登陆注册
5461900000013

第13章 The Hero of Redclay(3)

It was a nice little place, taking it all round.

"I remember a ball at the local town hall, where the scrub aristocrats took one end of the room to dance in and the ordinary scum the other.

It was a saving in music. Some day an Australian writer will come along who'll remind the critics and readers of Dickens, Carlyle, and Thackeray mixed, and he'll do justice to these little customs of ours in the little settled-district towns of Democratic Australia.

This sort of thing came to a head one New Year's Night at Redclay, when there was a `public' ball and peace on earth and good will towards all men -- mostly on account of a railway to Redclay being surveyed.

We were all there. They'd got the Doc. out of his shell to act as M.C.

"One of the aristocrats was the daughter of the local storekeeper; she belonged to the lawn-tennis clique, and they WERE select.

For some reason or other -- because she looked upon Miss Wilson as a slavey, or on account of a fancied slight, or the heat working on ignorance, or on account of something that comes over girls and women that no son of sin can account for -- this Miss Tea-'n'-sugar tossed her head and refused Miss Wilson's hand in the first set and so broke the ladies' chain and the dance. Then there was a to-do.

The Doctor held up his hand to stop the music, and said, very quietly, that he must call upon Miss So-and-so to apologise to Miss Wilson -- or resign the chair. After a lot of fuss the girl did apologise in a snappy way that was another insult. Jack Drew gave Miss Wilson his arm and marched her off without a word -- I saw she was almost crying.

Some one said, `Oh, let's go on with the dance.' The Doctor flashed round on them, but they were too paltry for him, so he turned on his heel and went out without a word.

But I was beneath them again in social standing, so there was nothing to prevent me from making a few well-chosen remarks on things in general -- which I did; and broke up that ball, and broke some heads afterwards, and got myself a good deal of hatred and respect, and two sweethearts; and lost all the jobs I was likely to get, except at the bank, the Doctor's, and the Royal.

"One day it was raining -- general rain for a week. Rain, rain, rain, over ridge and scrub and galvanised iron and into the dismal creeks.

I'd done all my inside work, except a bit under the Doctor's verandah, where he'd been having some patching and altering done round the glass doors of his surgery, where he consulted his patients.

I didn't want to lose time. It was a Monday and no day for the Royal, and there was no dust, so it was a good day for varnishing.

I took a pot and brush and went along to give the Doctor's doors a coat of varnish. The Doctor and Drew were inside with a fire, drinking whisky and smoking, but I didn't know that when I started work.

The rain roared on the iron roof like the sea. All of a sudden it held up for a minute, and I heard their voices. The doctor had been shouting on account of the rain, and forgot to lower his voice.

`Look here, Jack Drew,' he said, `there are only two things for you to do if you have any regard for that girl; one is to stop this' (the liquor I suppose he meant) `and pull yourself together; and I don't think you'll do that -- I know men. The other is to throw up the `Advertiser' -- it's doing you no good -- and clear out.'

`I won't do that,' says Drew. `Then shoot yourself,' said the Doctor.

`(There's another flask in the cupboard). You know what this hole is like. . . . She's a good true girl -- a girl as God made her.

I knew her father and mother, and I tell you, Jack, I'd sooner see her dead than. . . .' The roof roared again. I felt a bit delicate about the business and didn't like to disturb them, so I knocked off for the day.

"About a week before that I was down in the bed of the Redclay Creek fishing for `tailers'. I'd been getting on all right with the housemaid at the `Royal' -- she used to have plates of pudding and hot pie for me on the big gridiron arrangement over the kitchen range; and after the third tuck-out I thought it was good enough to do a bit of a bear-up in that direction. She mentioned one day, yarning, that she liked a stroll by the creek sometimes in the cool of the evening.

I thought she'd be off that day, so I said I'd go for a fish after I'd knocked off. I thought I might get a bite.

Anyway, I didn't catch Lizzie -- tell you about that some other time.

"It was Sunday. I'd been fishing for Lizzie about an hour when I saw a skirt on the bank out of the tail of my eye -- and thought I'd got a bite, sure. But I was had. It was Miss Wilson strolling along the bank in the sunset, all by her pretty self.

She was a slight girl, not very tall, with reddish frizzled hair, grey eyes, and small, pretty features. She spoke as if she had more brains than the average, and had been better educated.

Jack Drew was the only young man in Redclay she could talk to, or who could talk to a girl like her; and that was the whole trouble in a nutshell. The newspaper office was next to the bank, and I'd seen her hand cups of tea and cocoa over the fence to his office window more than once, and sometimes they yarned for a while.

"She said, `Good morning, Mr. Mitchell.'

"I said, `Good morning, Miss.'

"There's some girls I can't talk to like I'd talk to other girls.

She asked me if I'd caught any fish, and I said, `No, Miss.'

She asked me if it wasn't me down there fishing with Mr. Drew the other evening, and I said, `Yes -- it was me.' Then presently she asked me straight if he was fishing down the creek that afternoon?

I guessed they'd been down fishing for each other before. I said, `No, I thought he was out of town.' I knew he was pretty bad at the Royal.

I asked her if she'd like to have a try with my line, but she said No, thanks, she must be going; and she went off up the creek. I reckoned Jack Drew had got a bite and landed her. I felt a bit sorry for her, too.

同类推荐
  • 铜鼓书堂词话

    铜鼓书堂词话

    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。
  • 琴赋

    琴赋

    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。
  • All Roads Lead to Calvary

    All Roads Lead to Calvary

    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。
  • 老父云游始末

    老父云游始末

    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。
  • 魏忠贤小说斥奸书

    魏忠贤小说斥奸书

    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
  • 重生国民男神:离爷撩不停

    重生国民男神:离爷撩不停

    【1v1甜宠文】【微虐】一代军营女王,执行任务中光荣牺牲。重生到伪男身上,看她如何在娱乐圈掀起腥风血雨,打脸虐渣。然而,她和某人的牵扯,却是剪不断理还乱。佛曰:放下屠刀,立地成佛。离封:我的手里没有屠刀,执念早已成魔。因为我不知道,下一辈子还是否能遇见你,所以我今生才会,那么努力,把最好的都给你。#紧紧地咬着牙,强忍着疼痛,心痛得却像被千万根尖针扎过:我这样的人,连死都不怕,却害怕着黑夜,怕黑夜过去后,物是人非的一切。#身影渐渐消失在风雪中,心中冰冷得无以复加:下一次可不可以,换你褪去一身骄傲,喜欢我到疯掉?(此文原创,禁止转载,云起书院首发,作者酸奶q,抄袭必究,不喜勿喷。)
  • 中国本土精彩老童话大全集(超值金版)

    中国本土精彩老童话大全集(超值金版)

    中国有神话故事,中国自己的本土神话是丰富多彩的,其种类是多样的,其特色是鲜明的,其内涵是深远的。其故事是精湛的。许许多多的神话故事也是相当有知名度的,许许多多的神话人物也是相当有影响的。宫曙光和张馨编著的《中国本土精彩老神话》在前人的整理基础上,对中国神话重新进行了彻底的梳理,编者将支离破碎、点线分割、散落各地的中国神话彻底地回归到了一个有着基本脉络、基本情节的体系上,以期较完整地献给中国读者。尤其是广大的中国青少年提供一套详实可靠、真正体现中国特色的神话故事读本。一起来翻阅《中国本土精彩老神话》吧!
  • 我家上神疯了

    我家上神疯了

    那一战,硝烟四起,她决然离去。“若是能有幸生还,我便会回来接你。”圆圆看着远去的背影:“你一定要回来接我啊!”那一天,别无二致,她独自起身。“在这里好好历练,一年后我来接你。”绿萝答应她好好历练:“好!到时候你一定要来接我,不管多久我都等。”那一刻,宿命轮回,她再次离去。“以后我会来看你。”南露的眼里满是不舍:“嗯,你一定要来看我!”终是付了有心人,长等久候一场空。诛仙台,幽冥现。再见之时,厉鬼相伴。铃铛响,冥火燃。夜半之时,一辇红轿。身着红衣,万鬼臣服,她红唇轻启,无情收割生命:“杀你,会脏了我的手。”步履蹁跹,傲世风华,她神色冰冷,勾起那人下颚:“不过是一个靠我鲜血苟活的下等仙子,也敢如此放肆?”瞬间血溅三尺,无人敢议。
  • 散三儿

    散三儿

    自在逍遥的多好!我煮酒,你温茶。我笑着,你看着。别嘴上说不理我了,却还像个影子一样跟在我后面。
  • 临风听雨眠

    临风听雨眠

    宇宙浩渺,万物归元,万法皆空,色即是空,一沙一花,世界天堂,无中生有,有终化无,无无有有,有有无无,阴阳五行,天人合一,回归大道,归根复命,灵界为基,化生六界,六界众生,终归轮回,周而复始,循环往复,轮回之外,超脱六界,大陆海域,灵气不一,奈河桥下,可叹奈何,洞天福地,鲜有仙丹,断魂炼狱,九龙吐珠,封魔之渊,飞影逐月,虚妄之海,流觞无刃,无幽无忧,幻海无边,无色无渊,彼岸无边。
  • 追个媳妇儿我容易么

    追个媳妇儿我容易么

    本文没有勾心斗角,没有第三者插足,我就是想写一个甜文,一直甜到底。生活本就不易,我希望生活能够和小说一样甜蜜。祝愿天下有情人终成眷属,愿所有相爱的人都能有面包有爱情。
  • 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。
  • 校草多半是傲娇

    校草多半是傲娇

    啊咧,自己在酒吧里算计的帅哥,竟然是所谓的未婚夫!此男不仅脾气臭,还看不起她!问题是,她居然要跟他同居,美其名曰培养感情——她扔下一张金卡:“一百万,你给我滚!”“一千万,你滚。”好啊,用钱砸不死你,就直接扑倒吧!“宝贝,我冷!”他玩味的目光锁住她。“是吗?”她坏坏一笑,将手中的贵妇猫丢到他怀里,“那这只喵星人给你,拿去暖被窝吧,想用多久就用多久!怎么样,我够体贴吧?”他调笑着一把将她捞过来,“不,我需要的是你。”【世界上最长情的等待,是你走了,我还在。】
  • 魔法销售圣经

    魔法销售圣经

    献给中国上千万夹缝求生的销售员,“早一日看到,少奋斗十年”的销售职场宝书。把眼睛升级为 “水晶球”,学会念“销售魔咒”,生意场如舞台,一流的销售员像魔法师一样表演。你是不是已经迫不及待地想要迅速变成“销售魔法师”了?那么请随我们一起步入这座神奇的“魔法销售”殿堂吧。
  • 独手丐(下册)

    独手丐(下册)

    本书是一部武侠小说。由“现代武侠小说之王”还珠楼主创作。本书第一至十二集由上海元昌印书馆出版,第十三、十四集由武训出版社印行;第一至三集未印出版年月,第四集出版于1950年4月,第一四集出版于1951年5月。全书共五十八回,六十八万字。