The Widow’s Children. Paula Fox

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Widow’s Children - Paula Fox страница 11

The Widow’s Children - Paula  Fox

Скачать книгу

with fitting himself into a small boudoir chair. Desmond’s heavy breathing was audible in the silence – he sounded like a horse, a few stalls away, breathing evenly in the blankness of the night.

      When Laura looked up, she seemed unaware of Peter’s fidgeting, of Carlos brushing cigar ashes from the coverlet of the other bed where he had spilled them. She stared at Desmond as though they were alone. Clara had the startling impression that her mother’s eye sockets were empty, were like mouths, opening to scream. The heavy lids dropped suddenly. “If Eugenio were here, that would be all of us,” she said to no one in particular.

      Conversation began at once, although to Clara’s question about how long they would be in Africa, Desmond hesitated so long, she wondered if he knew what she was asking him.

      “Why do they always do it?” Peter Rice asked, rubbing the fabric of the chair with one finger.

      “Do what?” Laura asked.

      “So pretentious, this fabric. Fake brocade, isn’t it? Why not be plain? Why not a plain, decent chair? Why is music played in elevators? And what music! And those revolting gold tassels on airline menus, and what are those designs stamped on your bedspreads? Coats of arms, no less! I mean– ”

      “Peter,” Laura said. “Don’t waste your nerves on trivia. The world is wrecked, my dears. There’s no point at all in being sniffy about the corpse’s low taste in winding sheets.”

      “I was only babbling,” Peter said defensively.

      “Have you seen my mother recently?” Carlos asked Laura. He had been silent for some time, and now his voice was formal and chilled as though, during that time of silence, he had broken off his connections with everyone in the room. He was already turning away from his sister; his interest in her answer seemed negligible.

      “My mother.” That is how each of her children referred to Alma. They shut each other out, Clara thought. She hoped the subject of Alma would not engage them for long. Her heart pressed up weakly against her ribs. She felt the imminence of an attack against her. But there was no defense except the confession that she could not bring herself to visit the old woman. She cast a furtive glance at Laura.

      They were all staring at Laura. She had clasped her drink to her forehead frantically as though an ache there must be pressed away. Her eyes were closed. In the tension of her raised arms, the loosened curls tumbling forward, legs lifting toward her stomach, one shoe beginning to slip from a foot, she was like the personification of calamity.

      Desmond cried out incoherently, Peter stood up, Carlos backed away toward the windows, and Clara, remembering a glass of whiskey hurled at her by Laura so many years before she could not recall the place, only the arc of the glass, crouched in her chair.

      The legs came down, the foot found the fallen shoe and inserted itself, the drink was held out to be appraised by the now wide-open eyes, and Laura grinned at them like a rogue.

      “Your mother?” she asked lightly of Carlos. “You rascal! I drove all the way up from the farm last week to see your mother, and you, you wretch, live fifteen minutes from the home and haven’t been for a month. Isn’t he a rascal, Peter? Her very favorite, too! Even – even Eugenio went! Although I heard he stayed just long enough to taunt her with the details of some dinner party he crashed into. You know, Peter, don’t you, how Eugenio treats my mother? When he used to stay at the apartment, months sometimes when he had no money, he’d tell her about his dinner parties. He can’t bear to touch anybody – I suppose you must have noticed that, Clara – he always stands at least ten feet away from other human bodies. Isn’t it funny he should be running a travel agency and sending people away all the time? But I started to say – that he used to torment Mamá about the meals he was served in grand houses, as though it was her fault she didn’t live in a grand house with servants to take care of him properly!”

      Uncle Eugenio had once said to Clara, “My mother was so beautiful when she used to take care of herself.” And when Clara was older, though no less ill at ease in Eugenio’s presence, he confided to her that it was the childishness in his mother’s character, “fatal childishness,” he had said, that had brought the family so low. Did he, Clara wondered, hold his mother responsible too for the Spanish-American War which had dislodged the Maldonadas’ grip on their Cuban holdings? But he never spoke of such things, wars, depressions, the state of the world, seeming as unaware, Clara thought, as her mother and Carlos of the existences beyond the rain-blurred windows which impinged upon their own. Those two, like their brother, were interested in what was singular, aberrant. But was there anybody, she asked herself, who thought

      Конец ознакомительного фрагмента.

      Текст предоставлен ООО «ЛитРес».

      Прочитайте эту книгу целиком, купив полную легальную версию на ЛитРес.

      Безопасно оплатить книгу можно банковской картой Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, со счета мобильного телефона, с платежного терминала, в салоне МТС или Связной, через PayPal, WebMoney, Яндекс.Деньги, QIWI Кошелек, бонусными картами или другим удобным Вам способом.

/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAgEASABIAAD/7Q44UGhvdG9zaG9wIDMuMAA4QklNA+0KUmVzb2x1dGlvbgAA AAAQAEgAAAABAAIASAAAAAEAAjhCSU0EDRhGWCBHbG9iYWwgTGlnaHRpbmcgQW5nbGUAAAAABAAA AHg4QklNBBkSRlggR2xvYmFsIEFsdGl0dWRlAAAAAAQAAAAeOEJJTQPzC1ByaW50IEZsYWdzAAAA CQAAAAAAAAAAAQA4QklNBAoOQ29weXJpZ2h0IEZsYWcAAAAAAQAAOEJJTScQFEphcGFuZXNlIFBy aW50IEZsYWdzAAAAAAoAAQAAAAAAAAACOEJJTQP1F0NvbG9yIEhhbGZ0b25lIFNldHRpbmdzAAAA SAAvZmYAAQBsZmYABgAAAAAAAQAvZmYAAQChmZoABgAAAAAAAQAyAAAAAQBaAAAABgAAAAAAAQA1 AAAAAQAtAAAABgAAAAAAAThCSU0D+BdDb2xvciBUcmFuc2ZlciBTZXR0aW5ncwAAAHAAAP////// //////////////////////8D6AAAAAD/////////////////////////////A+gAAAAA//////// /////////////////////wPoAAAAAP////////////////////////////8D6AAAOEJJTQQAC0xh eWVyIFN0YXRlAAAAAgABOEJJTQQCDExheWVyIEdyb3VwcwAAAAAEAAAAADhCSU0ECAZHdWlkZXMA AAAAEAAAAAEAAAJAAAACQAAAAAA4QklNBB4NVVJMIG92ZXJyaWRlcwAAAAQAAAAAOEJJTQQaBlNs aWNlcwAAAAB1AAAABgAAAAAAAAAAAAADBAAAAfQAAAAKAFUAbgB0AGkAdABsAGUAZAAtADEAAAAB AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAfQAAAMEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAADhCSU0EERFJQ0MgVW50YWdnZWQgRmxhZwAAAAEBADhCSU0EFBdMYXllciBJ RCBHZW5lcmF0b3IgQmFzZQAAAAQAAAACOEJJTQQMFU5ldyBXaW5kb3dzIFRodW1ibmFpbAAAClsA AAABAAAASQAAAHAAAADcAABgQAAACj8AGAAB/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAgEASABIAAD/7gAOQWRvYmUA ZIAAAAAB/9sAhAAMCAgICQgMCQkMEQsKCxEVDwwMDxUYExMVExMYEQwMDAwMDBEMDAwMDAwMDAwM DAwMDAwMDAwMDAwMDAwMDAwMAQ0LCw0ODRAODhAUDg4OFBQODg4OFBEMDAwMDBERDAwMDAwMEQwM DAwMDAwMDAwMDAwMDAwMDAwMDAwMDAwMDAz/wAARCABwAEkDASIAAhEBAxEB/90ABAAF/8QBPwAA AQUBAQEBAQEAAAAAAAAAAwABAgQFBgcICQoLAQABBQEBAQEBAQAAAAAAAAABAAIDBAUGBwgJCgsQ AAEEAQMCBAIFBwYIBQMMMwEAAhEDBCESMQVBUWETInGBMgYUkaGxQiMkFVLBYjM0coLRQwclklPw 4fFjczUWorKDJkSTVGRFwqN0NhfSVeJl8rOEw9N14/NGJ5SkhbSVxNTk9KW1xdXl9VZmdoaWprbG 1ub2N0dXZ3eHl6e3x9fn9xEAAgIBAgQEAwQFBgcHBgU1AQACEQMhMRIEQVFhcSITBTKBkRShsUIj wVLR8DMkYuFygpJDUxVjczTxJQYWorKDByY1wtJEk1SjF2RFVTZ0ZeLys4TD03Xj80aUpIW0lcTU 5PSltcXV5fVWZnaGlqa2xtbm9ic3R1dnd4eXp7fH/9oADAMBAAIRAxEAPwDypJdl/wAzekhjHOuy Pcz1CQa4EBrn8jd+cpD6mdGMAZV3u0GrNT/mqL34eP2M33bJ4fa8WjjFc6tjmulz2l+3yBe3n+wu s/5m9I1Hr5Et7ezU7vThvt/e2f8AblacfU/o4cAMq+SCdCzgbf5P8tL34eP2JHLT8PteQdi2trLy PozuHwLW/wDf1I4dhs9OshxnaJgS7SR/0vzl13/M7pJBIy73AxMOYZ/dH0U3/M3pOyRk5EEgEAs+ lO3b9H6W4oe/HufsV92n2H2vFkEEg8jRJdmfqb0fdtfkXtcdYJr1nd32/wAhN/zP6INs5V7d3iWa fH2o+/Dx+xH3bJ4fa8akuzP1N6IJnLuEcya//Iqf/Mbpf+nyP+h/5BL34eP2J+7ZPD7X/9Dnh9b6 vTY12JYdrNk72DQta135v8lL/ndRvN32KyZgv3MiTueNdn0vc9YFbZLdwlukjy7qTj9nkVmwVWc7 XxMTz7f3XKL2Ydj9pZhzGTqR/ixd3/nfj+qLThWeo06O3t0gbf3f9f0f7iTfrX

Скачать книгу