登陆注册
10831300000007

第7章 Coming Events

In point of fact, investigations have shown that Alan was not the first to hear Ferrelyn's news. She had been worried and puzzled for some little time, and two or three days before she wrote to him had made up her mind that the time had come for the matter to be known in the family circle: for one thing, she badly needed advice and explanation that none of the books she consulted seemed able to give her; and, for another, it struck her as more dignified than just going on until somebody should guess. Angela, she decided, would be the best person to tell first-Mother, too, of course, but a little later on, when the organizing was already done; it looked like one of those occasions when Mother might get terribly executive about everything.

Decision, however, had been rather easier to take than action. On the Wednesday morning Ferrelyn's mind was fully made up. At some time in that day, some relaxed hour, she would draw Angela quietly aside and explain how things were….

Unfortunately, there hadn't seemed to be any part of Wednesday when people were really relaxed. Thursday morning did not feel suitable somehow, either, and in the afternoon Angela had had a Women's Institute meeting which made her look tired in the evening. There was a moment on Friday afternoon that might have done-and yet it did not seem quite the kind of thing one could raise while Daddy showed his lunch visitor the garden, preparatory to bringing him back for tea. So, what with one thing and another, Ferrelyn arose on Saturday morning with her secret still unshared.

'I'll really have to tell her today-even if everything doesn't seem absolutely right for it. A person could go on this way for weeks,' she told herself firmly, as she finished dressing.

Gordon Zellaby was at the last stage of his breakfast when she reached the table. He accepted her good-morning kiss absent-mindedly, and presently took himself off to his routine-once briskly round the garden, then to the study, and the Work in progress.

Ferrelyn ate some cornflakes, drank some coffee, and accepted a fried egg and bacon. After two nibbles she pushed the plate away decisively enough to arouse Angela from her reflections.

'What's the matter?' Angela inquired from her end of the table. 'Isn't it fresh?'

'Oh, there's nothing wrong with it,' Ferrelyn told her. 'Ijust don't happen to feel eggy this morning, that's all.'

Angela seemed uninterested, when one had half-hoped she would ask why. An inside voice seemed to prompt Ferrelyn: 'Why not now? After all, it can't really make much difference when, can it?' So she took a breath. By way of introducing the matter gently she said:

'As a matter of fact, Angela, I was sick this morning.'

'Oh, indeed,' said her stepmother, and paused while she helped herself to butter. In the act of raising her marmaladed toast, she added: 'So was I. Horrid, isn't it?'

Now she had taxied on to the runway, Ferrelyn was going through with it. She squashed the opportunity of diverting, forthwith:

'I think,' she said, steadily, 'that mine was rather special kind of being sick. The sort,' she added, in order that it should be perfectly clear, 'that happens when a person might be going to have a baby, if you see what I mean.'

Angela regarded her for a moment with thoughtful interest, and nodded slowly.

'I do,' she agreed. With careful attention she buttered a further area of toast, and added marmalade. Then she looked up again.

'So was mine,' she said.

Ferrelyn's mouth fell a little open as she stared. To her astonishment, and to her confusion, she found herself feeling slightly shocked…. But…. Well, after all, why not? Angela was only sixteen years older than herself, so it was all very natural really, only… well, somehow one just hadn't expected it…. It didn't seem quite…. After all, Daddy was a triple grandfather by his first marriage….

Besides, it was all so unexpected…. It somehow hadn't seemed likely…. Not that Angela wasn't a wonderful person, and one was very fond of her… but, sort, of as a capable elder sister…. It needed a bit of readjusting to….

She went on staring at Angela, unable to find the right-sounding thing to say, because everything had somehow turned the wrong way round….

Angela was not seeing Ferrelyn. She was looking straight down the table, out of the window at something much further away than the bare, swaying branches of the chestnut. Her dark eyes were bright and shiny.

The shininess increased and sparkled into two drops sparkling on her lower lashes. They welled, overflowed, and ran down Angela's cheeks.

A kind of paralysis still held Ferrelyn. She had never seen Angela cry. Angela wasn't that kind of person….

Angela bent forward, and put her face in her hands. Ferrelyn jumped up as if she had been suddenly released. She ran to Angela, put her arms round her, and felt her trembling. She held her close, and stroked her hair, and made small, comforting sounds.

In the pause that followed Ferrelyn could not help feeling that a curious element of miscasting had intruded. It was not an exact reversal of roles, for she had had no intention of weeping on Angela's shoulder; but it was near enough to it to make one wonder if one were fully awake.

Quite soon, however, Angela ceased to shake. She drew longer, calmer breaths, and presently sought for a handkerchief.

'Phew!' she said. 'Sorry to be such a fool, but I'm so happy.'

'Oh' Ferrelyn responded, uncertainly.

Angela blew, blinked, and dabbed.

'You see,' she explained, 'I've not really dared to believe it myself. Telling it to somebody else suddenly made it real. And I've always wanted to, so much, you see. But then nothing happened, and went on not happening, so I began to think-well, I'd just about decided I'd have to try to forget about it, and make the best of things. And now it's really happening after all, I-I-' She began to weep again, quietly and comfortably.

A few minutes later she pulled herself together, gave a final pat with the bunched handkerchief, and decisively put it away.

'There,' she said, 'that's over. I never thought I was one to enjoy a good cry, but it does seem to help.' She looked at Ferrelyn. 'Makes one thoroughly selfish, too-I'm sorry, my dear.'

'Oh, that's all right. I'm glad for you,' Ferrelyn said, generously she thought because, after all, one had been a bit anti-climaxed. After a pause, she went on:

'Actually, I don't feel weepy about it myself. But I do feel a bit frightened….'

The word caught Angela's attention, and dragged her thoughts from self-contemplation. It was not a response she expected from Ferrelyn. She looked at her step-daughter for a thoughtful moment, as if the full import of the situation were only just reaching her.

'Frightened, my dear?' she repeated. 'I don't think you need feel that. It isn't very proper, of course, but-well, we shan't get anywhere by being puritanical about it. The first thing to do is to make sure you're right.'

'I am right,' Ferrelyn said, gloomily. 'But I don't understand it. It's different for you, being married, and so on.'

Angela disregarded that. She went on:

'Well, then, the next thing must be to let Alan know.'

'Yes, I suppose so,' agreed Ferrelyn, without eagerness.

'Of course it is. And you don't need to be frightened of that. Alan won't let you down. He adores you.'

'Are you sure of that, Angela?' doubtfully.

'Why, yes, you silly. One only has to look at him. Of course, it's all quite reprehensible, but I shouldn't be surprised if you find he's delighted. Naturally, it will-Why, Ferrelyn, what's the matter?' She broke off, startled by Ferrelyn's expression.

'But-but you don't understand, Angela. It wasn't Alan.'

The look of sympathy died from Angela's face. Her expression went cold. She started to get up.

'No!' exclaimed Ferrelyn, desperately, 'you don't understand, Angela. It isn't that. It wasn't anybody! That's why I'm frightened….'

***

In the course of the next fortnight, three of the Midwich young women sought confidential interviews with Mr Leebody. He had baptized them when they were babies; he knew them, and their parents, well. All of them were good, intelligent, and certainly not ignorant, girls. Yet each of them told him, in effect: 'It wasn't anybody, Vicar. That's why I'm frightened….'

When Harriman, the baker, chanced to hear that his wife had been to see the doctor, he remembered that Herbert Flagg's body had been found in his front garden, and he beat her up, while she tearfully protested that Herbert hadn't come in, and that she'd not had anything to do with him, or with any other man.

Young Tom Dorry returned home on leave from the navy after eighteen months' foreign service. When he learned of his wife's condition, he picked up his traps and went over to his mother's cottage. But she told him to go back and stand by the girl because she was frightened. And when that didn't move him, she told him that she herself, respectable widow for years was-well, not exactly frightened, but she couldn't for the life of her say how it had happened. In a bemused state Tom Dorry did go back. He found his wife lying on the kitchen floor, with an empty aspirin bottle beside her, and he pelted for the doctor.

One not-so-young woman suddenly bought a bicycle, and pedalled it madly for astonishing distances, with fierce determination.

Two young women collapsed in over-hot baths.

Three inexplicably tripped, and fell downstairs.

A number suffered from unusual gastric upsets.

Even Miss Ogle, at the post office, was observed eating a curious meal which involved bloater-paste spread half an inch thick, and about half a pound of pickled gherkins.

A point was reached when Dr Willers' mounting anxiety drove him into urgent conference with Mr Leebody at the Vicarage, and, as if to underline the need for action, their talk was terminated by a caller in agitated need of the doctor.

It turned out less badly than it might have done. Luckily the word 'poison' appeared on the disinfectant bottle in conformity with regulations, and was not to be taken as literally as Rosie Platch had thought. But that did not alter the tragic intention. When he had finished, Dr Willers was trembling with an impotent, targetless anger. Poor little Rosie Platch was only seventeen….

同类推荐
  • Perseverance

    Perseverance

    The book is deeply grounded spiritually, accessing human experience and wisdom from many sources. We're just the most recent ones to face these challenges, and we can meet them as those who came before us did.
  • Murder in the Cathedral

    Murder in the Cathedral

    Murder in the Cathedral, written for the Canterbury Festival on 1935, was the first high point on T. S. Eliot's dramatic achievement. It remains one of the great plays of the century. Like Greek drama, its theme and form are rooted in religion and ritual purgation and renewal, and it was this return to the earliest sources of drama that brought poetry triumphantly back to the English stage.
  • Opened Ground

    Opened Ground

    This volume is a much-needed new selection of Seamus Heaney's work, taking account of recent volumes and of the author's work as a translator, and offering a more generous choice from previous volumes. Opened Ground: Poems 1966-1996 comes as close to being a 'Collected Poems' as its author cares to make it. It replaces his New Selected Poems 1966-1987, giving a fuller selection from each of the volumes represented there and adding large parts of those that have appeared since, together with examples of his work as a translator from the Greek, Latin, Italian and other languages. The book concludes with 'Crediting Poetry', the speech with which Seamus Heaney accepted the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature, awarded to him, in the words of the Swedish Academy of Letters, for his 'works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth'.
  • The Complete Short Stories Of Ernest Hemingway(IV)
  • Seeing Things

    Seeing Things

    This collection of Seamus Heaney's work, especially in the vivid and surprising twelve-line poems entitled "e;Squarings"e;, shows he is ready to re-imagine experience and "e;to credit marvels"e;. The title poem, "e;Seeing Things"e;, is typical of the whole book. It begins with memories of an actual event, then moves towards the visionary while never relinquishing its feel for the textures and sensations of the world. Translations of Virgil and Homer provide a prelude and a coda where motifs implicit in the earlier lyrics are given direct expression in extended narratives. Journeys to underworlds and otherworlds correspond to the journeys made by poetic language itself. From the author of "e;The Haw Lantern"e;, "e;Wintering Out"e;, "e;Station Island"e; and "e;North"e;.
热门推荐
  • 回忆停在那一边

    回忆停在那一边

    一场阴谋让在外留学的罗唱晚归国,因为十年前两个阿姨的死,她很讨厌萧恺中,却很喜欢同她一起长大的大哥哥方峻岩。她怀疑萧恺中为夺取她外公的产业而陷害自己,便处处针对萧恺中,想方设法找他的麻烦,甚至还鼓动公司的女明星找机会制造与萧恺中的绯闻,萧恺中一一化解,并且在一天天的相处中,拉近了与罗唱晚的距离。外公的公司遭遇危机,罗唱晚原以为这场危机是她同母异父的妹妹周凯丽一手策划,孰料在幕后操控一切的人竟然是……
  • 幸福终身从善待开始

    幸福终身从善待开始

    邸园精舍之钟声,奏诸行无常之响;娑罗双树之花色,表盛者必衰之兆;骄者难久,正如春宵一梦,醒来难忆梦中梦;猛者遂灭,恰似风前之花,风过始知花非花。《幸福终身从善待开始》(作者王晓静)把书本知识与生活经验融为一体,旁征博引,富含哲理。行文语言风格平易近人..
  • 且看明月几回圆

    且看明月几回圆

    她本是千金小姐,利用家族势力嫁给心爱之人,原以为生活会幸福下去,可是哥哥忽然战死沙场,父家也因为谋反遭到满门抄斩,她还会得到想象中的幸福吗。。。。。。
  • 在别人的盲点中谋利

    在别人的盲点中谋利

    本书内容包括干得好的永远是有头脑的、看得有多远,走得就有多远、细节之中藏着大生意、守候机遇,乘势而发、蛮干不如巧做等。列举了如“章光101”、“江西果喜集团”以及美国“可口可乐”等众多知名企业成功经营的事例,围绕在别人“盲点”中获利的立意,阐述致富的生意经。《在别人的盲点中谋利》的面世给正在创业和征战商场的人们提供借鉴和帮助。
  • 流离的萤火爱情

    流离的萤火爱情

    抬头看到的就是他那双孤傲的眼睛,散发着无数的寒气,让人不寒而栗,那张脸简直无懈可击,与哥哥相比似乎更胜一筹,但是他满脸的高傲和不屑,瞬间拒人于千里之外。那个冰山男依旧惜字如金,没有表情,我开始有些怀疑,老哥是不是认错人啦?呼呼,不理他们啦,走咯“答应我一个要求!”说得这么爽快?是早有预谋吗?可是不应该,总不至于他是策划者吧“要求?行,但是你不可以说…”委屈啊,莫名其妙地要答应冰山男一个要求。“不管如何,你都要信我!”那是你对我的乞求吗?一次次的错过,一次次的误会,他们之间是否经得起时间的考验?可爱善良的韩雪柔能够等到幸福钟声响起吗?面对昔日的男友、今时的未婚夫,她该如何抉择?求收藏,求推荐,求订阅,嘻嘻,我会再接再厉的~~~推荐——http://m.pgsk.com/a/450433/《邪魅总裁:女人,乖乖躺着!》推荐新作温馨治愈系列:听说,爱情回来过。http://m.pgsk.com/a/702512/
  • 尚相

    尚相

    她,苏浅,女扮男装,进入官场,步步为营,只为查出一个十几年前的一个真相,以慰藉死去的亡灵。却不料与他、他、他都有了纠葛。他说:倾颜,原(缘)来就是你苏浅。他说:我心中的倾世容颜,是你,苏浅。他说:从与你相遇,你的倾颜,我的情深,奈何缘浅。
  • 王朝与职官(和谐教育丛书)

    王朝与职官(和谐教育丛书)

    俗传中国史朝代起讫年匡谬西汉起始年目前多采用公元前206年的说法。前206年是刘邦始建汉王国之年,当时的汉王国只是项羽主命所分封十八王国之一,西楚霸王项羽才是当时的天下最高统治者。本书详细介绍了中国历朝历代的官制,解开我们心中深藏已久的疑惑,赶快和我们一起来翻开此书,品味历史吧。
  • 我真的不会打球

    我真的不会打球

    这是一个跳高运动员在篮球场上混日子的故事
  • 门通诸天

    门通诸天

    周瑞睡着之后,就会进入一个特殊的空间,里面有两扇门。房门后面,连接着不同的世界……将游戏中物品带到现实世界,利用游戏世界中获得的能力,在现实世界搞风搞雨。赚钱,氪金,享受生活,周瑞慢慢变强,强到无法想象!
  • 火影之大灾难

    火影之大灾难

    地球人李冉来到了这个世界,其目的是为了那颗神树的果实。所以,必须要在辉夜大筒木变成人形之前将其封印掉,然后带回去。这是一个有关于英雄和毁灭的故事。