登陆注册
26281500000205

第205章 six 1954-1965 Dane(37)

The priest bowed, departed. O'neill. Of course! It was young Dane's name, he should have remembered. Save that in the Cardinal's palace everyone just said Dane. Ah, he had made a grave mistake, keeping her waiting. If Dane was His Eminence's dearly loved nephew then Mrs. O'neill was his dearly loved sister.

When Meggie came into the room Cardinal Ralph hardly knew her. It was thirteen years since he had last seen her; she was fifty-three and he was seventy-one. Both of them aged now, instead of only him. Her face hadn't changed so much as settled, and into a mold unlike the one he had given her in his imagination. Substitute a trenchant incisiveness for sweetness, a touch of iron for softness; she resembled a vigorous, aging, willful martyr rather than the resigned, contemplative saint of his dreams. Her beauty was as striking as ever, her eyes still that clear silvery grey, but both had hardened, and the once vivid hair had faded to a drab beige, like Dane's without the life. Most disconcerting of all, she wouldn't look at him for long enough to satisfy his eager and loving curiosity. Unable to greet this Meggie naturally, he stiffly indicated a chair. "Please sit down."

"Thank you," she said, equally stilted.

It was only when she was seated and he could gaze down upon her whole person that he noticed how visibly swollen her feet and ankles were.

"Meggie! Have you flown all the way through from Australia without breaking your journey? What's the matter?"

"Yes, I did fly straight through," she said. "For the past twenty-nine hours I've been sitting in planes between Gilly and Rome, with nothing to do except stare out the window at the clouds, and think." Her voice was harsh, cold.

"What's the matter?" he repeated impatiently, anxious and fearful. She lifted her gaze from her feet and looked at him steadily. There was something awful in her eyes; something so dark and chilling that the skin on the back of his neck crawled and automatically he put his hand up to stroke it.

"Dane is dead," said Meggie.

His hand slipped, flopped like a rag doll's into his scarlet lap as he sank into a chair. "Dead?" he asked slowly. "Dane dead?" "Yes. He was drowned six days ago in Crete, rescuing some women from the sea."

He leaned forward, put his hands over his face. "Dead?" she heard him say indistinctly. "Dane dead? My beautiful boy! He can't be dead! Dane-he was the perfect priest-all that I couldn't be. What I lacked he had." His voice broke. "He always had it-that was what we all recognized-all of us who aren't perfect priests. Dead? Oh, dear Lord!"

"Don't bother about your dear Lord, Ralph," said the stranger sitting opposite him. "You have more important things to do. I came to ask for your help-not to witness your grief. I've had all those hours in the air to go over the way I'd tell you this, all those hours just staring out the window at the clouds knowing Dane is dead. After that, your grief has no power to move me."

Yet when he lifted his face from his hands her dead cold heart bounded, twisted, leaped. It was Dane's face, with a suffering written upon it that Dane would never live to feel. Oh, thank God! Thank God he's dead, can never now go through what this man has, what I have. Better he's dead than to suffer something like this.

"How can I help, Meggie?" he asked quietly, suppressing his own emotions to don the soul-deep guise of her spiritual counselor. "Greece is in chaos. They've buried Dane somewhere on Crete, and I can't find out where, when, why. Except I suppose that my instructions directing that he be flown home were endlessly delayed by the civil war, and Crete is hot like Australia. When no one claimed him, I suppose they thought he had no one, and buried him." She leaned forward in her chair tensely. "I want my boy back, Ralph, I want him found and brought home to sleep where he belongs, on Drogheda. I promised Jims I'd keep him on Drogheda and I will, if I have to crawl on my hands and knees through every graveyard on Crete. No fancy Roman priest's tomb for him, Ralph, not as long as I'm alive to put up a legal battle. He's to come home."

"No one is going to deny you that, Meggie," he said gently. "It's consecrated Catholic ground, which is all the Church asks. I too have requested that I be buried on Drogheda."

"I can't get through all the red tape," she went on, as if he hadn't spoken. "I can't speak Greek, and I have no power or influence. So I came to you, to use yours. Get me back my son, Ralph!"

"Don't worry, Meggie, we'll get him back, though it may not be very quickly. The- Left are in charge now, and they're very anti-Catholic. However, I'm not without friends in Greece, so it will be done. Let me start the wheels in motion immediately, and don't worry. He is a priest of the Holy Catholic Church, we'll get him back."

His hand had gone to the bell cord, but Meggie's coldly fierce gaze stilled it.

"You don't understand, Ralph. I don't want wheels set in motion. I want my son back-not next week or next month, but now! You speak Greek, you can get visas for yourself and me, you'll get results. I want you to come to Greece with me now, and help me get my son back."

There was much in his eyes: tenderness, compassion, shock, grief. But they had become the priest's eyes too, sane, logical, reasonable. "Meggie, I love your son as if he were my own, but I can't leave Rome at the moment. I'm not a free agent-you above all others should know that. No matter how much I may feel for you, how much I may feel on my own account, I can't leave Rome in the midst of a vital congress. I am the Holy Father's aide."

同类推荐
  • 五木经

    五木经

    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。
  • 昌言

    昌言

    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。
  • 元宫词百章笺注

    元宫词百章笺注

    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。
  • 太上洞玄灵宝三元无量寿经

    太上洞玄灵宝三元无量寿经

    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。
  • THE CRISIS IN RUSSIA

    THE CRISIS IN RUSSIA

    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。
热门推荐
  • 我的仙梦

    我的仙梦

    生在当代是幸运还是悲哀,浮躁迷茫曾经的梦想化作泡影。成仙没有人知道是不是真的,可是我们愿意相信虚幻的仙梦。仙路漫漫,吾愿吾求。科技推动物质,末法迷失灵魂。
  • 彷徨青葱

    彷徨青葱

    富二代叛逆少年叶果,在学校肆无忌惮,胡作胡为,虚度光阴。当他遇上才女佳人林雨亭后,却慢慢被她感化,洗心革面。林雨亭开始勉励叶果向上学习,给他补习功课,两人在追求理想的路上,渐渐擦出火花。面对毕业分离,彼此的选择变得有心无力,一切听天由命。(献给,对你只有放弃,没有忘记的,她。)
  • 佛说缘生初胜分法本经

    佛说缘生初胜分法本经

    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。
  • 异界穿越混都市

    异界穿越混都市

    叶少梵在异界手掌大权,以为人心巩固,却不知自己表面忠诚的手下姜陌同背地里勾结魔族想反叛,就在叶少梵冲击不朽主宰的时刻,姜陌同以损失九千九百九十九万神界精华炼制诸神灭亡大阵进行灭杀叶少梵时,一股无上神气将宇宙贯穿……从此,诸神湮灭,新的纪元重生,但叶少梵被一股无上神气传送到一个蔚蓝的星球。从此,叶少梵在地球发生了什么,谁都不知,因为命运轮盘将他的命运硬生生地排除了……
  • 古尊宿语要目录

    古尊宿语要目录

    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。
  • 四叶草and薰衣草

    四叶草and薰衣草

    四叶草(幸运草)---传说中的四叶草是夏娃从天国伊甸园带到大地上,花语是幸福。学名苜蓿草,是多年生草本植物,一般只有三片小叶子,叶形呈心形状,叶心较深色的部分亦是心形。最为有趣也最特别的是,在十万株苜蓿草中,你可能只会发现一株是‘四叶草’,因为机会率大约是十万分之一。因此‘四叶草’是国际公认为幸运的象征。它的每片叶子都有着不同的意义,当中包含了人生梦寐以求的四样东西:名誉、财富、爱情及健康,倘若同时拥有这些东西,那就是幸运了。FourLeafClover幸运草
  • 百胜之颠

    百胜之颠

    人类诞生万年,循规蹈矩,忽想自启智蒙,遂开天。凡天界,修者遍走,众教各立,刀光血影,无尽轮回。上天界,神秘莫测,尘世乐园,黑白两仪,谁人知晓。神天界,纷神于座,神威荡荡,天功灵宝,蝼蚁神明。……林逸怀揣着惊世骇俗的秘密,踏上了寻找的征程。百胜为路,血染巅峰,天穹之上,黎明在何方?
  • 惊奇时间

    惊奇时间

    这是一部由玄幻悬疑惊悚系列中篇小说合集,有你前所未见的故事,悬疑恐怖刺激,触碰你所有的阅读神经,带给你内心深处震撼的惊奇!你相信这个世界上有鬼么,最恐怖不是鬼,而是人心!附加:本文是悬疑恐怖惊悚系列中篇合集,故事情节曲折离奇,层层递进,一个比一个惊险离奇,一个比一个更扑簌迷离,一个比一个惊悚恐怖,总有一个故事是你的最爱,欢迎多多收藏和关注哦!
  • 市井诡影

    市井诡影

    叶文海在大一初年遇到纳兰甄婷后,第二年双双退学,并跟随她亲临和解决各种诡异事件,最后发现纳兰甄婷真实身份后的悲壮故事,事后叶文海写成故事文册,向我们展示他那一段跌宕起伏地一生。
  • 青少年一定要读的经典寓言故事

    青少年一定要读的经典寓言故事

    读书不仅让孩子得到趣味,得到成长,成为一个读书人。在浮躁的环境中,也更加可以让人保持一个安静的状态,让他的心灵家园更为丰富。同时,当他把读书当成单纯的享受,对他的性格养成和接受方式的训练大有裨益。一个阅读的孩子,思维上比较理性,比较善于主动思维,同时阅读也丝毫不会妨碍他接受新媒介。他不仅用他自己的眼睛观察,而且运用着无数心灵的眼睛,由于他们这种崇高的帮助,他将怀着挚爱的同情踏遍整个的世界。