest of her more or less caught up to it. Luke stayed away. Meggie had written to him repeatedly, but he neither answered nor came to see his child. In a way she was glad; she wouldn't have known what to say to him, and she didn't think he would be at all entranced with the odd little creature who was his daughter. Had Justine been a strapping big son he might have relented, but Meggie was fiercely glad she wasn't. She was living proof the great Luke O'neill wasn't perfect, for if he was he would surely have sired nothing but sons. The baby thrived better than Meggie did, recovered faster from the birth ordeal. By the time she was four months old she ceased to cry so much and began to amuse herself as she lay in her bassinet, fiddling and pinching at the rows of brightly colored beads strung within her reach. But she never smiled at anyone, even in the guise of gas pains. The Wet came early, in October, and it was a very wet Wet. The humidity climbed to 100 percent and stayed there; every day for hours the rain roared and whipped about Himmelhoch, melting the scarlet soil, drenching the cane, filling the wide, deep Dungloe River but not overflowing it, for its course was so short the water got away into the sea quickly enough. While Justine lay in her bassinet contemplating her world through those strange eyes, Meggie sat dully watching Bartle Frere disappear behind a wall of dense rain, then reappear.

The sun would come out, writhing veils of steam issue from the ground, the wet cane shimmer and sparkle diamond prisms, and the river seem like a great gold snake. Then hanging right across the vault of the sky a double rainbow would materialize, perfect throughout its length on both bows, so rich in its coloring against the sullen dark-blue clouds that all save a North Queensland landscape would have been paled and diminished. Being North Queensland, nothing was washed out by its ethereal glow, and Meggie thought she knew why the Gillanbone countryside was so brown and grey; North Queensland had usurped its share of the palette as well.

同类推荐
  • 益部谈资

    益部谈资

    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。
  • 黄帝阴符经注

    黄帝阴符经注

    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。
  • 紫金光耀大仙修真演义

    紫金光耀大仙修真演义

    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。
  • 译语

    译语

    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。
  • 中国古代画论类编

    中国古代画论类编

    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
  • 妖逝今生

    妖逝今生

    前世为妖,今世为人,诛仙屠魔,唯我长生。
  • 我有一方六界棋子

    我有一方六界棋子

    这是一个有五行、法器、法术、圣地、并且在“道”之内的世界。这个世界的每个人都会有一方诸天棋盘,棋子在,棋主生;棋子陨,棋主亡。天、人、冥、妖、魔、神六界棋子。不同棋子之间会有羁绊。魔界棋子与神界棋子相遇,必有一颗棋子陨落。人界棋子和妖界棋子相遇,必有一颗棋子陨落。妖界和人界遇到奇遇或参悟大道,则会飞升至天界棋子。除了魔界棋子,其他所有棋子陨落后会遁入冥界,成为冥界棋子。冥界棋子只能伤害到冥界棋子,但黑夜降临时,冥界棋子可以伤害六界棋子。人界必须拥有斩神武器才可以伤害到神界棋子、人界必须拥有斩魔武器才可以伤害到魔界棋子、人界必须拥有斩冥武器才可以伤害到冥界棋子。规则之内,我即无敌!
  • 记得我们青春年少

    记得我们青春年少

    苏北北父母都因为车祸去世,只有寄居在叔叔家里。在初中那种没有爱还有整天苛责的环境里,只有左邵陪着她。他玩世不恭,却真的为她做了很多。偶然的机会,结识了A市最大房地产股东的儿子,江林。他刚大学毕业,青年才俊,多金却有才华。她被婶婶从家里面赶出来,是这个男人收留并将她抚养成人。大学里的爱情缠绵悱恻,那个叫做楚弈桑的男孩让她终生难忘。因为误会分开,多年后再次相遇又会是怎样···
  • 装帝

    装帝

    装到极限人消瘦,笑到小腹见肌肉。装逼人人会,但怎样才能装得清新脱俗,装得大道无痕,装得爆笑舒爽?请跟点击进入最强装逼现场,见证一代装帝化龙之旅。
  • 六宫:新月记

    六宫:新月记

    一入宫门深似海,从此连性命都一并是皇家的了。后宫风云起,太子燕西真的是良人吗?还是几次救她于危难的燕昭呢?波诡云谲,明争暗斗,冷江月披荆斩棘,最终又能否登上权力的巅峰,与心爱的人一起笑看风云呢?各位喜欢并支持这部作品的朋友们,小斐要跟大家请个假,由于个人工作的关系,可能要暂停一段时间的更新,等待小斐工作稳定了,立马会恢复的,希望大家理解,并且继续支持小斐,小斐会不断地努力写下去的,谢谢。
  • 冰冷校花:遇上高冷校草

    冰冷校花:遇上高冷校草

    不明白为什么人们会喜欢玫瑰般的爱情,是因为它的浪漫使人忘记了被刺伤的痛苦?是它亮丽的表面是人忘记了心中的孤独?比起玫瑰,我更爱蔷薇,蔷薇把我们分开,又让我们重聚,再把我们分开。“那些年的仇,我一定会报。”吴欣桐冷冷的对着墨芹说。“该遗忘的,迟早要遗忘,别让仇恨成为可支配你的魔鬼,记住我的话,你在敢碰小慕一下,就别现在这个世界上呆着了!”
  • 你好流星

    你好流星

    她在七岁那年看到了流星,从火海里救了他,他告诉她他不是人类……
  • 许你余生不离弃

    许你余生不离弃

    小时候许下的诺言还记得吗?我爱你,还记得吗?若你哪天离开了,就告诉我,免得我去找你,你不在……还有,我——一直爱你!许你余生不离弃,爱你此生永不渝!
  • 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!
  • 帝曜九重天

    帝曜九重天

    一次意外的事故,让赵翊穿越到一个完全不同的世界,从此踏上一段不寻常的修元之路。…………“不管是前世,还是今生,我都会永远的站在你身前,为你遮挡所有的风雨。别说是这小小的魔星出世,就算是九天圣后要将你亲手收回,我也会杀去她的九重罗天,与她狠狠战上一场。”“所以,傻丫头,你不需要再有那些无谓的想法,只要开开心心的,站在我的身后便好。”赵翊一身黄衫,站在九界大陆的最中央,对怀中的女孩轻声说道。