Читаем On The Beach полностью

Dwight Towers spent the week-end with the Davidsons at Harkaway, working from dawn till dusk each day on the construction of the fences. The hard physical work was a relief from all his tensions, but he found his host to be a worried man. Someone had told him about the resistance of the rabbit to radioactive infection. The rabbit did not worry him a great deal, for Harkaway had always been remarkably free from rabbits, but the relative immunity of the furred animals raised questions in regard to his beef cattle, and to these he had found no answer.

He unburdened himself one evening to the American. "I never thought of it," he said. "I mean, I assumed the Aberdeen Angus, they'd die at the same time as us. But now it looks as though they'll last a good while longer. How much longer they'll last-that I can't find out. Apparently there's been no research done on it. But as it is, of course, I'm feeding out both hay and silage, and up here we go on feeding out until the end of September in an average year-about half a bale of hay a beast each day. I find you have to do that if you're going to keep them prime. Well, I can't see how to do it if there's going to be no one here. It really is a problem."

"What would happen if you opened the hay barn to them, and let them take it as they want it?"

"I thought of that, but they'd never get the bales undone. If they did, they'd trample most of it underfoot and spoil it." He paused. "I've been puzzling to think out if there isn't some way we could do it with a time clock and an electric fence… But any way you look at it, it means putting out a month's supply of hay into the open paddock, in the rain. I don't know what to do…"

He got up. "Let me get you a whisky."

"Thank you-a small one." The American reverted to the problem of the hay. "It certainly is difficult. You can't even write to the papers and find out what anybody else is doing."

He stayed with the Davidsons until the Tuesday morning, and then went back to Williamstown. At the dockyard his command was beginning to disintegrate, in spite of everything that the executive and the chief of the boat had been able to do. Two men had not returned from leave and one was reported to have been killed in a street brawl at Geelong, but there was no confirmation. There were eleven cases of men drunk on return from leave waiting for his jurisdiction and he found these very difficult to deal with. Restriction of leave when there was no work to do aboard and only about a fortnight left to go did not seem to be the answer. He left the culprits confined in the brig of the aircraft carrier while they sobered up and while he thought about it; then he had them lined up before him on the quarter deck.

"You men can't have it both ways," he told them. "We've none of us got long to go now, you or me. As of today, you're members of the ship's company of U.S.S. Scorpion, and that's the last ship of the U.S. Navy in commission. You can stay as part of the ship's company, or you can get a dishonorable discharge."

He paused. "Any man coming aboard drunk or late from leave, from this time on, will get discharged next day. And when I say discharged, I mean dishonorable discharge, and I mean it quick. I'll strip the uniform off you right there and then and put you outside the dockyard gates as a civilian in your shorts, and you can freeze and rot in Williamstown for all the U.S. Navy cares. Hear that, and think it over. Dismissed."

He got one case next day, and turned the man outside the dockyard gates in shirt and underpants to fend for himself. He had no more trouble of that sort.

He left the dockyard early on the Friday morning in the Chevrolet driven by his leading seaman, and went to the garage in the mews off Elizabeth Street in the city. He found John Osborne working on the Ferrari, as he had expected; the car stood roadworthy and gleaming, to all appearances ready to race there and then. Dwight said, "Say, I just called in as I was passing by to say I'm sorry that I won't be there to see you win tomorrow. I've got another date up in the mountains, going fishing."

The scientist nodded. "Moira told me. Catch a lot of fish. I don't think there'll be many people there this time except competitors and doctors."

"I'd have thought there would be, for the Grand Prix."

"It may be the last week-end in full health for a lot of people. They've got other things they want to do."

"Peter Holmes-he'll be there?"

John Osborne shook his head. "He's going to spend it gardening." He hesitated. "I oughtn't to be going really."

"You don't have a garden."

The scientist smiled wryly. "No, but I've got an old mother, and she's got a Pekinese. She's just woken up to the fact that little Ming's going to outlive her by several months, and now she's worried stiff what's going to happen to him…" He paused. "It's the hell of a time, this. I'll be glad when it's all over."

"End of the month, still?"

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