The Fifth Child

Read Online The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing - Free Book Online

Book: The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing Read Free Book Online
Authors: Doris Lessing
Tags: Contemporary, Horror
Ads: Link
forehead sloped from his eyebrows tohis crown. His hair grew in an unusual pattern from the double crown where started a wedge or triangle that came low on the forehead, the hair lying forward in a thick yellowish stubble, while the side and back hair grew downwards. His hands were thick and heavy, with pads of muscle in the palms. He opened his eyes and looked straight up into his mother’s face. They were focussed greeny-yellow eyes, like lumps of soapstone. She had been waiting to exchange looks with the creature who, she had been sure, had been trying to hurt her, but there was no recognition there. And her heart contracted with pity for him: poor little beast, his mother disliking him so much … But she heard herself say nervously, though she tried to laugh, “He’s like a troll, or a goblin or something.” And she cuddled him, to make up. But he was stiff and heavy.
    “Come, Harriet,” said Dr. Brett, annoyed with her. And she thought, I’ve been through this with Dr. bloody Brett four times and it’s always been marvellous, and now he’s like a school-master.
    She bared her breast and offered the child her nipple. The nurses, the doctor, her mother, and her husband stood watching, with the smiles that this moment imposed. But there was none of the atmosphere of festival, of achievement, no champagne; on the contrary, there was a strain in everyone, apprehension. A strong, sucking reflex, and then hard gums clamped down on her nipple, and she winced. The child looked at her and bit, hard.
    “ Well,” said Harriet, trying to laugh, removing him.
    “Try him a little more,” said the nurse.
    He was not crying. Harriet held him out, challenging the nurse with her eyes to take him. The nurse, mouth tight with disapproval, took the baby, and he was put unprotesting in his cot. He had not cried since he was born, except for a first roar of protest, or perhaps surprise.
    The four children were brought in to see their new brotherin the hospital ward. The two other women who shared the room with her had got out of bed and taken their babies to a day-room. Harriet had refused to get out of bed. She told the doctors and nurses she needed time for her internal bruises to heal; she said this almost defiantly, carelessly, indifferent to their critical looks.
    David stood at the end of the bed, holding baby Paul. Harriet yearned for this baby, this little child, from whom she had been separated so soon. She loved the look of him, the comical soft little face, with soft blue eyes—like bluebells, she thought—and his soft little limbs … it was as if she were sliding her hands along them, and then enclosing his feet in her palms. A real baby, a real little child …
    The three older children stared down at the newcomer who was so different from them all: of a different substance, so it seemed to Harriet. Partly this was because she was still responding to the look of him with her memories of his difference in the womb, but partly it was because of his heavy, sallow lumpishness. And then there was this strange head of his, sloping back from the eyebrow ridges.
    “We are going to call him Ben,” said Harriet.
    “Are we?” said David.
    “Yes, it suits him.”
    Luke on one side, Helen on the other, took Ben’s small hands, and said, “Hello, Ben.” “Hello, Ben.” But the baby did not look at them.
    Jane, the four-year-old, took one of his feet in her hand, then in her two hands, but he vigorously kicked her away.
    Harriet found herself thinking, I wonder what the mother would look like, the one who would welcome this—alien.
    She stayed in bed a week—that is, until she felt she could manage the struggle ahead—and then went home with her new child.
    That night, in the connubial bedroom, she sat up against a stack of pillows, nursing the baby. David was watching.
    Ben sucked so strongly that he emptied the first breast in less than a minute. Always, when a breast was nearly empty, he ground his gums

Similar Books

Unknown

Christopher Smith

Poems for All Occasions

Mairead Tuohy Duffy

Hell

Hilary Norman

Deep Water

Patricia Highsmith