"Robertson-WendyDarling" - читать интересную книгу автора (Robertson R Garcia Y)"Bloody Wong-wongs," the woman insisted. "I heard them over Maidstone last
month." Wendy saw nothing alarming about the orderly formation -- until white puffs of anti-aircraft fire appeared in its path. When they reached Liverpool Station she saw bombs start to fall, and yelled to Mother, "We're under attack. They are bombing Tottenham Court. I can see the smoke." "Twenty to noon," Mother reminded her. Wendy swung back into the nursery. She'd be late for afternoon session, and she had the infant's class. What did sixty-four quarrelsome kindergartners know about the war and air raids? She dashed downstairs. Mother pressed a fresh cucumber sandwich into her hands. "Here, eat this on the bus." Wendy fled the house. From atop a belching omnibus she saw the tiny specks separate, one gaggle headed south across the Thames, the others turning north toward Dalston. She was not the least frightened by this grand show, put on free for the citizens of London. People craned their necks in the street. No one searched for shelter. Nothing matched the innocence of that first daylight raid. At the North Street stop an officious bobby told her, "Take care. Bombs been falling hereabouts." School was below ground level, in a large partitioned basement with three stories of older children's classes overhead. Wendy could not picture a safer spot -- protected by God's Grace and tile floors. The peeler touched his helmet. "Then you'd best get to your work." She started off fast, to please the bobby-- not afraid, just late. Heavy smoke hung over Southwark. Warehouses were burning, but the planes themselves had vanished. The double beat of their engines faded over the East End-- new to being bombed, she supposed the raid was over. Wendy Moira Angela Darling was as raw as the rest of London. Half a block from the school she came on the crowd, and heard the clanging firetrucks. She jostled her way to the front. Frantic mothers combed the throng, jerking dazed children around to search their faces. Cries of thanksgiving mixed with agonized wails. Wendy grabbed a teacher. "What's happened?" "Angela, where were you? It came through the roof, dragging an older child with it." Wendy let the woman go, pushing into the school, descending into the wrecked basement. The bomb had hit the roof, split in two, and punctured three floors before exploding -- as though an invisible hand guided it to the infant's class. Sailors carried out the wounded in blankets, sobbing as they worked. Only the dead remained at their desks. Wendy began brushing off dust and rubble, |
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