登陆注册
10783000000007

第7章

MISS BRETT'S FOR WOMEN

DEEP BOOMS AND SHARP CRIES. STRANGE SOUNDS ERUPTED IN Lena's dreams. She bolted up from her bed, heart hammering, and found herself in a strange room filled with gray light. A cool, thick fog had crept in through the window and with it the lonely boom of a foghorn warning ships off the rocky coast of Knob Knoster. Hungry gulls screamed and squabbled for breakfast, and Lena realized that if she didn't hurry, she would miss hers. Miss Brett had said seven a.m. With no time to bind her hair in a braid, she ran her tortoiseshell comb through the knots and pulled on a pair of pale thin gloves.

She was the last guest to arrive in the small dining room. There was only one seat empty, next to an old lady with a horn in her ear, which suited Lena fine. Perhaps there would be little conversation about her hands. As expected, no one else in the breakfast room was wearing gloves for the meal. Lena hoped that the pale color she chose would draw little attention and that anyone who did notice would be too polite to remark on them.

At the next table, Lena recognized her companion from the train-the lady with the firm jaw and red poppies on her hat. She was wearing the same hat, Lena noticed, not even removing it for the meal, as would have been proper. The woman next to her, the one Lena had seen at the station, shared the same thick profile. A pink carnation blossomed on the front of her stiff black dress. Lena smiled at the ladies in recognition, but they were too engaged in conversation to notice her.

The china teacups were delicate, covered with a pattern of blue forget-me-nots. Lena reached a trembling hand for the teapot. Her fingers wrapped around the thin handle. With practiced concentration she maneuvered the teapot with only one hand, steadying her cup with the other. Her long fingers made it much too easy to drop one of the tiny cups. By the time she had poured her tea and reached for a roll, a thin trickle of sweat had run between her shoulder blades.

"It's the fog, Mrs. Fetiscue." Poppy Hat's voice carried across the room. "It would drive anyone mad." She lowered her voice. "It's a cover for evil."

"Once," her companion replied, "the fog didn't lift for three weeks. Imagine that, Mrs. Fortinbras. You couldn't hardly tell if it were day or night. That's when the lot of them came slinking over the border. Killed a family in their own beds and then disappeared back to where they come from."

"Evil, Mrs. Fetiscue, pure evil. I don't know how a God-fearing woman like yourself could have lived here so long."

"You know, sister, that ever since our husbands died-God rest their souls-I've counted you as my closest friend and ally. It's how I've bore living in this heathen place."

Mrs. Fortinbras leaned across the table and patted her sister's hand. "There is no friend like a sister, Mrs. Fetiscue. I'm glad to have been some encouragement."

By now everyone in the room was listening. Miss Brett entered from the kitchen carrying a steaming tray of eggs. "The fog is natural to all sea towns."

"It's wicked!" declared Mrs. Fetiscue. "People do things under the cover of darkness they would never do in the light of day. Fog provides them the same benefit."

Mrs. Fortinbras nodded so vehemently that her poppies shook.

"Are you saying the people of Knoster are wicked?" Miss Brett set the tray of eggs down with a thump.

"No more than the average. But living so close to the borders of a land thick with heathens…" Mrs. Fortinbras's voice trailed off, but the point was clear. "My sister and I are traveling into Scree to convert the heathens. We'll have to get used to such things."

Miss Brett peered down the length of her nose.

Lena couldn't help herself. "Do you believe there are Peculiars in Scree?" she asked.

"Oh, there are Peculiars, all right. But we won't be concerning ourselves with them, dear. Peculiars do not have souls. Nothing to convert."

The rest of breakfast continued with subdued conversation. As soon as she could politely escape the dining room, Lena fled. A strange hollowness had filled her at the missionary's words. Perhaps this is how it feels to be soulless, she thought. Could one feel a soul? Lena concentrated very hard, focusing her attention on her rib cage. Surely that was where the soul would be encased. Nothing, except the anxious fluttering of her heart.

Lena tried to put her unease aside. It was time to be businesslike, time to focus on the reasons she had stopped in Knoster. She drew a thick shawl over her fitted jacket and took her second-best purse out of her luggage-the first-best having been the one lost on the train. As she prepared to leave, she had two purposes in mind. The first was to stand on the shore and touch the sea. The second purpose required more courage: Find a reliable guide into Scree, one whom she could afford now that her circumstances were considerably reduced.

All roads in Knoster wound down to the harbor. Foghorns beckoned, and Lena kept a good pace, although thick fog still obscured most of the view. Tall, crooked houses brooded like ghosts over the cobbled streets. Miss Brett had predicted the fog would burn off before noon and then Lena would be able to see some of the glories of Knob Knoster. The promise of a steam carousel near the boardwalk quickened Lena's steps.

Once Knoster had hopes of becoming the major port city in the West. Trade boats arrived from across the sea. Whalers set forth on the spumy waves, and a fishing fleet flourished. Miss Brett's father once owned a large fishing boat with a crew of twenty. But it had proved difficult to transport the necessary supplies for a town into Knoster. Train tunnels had not yet been excavated through the basalt cliffs, forcing the price of goods higher. And then there had always been the rumors.

As the coastal town mushroomed, news of its superior harbor drew investors despite the high cost of supplies. But then animals began to disappear: a merchant's horse, the dairy farmer's best milk cow, neighbors' dogs. Then a handful of the new citizens of Knoster gave credence to rumors about the wild lands to the north. Old stories of Peculiars resurfaced, and with the rumors fear blew in like a persistent wind. People saw Peculiars in every misfortune. The final blow came when the Whittlestone Mining Company withdrew its plans for a base of operations in Knoster. The new and still fragile economy collapsed. Houses were sold cheap, farms abandoned. Only the hardiest people remained, along with a few eccentrics who found that the isolation of Knoster suited them.

Now only a small fleet of fishing boats and whalers remained, and every year their numbers grew smaller. The weather and tides were too capricious to allow them to compete with those from more southerly ports.

The town had a faded glamour. The opera house, still the largest building in town and the only one made out of brick, had once offered performances by the likes of Ida Fincher, the Western Star. It was now reduced to a glorified grange, advertising town hall meetings and displaying a tattered poster for a salon steam carousel known as the Pleasure Dome. On the poster, men, women, and children rode on painted wooden ponies or pigs while others glided in gold-leaf gondolas circling a carousel organ. Lena stared at the poster for a long time. She had always dreamed of riding a carousel pony.

Like the poster, everything in Knoster had grown tattered with time. Nothing could stand up against the relentless salt wind. That wind was stirring now. Lena watched the fog swirl in tendrils across the sky. The dampness made her hair curl, and beads of moisture clung like tears to her lashes. Her anticipation quickened with her pace. She had never been to a beach before. As she wound her way down the hill, the train station appeared suddenly on her left, and she heard more distinctly the slap of water and the roar of waves. Dark pilings pierced the fog, and she set them as guideposts to the harbor. Suddenly, the sidewalk ended and stone crunched beneath her feet.

As a child, Lena had pored over pictures of tropical beaches in faraway lands, beaches where sand lay smooth and warm as a blanket. Those were not the beaches of Knob Knoster. She sifted crushed rock, bits of shell, and glass through her fingers. Everything around her was muted in shades of gray-water, sky, and land. She breathed in the distinctive smell of fish and tar. Waves licked the stony shore of the harbor and crashed against the riprap of a jetty. And Lena found that she was listening, as if the wild call of the ocean was familiar. It filled her with strange longings for adventure, longings Nana Crane would say no civilized girl should ever have. Her heart beat faster. Lena tried not to listen, afraid the ocean might call her name.

She was not sure how long she stood in the harbor listening, and not listening. It was long enough that the sun began to fight its way through the remnants of fog. And with the sun, the wind whipped in, salty and sharp. And the landscape emerged. Lena was surprised to see she wasn't alone on the harbor beach. A wizened man with a pipe in his mouth stood looking out to sea not more than a few yards away. Not wanting to disturb him, Lena averted her eyes and looked down at the ground around her feet, hoping to discover shells. She jumped. Instead of shells, strange brown snakes crisscrossed the rough beach. Long and bulbous, they sprouted tufts of green hair but lay completely still. Lena bent closer. Cautiously, she poked at one with the pointed tip of her alligator boot. It didn't move.

"Bull kelp." The man wore a squashed bowler hat and mumbled his words around the pipe between his lips. "Some folks say it's mermaid whips, used to tame the sea horses." His laugh was rusty, creaking like something exposed too long to the sea air. From under the hat deep-set eyes twinkled. "Not from here, are you?"

Lena shook her head and recovered her voice. "No, it's my first time at the ocean."

"Thought so." He nodded and chewed his pipe.

The man, Lena noted, was barely taller than her shoulder. He looked like one of the craggy boulders come to life. "Do you live here?"

"Came here with my father's fishing boat 'fore this town was anything at all, and I'm still here now that it's nothing again."

"You're a fisherman?" She could see five or six boats bobbing not far offshore now that the fog had cleared.

"Used to be." He rubbed his hand across the stubble on his face. "Now I just help out on the boats, some."

Lena thought quickly. If he'd been here that long, he might be just the person to ask. "I want to hire a guide. Perhaps you could tell me whom to talk to?" She wasn't prepared to reveal too much about her reasons for coming to Knoster.

"Fishing guide? That's the kind of guide most tourists want." He squinted out toward the open water.

"No, a travel guide." Lena scuffed the toe of her boot in the grainy sand. "I'm not really a tourist. I need a guide into Scree."

The man turned toward her, his furrowed face scrunched tightly as a raisin. "You don't look the type to have business in Scree." He sucked his pipe thoughtfully as his eyes traveled from the pointy toes of her boots to her dark, windswept hair.

Lena attempted to appear dignified. "Nevertheless, I am here on business. And I'm willing to pay."

Overhead a seagull whirled and screeched as it dropped a clamshell to smash against the rock. In a sharp dive the bird dropped and swallowed the exposed animal in a gulp.

"They're clever that way," said the man. "Know how to get what they want." He tapped his pipe against his leg and pulled out a pouch of tobacco. He took his time refilling the pipe. Lena waited.

"Looks like you know what you want too. Name's Milo. If we're going to talk business, we'd best introduce ourselves." He shuffled toward her and extended a brown-clawed hand.

"Lena Mattacascar." She held out her gloved hand, which he took and shook without comment.

"Well, Lena Mattacascar-it just so happens you asked the right man. There's only two folks I'd trust to take me into Scree. Two folks who really know the land and can help you find whatever it is you're looking for." He paused, waiting for her to say just what she was looking for. When she didn't, he continued. "And I suspect it's not the usual tourist curiosity. But it'll cost ya."

She nodded.

"Margaret Flynn-you can find her down at the Parasol." He nodded toward the row of shops lining the harbor. "And Mr. Tobias Beasley. But he don't do that kind of thing much anymore. Lives in a big house outside of town."

Lena started at the name Beasley. "Is that the Mr. Beasley with a library?"

"You've heard of him. Yep, that's him, all right. Used to be a practicing medical man. Gave it up a few years back. But I can say this for him: He helped out some of those poor folk living in the forests up there. A shame the way they been treated. Beasley and Flynn're both strange folk, I won't deceive you. But they know things about Scree others don't." He turned back toward the sea, nursing his pipe, hands buried deep in his pockets.

"Thank you. Thank you very much." Lena looked up the narrow harbor lane, wondering just how far it was to the Parasol. "There's one thing more."

"Go on."

Lena could feel her face turning red. "Does Knoster still have the Pleasure Dome?"

Milo nodded. "Fancy carousel. Still runs on the weekends, hoping to draw in tourists. Not far from the Parasol. You can't miss it. The front's covered with cupids and doodads."

"You've been very helpful, Milo."

"Not often I get to help folks looking to go into Scree." Lena wasn't sure, but she thought she caught the muttered words "a fool's errand" as she walked away.

EAVESDROPPING LENA AT FIVE YEARS OF AGE

Late at night. Banging on the front door. I sit up in bed, and in the darkness there are shadows cast from the gas lamps outside my bedroom window. Creeping into the cold of the upstairs hallway, careful to avoid the squeaky floorboard, I seek out the listening grate. All day Mother's been sharp, hardly talking, even when she tucked me into bed. And there had been no story.

Nana Crane watched with her birdlike eyes but held her tongue. I haven't seen Poppa for two days. I wonder where he's gone. But I'm afraid to ask.

I can hear the bolt slide open on the front door and the mumbling of a male voice. Is it Poppa? No, another man's voice. Mother invites him into the parlor. Good, I can hear the words more clearly when they come from the parlor. It's freezing outside. I put my ear to the grate and wrap my icy feet in the hem of my nightgown.

"Your husband's down at the precinct in lockup. Started a fight in a bar last night and gave a fellow a nasty blow to the head. Sent the gentleman to the hospital. Far as anyone could see, it was unprovoked. Same thing last month, Mrs. Mattacascar."

Mother's words are too low to hear. I wonder what a precinct is.

"I understand, ma'am, but bail's going to be larger this time. Here's what the judge has ordered."

Papers rustle.

"I'll pay it, of course, I'll pay it. First thing in the morning."

In the morning, before I finish breakfast, Mother hurries out. Nana Crane pours a glug of tea into my mug of milk.

"Your father has bad blood. Nothing your mother does can change that."

I stir the milk, wondering what makes some blood bad.

同类推荐
  • 发现 (龙人日志系列#8)

    发现 (龙人日志系列#8)

    在《发现》(《龙人日志》#8)中,凯特琳和迦勒在公元三十三年的古代以色列醒来,并惊讶地发现他们身处在基督生活的时代。古代以色列是一个充满圣地、古犹太教堂和失落的遗址的地方。这里是当时世界上精神控制最严密的地方——而在公元三十三年,也就是耶稣受难的那一年,是精神控制最严密的一年。在以色列首都耶路撒冷的中心座落着所罗门的圣殿,在圣殿里安置着至圣所和神的约柜。而耶稣将最终走过这些街道,走向最后的十字架。在罗马士兵以及他们的总督——本丢·比拉多的严密统治下,耶路撒冷充满有各种宗教背景和信仰的人们。这座城市也有隐秘的一面,有着众多错综复杂的街道和迷宫般的巷道,通往不为人知的秘密和异教徒神庙。现在,凯特琳终于有了四把钥匙,但是,她仍然需要找到她的父亲。她的追寻将她带到拿撒勒、伽百侬,带到耶路撒冷,带她追随着耶稣行过的踪迹去寻找秘密和线索的神秘踪迹。追寻也同样将她带到古老的橄榄山上,带到艾登和他的家族那里,带着她找到更多她从未知道的更强大的秘密和圣物那里。每经过一处,她的父亲就只有一步之遥。但是时间紧迫——山姆,被转向黑暗的一面,也穿越到这个时代,而且和邪恶家族的领袖Rexius联手。他们急起直追要阻止凯特琳得到盾。Rexius将不惜一切代价毁灭凯特琳和迦勒——有山姆在旁相助,身后有一支新生的军队,他胜券在握。更糟糕的是,斯嘉丽和她的父母走散了,独自一人穿越到这个时代。她独自一人,和露丝流浪在耶路撒冷的大街上,她渐渐发现了自己的力量,并发现自己比以前处在更危险得多的境地中——特别是当她发现自己也持有一个秘密的时候。凯特琳找到她父亲了吗?她找到古老的龙人之盾了吗?她和女儿重聚了吗?她的亲弟弟是不是企图杀死她?她和迦勒之间的爱能不能在这最后一场时光穿越中经受住考验?《发现》是《龙人日志》系列的第八本书(之前有《转变》、《爱》、《背叛》、《命中注定》、《渴望》、《订婚》和《誓言》)。本书同时也可以作为一本独立的小说来读。《发现》共约有71,000字。《龙人日志》#9-#10现在也有售!同时,摩根莱斯第一畅销书系列、反乌托邦、后启示录惊悚小说《幸存者三部曲》现也已有售;摩根莱斯第一畅销玄幻系列《魔法师戒指》(含10部,未完待续)现也已有售——此系列第一部《寻找英雄》,可免费下载!
  • The Problem Child (The Sisters Grimm #3)
  • Splintered (Splintered Series #1)
  • Evita, First Lady

    Evita, First Lady

    Eva Peron was a star and a legend during her lifetime, one of the most alluring women of the twentieth century. Through the hit Broadway musical Evita by Andrew Lloyd Webber, her story became famous, and with the release of the film starring Madonna as Eva Peron, her life became a media obsession once again. Whore and feminist, tyrant and saint, Evita was the beautiful and legendary woman who rose up from poverty to become the hypnotically powerful first lady of Argentina. To millions of poor people she was a savior; to her enemies she was a monstrous dictator. In this riveting biography, John Barnes explores the astonishing paradox of this champion of the poor who attacked the rich and, in the process, made herself the wealthiest woman in the world.
  • Iron Cast

    Iron Cast

    It's Boston, 1919, and the Cast Iron club is packed. On stage, hemopaths —whose "afflicted" blood gives them the ability to create illusions through art —Corinne and Ada have been best friends ever since infamous gangster Johnny Dervish recruited them into his circle. By night they perform for Johnny's crowds, and by day they con Boston's elite. When a job goes wrong and Ada is imprisoned, she realizes how precarious their position is. After she escapes, two of the Cast Iron's hires are shot, and Johnny disappears. With the law closing in, Corinne and Ada are forced to hunt for answers, even as betrayal faces them at every turn. An ideal next read for fans of Libba Bray's The Diviners.
热门推荐
  • 再续红楼溶黛情

    再续红楼溶黛情

    泪恩偿罢,宿缘未尽。当黛玉醒来,重生在了三年前的扬州。林如海亡故,留下孤女伶俜。同族虎视眈眈,更有贾府欲壑难填,五代列侯的林氏望族风雨飘摇。重生而来的黛玉,看穿了那些伪善真恶,她又该如何应对。木石无份,金玉有缘,她是否能真的放开心怀?水润清木,既唯水能溉,唯水能续,属于她的良缘,又应于何人?水溶,朝野称赞的一代贤王,温润如玉,风华绝代,却心机至深。雪地里的一次邂逅,冥冥之中注定了一世纠缠。这一世,流烟散尽,谁拭她双颊泪痕道一声:此生再不令你落泪。这一世,尘埃落定,又是谁,执她的手,许下三生三世,生则同室,死则同椁。本文,宠,偶有小虐怡情,一对一,有宅斗,给林妹妹一个别样的红楼人生。红楼迷们不要错过,赶紧收藏了呦~
  • 初长成

    初长成

    在我十八岁那年的冬天,一个雪后初晴的午后,母亲午睡醒来,说,我梦见春泥了。当时我正坐在窗前看外面的雪,不由转头道,我也正想春泥呢。说罢,我和母亲相视而笑,母亲掀开被子坐起来,揉搓着双腿,说,梦里面春泥还是那样新鲜,葱苗一样。我起身给母亲倒了杯温水,顺势坐在她身边,并不回话,又把目光望向窗外,我还是相信,春泥仍如当年般站立在那里,释放着芬芳。六年前,这个小镇迎来了入冬以来最凶猛的一场雪,不只挡住了门,还差一点爬上窗台,径直进到屋子里面来。父亲早早起床,从厨房的后窗跳出去和邻居们一起清理院内的积雪。
  • 雨点传奇

    雨点传奇

    楼兰界(主宰)云歌,修炼逆天功法时,意外陨落!当他再一次醒来的时候,以过去万年,看他如何脚踩各路妖孽天才,重回巅峰之路。
  • 慕色贪欢

    慕色贪欢

    “贪财好色这不人之常情嘛。”我淡淡的望着身旁面色阴沉的少年,“怎么?不服?”
  • Love-Songs of Childhood

    Love-Songs of Childhood

    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。
  • 快穿红娘系统男神恋爱吗

    快穿红娘系统男神恋爱吗

    一个月黑风高的夜晚,简兮被迫绑定了一个高(智)级(障)系统。开启了自己的红娘之路。不过,为什么气运之子不去找他的天命真女,在她后面追着跑是怎么回事啊?!!!
  • 剑开长生

    剑开长生

    大道断生机,长生何处寻?我有一剑可开天,亘古长河寻古仙!沧海禁断入归墟,大道长生万万年!(新书《核平纪元传》求罩)
  • 玄亟仙踪

    玄亟仙踪

    诸天万界,种族林立;末法时代。崛起于微末之间,傲立于寰宇之巅·····
  • 阴都志

    阴都志

    阴阳相生相克,万事周而复始。生与死一线之隔,善与恶一念之间。风平浪静之际,暗流涌动之时。人心难满,欲壑难填,人间如此,阴间亦然……
  • 纳西族风俗志

    纳西族风俗志

    本书读者对象:民俗学、文化人类学、民族学、宗教学专业工作者及有兴趣读者。