Authors: Margaret Mayhew
More subterfuge but she could hardly say, âActually, I'm going for an illicit three days with the American colonel sitting opposite me by the window, on your left. Only we're pretending we hardly know each other, because we're not married and he's married to somebody else.'
The major talked nearly all the way to London. Tedious trivia about the trials and tribulations of his desk-bound job and, lowering his voice only slightly in spite of the strong American presence in the compartment, how tricky the Yanks were to deal with. At King's Cross, she managed to shake him off and they joined the long queue for a taxi. In the fading light of early evening she could see fresh ruins where the monstrous new German weapons had found their mark, and everywhere the old scars from earlier bombing raids. A few doors away from the block of flats in Kensington a house had been hit, only its elegant facade left standing while the remainder behind had collapsed into a pile of rubble. They took the lift up to the top floor and she opened the front door to the flat hallway.
âThe drawing room's through here.' She led the way for Carl. âI'll do the blackout.' She pulled the blinds down by their acorns before she turned on the lamps. A thick film of dust lay over everything but otherwise there was no damage. It was like stepping back into the past â a past she had shared with Richard. He had lived here, sat on that sofa, eaten off the table in the dining room, slept in the bed. She switched on the electric bar fire. âI'm sorry, it's freezing.'
âI don't feel it.'
âYou must have got acclimatized.' She peeled off her gloves and took off her hat and fur coat. âWould you like a drink? That's if there is anything.'
He was still standing over by the door, looking so very American in his so very fine American uniform, with what Doris called all the brass bits and the silver wings and the medals. And she was so very much in love with him.
âSure. Can I help?'
âYou can pour out whatever I can find. I'm sorry, but there won't be any ice. The fridge is turned off.' She opened the drinks cupboard and discovered a near-empty bottle of Tio Pepe, a near-full bottle of Martini and a half-full one of brandy. She held it up. âWith luck there'll be some soda in the siphon to go with this.'
âExactly what the doctor ordered.'
âAnd here are the glasses. Very dusty, I'm afraid. I'd better give them a wipe.'
He poured the brandy for them and squirted the soda. He handed her one glass and raised his own. âTo you, Lady Beauchamp.'
âAnd to you, Colonel Schrader.'
They smiled at each other.
âSo, where shall we dine and dance, Lady Beauchamp? I'm not too familiar with London.'
âWell, the Savoy's rather nice. They've danced all through the war, so to speak. Blitz and all. Carroll Gibbons's band. He's a compatriot of yours.'
âSounds great. Will they let me in dressed like this?'
âCertainly. Uniforms are fine. Almost
de rigueur
. I'll need to change, though, if you don't mind waiting.'
âI'll wait as long as it takes.'
âThere are some records in the gramophone cupboard, if you'd like to put one on.'
In the bedroom she went through the wardrobe and decided on a pre-war Chanel of coffee-coloured tulle. She hadn't worn it for years. She redid her face and her hair and went back into the drawing room. A record was playing quietly.
East of the sun and West of the moon
. âOne of my favourites,' she said from the doorway.
He turned and stood up. âMine too. You look very beautiful.'
âThank you.'
He went on looking at her and the record played on and finished. He drained his glass and put it down. âShall we go?'
They took another taxi across wartime, blacked-out London: traffic crawling along on dimmed headlights, buses and trams with blinds down, traffic lights thin crosses of red, amber and green, the white glimmer of S for shelter, the orange blink of Belisha beacons, torches wielded by unseen pedestrians. Apart from helping her on with her coat he hadn't touched her.
Inside the hotel there was light and warmth and music. If it hadn't been for the predominance of men in uniform it would have been possible to forget that there was a war on at all. Looking round, she saw that many of them were American.
âThis is a wonderful place,' he said.
âRichard and I used to come here quite a bit. It's a good dance floor, as well as a good band.'
âI'd like to try it out.'
He danced very well. Miriam would probably have been surprised at that too, as well as at the bridge-playing. They danced and they dined and they talked and they laughed. She watched him shed years before her eyes. Felt herself doing the same.
It was after midnight when they returned to the flat. âAnother brandy?' she asked him.
âNo, thanks. Another dance, instead.' He put the same record on again and took her in his arms. She closed her eyes, longing for him. As it finished, he started to kiss her.
He saw her through the window and drew back. He'd kept away for weeks, like she'd wanted, but the need to see her, just to look at her, was too great and, in the end, he'd ridden the bike down the hill to the village, like he always used to, and leaned it against the wall beside the bakehouse. He waited until the sheep's bell sounded as a customer came out, and then went in. She hadn't seen him, he realized that by the look on her face when she did. It was something like fear but he must have been mistaken. She had nothing to fear from him, she'd know that.
âHalf a dozen of the rock cakes, please,' he said. âI've brought a bag.'
âYou mustn't come here, Chester. I asked you not to. You mustn't.' She kept tugging at her overall, real nervous. What the heck was the matter with her?
âNo harm in it, surely. I missed those cakes.'
âIf Dad sees you . . .'
âHe's seen me before.'
âThat's just it.'
âHe still on about Yanks?'
She nodded. âWorse than ever. You've got to stay away, Chester. Please. For my sake.'
âOK,' he shrugged. âIf that's what you want.'
âI've told you before it is.' She put the rock cakes into the brown paper bag he'd given her. âJust go.'
âHaven't paid for them yet.'
âOh . . . it's threepence.'
He was handing over a threepenny bit when her father came into the bakehouse, stopped dead and then rushed at him like an angry bull.
âBy God, it's
you
! Showing your face here! I'm going to see you court-martialled for what you've done.'
He backed away from the onslaught. âI'm sorry, sir. I don't know what you mean.'
âYou took advantage of my daughter. You raped her!'
â
Dad
, please . . .'
âHold your tongue, Sally. That's what he did. Let him deny it, if he dares. Fifteen years old you were. That's against the law in this country.
Fifteen
.'
âHe didn't know, Dad. I told him I was eighteen. He didn't know.'
The father snorted in fury. âYou'll be telling me next he doesn't know you're carrying his child.'
Chester saw now why she'd been tugging at the overall and wondered how he could have been so blind. So dumb.
âHe doesn't.' She moved between her father and himself and crossed her arms over her swollen stomach. âAnd I don't know whose child it is. That's a fact.'
âWhat do you mean you don't know? You know very well.'
âNo, I don't, Dad. I've gone with several Yanks â four of them â and I don't know which one it was. I can't tell, can I?'
Her father raised his hand as though to strike her, and then let it drop. He shook his head, bewildered. âI don't believe it â a daughter of mine, acting like a whore. I don't believe it.'
She tossed her head at him. âWell, it's true, Dad. And you can't make me marry all of them.' Over her shoulder, she said to Chester, âIt was never just you, see. You ought to've known that.'
He stared at her and he thought about the way she'd always looked at other guys. He said steadily, âI still want to marry you, Sally, like I asked you before.'
âI told you, I don't want to get married.'
âWhat about the baby? You've got to think of the kid.'
âI'm giving it away. Aren't I, Dad? He doesn't want it. I don't want it. Nobody wants it.'
âWell, I sure do.'
âIt's not yours to have, Chester. It's mine. And I don't know who the father is. Tell him to go, Dad. Go away and not come back. Ever.'
All the anger had gone out of the poor guy; his shoulders were sagging, his face grey and defeated. He felt real sorry for him.
âYou'd better go. Go away, like she said, and don't come back. Go
on
. Before I throw you out.'
âSally?'
She turned her back on him.
The sheep's bell jangled loudly as he wrenched the door open. In his acute distress, he almost knocked down an old woman with his bike as she was hurrying across the road.
Miss Cutteridge collected herself and her fallen shopping basket. The young American had ridden past so close that she had had to leap for the pavement. She'd seen him come bursting out of Mr Barnet's, jump on the bike and tear off as though the hounds of hell were after him. From the brief glimpse she'd had of his face, he'd looked very upset and he had scarcely seemed to see her.
She straightened her hat and went to the bakehouse to collect the small tin loaf that Sally always put by for her on a Friday. The young man had left the door open and the bell was still jiggling on its leather strap as she stepped inside. Sally wasn't there, which was unusual, and it was Mr Barnet himself who served her. He looked upset, she thought, just like the young man, and seemed quite distracted too.
âIs Sally well?' she enquired.
He almost snapped at her. âPerfectly, thank you.'
âI just wondered . . . she's normally here.'
âWell, she's not at the moment. Will there be anything else?'
She didn't like to ask for the stale bread that Sally sometimes put by for her for Porky Pig. âNo, thank you, Mr Barnet.'
She paid for the small tin loaf and walked back to her cottage. It seemed to her that the rumours about Sally must be true, after all. For a time she had persisted in believing that the girl was simply putting on rather a lot of weight, perhaps eating too many of those delicious cakes she made, but the encounter with Mr Barnet had signified some serious trouble. He was always politeness itself with customers; always so anxious to please and give the best service. And then there was the young American rushing off like that. She could remember having seen him before, calling at the bakehouse. If Sally was expecting, as half the village said she was, then, most probably, he was the father. Perhaps he had refused to marry her? That seemed unlikely as he looked a very nice young man, even if he had nearly knocked her down. It was all very shocking, of course, but somehow she seemed to have become quite used to being shocked these days.
She let herself into her cottage and put the fresh loaf away in the bread bin. There was only a little stale bread left which she would mash up for Porky with the last of the potato peelings. Fortunately, Joe would be bringing another bucket of scraps later on, or she would have had nothing else left to give the pig who seemed to have an insatiable appetite. He had grown and grown until he almost filled the shelter, and he had become even more sociable, knowing exactly when to expect her visits. He would trot over to the wire to grunt his welcome and wait for her to scratch his back with a stick. She had never imagined that it would be possible to grow so fond of a pig, just the way she was fond of Ginger, and the time had long passed when he should have ceased to exist. She had put it off again and again. âYou've got to do it, ma'am,' Joe kept telling her. âYou can't keep him for ever.'
âI'll do it next week,' she always said, but when the next week came she couldn't bring herself to send for Mr Ford, the butcher.
She went down to the bottom of the garden and Porky came out of the Anderson and ambled over, grunting. On the way she had found him a windfall apple in the grass and she dropped it over the wire in front of his snout. He crunched it up noisily in a flash and looked up at her with his little eyes, hoping for more. âYou'll have to wait till Joe gets here,' she said. âHe won't be long.'
By late afternoon Joe had still not arrived and it was getting dark and had started to rain. Miss Cutteridge watched the street anxiously from the sitting-room window, waiting for him to come riding along on his old bike with the bucket hooked over the handlebars. She put on her mackintosh and went to feed Porky the last of the stale bread and the few potato peelings. Then she went back indoors, drew the blackout blinds and the curtains, switched on a lamp and sat waiting. It was very unlike Joe to let her down. He always came when he said he would, so something must have happened to him. Her imagination started to paint horror pictures of him lying badly injured in a fall. He was always climbing up telegraph poles â she remembered him telling her so in the very beginning, when he'd first come to tea that day.
You see some guy up a pole, it's me
. Perhaps he'd fallen and nobody knew. He was lying there in the dark, badly injured, all alone and suffering. Perhaps nobody would miss him until it was too late . . . She stood up and began pacing up and down, wringing her hands.
When she heard the knocker she rushed to the front door and flung it open. Joe stood there in the rain without any waterproof coat, carrying the pig bucket, and she could see at once that something was terribly wrong. She took the bucket from him and set it down on her polished lino floor, and then she grasped his hand and drew him into the sitting room. Made him sit down, not caring about the water dripping all over the sofa or the thick mud that his shoes left on the carpet. âJoe, dear, what is it? What's happened?'