登陆注册
15468300000191

第191章 six 1954-1965 Dane(23)

"And what about the fact he mightn't come home after he's a priest? Did that ever occur to you? He won't be given huge chunks of leave the way he was in the seminary, so if he decides to remain in Rome you may well have to take yourself there if you ever want to see him at all. Go to Rome, Meggie!" "I can't. If you knew how frightened I am! It's not pride, or Ralph scoring one over on me, or any of the things I say it is to stop people asking me questions. Lord knows, I miss both my men so much I'd crawl on my knees to see them if I thought for a minute they wanted me. Oh, Dane would be glad to see me, but Ralph? He's forgotten I ever existed. I'm frightened, I tell you. I know in my bones that if I go to Rome something will happen. So I'm not going."

"What could happen, for pity's sake?"

"I don't know . . . . If I did, I'd have something to battle. A feeling, how can I battle a feeling? Because that's all it is. A premonition. As if the gods are gathering.

Anne laughed. "You're becoming a real old woman, Meggie. Stop!" "I can't, I can't! And I am an old woman."

"Nonsense, you're just in brisk middle age. Well and truly young enough to hop on that plane."

"Oh, leave me alone!" said Meggie savagely, and picked up her book.

Occasionally a crowd with a purpose converges upon Rome. Not tourism, the voyeuristic sampling of past glories in present relics; not the filling in of a little slice of time between A and B, with Rome a point on the line between those two places. This is a crowd with a single uniting emotion; it bursts with pride, for it is coming to see its son, nephew, cousin, friend ordained a priest in the great basilica which is the most venerated church in the world. Its members put up in humble pensiones, luxury hotels, the homes of friends or relatives. But they are totally united, at peace with each other and with the world. They do the rounds dutifully; the Vatican Museum with the Sistine Chapel at its end like a prize for endurance; the Forum, the Colosseum, the Appian Way, the Spanish Steps, the greedy Trevi Fountain, the son et lumiere. Waiting for the day, filling in time. They will be accorded the special privilege of a private audience with the Holy Father, and for them Rome will find nothing too good.

This time it wasn't Dane waiting on the platform to meet Justine, as it had been every other time; he was in retreat. Instead, Rainer Moerling Hartheim prowled the dirty paving like some great animal. He didn't greet her with a kiss, he never did; he just put an arm about her shoulders and squeezed. "Rather like a bear," said Justine.

"A bear?"

"I used to think when I first met you that you were some sort of missing link, but I've finally decided you're more of a bear than a gorilla. It was an unkind comparison, the gorilla."

"And bears are kind?"

"Well, perhaps they do one to death just as quickly, but they're more cuddly." She linked her arm through his and matched his stride, for she was almost as tall as he. "How's Dane? Did you see him before he went into retreat? I could kill Clyde, not letting me go sooner."

"Dane is as always."

"You haven't been leading him astray?"

"Me? Certainly not. You look very nice, Herzchen."

"I'm on my very best behavior, and I bought out every couturier in London. Do you like my new short skirt? They call it the mini."

"Walk ahead of me, and I'll tell you."

The hem of the full silk skirt was about midthigh; it swirled as she turned and came back to him. "What do you think, Rain? Is it scandalous? I noticed no one in Paris is wearing this length yet."

"It proves a point, Herzchen-that with legs as good as yours, to wear a skirt one millimeter longer is scandalous. I'm sure the Romans will agree with me."

"Which means my arse will be black and blue in an hour instead of a day. Damn them! Though do you know something, Rain?" "What?"

"I've never been pinched by a priest. All these years I've been flipping in and out of the Vatican with nary a pinch to my credit. So I thought maybe if I wore a miniskirt, I might be the undoing of some poor prelate yet." "You might be my undoing." He smiled.

"No, really? In orange? I thought you hated me in orange, when I've got orange hair."

"It inflames the senses, such a busy color."

"You're teasing me," she said, disgusted, climbing into his Mercedes limousine, which had a German pennant fluttering from its bonnet talisman. "When did you get the little flag?"

"When I got my new post in the government."

"No wonder I rated a mention in the News of the World! Did you see it?" "You know I never read rags, Justine."

"Well, nor do I; someone showed it to me," she said, then pitched her voice higher and endowed it with a shabby-genteel, fraightfully naice accent. "What up-and-coming carrot-topped Australian actress is cementing very cordial relations with what member of the West German cabinet?" "They can't be aware how long we've known each other," he said tranquilly, stretching out his legs and making himself comfortable. Justine ran her eyes over his clothes with approval; very casual, very Italian. He was rather in the European fashion swim himself, daring to wear one of the fishing-net shirts which enabled Italian males to demonstrate the hairiness of their chests.

"You should never wear a suit and collar and tie," she said suddenly. "No? Why not?"

"Machismo is definitely your style-you know, what you've got on now, the gold medallion and chain on the hairy chest. A suit makes you look as if your waistline is bulging, when it really isn't at all."

For a moment he gazed at her in surprise, then the expression in his eyes became alert, in what she called his "concentrated thinking look." "A first," he said.

"What's a first?"

"In the seven years I've known you, you've never before commented upon my appearance except perhaps to disparage it."

"Oh, dear, haven't I?" she asked, looking a little ashamed. "Heavens, I've thought of it often enough, and never disparagingly." For some reason she added hastily, "I mean, about things like the way you look in a suit."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 郭沫若集

    郭沫若集

    郭沫若(1892-1978)是我国著名的诗人和作家、历史学家和古文字学家。曾任中国科学院院长、哲学社会科学部委员和主任。他学识渊博、才华卓著,在哲学社会科学的诸多领域均有重大建树。本文集选录他有关历史学、古文字学和文艺理论、文艺批评的一些重要的、有代表性的学术论文四十八篇,分为上下两编。 编为历史学和古文字学,下编为文艺理论和文学批评。
  • 守护甜妻:我愿伴你到永远

    守护甜妻:我愿伴你到永远

    他与她在最无助的那年相遇,风雨中,他与她同行,与她共同承担,栀子花开的季节他们的约定,十八岁的眼泪注定落下。他却已忘却美丽的她......她带着那年的记忆回归,他的爱会属于她吗?眼泪代表痛苦,她能挽回一切吗?
  • 黑僵鬼事

    黑僵鬼事

    我是北京一家白布寿衣店的小伙计,一次外出送货,让我再也没有办法相信眼前的这个世界了,会哭的纸人,黑色的骷髅,红裙的女鬼,老坟的僵尸,会奇门道术的道士……还有我耳边经常出现的说话声,都让我感觉自己好像已经踏上了,徘徊于阴界阳间的不归路。
  • 轮回天青

    轮回天青

    一名普通废物大少寒仇,遇到了一名惊天强者唐九剑,传承师门轮回天青剑典,从而成长为一名绝世强者,踏上近百年无人达到的高度,探寻天道的秘辛,且看一代强者寒仇的成长之路。
  • 原谅年少不懂爱

    原谅年少不懂爱

    不管你的人生怎样悲惨怎样精彩,在别人眼里都不过是一个看了就忘了的故事。
  • 我的一生唯与你相惜

    我的一生唯与你相惜

    言芝惜推不动他,张大嘴巴狠狠咬在他肩膀,左逸皱了一下眉,水杯送到自己嘴边喝一口水含在嘴里。言芝惜松口,牙齿觉得累。看着左逸鼓鼓的口,疑惑道:“你嘴巴干嘛啦?”左逸嘴角上扬,吻上言芝惜的嘴,硬是把水喂到她口里,言芝惜不停地拍他。左逸喂完才起身,背对她说:“喝水,消消气。”
  • 长老会之永恒史诗

    长老会之永恒史诗

    【白龙渊文学社】神与魔的共存世界,到底是什么原因促成?这个神秘重重的世界里又到底隐藏了何种惊人的秘密?神魔之间又到底是什么关系?【常青藤神林】,【源火七彩海】,【冰魄神谭】,【修罗战场】……这些几乎独成一界的灵天异地究竟是何来历?这是一本充满杀戮极其血腥的打斗爽文,没有太多的花哨都是切切实实的争斗,而且不会有太多的主角光环,给大家一种真实的感觉。天才多如狗,强者遍地走,在这个世界也许死亡才是一种解脱!
  • 冰封五百年

    冰封五百年

    为了应对太阳的突变,人类开启可以笼罩半个地球的太阳伞,以抵御太阳的暴虐,却成为人类黑暗与酷寒的时代的开端。仅有的阳光带下,人类文明之光,日渐熄灭。就在残存的人类为生存而苦苦挣扎时,本以为这样可以苟延残喘,可太阳并不想就此罢手,正酝酿着更强的风暴,人类要想逃过此劫生存下去,除了强化自身,还要想出更不可思议的计划。
  • 青涩锦华

    青涩锦华

    “我们就像蓝天白云,即使相互依偎,却始终不能在一起。谢谢,因为你,我才可以继续活下去。”看着在病床上躺着的他,苍白的脸上没有一丝的血色,她停下手中的笔,对着身后的男人说:“伯伯,我决定了……”
  • 校花的吸血鬼侍卫

    校花的吸血鬼侍卫

    克服了自身嗜血欲望的吸血鬼,被家族指派前往人类社会,化身一名普通学生,贴身保护一位人类少女。吸血鬼与这名女高中女生之间会有怎样的故事呢?在这次保护任务的背后,会有什么样的阴谋浮出水面?浪漫爱情、奇幻冒险,一步步找出血族的秘密。