The Thorn Birds (50 page)

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Authors: Colleen McCullough

Tags: #Catholics, #Australia, #Christian, #Historical, #General, #Romance, #Sagas, #Clergy, #Fiction

BOOK: The Thorn Birds
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“I will, I will! But I can’t yet; I’ve got to carry on in the sugar for a couple more years just to make sure. I don’t want to say I’m living off Meg, which is what I’d be doing until things got better.”

Anne lifted her lip contemptuously. “Oh, bullshit! You married her for her money, didn’t you?”

A dark-red flush stained his brown face. He wouldn’t look at her. “I admit the money helped, but I married her because I liked her better than anyone else.”

“You
liked
her! What about loving her?”

“Love! What’s love? Nothing but a figment of women’s imagination, that’s all.” He turned away from the crib and those unsettling eyes, not sure someone with eyes like that couldn’t understand what was being said. “And if you’ve quite finished telling me off, where’s Meg?”

“She wasn’t well. I sent her away for a while. Oh, don’t panic! Not on your money. I was hoping I could persuade you to join her, but I see that’s impossible.”

“Out of the question. Arne and I are on our way to Sydney tonight.”

“What shall I tell Meggie when she comes back?”

He shrugged, dying to get away. “I don’t care. Oh, tell her to hang on a while longer. Now that she’s gone ahead with the family business, I wouldn’t mind a son.”

Leaning against the wall for support, Anne bent over the wicker basket and lifted the baby up, then managed to shuffle to the bed and sit down. Luke made no move to help her, or take the baby; he looked rather frightened of his daughter.

“Go away, Luke! You don’t deserve what you’ve got. I’m sick of the sight of you. Go back to bloody Arne, and the flaming sugar, and the backbreak!”

At the door he paused. “What did she call it? I’ve forgotten its name.”

“Justine, Justine,
Justine
!”

“Bloody stupid name,” he said, and went out.

Anne put Justine on the bed and burst into tears. God damn all men but Luddie, God damn them! Was it the soft, sentimental, almost womanish streak in Luddie made him capable of loving? Was Luke right? Was it just a figment of women’s imaginations? Or was it something only women were able to feel, or men with a little woman in them? No woman could ever hold Luke, no woman ever had. What he wanted no woman could ever give him.

But by the next day she had calmed down, no longer feeling she had tried for nothing. A postcard from Meggie had come that morning, waxing enthusiastic about Matlock Island and how well she was. Something good had come out of it. Meggie was feeling better. She would come back as the monsoons diminished and be able to face her life. But Anne resolved not to tell her about Luke.

So Nancy, short for Annunziata, carried Justine out onto the front veranda, while Anne hobbled out with the baby’s wants in a little basket between her teeth; clean diaper, tin of powder and toys. She settled in a cane chair, took the baby from Nancy and began to feed her from the bottle of Lactogen Nancy had warmed. It was very pleasant, life was very pleasant; she had done her best to make Luke see sense, and if she had failed, at least it meant Meggie and Justine would remain at Himmelhoch a while longer. She had no doubt that eventually Meggie would realize there was no hope of salvaging her relationship with Luke, and would then return to Drogheda. But Anne dreaded the day.

A red English sports car roared off the Dunny road and up the long, hilly drive; it was new and expensive, its bonnet strapped down with leather, its silver exhausts and scarlet paintwork glittering. For a while she didn’t recognize the man who vaulted over the low door, for he wore the North Queensland uniform of a pair of shorts and nothing else. My word, what a beautiful bloke! she thought, watching him appreciatively and with a twinge of memory as he took the steps two at a time. I wish Luddie wouldn’t eat so much; he could do with a bit of this chap’s condition. Now, he’s no chicken—look at those marvelous silver temples—but I’ve never seen a cane cutter in better nick.

When the calm, aloof eyes looked into hers, she realized who he was.

“My God!” she said, and dropped the baby’s bottle.

He retrieved it, handed it to her and leaned against the veranda railing, facing her: “It’s all right. The teat didn’t strike the ground; you can feed her with it.”

The baby was just beginning a deprived quiver. Anne stuck the rubber in her mouth and got enough breath back to speak. “Well, Your Grace, this is a surprise!” Her eyes slid over him, amused. “I must say you don’t exactly look like an archbishop. Not that you ever did, even in the proper togs. I always imagine archbishops of any religious denomination to be fat and self-satisfied.”

“At the moment I’m not an archbishop, only a priest on a well-earned holiday, so you can call me Ralph. Is this the little thing caused Meggie so much trouble when I was here last? May I have her? I think I can manage to hold the bottle at the appropriate angle.”

He settled into a chair alongside Anne, took baby and bottle and continued to feed her, his legs crossed casually.

“Did Meggie name her Justine?”

“Yes.”

“I like it. Good Lord, look at the color of her hair! Her grandfather all over.”

“That’s what Meggie says. I hope the poor little mite doesn’t come out in a million freckles later on, but I think she will.”

“Well, Meggie’s sort of a redhead and she isn’t a bit freckled. Though Meggie’s skin is a different color and texture, more opaque.” He put the empty bottle down, sat the baby bolt upright on his knee, facing him, bent her forward in a salaam and began rhythmically rubbing her back hard. “Among my other duties I have to visit Catholic orphanages, so I’m quite deedy with babies. Mother Gonzaga at my favorite infants’ home always says this is the only way to burp a baby. Holding it over one’s shoulder doesn’t flex the body forward enough, the wind can’t escape so easily, and when it does come up there’s usually lots of milk as well. This way the baby’s bent in the middle, which corks the milk in while it lets the gas escape.” As if to prove his point, Justine gave several huge eructations but held her gorge. He laughed, rubbed again, and when nothing further happened settled her in the crook of his arm comfortably. “What fabulously exotic eyes! Magnificent, aren’t they? Trust Meggie to have an unusual baby.”

“Not to change the subject, but what a father you’d have made, Father.”

“I like babies and children, I always have. It’s much easier for me to enjoy them, since I don’t have any of the unpleasant duties fathers do.”

“No, it’s because you’re like Luddie. You’ve got a bit of woman in you.”

Apparently Justine, normally so isolationist, returned his liking; she had gone to sleep. Ralph settled her more snugly and pulled a packet of Capstans from his shorts pocket.

“Here, give them to me. I’ll light one for you.”

“Where’s Meggie?” he asked, taking a lit cigarette from her. “Thank you. I’m sorry, please take one for yourself.”

“She’s not here. She never really got over the bad time she had when Justine was born, and The Wet seemed to be the last straw. So Luddie and I sent her away for two months. She’ll be back around the first of March; another seven weeks to go.”

The moment Anne spoke she was aware of the change in him; as if the whole of his purpose had suddenly evaporated, and the promise of some very special pleasure.

He drew a long breath. “This is the second time I’ve come to say goodbye and not found her…. Athens, and now again. I was away for a year then and it might have been a lot longer; I didn’t know at the time. I had never visited Drogheda since Paddy and Stu died, yet when it came I found I couldn’t leave Australia without seeing Meggie. And she’d married, gone away. I wanted to come after her, but I knew it wouldn’t have been fair to her or to Luke. This time I came because I knew I couldn’t harm what isn’t there.”

“Where are you going?”

“To Rome, to the Vatican. Cardinal di Contini-Verchese has taken over the duties of Cardinal Monteverdi, who died not long ago. And he’s asked for me, as I knew he would. It’s a great compliment, but more than that. I cannot refuse to go.”

“How long will you be away?”

“Oh, a very long time, I think. There are war rumbles in Europe, though it seems so far away up here. The Church in Rome needs every diplomat she has, and thanks to Cardinal di Contini-Verchese I’m classified as a diplomat. Mussolini is closely allied to Hitler, birds of a feather, and somehow the Vatican has to reconcile two opposing ideologies, Catholicism and Fascism. It won’t be easy. I speak German very well, learned Greek when I was in Athens and Italian when I was in Rome. I also speak French and Spanish fluently.” He sighed. “I’ve always had a talent for languages, and I cultivated it deliberately. It was inevitable that I would be transferred.”

“Well, Your Grace, unless you’re sailing tomorrow you can still see Meggie.”

The words popped out before Anne let herself stop to think; why shouldn’t Meggie see him once before he went away, especially if, as he seemed to think, he was going to be away a very long time?

His head turned toward her. Those beautiful, distant blue eyes were very intelligent and very hard to fool. Oh, yes, he was a born diplomat! He knew exactly what she was saying, and every reason at the back of her mind. Anne found herself hanging breathlessly on his answer, but for a long time he said nothing, just sat staring out over the emerald cane toward the brimming river, with the baby forgotten in the crook of his arm. Fascinated, she stared at his profile—the curve of eyelid, the straight nose, the secretive mouth, the determined chin. What forces was he marshaling while he contemplated the view? What complicated balances of love, desire, duty, expediency, will power, longing, did he weigh in his mind, and which against which? His hand lifted the cigarette to his lips; Anne saw the fingers tremble and soundlessly let go her breath. He was not indifferent, then.

For perhaps ten minutes he said nothing; Anne lit him another Capstan, handed it to him in place of the burned-out stub. It, too, he smoked down steadiliy, not once lifting his gaze from the far mountains and the monsoon clouds lowering the sky.

“Where is she?” he asked then in a perfectly normal voice, throwing the second stub over the veranda railing after the first.

And on what she answered depended his decision; it was her turn to think. Was one right to push other human beings on a course which led one knew not where, or to what? Her loyalty was all to Meggie; she didn’t honestly care an iota what happened to this man. In his way he was no better than Luke. Off after some male thing with never the time or the inclination to put a woman ahead of it, running and clutching at some dream which probably only existed in has addled head. No more substance than the smoke from the mill dissipating itself in the heavy, molasses-laden air. But it was what he wanted, and he would spend himself and his life in chasing it.

He hadn’t lost his good sense, no matter what Meggie meant to him. Not even for her—and Anne was beginning to believe he loved Meggie more than anything except that strange ideal—would he jeopardize the chance of grasping what he wanted in his hands one day. No, not even for her. So if she answered that Meggie was in some crowded resort hotel where he might be recognized, he wouldn’t go. No one knew better than he that he wasn’t the sort who could become anonymous in a crowd. She licked her lips, found her voice.

“Meggie’s in a cottage on Matlock Island.”

“On where?”

“Matlock Island. It’s a resort just off Whitsunday Passage, and it’s specially designed for privacy. Besides, at this time of the year there’s hardly a soul on it.” She couldn’t resist adding, “Don’t worry, no one will see you!”

“How reassuring.” Very gently he eased the sleeping baby out of his arms, handed her to Anne. “Thank you,” he said, going to the steps. Then he turned back, in his eyes a rather pathetic appeal. “You’re quite wrong,” he said. “I just want to see her, no more than that. I shall never involve Meggie in anything which might endanger her immortal soul.”

“Or your own, eh? Then you’d better go as Luke O’Neill; he’s expected. That way you’ll be sure to create no scandal, for Meggie or for yourself.”

“And what if Luke turns up?’

“There’s no chance of that. He’s gone to Sydney and he won’t be back until March. The only way he could have known Meggie was on Matlock is through me, and I didn’t tell him, Your Grace.”

“Does Meggie expect Luke?”

Anne smiled wryly. “Oh, dear me, no.”

“I shan’t harm her,” he insisted. “I just want to see her for a little while, that’s all.”

“I’m well aware of it, Your Grace. But the fact remains that you’d harm her a great deal less if you wanted more,” said Anne.

 

 

When old Rob’s car came sputtering along the road Meggie was at her station on the cottage veranda, hand raised in the signal that everything was fine and she needed nothing. He stopped in the usual spot to reverse, but before he did so a man in shorts, shirt and sandals sprang out of the car, suitcase in hand.

“Hooroo, Mr. O’Neill!” Rob yelled as he went.

But never again would Meggie mistake them, Luke O’Neill and Ralph de Bricassart. That wasn’t Luke; even at the distance and in the fast-fading light she wasn’t deceived. She stood dumbly and waited while he walked down the road toward her, Ralph de Bricassart. He had decided he wanted her after all. There could be no other reason for his joining her in a place like this, calling himself Luke O’Neill.

Nothing in her seemed to be functioning, not legs or mind or heart. This was Ralph come to claim her, why couldn’t she feel? Why wasn’t she running down the road to his arms, so utterly glad to see him nothing else mattered? This was Ralph, and he was all she had ever wanted out of living; hadn’t she just spent more than a week trying to get that fact out of her mind? God damn him, God damn him! Why the
hell
did he have to come when she was finally beginning to get him out of her thoughts, if not out of her heart? Oh, it was all going to start again! Stunned, sweating, angry, she stood woodenly waiting, watching that graceful form grow larger.

“Hello, Ralph,” she said through clenched teeth, not looking at him.

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