登陆注册
10774100000004

第4章 WAR

THERE WAS SOMETHING TERRIBLE AND UNCOMFORTABLE about hearing her mother sob.

It was a relief when at last Triss's mother sniffed and rallied, carefully wiping away tears with the very tips of two fingers, so as not to smudge her makeup. She locked the drawer again and pocketed the key, then stood and left the room, closing the door carefully, as if an invalid slept in the empty bed.

Triss remained where she was, listening as her mother's tread moved away across the landing.

A distant door closed, and from behind it came the dull murmur of voices. At last Triss dared to crawl out from under the bed. The locked drawer taunted her, and she gave its handle a small, futile tug, but the drawer would not yield.

Taking a deep breath, she softly opened the door and slipped out, closing it behind her. The landing was empty, and Triss uttered a quiet prayer as she slipped across to the door opposite.

Please let it be the right one this time … To her relief, it opened onto a little room that she recognized instantly. Patchwork quilt on the bed, new Flower Fairies book on the bedside table, primrose wallpaper … yes, it was her room. It smelled faintly of cod-liver oil and the potpourri in the drawers. An old tongue-shaped cocoa stain that had never been entirely cleaned out of the carpet was a familiar roughness under her foot.

A wave of relief broke over her, then lost its bubbling momentum and drained away, leaving her cold and uncertain. Even this, her own little lair, gave her no sense of comfort or security.

Mother said the letters were from that man, the one they're worried about. They think he attacked me, so they whisked me home, where I'd be safe. But if he left letters in Sebastian's desk, then he must have been in the room somehow.

Home isn't safe. Whoever he is, he can get in.

Her wardrobe loomed at her from the corner of the room. Triss's imagination instantly crowded it with creeping assassins. When she threw open the door, however, nothing but innocuous dresses stared back at her.

On impulse, she ran her fingers over lace collars and cotton frocks, trying to tease out her own memories. Her hand paused on a small, cream-colored blazer, with a straw boater hung over the same hanger. These did stir a memory, but also a painful briar-tangle of feelings.

Two years ago, Triss had worn this uniform during her brief time at St. Bridget's Preparatory School. She had loved going to the school, but it had made her ill.

Triss had not noticed it making her ill. In fact, she had thought she was getting better, brighter, and happier. After spending so much of her life in one house, leaving it each morning filled her with an almost painful excitement. Her parents had changed, however, seeming discontented and short of temper. Everything had turned wrong and sour, and she sensed deep in her gut that it was her doing. Often they had felt her brow at breakfast, then decided she was too excited and kept her home. Every day they interrogated her about the school, and declared that the teachers had been negligent in some way that she had missed.

One day Triss was caught gossiping in class and was kept back after school. It was only for ten minutes, but her parents were in an uproar. After bitter recriminations the Crescents had taken both their daughters out of the school. Triss had begged her father to let her stay, which made him more agitated than she had ever seen him before or since. He was doing all of this for her. He was defending her. Why was she trying to turn her back on her home? She had wept and wept for hours afterward, until her stomach turned sick and her head ached. Then, of course, she had realized that she must be ill, and that her parents must have been right all along.

Knowing that the uniform no longer fit filled Triss with a saddened yearning, and a twist of guilt at the feeling. She closed the wardrobe door to block it from sight. Even as she did so, she thought she glimpsed a tiny hint of movement in her peripheral vision. She tensed and stared around the room, senses tingling.

Everything around her was still, but her gaze was returned. From the dresser and side table stared the rag dolls her mother had sewn her, the cherry-mouthed French bébé doll, and a china ballerina her father had given her after her first serious fever, almost like a reward. On any other day their presence should have been comforting, but now as Triss looked at them, all she could think of was Angelina's shattered face.

They were motionless, nothing but dumb, soft bundles of cloth and china. Or perhaps they were rigid, watching her, waiting for her to look away so that they could move again …

Stop looking at me.

She could not bear the thought that all of them might slowly turn their heads to stare at her, chime out china words, or start to scream. Scrambling off the bed, Triss snatched up a pillowcase. She hastily swept all the dolls into it and knotted the top. Looking for somewhere to hide the bundle, she dragged open a drawer, then froze, staring down into it.

Within it she could see the diaries she had kept for years, each with its different leather or fabric cover. Every one lay open, a ravaged paper frill showing where all their pages had been torn out. They had been ripped in just the same way as the diary she had taken on holiday.

This changed everything. One destroyed diary smacked of an act of impulsive spite, the sort of thing that Pen might well do if she had the chance. The destruction of seven diaries in two different places suggested method and planning. Was Pen really that organized?

Perhaps Pen had not done it at all. Perhaps her father's mysterious enemy had been in Triss's room and gone through her things.

"Mommy!" It was meant to be a call, but it turned into a croak instead, as the force left her voice. The next moment Triss felt frightened and embarrassed by the tortured books and shut the drawer quickly, glad that nobody had heard her.

She hurled the pillowcase of dolls into her wardrobe instead, and dived back into her bed. For a long while she stayed perfectly still, listening for any sound from within. There was nothing but silence.

Even in Triss's quilt-fortress the scents of cooking found her out. Evidently Mrs. Basset, the cook, had been tracked down after all. However hard Triss tried to focus on understanding everything that had happened, her mind was soon a slave of her stomach, and her attention fixed on the yawning emptiness inside her.

When lunch was called, it took all her willpower to walk down the stairs instead of running. Her parents were fortunately distracted and did not appear to notice her meal vanishing almost as soon as it was set in front of her, nor did they catch her stealthily ladling more onto her plate.

Triss could not understand how they could sit so mildly and calmly at the table and talk about boring, ordinary things as if they mattered. Her mother was complaining that Cook had asked for the whole of Tuesday off, in lieu of the break she had been promised.

Once again, Pen did not come down to lunch, and Triss was tortured by the sight of her sister's food gradually cooling and congealing on the table. Only by clasping her hands tightly together in her lap did she prevent herself from snatching at it.

"She'll get weak at this rate," sighed their mother. "Triss—could you be a love and take it up to her room? If she won't answer, leave it by her door."

"Yes!" Triss struggled to suppress her eagerness while her mother fetched a tray.

Carrying Pen's lunch up the stairs, Triss managed to wait until she was unobserved before furtively picking at it. Just a potato—she won't miss one. And … that piece of bacon. And a carrot. It took a lot of self-control to leave it at that, and Triss proceeded to Pen's room with haste so that she could put the rest of the meal out of temptation's way.

"Pen?" she called quietly, knocking on what she believed and hoped was Pen's door. "Your lunch is out here!" There was no response. Triss wondered if Pen was sitting sullenly within, ignoring her, or whether the younger girl had climbed out her window and run off in yet another fit of truancy. She laid the tray on the ground. "Pen, I'm leaving it by your door."

Please come to the door and take the food, Pen. Please—I don't think I can resist it if you don't.

No Pen appeared. The scented steam from the plate was in Triss's nose, and even when she closed her eyes, she could still see the golden-crusted pie with its glossy gravy, and the pepper freckles on the potatoes' creamy flesh …

It was too much for her. With a small, helpless sob, Triss dropped to her knees and snatched up the fork. Pen's food tasted better than hers had, better than anything. She tried to make every mouthful last, but could not. She tried to stop, but could not.

And as she was shakily licking the plate, she heard the faint sound of a voice in her father's study, the study that should have been empty.

Triss set down the empty plate on the tray, then gingerly drew closer to the study. When she put her ear to the door, she heard what sounded a good deal like Pen, talking in a low, steady, furtive tone. Peering in through the keyhole, Triss could indeed see Pen. The younger girl was facing away, but Triss could still see exactly what she was doing. She was making free with that most august and sacrosanct of objects, the family phone. Triss felt her eyebrows rise. She could not have been much more surprised if she had caught Pen borrowing the family car.

It was a tall black candlestick telephone and was fixed to the wall for ease of use, so that you needed only one hand to use it instead of two. It was placed at a height convenient for Triss's father, but Pen was standing on tiptoe on a chair to bring her face level with the mouthpiece. Her right hand held the little conical earpiece to her ear.

Triss could not make out her sister's murmured words. Pen looked absurd perched there, like a tiny child playing at being the parent in a game of make-believe. Only Pen's hushed tones made the matter seem more serious.

As Triss watched, Pen hung the little earpiece back on its hook and stepped down. Triss straightened up, and a few seconds later Pen opened the study door. Finding herself face-to-face with Triss, Pen froze, her face a mask of guilty terror.

"Who were you talking to, Pen?" asked Triss.

Pen took a deep breath but found no words. Her face reddened and twitched, and Triss could almost see her sister hastily auditioning a range of lies and denials to figure out whether any of them would do. Then Pen's eye fell on the empty plate by her door, and when her gaze returned to Triss's face, the terror had been replaced by outrage and disbelief.

"You ate my lunch!" Her voice was so shrill it was almost a squeak. "You did, didn't you? You ate it! You stole my lunch!"

"You didn't come down for it!" Triss protested, feeling her hackles rise defensively. "I knocked—I tried to give it to you—"

"I … I'm going to tell Mother and Father …" Pen was gasping in angry breaths as if she might explode at any moment.

"They won't believe you." Triss had not meant to say it. She had been thinking it, but she had never intended the words to leave her head. It was true, though, and Triss could see the same knowledge reflected in the frustration and rage on Pen's face.

"You think you can do anything you like, don't you?" snapped Pen, in a tight, bitter little voice. "You think you've won already. But you haven't."

"Pen"—Triss struggled to undo the damage—"I'm sorry I ate your lunch. I'll …" She steeled herself to promise Pen part of her own dinner, but knew this was a promise she could not keep. "I'll make it up to you. Please, can't we just stop this? Why do you hate me so much?" All at once Triss felt that she could not bear Pen's relentless animosity on top of everything else.

"Who do you think you're kidding?" Pen's face was a map of disbelief. She leaned forward to peer into Triss's eyes, her own gaze pit-bull fierce. "I know about you. I know what you are. I saw you when you climbed out of the Grimmer. I was there."

"You were there?" Triss took a step forward, only to see her sister flinch back. "Pen, you have to tell me everything you saw! Did you see me fall in? What happened?"

"Oh, stop it!" snapped Pen. "You think you're really clever, don't you?" She swallowed hard and clenched her jaw as if there was nothing she wanted more than to bite somebody. "You know what? You're not as clever as you think. You're getting everything just a bit wrong. Everything. All the time. And sooner or later they'll notice. They'll see."

In Pen's face Triss could see nothing but a declaration of war. The younger girl's incomprehensible words boiled and seethed in Triss's mind like a shoal of piranhas, and Triss's desperation was swiftly replaced by a flood of frustration and resentment. She had wanted to be sorry about eating Pen's lunch, had wanted to talk it out with her, but all of these feelings were now swallowed up by bitterness and a stinging sense of unfairness. It was always this way, she remembered that now. She would try to reach out, only to be knocked back by Pen's ingenious and relentless hatred.

"You're lying, aren't you?" Triss hissed. "You didn't see anything at all. You're just trying to scare me. Liar!"

She was filled with a seething desire to strike back, and with a honey-sweet throb of power realized that, if she wanted, she could get Pen into trouble without even trying. I can tell them she screamed at me and made my head hurt. As the thought passed through her mind, it started to seem to her that her head did hurt, that Pen had made her feel ill. And I can tell them she saw something the day I fell in the Grimmer; they'll make her tell.

"Girls?" Their mother appeared at the head of the stairs. "Girls—are you having a row up here?"

Both girls froze and involuntarily glanced across at each other, more like conspirators than opponents. If there was no row, neither of them would be in trouble. On the other hand, if either of them wanted to plead a grievance, the other would have to do the same, louder and harder. Who had more to lose from a cascade of blame?

Triss had been on the verge of calling down the stairs to her parents, to tell them what Pen had said and report the illicit phone use. Now, however, her nerve failed her. Despite her rage, there was a creeping fear that perhaps Pen really did know something terrible about her, something that Triss would not want her parents to know.

"No," answered Pen sullenly. "We're not rowing. I was just … telling Triss something I thought she ought to do. Loudly."

"Really?" Triss's mother raised both eyebrows.

"Yes. You see"—Pen's gaze crept sideways to Triss's face—"Triss brought me up my lunch, and I told her I wasn't hungry. And … she was. So I told her to eat it. And so she did."

Triss's mother looked to Triss, a question in her eyes. Triss's mouth was dry. She had been braced for Pen to accuse her of lunch theft. Now, for no obvious reason, Pen seemed to be letting her off the hook. Feeling a little as if somebody had poked her in the eye with an olive branch, Triss slowly nodded, confirming Pen's story.

"Oh, Triss!" her mother said, sounding half scandalized, half concerned.

"You see, she's really hungry all the time," continued Pen, frowning deeply at her scuffed shoes. "Really hungry. And just now I was saying that she ought to tell you, in case it meant she was still ill, only she didn't want to because it might worry you."

"Triss! Darling!" Her mother dropped down onto her knees and gave Triss a tight, brief hug. "Oh, you should have said! You should always tell me things that are worrying you, poor froglet!"

"Mommy," Pen asked in the smallest of voices, "is Triss going to be all right?" Her brow puckered and her mouth drooped a little, as if she was a much younger child, frightened by the dark. "Is she still sick? Only … I got really scared last night. When I saw her in the garden. She was acting all funny."

Triss's blood turned cold. That little snake. She saw me under the apple tree last night. She must have seen me from her window.

Their mother looked at Triss again, no suspicion or accusation in her gaze, only the beginnings of a bewildered smile. "In the garden?"

"I have no idea what she's talking about." Triss was amazed that she managed to keep her voice so level, so convincingly bemused.

"Yes—that's the scariest bit," mumbled Pen. She reached out and wound one finger round a fold of their mother's skirt, as if for comfort. "I really don't think Triss remembers. But I saw her, and she was crawling around in the mud and stinky apples for ages. She looked all starey, and her nightdress was mucky …"

"Triss, darling." Her mother's voice was very soft, and with a sinking of the heart Triss knew what she was going to ask. "Can you fetch your nightdress? There's a love."

Inside her room, Triss tried to scratch off some of the mud and grass stains with her fingernails, but to little avail. There was no spare nightdress she could substitute. Her neck and face felt hot as she carried the grimy, crumpled mess out to her mother, who unfolded it and surveyed it in silence.

For the briefest moment, Triss caught Pen flashing her a hard, appraising glance. The whole conversation had been a trap. Triss could see only now that the pit was gaping in front of her.

"Pen was using Father's telephone." The words fell from Triss's mouth like stones, hard, cold, and bitter tasting.

"I didn't!" Pen's face took on a look of simple blank incomprehension, so realistic that for a moment Triss half believed in it. "Mommy—why is Triss saying that?"

"She's lying!" protested Triss. "She's always lying!" For the first time, however, she saw her mother's seesaw teeter and threaten to settle in a new direction.

"I didn't!" Pen sounded as if she was close to tears. "Triss did say something about hearing voices coming from the study when she came up, and said it sounded like somebody on the telephone, but there wasn't anyone there! There weren't any voices! Mommy—she's scaring me!"

"Girls, I want you to wait here." Their mother half walked, half ran to the stairs and returned a few moments later with their father, who gave them both a brief, distracted smile that did not reach his eyes. He walked into the study, and then Triss could hear him talking loudly to the operator, asking what other calls there had been in the last day.

When he returned, he knelt down before Triss, sighed, and looked her straight in the eye.

"Think carefully, Triss. When was it you thought you saw Pen using the telephone?"

"Just now," whispered Triss. His words had already told her all she needed to know, however. Not, "When was it you saw Pen using the telephone," but "When was it you thought you saw Pen using the telephone."

The operator must have told him that there had been no call made from their house. What could that mean? Had Pen been playacting with the phone after all? Could she even have put on a performance, to trick Triss into looking crazy? Or … was it possible that Pen never had been in the study, and that Triss really had imagined it?

Triss's mother put her arms around her.

"You're not in trouble," she said very, very gently. Triss's blood ran cold.

同类推荐
  • Gracious Leadership
  • American Quartet

    American Quartet

    Detective Fiona Fitzgerald is an unlikely force for justice in Washington, D.C.'s predominantly male police force. As a Senator's daughter and top investigator in the homicide division of the Metropolitan Police Department, Fiona maneuvers between two vastly different worlds, moving quickly from opulent State galas to gritty crime scenes. Born into the elite social circles of the nation's capital, and armed with intimate knowledge of the true face of the political establishment, Fiona is determined to expose the chicanery concealed within the highest echelons of the American political aristocracy.When a string of inexplicable murders rocks the hallowed streets of central D.C., Fiona finds herself charging through the shadows of a mysterious conspiracy. Faced with an investigation with no leads and a rising body count, Fiona's reputation as a top investigator is called into question.
  • Oh Yeah, Audrey!

    Oh Yeah, Audrey!

    It's 5:00 a.m. on Fifth Avenue, and 16-year-old Gemma Beasley is standing in front of Tiffany & Co. wearing the perfect black dress with her coffee in hand—just like Holly Golightly. As the cofounder of a successful Tumblr blog—Oh Yeah Audrey!—devoted to all things Audrey Hepburn, Gemma has traveled to New York in order to meet up with her fellow bloggers for the first time. She has meticulously planned out a 24-hour adventure in homage to Breakfast at Tiffany's; however, her plans are derailed when a glamorous boy sweeps in and offers her the New York experience she's always dreamed of. Gemma soon learns who her true friends are and that, sometimes, no matter where you go, you just end up finding pgsk.com with hip and sparkling prose, Oh Yeah, Audrey! is as much a story of friendship as it is a love letter to New York, Audrey Hepburn, and the character she made famous: Holly Golightly.
  • Water in May

    Water in May

    Fifteen-year-old Mari Pujols believes that the baby she's carrying will finally mean she' ll have a family member who will love her deeply and won't ever leave her—not like her mama, who took off when she was eight; or her papi, who's in jail; or her abuela, who wants as little to do with her as possible. But when doctors discover a potentially fatal heart defect in the fetus, Mari faces choices she never could have imagined. Surrounded by her loyal girl crew, her off-and-on boyfriend, and a dedicated doctor, Mari navigates a decision that could emotionally cripple the bravest of women. But both Mari and the broken-hearted baby inside her are fighters; and it doesn't take long to discover that this sick baby has the strength to heal an entire family. Inspired by true events, this gorgeous debut has been called “heartfelt, heartbreaking and—yes!—even a little heart-healing, too by bestselling YA novelist Carolyn Mackler.
  • The Signal-Man 信号员(英文版)

    The Signal-Man 信号员(英文版)

    The ghost story "The Signal-Man" is written in 1866, which concerns a spectre seen beside a tunnel entrance. The signal-man of the title tells the narrator of a ghost that has been haunting him. Each spectral appearance precedes, and is a harbinger of, a tragic event on the railway on which the signalman works. The signalman's work is at a signalbox in a deep cutting near a tunnel entrance on a lonely stretch of the line, and he controls the movements of passing trains. When there is danger, his fellow signalmen alert him via telegraph and alarms. Three times, he receives phantom warnings of danger when his bell rings in a fashion that only he can hear. Each warning is followed by the appearance of the spectre, and then by a terrible accident. The first accident involves a terrible collision between two trains in the tunnel. Dickens may have based this incident on the Clayton Tunnel rail crash that occurred in 1861.
热门推荐
  • 凤栖梧桐幽幽木香

    凤栖梧桐幽幽木香

    如果再给你一次机会,你会如何度过漫长岁月是沉溺在黑暗里自艾自怨还是追逐黎明之光当我遇到他时,好像答案就明显了
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 爱豆三国志

    爱豆三国志

    这本书,是一群coser带着CN来演的大型三国主题情景剧。如果这你都能看懂,那就真的厉害了!书友群号:696653530
  • 独步惊情:盛宠毒妃

    独步惊情:盛宠毒妃

    【已完结,新书《一世倾心:放倒妖孽邪王》已发布,希望大家都去看看,谢谢捧场!】人只有死过一次,才明白自己贱在哪里!重生归来,势要把握一切先机,可这一个个目露凶光的女人,实在是太恐怖了,怎么办才好呢?她冷冷一笑:“那就能动手就决不动口,能弄死就决不留活口。”那一天他说:“怡儿,朕护你一世无忧,可好?”她不语:一世无忧当真是许她的?多年以后他又说:“怡儿,朕陪你一世无忧,可好?”她得意的笑了:开玩笑,现在的她会这么随随便便的就被人搞定?
  • 素玉君我心悦你

    素玉君我心悦你

    天朝崩析,余三国鼎立,三国定下盟约,安黎民百姓,百年内不可侵犯边境,然后,雷厉风行的素玉君,乌雍国公主,于战乱之后,扶持胞弟,然后隐于山林清修。容正轩啪啪啪的敲门,“有人在吗?”素玉君慢条斯理的走到门前,瞥了他一眼,进了门,却是没有关上,容正轩的心里面砰的一声,公主走到第二到门都没反应。容正轩挑着从山上摘回来的晶莹欲滴的翠果,素玉君看了他一眼,淡淡的道,“蛇舔过的”容正轩啪的放下了水果。素玉君近来想着学琴,下山买了一把,回来后,容正轩献宝一样拿出了一本琴谱,素玉君把琴谱放进了书柜里。素玉君着凉了,睡梦中似乎在出汗,口中喃喃自语,容正轩拿着手帕轻柔的擦着她的手,“涵玉,别怕”看不羁少年和素玉君如何携手共林间
  • 地走飞侦

    地走飞侦

    被罪侵染,还是匍匐事外。看似真实的世界,让人顾盼流连。夏秋的周围总有人会先行离世,阴影的暗潮汹涌澎湃,在真诚的面具背后往往隐藏噬人的故事。
  • 雨天遇见你

    雨天遇见你

    刘雨若在经历了婚姻的挫折后,几次三番被前夫和前夫的现任妻子找麻烦,但是命运并没有让她的衰运就此延续,她的身边始终都有着喜欢他的人守护在他的身边,无论是如何的守护,总是站在她身后等着她转身。终于,在经历了流产,误会,甚至是排挤,更多的前男友的不屑与破坏后,还是与许星灿在一起了。几经风雨,好事多磨,最终却是白首不相离。
  • 回到大明写小说

    回到大明写小说

    他是说书人,他也是小说家,他让穿越小说在大明普及开来,但凡他开讲,那必定会是十里空巷,但凡他的新书上市,那必定会在顷刻之间被抢购一空...时逢靖难之役前夕,他又该如何抉择,是做个腰缠万贯的富家翁,还是封侯拜相,在史书之上为自己添上浓墨重彩的一笔...只是,人生在世自己的命运却并不掌握在自己的手中。新书《大明好伴读》已发!
  • 山海传说之僵临天下

    山海传说之僵临天下

    远古众神在女娲补天之后,觉得这个世界的已经有自己的法则。便撕破虚空离去。大地之母女娲与人王伏羲在离去之前为人界布下了最强大的界结禁制,无论是神,仙,魔,妖,鬼,只有进入人界都将受其压制。几千年不知何故三十六天众神仙将仙界与人界分离。只留下青龙白虎朱雀玄武镇守人界四荒,神陆吾执掌昆仑,最公正无私的冥王统领冥界。昆仑是唯一通往人间的路。她白若水修仙界的天之娇女,天生便是灵眼,于修行一途上天赋异禀,一次意外她竟穿越伏羲女娲设下的封印结界落入了神之弃地山海界……
  • 无限之生灵终律

    无限之生灵终律

    这是一部描写对生命,人心和世界的思考的作品。看似平静的世界,却隐藏着即将到来的变乱与纷争。各种永生法则开始构筑...欲望产生冲突,冲突带来毁灭...故事从科技中心之城——艾尔特开始,因为爱,追寻希望的两人结合在一起,代码与基因的结合,会给世界带来光明吗?他们又将如何对抗那些闻所未闻的科技,魔法,还有隐藏在黑暗中的那些危险?阴谋交错之下,什么将要苏醒?谁又将掌控最后的法则?不懈斗争的人们啊,撕开黑暗,从缝隙中透出那丝光明吧。