登陆注册
19595400000058

第58章 Part II.(22)

The doctors were against it;but he couldn't rest till he tried it.

He took her out,and explained it all to her.She scarcely seemed interested.

She read the names on the stone,and said it was a nice stone,and asked questions about how the children were found and brought here.

She seemed quite sensible,and very cool about it.But when he got her home she was back on the fairy idea again.He tried another day,but it was no use;so then he let it be.I think it's better as it is.

Now and again,at her best,she seems to understand that the children were found dead,and buried,and she'll talk sensibly about it,and ask questions in a quiet way,and make him promise to take her to Sydney to see the grave next time he's down.But it doesn't last long,and she's always worse afterwards.'

We turned into a bar and had a beer.It was a very quiet drink.

Andy `shouted'in his turn,and while I was drinking the second beer a thought struck me.

`The Boss was away when the children were lost?'

`Yes,'said Andy.

`Strange you couldn't find him.'

`Yes,it was strange;but HE'LL have to tell you about that.

Very likely he will;it's either all or nothing with him.'

`I feel damned sorry for the Boss,'I said.

`You'd be sorrier if you knew all,'said Andy.`It's the worst trouble that can happen to a man.It's like living with the dead.

It's --it's like a man living with his dead wife.'

When we went home supper was ready.We found Mrs Head,bright and cheerful,bustling round.You'd have thought her one of the happiest and brightest little women in Australia.Not a word about children or the fairies.

She knew the Bush,and asked me all about my trips.

She told some good Bush stories too.It was the pleasantest hour I'd spent for a long time.

`Good night,Mr Ellis,'she said brightly,shaking hands with me when Andy and I were going to turn in.`And don't forget your pipe.

Here it is!I know that Bushmen like to have a whiff or two when they turn in.Walter smokes in bed.I don't mind.

You can smoke all night if you like.'

`She seems all right,'I said to Andy when we were in our room.

He shook his head mournfully.We'd left the door ajar,and we could hear the Boss talking to her quietly.Then we heard her speak;she had a very clear voice.

`Yes,I'll tell you the truth,Walter.I've been deceiving you,Walter,all the time,but I did it for the best.Don't be angry with me,Walter!

The Voices did come back while you were away.Oh,how I longed for you to come back!They haven't come since you've been home,Walter.

You must stay with me a while now.Those awful Voices kept calling me,and telling me lies about the children,Walter!They told me to kill myself;they told me it was all my own fault --that I killed the children.

They said I was a drag on you,and they'd laugh --Ha!ha!ha!--like that.

They'd say,"Come on,Maggie;come on,Maggie."They told me to come to the river,Walter.'

Andy closed the door.His face was very miserable.

We turned in,and I can tell you I enjoyed a soft white bed after months and months of sleeping out at night,between watches,on the hard ground or the sand,or at best on a few boughs when I wasn't too tired to pull them down,and my saddle for a pillow.

But the story of the children haunted me for an hour or two.

I've never since quite made up my mind as to why the Boss took me home.

Probably he really did think it would do his wife good to talk to a stranger;perhaps he wanted me to understand --maybe he was weakening as he grew older,and craved for a new word or hand-grip of sympathy now and then.

When I did get to sleep I could have slept for three or four days,but Andy roused me out about four o'clock.The old woman that they called Auntie was up and had a good breakfast of eggs and bacon and coffee ready in the detached kitchen at the back.We moved about on tiptoe and had our breakfast quietly.

`The wife made me promise to wake her to see to our breakfast and say Good-bye to you;but I want her to sleep this morning,Jack,'said the Boss.`I'm going to walk down as far as the station with you.

She made up a parcel of fruit and sandwiches for you and Andy.

Don't forget it.'

Andy went on ahead.The Boss and I walked down the wide silent street,which was also the main road;and we walked two or three hundred yards without speaking.He didn't seem sociable this morning,or any way sentimental;when he did speak it was something about the cattle.

But I had to speak;I felt a swelling and rising up in my chest,and at last I made a swallow and blurted out --`Look here,Boss,old chap!I'm damned sorry!'

Our hands came together and gripped.The ghostly Australian daybreak was over the Bathurst plains.

We went on another hundred yards or so,and then the Boss said quietly --`I was away when the children were lost,Jack.I used to go on a howling spree every six or nine months.Maggie never knew.I'd tell her I had to go to Sydney on business,or Out-Back to look after some stock.

When the children were lost,and for nearly a fortnight after,I was beastly drunk in an out-of-the-way shanty in the Bush --a sly grog-shop.The old brute that kept it was too true to me.

He thought that the story of the lost children was a trick to get me home,and he swore that he hadn't seen me.He never told me.

I could have found those children,Jack.They were mostly new chums and fools about the run,and not one of the three policemen was a Bushman.

I knew those scrubs better than any man in the country.'

I reached for his hand again,and gave it a grip.That was all I could do for him.

`Good-bye,Jack!'he said at the door of the brake-van.`Good-bye,Andy!--keep those bullocks on their feet.'

The cattle-train went on towards the Blue Mountains.Andy and I sat silent for a while,watching the guard fry three eggs on a plate over a coal-stove in the centre of the van.

`Does the boss never go to Sydney?'I asked.

`Very seldom,'said Andy,`and then only when he has to,on business.

When he finishes his business with the stock agents,he takes a run out to Waverley Cemetery perhaps,and comes home by the next train.'

同类推荐
  • 曹月川集

    曹月川集

    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。
  • 注华严同教一乘策

    注华严同教一乘策

    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。
  • The Red One

    The Red One

    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。
  • Letters From High Latitudes

    Letters From High Latitudes

    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。
  • The Well at the World's End

    The Well at the World's End

    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。
热门推荐
  • 噬血魔女复仇之路

    噬血魔女复仇之路

    她们。冷漠!狠毒!温静!童真!坚强的外表内隐藏着一颗急切的复仇之心,命运的摧残将她们牢牢扣住,慢慢地蜕变出一颗冰冷的心。变成噬血如魔的魔女,四大少的出现能否改变她们的命运?在亲情和爱情之间,她们又将如何选择?拭目以待吧……
  • 中国佛教与传统文化(第六卷)(方立天文集)

    中国佛教与传统文化(第六卷)(方立天文集)

    方立天编著的《中国佛教与传统文化》把佛教中国化界定为“三化”,即民族化、本土化和时代化,并叙述了佛教中国化的不同阶段、途径和方式,还通过与中国的政治理念、哲学思想、伦理道德、文学艺术、民间信仰、社会习俗等的互动关系,揭示出佛教中国化的实质,总结出有别于印度佛教的中国佛教的六个重要特点:重自性、重现实、重禅修、重顿悟、重简易、重圆融。
  • 妹妹不乖

    妹妹不乖

    通往爱情的道路,总是在施工中。她走错了路,一转身却发现高冷男神早就给她铺就了一条康庄大道,从此走上不“归”路。
  • 腹黑男神,别心急

    腹黑男神,别心急

    哼哼,胆敢嘲笑她的名字?她的名字可是有讲究的,方眠——方便面,没错,她的泡面可是天下无双,多少人想吃都吃不到!什么?这位帅哥想吃她做的泡面?那就看在他长的还算凑合的份上给他做一碗吧,可是,为什么他却吃不到!帅哥啊帅哥,看在你没有名字而且还是个鬼魂但是颜值过高的份上,她就勉强给你做碗鬼魂专属泡面吧!你可要知恩图报啊!但是这个阻碍她与帅哥相爱的阎王又是怎么回事?喂喂喂,帅鬼,她都舍弃阎王这个一等高富帅,冒着魂飞魄散的危险前来救你了,你怎么能这么淡定的微笑?而且还笑的这么迷人!“莫急,来碗泡面先!”泡你个大头鬼!
  • 十年等待青城花开

    十年等待青城花开

    淮城中的懵懂,江城里的痴恋,枫都上的远行。如果,当初的月夜,我们不曾遇见,若是,那日的雨夜,我们不曾擦肩,爱情的香甜和苦涩,是否我们终生都不会品尝。
  • 清官难做好米虫

    清官难做好米虫

    谁说女子无才便是的德!谁说女人都是优柔寡断的!谁说古代女子都是大门不出二门不迈的!谁说你犯罪我就一定要有证据才能杀你的。“来人,把城门尉拖出去打一顿!”“公主,臣无错,为何要挨打!”“质疑本公主就是错,给我拖出去斩了!”
  • 20几岁必须看透的50个人生谬误

    20几岁必须看透的50个人生谬误

    化解疑难,不可或缺的智慧心法;开悟思路,步步为营的人生航标。前车之鉴,50个谬误道尽一生常见认知误区;智者点拨,50个谬误助你轻松跨越人生险境。人生最可怕的是与谬误如影相随,却无法自知。二十几岁决定人的一生,而谬误导引你坠入万劫不复的糟糕险境。本书为你扫除关键时期的所有拦路虎,让你轻松迈入成功的快车道。
  • 亿万新娘赖上你

    亿万新娘赖上你

    “靳哲凯,我喜欢你!”她是身家亿万霸气凌人的豪门千金,却对他情有独钟。“曲萌萌,你老赖着我干什么?你喜欢我什么?我改还不行吗?”他是企业总裁,跟她原本是门当户对,却对她避如蛇蝎。“靳哲凯,我决定放了你。”当他习惯了她赖在身边,她却要抽身离去,谁给她的权利?他决定这次换他赖上她!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 爆笑无良妻:质子毒妃狠嚣张

    爆笑无良妻:质子毒妃狠嚣张

    穿越前,未婚夫和妹妹在自己面前OOXX,穿越后,又有人在面前上演一场免费的活春宫?“技术太差,需要本大师给你们画春宫图么?人物有保障,保证要你们欲求不满,只需999哦——”她,夜妖娆,21世纪金牌毒医,一朝穿越,竟成了被人弃之若敝的废材质子。且看她如何收宝物,练神功,打的渣男贱女满地找牙,只是,当她把睥睨全天下时,身边怎么会多了一只甩不掉的妖孽?“爷,王妃送你‘情书’一封,请签收。”某男疑惑拆开信一看,脸瞬间黑了一半,“来人,操家伙,抢王妃!”
  • 废弃狼妃

    废弃狼妃

    她,本是一只雪山上的狼,懦弱的狼。魂断于猎人的枪下,穿越时空,来到了一个陌生的地方。她是王妃,懦弱的王妃,丫环小妾随便欺负的王妃。王爷丈夫拿她的血去救他心爱的女人。王爷丈夫亲手打掉了她的孩子。面对王爷丈夫一次又一次的折磨,她还是走到了最后。多年后她又出现在了王爷面前,可是她已经不是从前的她了。