登陆注册
19639600000148

第148章 FIVE 1938-1953 FEE(11)

Three days later he was dead; a huge piece of shrapnel took off his arm and half his side in a fresh advance, but no one had time to stop except to pluck his whistle from what was left of his mouth. Men were going down now like flies, too tired to maintain the initial pitch of vigilance and swiftness; but what miserable barren ground they took they held on to, in the face of a bitter defense by the cream of a magnificent army. It had become to them all no more than a dumb, stubborn refusal to be defeated. The Ninth held off Graf von Sponeck and Lungerhausen while the tanks broke out to the south, and finally Rommel was beaten. By November 8 he was trying to rally beyond the Egyptian border, and Montgomery was left in command of the entire field. A very important tactical victory, Second Alamein; Rommel had been forced to leave behind many of his tanks, guns and equipment. Operation Torch could commence its push eastward from Morocco and Algeria with more security. There was still plenty of fight in the Desert Fox, but a large part of his brush was on the ground at El Alamein. The biggest and most decisive battle of the North African theater had been fought, and Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery of Alamein was its victor. Second Alamein was the swan song of the Ninth Australian Division in North Africa. They were finally going home to contend with the Japanese, on the main land of New Guinea. Since March of 1941 they had been more or less permanently in the front line, arriving poorly trained and equipped, but going home now with a reputation exceeded only by the Fourth Indian-,

Division. And with the Ninth went Jims and Patsy, safe and whole.

Of course they were granted leave to go home to Drogheda. Bob drove into Gilly to collect them from the Goondiwindi train, for the Ninth was based in Brisbane and would depart after jungle training for New Guinea. When the Rolls swept round the drive all the women were out on the lawn waiting, Jack and Hughie hanging back a little but just as eager to see their young brothers. Every sheep left alive on Drogheda could drop dead if it so desired, but this was a holiday.

Even after the car stopped and they got out, no one moved. They looked so different. Two years in the desert had ruined their original uniforms; they were dressed in a new issue of jungle green, and looked like strangers. For one thing, they seemed to have grown inches, which indeed they had; the last two years of their development had occurred far from Drogheda, and had pushed them way above their older brothers. Not boys any more but men, though not men in the BobJack-Hughie mold; hardship, battle euphoria and violent death had made something out of them Drogheda never could. The North African sun had dried and darkened them to rosy mahogany, peeled away every layer of childhood. Yes, it was possible to believe these two men in their simple uniforms, slouch hats pinned above their left ears with the badge of the AIF rising sun, had killed fellow men. It was in their eyes, blue as Paddy's but sadder, without his gentleness.

"My boys, my boys!" cried Mrs. Smith, running to them, tears streaming down her face. No, it didn't matter what they had done, how much they had changed; they were still her little babies she had washed, diapered, fed, whose tears she had dried, whose wounds she had kissed better. Only the wounds they harbored now were beyond her power to heal.

Then everyone was around them, British reserve broken down, laughing, crying, even poor Fee patting them on their backs, trying to smile. After Mrs. Smith there was Meggie to kiss, Minnie to kiss, Cat to kiss, Mum to hug bashfully, Jack and Hughie to wring by the hand speechlessly. The Drogheda people would never know what it was like to be home, they could never know how much this moment had been longed for, feared for.

And how the twins ate! Army tucker was never like this, they said, laughing. Pink and white fairy cakes, chocolate-soaked lamingtons rolled in coconut, steamed spotted dog pudding, pavlova dripping passion fruit and cream from Drogheda cows. Remembering their stomachs from earlier days, Mrs. Smith was convinced they'd be ill for a week, but as long as there was unlimited tea to wash it down, they didn't seem to have any trouble with their digestions.

"A bit different from Wog bread, eh, Patsy?"

"Yair."

"What's Wog mean?" asked Mrs. Smith.

"A Wog's an Arab, but a Wop's an Italian, right, Patsy?" "Pair."

It was peculiar. They would talk, or at least Jims would talk, for hours about North Africa: the towns, the people, the food, the museum in Cairo, life on board a troopship, in rest camp. But no amount of questioning could elicit anything but vague, change-the subject answers as to what the actual fighting had been like, what Gazala, Benghazi, Tobruk, El Alamein had been like. Later on after the war was over the women were to find this constantly; the men who had actually been in the thick of battle never opened their mouths about it, refused to join the ex-soldiers' clubs and leagues, wanted nothing to do with institutions perpetuating the memory of war. Drogheda held a party for them. Alastair MacQueen was in the Ninth as well and was home, so of course Rudna Hunish held a party. Dominic O'Rourke's two youngest sons were in the Sixth in New Guinea, so even though they couldn't be present, Dibban-Dibban held a party. Every property in the district with a son in uniform wanted to celebrate the safe return of the three Ninth boys. Women and girls flocked around them, but the Cleary returned heroes tried to escape at every opportunity, more scared than they had been on any field of war. In fact, Jims and Patsy didn't seem to want to have anything to do with women; it was to Bob, Jack and Hughie they clung. Late into the night after the women had gone to bed they sat talking to the brothers who had been forced to remain behind, opening their sore, scarred hearts. And they rode the paddocks of parched Drogheda, in its seventh year of the drought, glad to be in civvies.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 无限玩家终端

    无限玩家终端

    一个不一样的无限人生,为的是自己,为的是家人,为的是未来,有着无限玩家终端在手,原本可以建立一个庞大的后宫!陈铭:“我有女朋友!我有老婆!后宫与我如浮云!她是谁?呵呵,她就是——双儿。”
  • 刷子传记

    刷子传记

    亿万年前,宇宙初诞之时,樱特尔人占领了宇宙中最大的一颗行星,并命名为樱特尔星。樱特尔人统治着樱特尔星亿万年,直到人类的出现人类的出现给樱特尔人带来了空前的灾难,他们的毒奶粉地沟油,杀伤力极其大强大!以至于使樱特尔人陷入了濒临灭绝的地步在广阔无垠的樱特尔星,有个叫做藤埙的帝国。藤埙帝国的首都是个名为蔻口的城池,在这座城池中有个名为刷子的公寓,刷子公寓中住着一群萌萌哒的刷子这群刷子有着各自不同的工作,而他们有一个共同的身份——写手,这不过是为了掩人耳目,他们还有另一冲身份——拥有特异功能的变异人!樱特尔人正需要这样的特异功能来拯救他们,经过数年的追踪,终于在蔻口城发现了变异人的踪迹……
  • 玄神录

    玄神录

    小说交流QQ群号:298951276新章节会在“勤书网”持续更新。
  • 生命对你意味着什么

    生命对你意味着什么

    个体心理学大师阿德勒的巅峰之作,阐明人生道路和人生意义的通俗性心理学读物。作者指出,生活中我们所遇到的每一个问题,几乎都与职业、社会和性有着千丝万缕的联系,而在追求事业成功、社会价值肯定及婚姻幸福时,人人都会产生不同程度的自卑感,这种自卑感源于对现状的不满和对自身的不自信。作者将本书献给所有对生活感到挫败、焦躁、迷茫的现代人:自卑不是一件羞耻的事,它具有一种强烈的反弹力量,妥善利用,就会成为你不断突破的动力。找到自卑的根源,正确理解生活,并懂得合作的价值,你也可以实现从自卑到超越的惊人蜕变。
  • 傻王追妻:护短大小姐

    傻王追妻:护短大小姐

    她,本是二十一世纪的金牌杀手,穿越到轩辕王朝的废材郡主身上,而且还是个废材,花痴。废材吗?姐会让你们好好的看看谁才是废材!你们不是说,每人只可以契约一只兽兽吗?姐的兽兽们都可以组成军队了!而且还是自动送上门的!他,是轩辕王朝的傻王,人前他是傻王,人后他是暗夜之王。当他遇到她,他们会发生什么样故事?看女主从废柴变成天才后又会发生什么事?【如有雷同,纯属巧合】
  • 中国播音主持艺术

    中国播音主持艺术

    各类大专院校“播音与主持艺术”专业亦如雨后春笋般纷纷设立,然则不少学校教学混乱、各执其词、鱼龙混杂、莫衷一是。教师队伍后继乏人,即使一些老牌院校亦显青黄不济之象。有感于此,遂执拙笨之笔,集散乱之思,拾荧光之火,尽绵薄之力。斗胆放异响之厥词,虚心集八方之斥讨,微心可鉴!
  • 不纠结 不抱怨 不生气

    不纠结 不抱怨 不生气

    吴学刚所著的《不纠结不抱怨不生气》讲述处在竞争激烈时代的我们,面临的心理压力问题对我们自身的威胁,将远远大于生理疾病的威胁。善于调适生活的人,如同善于增减衣服以适应气候变化一样,能获得舒适的生存;而不善调适者,却长久走不出烦恼的怪圈。《不纠结不抱怨不生气》从“不纠结”“不抱怨”“不生气”三个方面告诉我们,如何通过调节自己的心态来驾驭自己的情绪,保持愉悦的心情,达到心灵的宁静状态。
  • 大清捕蛇人

    大清捕蛇人

    杨得草,东北大兴安岭小山旮旯里出来的捕蛇人,却阴差阳错进衙门当了差,步步高升了。~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~巴山蜀水繁锦地,二十三年亦独身。怀旧空写大清赋,起点写出捕蛇人。点击侧畔票飘过,章节后头闹新春。今日听吾歌一曲,暂凭杯酒长精神。~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~本书已成历史,流水账式的文是对读者的不负责,深感愧疚!新书发布,好奇者、想骂人者、不屑者、姑且一试者可以去看看武王新书《扁鹊后人秦三思的现代生活》。书号:1337057
  • 宿裴氏溪居怀厉玄先

    宿裴氏溪居怀厉玄先

    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。
  • 你的青春,我来过

    你的青春,我来过

    青春里不只有爱情是明媚动人的,那些在你身边,从不曾离去的人汇聚成了一个个年轻的生命,让青春熠熠闪光。