登陆注册
37884800000031

第31章 TWO 1921-1928 Ralph(11)

The bird life was so rich and varied there seemed no end to new kinds, and they lived not in ones and twos but in thousands upon thousands: tiny green-and-yellow parakeets Fee used to call lovebirds, but which the locals called budgerigars; scarlet-and-blue smallish parrots called rosellas; big pale-grey parrots with brilliant purplish-pink breasts, underwings and heads, called galahs; and the great pure white birds with cheeky yellow combs called sulphur-crested cockatoos. Exquisite tiny finches whirred and wheeled, so did sparrows and starlings, and the strong brown kingfishers called kookaburras laughed and chuckled gleefully or dived for snakes, their favorite food. They were wellnigh human, all these birds, and completely without fear, sitting in hundreds in the trees peering about with bright intelligent eyes, screaming, talking, laughing, imitating anything that produced a sound. Fearsome lizards five or six feet long pounded over the ground and leaped lithely for high tree branches, as at home off the earth as on it; they were goannas. And there were many other lizards, smaller but some no less frightening, adorned with horny triceratopean ruffs about their necks, or with swollen, bright-blue tongues. Of snakes the variety was almost endless, and the Clearys learned that the biggest and most dangerous looking were often the most benign, while a stumpy little creature a foot long might be a death adder; carpet snakes, copper snakes, tree snakes, red-bellied black snakes, brown snakes, lethal tiger snakes.

And insects! Grasshoppers, locusts, crickets, bees, flies of all sizes and sorts, cicadas, gnats, dragonflies, giant moths and so many butterflies! The spiders were dreadful, huge hairy things with a leg span of inches, or deceptively small and deadly black-things lurking in the lavatory; some lived in vast wheeling webs slung between trees, some rocked inside dense gossamer cradles hooked among grass blades, others dived into little holes in the ground complete with lids which shut after them.

Predators were there, too: wild pigs frightened of nothing, savage and flesh-eating, black hairy things the size of fully grown cows; dingoes, the wild native dogs which slunk close to the ground and blended into the grass; crows in hundreds carking desolately from the blasted white skeletons of dead trees; hawks and eagles, hovering motionless on the air currents. From some of these the sheep and cattle had to be protected, especially when they dropped their young. The kangaroos and rabbits ate the precious grass; the pigs and dingoes ate lambs, calves and sick animals; the crows pecked out eyes. The Clearys had to learn to shoot, then carried rifles as they rode, sometimes to put a suffering beast out of its misery, sometimes to fell a boar or a dingo.

This, thought the boys exultantly, was life. Not one of them yearned for New Zealand; when the flies clustered like syrup in the corners of their eyes, up their noses, in their mouths and ears, they learned the Australian trick and hung corks bobbing from the ends of strings all around the brims of their hats. To prevent crawlies from getting up inside the legs of (heir baggy trousers they tied strips of kangaroo hide called bowyangs below their knees, giggling at the silly-sounding name, but awed by the necessity. New Zealand was tame compared to this; this was life. Tied to the house and its immediate environs, the women found life much less to their liking, for they had not the leisure or the excuse to ride, nor did they have the stimulation of varying activities. It was just harder to do what women always did: cook, clean, wash, iron, . 98 care for babies. They battled the heat, the dust, the flies, the many steps, the muddy water, the nearly perennial absence of men to carry and chop wood, pump water, kill fowls. The heat especially was hard to bear, and it was as yet only early spring; even so, the thermometer out on the shady veranda reached a hundred degrees every day. Inside the kitchen with the range going, it was a hundred and twenty degrees.

Their many layers of clothing were close-fitting and designed for New Zealand, where inside the house it was almost always cool. Mary Carson, exercising gently by walking down to see her sister-in-law, looked at Fee's high-necked, floor-length calico gown superciliously. She herself was clad in the new fashion, a cream silk dress coming only halfway down her calves, with loose elbow sleeves, no waist and a low décolletage. "Really, Fiona, you're hopelessly old-fashioned," she said, glancing round the parlor with its fresh coat of cream paint, the Persian carpets and the spindly priceless furniture.

"I have no time to be anything else," Fee said, curtly for her when acting as hostess.

"You'll have more time now, with the men away so much and fewer meals to get. Raise your hems and stop wearing petticoats and stays, or you'll die when summer comes. It can get fifteen to twenty degrees hotter than this, you know." Her eyes dwelled on the portrait of the beautiful blond woman in her Empress Eugenie crinoline. "Who's that?" she asked, pointing. "My grandmother."

"Oh, really? And the furniture, the carpets?" "Mine, from my grandmother."

"Oh, really? My dear Fiona, you've come down in the world, haven't you?" Fee never lost her temper, so she didn't now, but her thin lips got thinner. "I don't think so, Mary. I have a good man; you ought to know that." "But penniless. What was your maiden name?"

"Armstrong."

"Oh, really? Not the Roderick Armstrong Armstrongs?" "He's my oldest brother. His namesake was my great-grandfather." Mary Carson rose, flapping her picture hat at the flies, which were not respecters of person. "Well, you're better born than the Clearys are, even if I do say so myself. Did you love Paddy enough to give all that up?" "My reasons for what I do," said Fee levelly, "are my business, Mary, not yours. I do not discuss my husband, even with his sister."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 两年之约:那年的快乐

    两年之约:那年的快乐

    这本小说,主要写了唐鑫、袁诗琪、唐政、元文涛、陈晞这几位小学生的快乐生活,但是,两年之后,他们是否能再次相遇?两年之约,恭候你们!
  • 神将抽奖机

    神将抽奖机

    林木森,一位做了守墓人一年人年轻小伙手底下有着大将吕布、项羽、白起做为先锋!兵仙韩信为大将军!存兵大战仙魔两界,背靠地球通道,无路可退既已破釜沉舟,何不拼死一战!!!
  • 至情剑

    至情剑

    ”儒家儒圣,汲了这人间一分文气,潇潇洒洒的写了篇自立论,于那三寸青台上脱凡成圣;道家道圣在自在山上看破逍遥,羽化成圣,却只能自封山中,不得逾越半步;佛家佛圣乱世中屠宰一城无辜,自言一句苦海无涯,立地成圣;魔家魔祖,妄言我自无敌,敢向天举刀,却是斩了那一缕牵念,才得以化己为魔。“闹市之中,一个说书先生滑稽的站在一张破旧桌子上,看着底下挤挤攘攘的听客,像是陈述般的说着这番惊世骇俗的言论。过了许久,底下无言,说书人清了清嗓子,又说道:“这世间倒有一个人与天比剑,胜了半招……”说到这儿,说书人看向远处,喃喃自语:“不过他也快死了……”说到这儿,说书人嘴角扯出一抹诡异的笑容,跳下桌子,似是发癫般的挤进人群,手舞足蹈的跑走了。说书人走后,那些听客犹如油锅里的蚂蚁般乱作一团,只见他们皆神色茫然的左右看看,过了许久,人群才散开,闹市又恢复了往日的喧嚣。
  • 我的爱情伤痕

    我的爱情伤痕

    其实不然,每个人都把心中的秘密,神圣的供起。而选择守候,很多时候是一种对他人的伤害,因为同样执着与守候。各自的生活,互不干扰,却也能牵动,如同雨点效应,在密集中化作洪荒。
  • 斗破苍穹之雷帝传说

    斗破苍穹之雷帝传说

    来自地球的少年带着牛逼系统穿越到了斗破苍穹的世界,在这强者独尊的世界,少年搅动个天翻地覆!众美环绕,武破苍穹!不一样的斗破,不一样的苍穹!
  • 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!
  • 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!
  • 倾城之恋已是悲剧

    倾城之恋已是悲剧

    她,是北笙国最骄傲的将军府小姐,是整个京城公认的才女。15岁,一道圣旨,让她嫁给了北笙国曾经的战神,如今双腿残疾的落魄王爷!她独排众议,把将军府里的医书搬出来,不顾父亲反对,只为为他治疗腿疾,为他夺得皇位!他允过她,将来他为皇,她为后,从此后宫只许她一人,可到底,他还是负了她……她被他一剑刺入心口,被神秘女子所救,也与那可怕的神秘女子达成协议,当协议完成,一切真相浮出水面,她该爱还是恨?
  • 绿茵小将

    绿茵小将

    这是一个关于青春热血的足球故事。也是一个懵懂少年的爱情成长之路。李小楠,一个勇于追求梦想的男孩。因为利益的关系,没有能代表省队参加国家级高中足球联赛,转而进军欧洲。最终却从英冠开始,踏上了一段传奇的绿茵场上的旅程。
  • 唯你让我欢喜

    唯你让我欢喜

    每个人都可能有所感同身受,愿你在世界上被珍惜