"Mammamia!" It hadn''''t occurred to her that they might bite
her. She opened her hands and the rose-chafers spread their
wings and the beautiful colours vanished and there was nothing
to be seen but a swarm of black insects flying about and settling.
"What a pity. I try to give you a present and you don''''t
want it."
"I must go and do the washing up. The Signora will be cross
if she can''''t find me."
"Don''''t you want a present ?"
"What are you going to give me now ?"
"Come and see."
He took her hand again and led her through the flower-beds.
"I must get back to the kitchen soon, Libereso. There''''s a chicken
to pluck, too."
"Poof!"
"Why poof?"
"We don''''t eat the flesh of dead birds or animals."
"Why, are you always in Lent ?"
"What do you mean ?"
"Well, what do you eat then ?"
"Oh, all sorts of things, artichokes, lettuces, tomatoes. My
father doesn''''t like us to eat the flesh of dead animals. Or coffee or
sugar, either."
"What d''''you do with your sugar ration, then ?"
"Sell it on the black market."
They had reached some climbing plants, starred all over with
red flowers.
"What lovely flowers," said Maria-nunziata. "D''''you ever
pick them ?"
"What for ?"
"To take to the Madonna. Flowers are for the Madonna."
"Mesembryanthemum."
"What''''s that ?"
"This plant''''s called Mesembryanthemum in Latin. All flowers
have Latin names."
"The Mass is in Latin, too."
"I don''''t know about that."
Libereso was now peering closely between the winding branches
on the wall.
"There it is," he said.
"What is ?"
It was a lizard green with black markings, basking in the sun.
"I''''ll catch it."
"No."
But he got closer to the lizard, very slowly, with both hands
open; a jump, and he''''d caught it. He laughed happily, showing
his'''' white teeth. "Look out, it''''s escaping!" First a stunned-
looking head, then a tail, slithered out between his closed fingers.
Maria-nunziata was laughing too, but every time she saw the
lizard she skipped back and pulled her skirt tight about her
knees.
"So you really don''''t want me to give you anything at all ?"
said Libereso, rather sadly, and very carefully he put the lizard
back on the wall; off it shot. Maria-nunziata kept her eyes
lowered.
"Come along," said Libereso, and took her hand again.
"I''''d like to have a lipstick and paint my lips red on Sundays
to go out dancing. And a black veil to put on my head afterwards
for Benediction."
"On Sundays," said Libereso, "I go to the woods with my
brother and we fill two sacks with pine cones. Then, in the evening,
my father reads out loud from Kropotkin. My tither has hair
down to his shoulders and a beard right down to his chest. And
he wears shorts in summer and winter. And I do drawings for the
Anarchist Federation windows. The figures in top hats are business
men, those in caps are generals, and those in round hats are priests;
then I paint them in water colours."
They came to a pond with round water-lily leaves floating
on it.
"Quiet, now," commanded Libereso.
Under the water a frog could be seen swimming up with sharp
little strokes of its green arms and legs. It suddenly surfaced,
jumped on to a water-lily leaf and sat down in the middle.
"There," cried Libereso and put out a hand to catch it, but
Maria-nunziata let out a cry, "Ut!" and the frog jumped back
into the water. Libereso began searching for it, his nose almost
touching the surface.
"There it is."
[此贴子已经被作者于2005-8-21 23:07:52编辑过]