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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
82.
We found a place. Priced at a steep discount. Just up the coast, outside Santa Barbara. Lots of
room, large gardens, a climbing frame—even a pond with koi carp.
The koi were stressed, the estate agent warned.
So are we. We’ll all get along famously.
No, the agent explained, the koi need very particular care. You’ll have to hire a koi guy.
Uh-huh. And where does one find a koi guy?
The agent wasn’t sure.
We laughed. First-world problems.
We took a tour. The place was a dream. We asked Tyler to look at it too, and he said: Buy it.
So we pulled together a down-payment, took out a mortgage, and in July 2020 we moved in.
The move itself required only a couple of hours. Everything we owned fitted into thirteen
suitcases. That first night we had a quiet drink in celebration, roasted a chicken, went to bed early.
All was well, we said.
And yet Meg was still under loads of stress.
There was a pressing issue with her legal case against the tabloids1. The Mail was up to its
usual tricks. Their first crack at offering a defense2 had been patently ridiculous, so now they were
trying a new defense, which was even more ridiculous. They were arguing that they’d printed
Meg’s letter to her father because of a story in People magazine, which quoted a handful of Meg’s
friends—anonymously. The tabloids argued that Meg had orchestrated these quotes, used her
friends as de facto spokespeople, and thus the Mail had every right to publish her letter to her
father.
More, they now wanted the names of Meg’s previously4 anonymous3 friends read into the
official court record—to destroy them. Meg was determined5 to do everything in her power to
prevent that. She’d been staying up late, night after night, trying to work out how to save these
people, and now, on our first morning in the new house, she reported abdominal6 pains.
And bleeding.
Then she collapsed7 to the floor.
We raced to the local hospital. When the doctor walked into the room, I didn’t hear one word
she said, I just watched her face, her body language. I already knew. We both did. There had been
so much blood.
Still, hearing the words was a blow.
Meg grabbed me, I held her, we both wept.
In my life I’ve felt totally helpless only four times.
In the back of the car while Mummy and Willy and I were being chased by paps.
In the Apache above Afghanistan, unable to get clearance8 to do my duty.
At Nott Cott when my pregnant wife was planning to take her life.
And now.
We left the hospital with our unborn child. A tiny package. We went to a place, a secret place
only we knew.
Under a spreading banyan9 tree, while Meg wept, I dug a hole with my hands and set the tiny
package softly in the ground.
1 tabloids | |
n.小报,通俗小报(版面通常比大报小一半,文章短,图片多,经常报道名人佚事)( tabloid的名词复数 );药片 | |
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2 defense | |
n.防御,保卫;[pl.]防务工事;辩护,答辩 | |
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3 anonymous | |
adj.无名的;匿名的;无特色的 | |
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4 previously | |
adv.以前,先前(地) | |
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5 determined | |
adj.坚定的;有决心的 | |
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6 abdominal | |
adj.腹(部)的,下腹的;n.腹肌 | |
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7 collapsed | |
adj.倒塌的 | |
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8 clearance | |
n.净空;许可(证);清算;清除,清理 | |
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9 banyan | |
n.菩提树,榕树 | |
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