Читаем On The Beach полностью

"I haven't got those, Ralphie. I'll put an automatic out on deck if you want it."

The fisherman shook his head. "I got my own gun. I'll take a look around the pharmacy when I get on shore-maybe there's something there. But I guess the gun would be the best."

"Is there anything else you want?"

"Thanks, Cap, but I got everything I want on shore. Without a dime to pay, either. Just tell the boys on board hullo for me."

"I'll do that, fella. We'll be going on now. Good fishing."

"Thanks, Cap. It's been pretty good under you, and I'm sorry I jumped ship."

"Okay. Now just watch the suck of the propellers as I go ahead."

He turned to the executive. "Take the con, Commander. Go ahead, and then on course, ten knots."

That evening Mary Holmes rang Moira at her home. It was a pouring wet evening in late autumn, the wind whistling around the house at Harkaway. "Darling," she said, "there's been a wireless signal from them. They're all well."

The girl gasped, for this was totally unexpected. "However did they get a signal through?"

"Commander Peterson just rang me up. It came through on the mystery station that they went to find out about. Lieutenant Sunderstorm was sending and he said they were all well. Isn't it splendid?"

The relief was so intense that for a moment the girl felt faint. "It's marvellous," she whispered. "Tell me, can they get a message back to them?"

"I don't think so. Sunderstrom said that he was closing down the station, and there wasn't anyone alive there."

"Oh…" The girl was silent. "Well, I suppose we'll just have to be patient."

"Not really. Just something I wanted to tell Dwight. But it'll have to wait."

"Darling! You don't mean…"

"No, I don't."

"Are you feeling all right, dear?"

"I'm feeling much better than I was five minutes ago." She paused. "How are you getting on, and how's Jennifer?"

"She's fine. We're all right, except it's raining all the time. Can't you come over sometime? It's an age since we met."

The girl said, "I could come down one evening after work, and go up again next day."

"Darling! That would be wonderful!"

She arrived at Falmouth station two nights later, and set herself to walk two miles up the hill in a misty drizzle. In the little flat Mary was waiting to welcome her with a bright fire in the lounge. She changed her shoes, helped Mary bathe the baby and put her down, and then they got the supper. Later they sat together on the floor before the fire.

The girl asked, "When do you think they'll be back?"

"Peter said that they'd be back about the fourteenth of June." She reached out for a calender upon the desk behind her. "Three more weeks-just over. I've been crossing off the days."

"Do you think they're up to time at this place-wherever they sent the wireless signal from?"

"I don't know. I ought to have asked Commander Peterson that. I wonder if it would be all right to ring him up tomorrow and ask?"

"I shouldn't think he'd mind."

"I think I'll do that. Peter says this is his last job for the navy, he'll be unemployed after they come back. I was wondering if we couldn't get away in June or July and have a holiday. It's so piggy here in the winter-nothing but rain and gales."

The girl lit a cigarette. "Where would you go to?"

"Somewhere where it's warm. Queensland or somewhere. It's such an awful bore not having the car. We'd have to take Jennifer by train, I suppose."

Moira blew a long cloud of smoke. "I shouldn't think Queensland would be very easy."

"Because of the sickness? It's so far away."

"They've got it at Maryborough," the girl said. That's only just north of Brisbane."

“But there are plenty of warm places to go to without going right up there, aren't there?"

"I should think there would be. But it's coming down south pretty steadily."

Mary twisted round and glanced at her. "Tell me, do you really think it's going to come here?"

"I think I do."

"You mean, we're all going to die of it? Like the men say?"

"I suppose so."

Mary twisted round and pulled a catalogue of garden flowers down from a muddle of papers on the settee. "I went to Wilson's today and bought a hundred daffodils," she said. "Bulbs. King Alfreds-these ones." She showed the picture. "I'm going to put them in that corner by the wall, where Peter took out the tree. It's sheltered there. But I suppose if we're all going to die that's silly."

"No sillier than me starting in to learn shorthand and typing," the girl said drily. "I think we're all going a bit mad, if you ask me. When do daffodils come up?"

"They should be flowering by the end of August," Mary said. "Of course, they won't be much this year, but they should be lovely next year and the year after. They sort of multiply, you know."

"Well, of course it's sensible to put them in. You'll see them anyway, and you'll sort of feel you've done something."

Mary looked at her gratefully. "Well, that's what I think. I mean, I couldn't bear to-to just stop doing things and do nothing. You might as well die now and get it over."

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