登陆注册
26281500000148

第148章 FIVE 1938-1953 FEE(11)

Three days later he was dead; a huge piece of shrapnel took off his arm and half his side in a fresh advance, but no one had time to stop except to pluck his whistle from what was left of his mouth. Men were going down now like flies, too tired to maintain the initial pitch of vigilance and swiftness; but what miserable barren ground they took they held on to, in the face of a bitter defense by the cream of a magnificent army. It had become to them all no more than a dumb, stubborn refusal to be defeated. The Ninth held off Graf von Sponeck and Lungerhausen while the tanks broke out to the south, and finally Rommel was beaten. By November 8 he was trying to rally beyond the Egyptian border, and Montgomery was left in command of the entire field. A very important tactical victory, Second Alamein; Rommel had been forced to leave behind many of his tanks, guns and equipment. Operation Torch could commence its push eastward from Morocco and Algeria with more security. There was still plenty of fight in the Desert Fox, but a large part of his brush was on the ground at El Alamein. The biggest and most decisive battle of the North African theater had been fought, and Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery of Alamein was its victor. Second Alamein was the swan song of the Ninth Australian Division in North Africa. They were finally going home to contend with the Japanese, on the main land of New Guinea. Since March of 1941 they had been more or less permanently in the front line, arriving poorly trained and equipped, but going home now with a reputation exceeded only by the Fourth Indian-,

Division. And with the Ninth went Jims and Patsy, safe and whole.

Of course they were granted leave to go home to Drogheda. Bob drove into Gilly to collect them from the Goondiwindi train, for the Ninth was based in Brisbane and would depart after jungle training for New Guinea. When the Rolls swept round the drive all the women were out on the lawn waiting, Jack and Hughie hanging back a little but just as eager to see their young brothers. Every sheep left alive on Drogheda could drop dead if it so desired, but this was a holiday.

Even after the car stopped and they got out, no one moved. They looked so different. Two years in the desert had ruined their original uniforms; they were dressed in a new issue of jungle green, and looked like strangers. For one thing, they seemed to have grown inches, which indeed they had; the last two years of their development had occurred far from Drogheda, and had pushed them way above their older brothers. Not boys any more but men, though not men in the BobJack-Hughie mold; hardship, battle euphoria and violent death had made something out of them Drogheda never could. The North African sun had dried and darkened them to rosy mahogany, peeled away every layer of childhood. Yes, it was possible to believe these two men in their ****** uniforms, slouch hats pinned above their left ears with the badge of the AIF rising sun, had killed fellow men. It was in their eyes, blue as Paddy's but sadder, without his gentleness.

"My boys, my boys!" cried Mrs. Smith, running to them, tears streaming down her face. No, it didn't matter what they had done, how much they had changed; they were still her little babies she had washed, diapered, fed, whose tears she had dried, whose wounds she had kissed better. Only the wounds they harbored now were beyond her power to heal.

Then everyone was around them, British reserve broken down, laughing, crying, even poor Fee patting them on their backs, trying to smile. After Mrs. Smith there was Meggie to kiss, Minnie to kiss, Cat to kiss, Mum to hug bashfully, Jack and Hughie to wring by the hand speechlessly. The Drogheda people would never know what it was like to be home, they could never know how much this moment had been longed for, feared for.

And how the twins ate! Army tucker was never like this, they said, laughing. Pink and white fairy cakes, chocolate-soaked lamingtons rolled in coconut, steamed spotted dog pudding, pavlova dripping passion fruit and cream from Drogheda cows. Remembering their stomachs from earlier days, Mrs. Smith was convinced they'd be ill for a week, but as long as there was unlimited tea to wash it down, they didn't seem to have any trouble with their digestions.

"A bit different from Wog bread, eh, Patsy?"

"Yair."

"What's Wog mean?" asked Mrs. Smith.

"A Wog's an Arab, but a Wop's an Italian, right, Patsy?" "Pair."

It was peculiar. They would talk, or at least Jims would talk, for hours about North Africa: the towns, the people, the food, the museum in Cairo, life on board a troopship, in rest camp. But no amount of questioning could elicit anything but vague, change-the subject answers as to what the actual fighting had been like, what Gazala, Benghazi, Tobruk, El Alamein had been like. Later on after the war was over the women were to find this constantly; the men who had actually been in the thick of battle never opened their mouths about it, refused to join the ex-soldiers' clubs and leagues, wanted nothing to do with institutions perpetuating the memory of war. Drogheda held a party for them. Alastair MacQueen was in the Ninth as well and was home, so of course Rudna Hunish held a party. Dominic O'Rourke's two youngest sons were in the Sixth in New Guinea, so even though they couldn't be present, Dibban-Dibban held a party. Every property in the district with a son in uniform wanted to celebrate the safe return of the three Ninth boys. Women and girls flocked around them, but the Cleary returned heroes tried to escape at every opportunity, more scared than they had been on any field of war. In fact, Jims and Patsy didn't seem to want to have anything to do with women; it was to Bob, Jack and Hughie they clung. Late into the night after the women had gone to bed they sat talking to the brothers who had been forced to remain behind, opening their sore, scarred hearts. And they rode the paddocks of parched Drogheda, in its seventh year of the drought, glad to be in civvies.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 幻武魔尊

    幻武魔尊

    武修天才因魔神器认主而瞬间沦为废人,但此刻,魔神器终将苏醒,且看他如何置之死地而后生,睥睨众神,成就一代魔神。情深义重,荡气回肠。为了义,他不畏强敌,以身犯险;为了情,他血炼星辰,舍身求魔。他是众神畏惧的星主,他是众魔臣服的魔尊,可他,也曾是世人耻笑的废物。这是一次新生,秩序将由他改写;这是一场轮回,凡人终将逆袭。没有什么不可能,路是踩出来的,奇迹是拼出来的,一切精彩,尽在《幻武魔尊》。
  • 地球仙尊

    地球仙尊

    公元2042年,一群考古地质学家在喜马拉雅山脉发现了一个古老残破的符文大阵,并用当时最顶尖的科技将其修复,导致地球六大板块移位,世界十大山脉彼此连接在了一起,形成了一个新的大陆,取名‘神州’。通过大阵地球迎来一群修道者并留下大量传承,神州大陆进入到了修道与科技并存的大时代。一个少年的传奇之路,就此展开。腹黑,坑神,踏天问道,一路坑上天。大道有始起,混源九重身。我若风魔,谁人能挡。比炼丹我有数控炼丹炉,你还在用灵念炼丹?这么out,现在炼丹靠编程,一炉极品丹,炉炉极品丹。比法宝!小样儿哥有九大剑魂,随便用小刀削个木剑出来,融入剑魂也不是你能比的。不说了,里边儿见。
  • 异世之魔月传说

    异世之魔月传说

    这是一个拥有魔月血脉的少年的逆天之路……传说在很古很古以前,大概有一万年之久,一次灭世的雷电风暴打开了卡尼亚大陆通往另一个空间的通道,那个空间称为魔月空间,那里的种族称为魔月族,他们吸取宇宙星月之力修炼,不通魔法斗气却有着比魔法斗气更华丽的攻击招式。{这是天堂的异世系列之二,老书《异世之风流大法师》已近尾声,二百万字有余,没有看过的不妨去瞅瞅。}
  • 我的体内有世界

    我的体内有世界

    房天在异世大陆称霸天下,而他的口头禅是我是君子,一般不动手,那个谁你去解决他
  • 青丘央夙

    青丘央夙

    世间事物,渐渐有了转变。只有人的世界中出现了其他,六界众生,绝地而起,狐族妖王,平定妖界,在六界中,有了一席之地。妖界众生窥视着妖王之位。妖王后代出现人狐留下的公主,实力雄厚,妖王在与狼族大战中,牺牲……这位公主继承王位,带领狐族,再次走向复兴……
  • 浣冥

    浣冥

    上古混沌开,天地初成。宇内自成神、人、冥无,三界。而其中最强大的是冥无界······十六年前的一场惨案,几千人瞬间灰飞烟灭,缘由是一个十几岁的小姑娘怀了冥无王——无的孩子,从而被愤怒的人们送上火刑架烧死。这其中到底有何因缘?十六年后,一个在山上被狼养大的红发男孩,一个有着灭族深仇的冷面少爷,一个活泼暴力的平民女孩,三人六年前偶然结识。随着三人一同上极玉峰拜师学艺,下山执行任务,经历了一个个离奇凄美的故事,并逐渐揭开十六年前的真相以及冥无、人、神三界的恩怨纠葛。
  • 灵冢

    灵冢

    四洲大陆,军门一统。武者,修士,各领风骚。炼体,修魂,修魄,修神。人,生而有一体一神三魂七魄,体纳魄,魄辅魂,魂修神,四者合一,乃成大道。少年秦无言,入道宗,跨秦域,破四洲,剑指苍穹,只为那一份羁绊,为了追寻,为了守护,心中的人……
  • 丈夫的诡计

    丈夫的诡计

    选自希区柯克短篇故事集,包括《丈夫的诡计》《拳击高手》《奇怪的凶器》等十余篇短篇小说,文字简洁平实,情节曲折跌宕,结局却出人意料,并且往往让读者有一种身临其境的感觉。小说具有较高的可读性,富于现代特点,符合当下阅读习惯及阅读趋向,颇受年青一代欢迎。
  • 三世三色浮生梦

    三世三色浮生梦

    我叫洛蓝,一个21世纪普通的不能再普通的宅女。我叫长青,一个星宇大陆自由的不能再自由的剑客。我叫...好吧,上面两个都叫我小白,但是在这个组合里是‘颜值担当’+‘智商担当’+‘主要输出位置’+...长青+洛蓝:不要脸!!--------从天而降的少女,搭上无敌剑客,偶遇腹黑小白,意外得到的璃光珠让三人的命运轨迹开始交缠,一路斩妖除魔,有过决裂的分离,也有温情的守候。三个人,一段路,一次不知终点的旅行,一场在异世的繁华之梦。
  • 0-3岁全脑开发亲子游戏大全

    0-3岁全脑开发亲子游戏大全

    3岁前是大脑潜能开发的关键期,游戏是开发左右脑的最佳方式,父母是宝宝最佳的游戏伙伴,早教一线教师亲自指导,让宝宝快乐学习,越来越聪明。马秀主编的《0~3岁全脑开发亲子游戏大全》根据不同年龄段,按照左右脑发育的需要安排游戏,注重全面智能的开发。