Rhodes was not present at the first meeting between Boden and this unusual, half-French army officer. Boden, it seemed, had met this Captain Simon in the private bar of the “Royal Sovereign” and had taken him at once to see the French fishing vessel that they had come to regard as their own property. She had been moved from Dittisham and had been towed down to a little shipyard on the Kingswear side; Rhodes had contrived that for their mutual convenience.
Next day they all met at the shipyard and talked for some time in the boat-shed, sitting on upturned dinghies. “I see what you mean to say, you two chaps,” said Simon presently. “You mean this war goes too bloody slow for your liking.”
“Put it that way if you like,” said Rhodes. “There’s the boat and here we are, and the Germans over on the other side. The Admiralty will give us guns for her if we can thrash out what we want to do. They as good as said so.”
“And what is it that you want to do?”
There was a little silence. “That’s the devil of it,” Boden said. “We’re working blindfold. But surely to God there must be something you could do with that sort of a boat.”
The Frenchman looked across the sunlit water of the estuary towards Mill Creek. “You want to fight a battle,” he said quietly. “I think you have got hold of the wrong end of the stick. You cannot fight a battle against German ships in a French fishing-boat. Your Admiralty have told you that, and they are right. I think you have been looking at this thing all wrong.”
Boden said: “What do you mean?”
Simon looked at them and smiled. “Look, you chaps,” he said. “I have been over on the other side. I must not talk about it, but I know what I am saying. You do not want to fight a battle in that fishing-boat. It is not suitable for that. But it is suitable for … secret things. In that you can approach the other side without suspicion. You can take photographs, land agents, even lay a mine or two, perhaps, before you slip away. You may work secretly for months and never fire a shot. That is the proper way to use a fishing vessel like that one.”
Boden said: “You may be right in that. But that’s a bit out of my depth. That turns it into a—a sort of an intelligence job.”
“Yes. That is what it would be.”
Boden said moodily: “I don’t know that I’d be much interested in that.”
The army officer said quietly: “It is interesting work.”
“Not to me.”
“What would you rather do?”
“I’d rather stay on in my A/S trawler. It’s a bit slow at times, but it’s definitely killing Germans.”
Simon glanced curiously at the strained white face. “So?”
Boden said: “Look. Take a contact that we made last month. We put down fifteen charges set for various depths, and Louise put down thirteen. We got a lot of oil up to the surface, and the hell of a lot of air came up. And we could hear the muggers tapping—hammering at something. We heard them on the hydro-phones. The noise went on for nearly half an hour, and then it got fainter and stopped.”
He turned to them, eyes glowing, “They were trying to get out, or something, right down there on the bottom in seventy fathoms, in the darkness and the mud and slime. I reckon we split the pressure hull right open, and there were just a few of them trapped in one end, up to their necks in water, smothered in oil, trying to get out. I expect the lights were out and they were trying to get out in the darkness. They’d probably got just a little pocket of air above the water-level, and as they breathed up that they died off one by one. Or else the pressure killed them, or the chlorine fumes. But I swear we got the lot of them. I swear we did.”
There was a little pause.
“So?” said Simon again.
Rhodes spoke up. “Can you think of how this vessel could be used if she were turned over to intelligence, as you say?”
The other said: “I could find out about that from—from my friends.”
They settled that he should do so, and presently broke up their meeting. It was not satisfactory to any of them, but it seemed the only thing to do. Boden was definitely not interested; in the job that he was in he knew that he had killed some Germans, distant and unseen as they might be. He had no intention of giving up that mode of life for a less active one. To Rhodes it seemed that if the vessel were employed as Simon had suggested, there could be no place for him in the scheme. If she were to do no fighting there would be no place in her for a colour-blind Special officer; it would have been difficult enough for him to go with her, anyway.
Simon went up to London some days later, Boden went to sea, and Rhodes went on with his routine jobs at the harbour mouth. He was depressed about the vessel he had been the first to find, and a little morose. It had seemed at first that he had found an opportunity for active combat with the Germans; now that was slipping from him. Other men with better eyes would take Geneviève upon whatever secret mission she was destined to perform, and he would only be an onlooker. It seemed that it was not his lot to fight the Germans in this war; he could have served his country just as well or better by staying on with British Toilet Products, now switched entirely to war work. He could have still had Ernest with him.
He did not regret altogether his decision to become a naval officer, but the remembrance of his dog affected all he did or thought about. He became morose and rather bitter in regard to the trivial defect in his eyes.
Marshall, his elderly commanding officer, made short trips now and then with other area officers of the defences to see demonstrations of new methods of attack for which the coast defences must prepare. Sometimes these took the form of confidential lectures in some hall in Plymouth; at other times there were actual demonstrations of real weapons in the field. He went down in the middle of May with acute lumbago; after a day of pain and bad temper in the office he gave up and went to bed. He sent for Rhodes in the stuffy little bedroom of the hotel where he lived.
“Look, Rhodes,” he said. “This show at Honiton the day after to-morrow. I fixed up with N.O.I.C. I’d take the little Austin van because the place is five miles from a railway station. But I shan’t be fit. You’d better go instead of me, and come back and write a report that I can send in all about it. It’s eighty miles there and eighty miles back, and I can’t stand that with this damn thing I’ve got.”
Rhodes said: “I’m very sorry, sir. What is it you were going to see?”
“Didn’t I tell you?”
“No, sir.”
“Well, it’s flame-throwers. I don’t know what the ruddy things are like, but the Germans have them in the invasion barges, so we’ve got to know what we’ll be up against. They’re going to show a lot of different sorts of them, I believe.”
“I see, sir. Then we’ve got to see if we can cope with them?”
“That’s right. You make a full report of what you’ve seen, when you get back, and then we’ll see just what it means to us.”
“Are these our own flame-throwers that they’re going to show or German ones?”
“Oh, these things are our own. The Army do a good bit with them, I believe.”
Marshall gave him instructions how to find the place and a roneoed, numbered pass for entry to the show. Rhodes asked: “Shall I take the van myself, sir?”
“No, you’d better not do that. The Naval Stores are sending a Wren driver. It’ll take you all of three hours to get there in that thing; you’d better make your plans to get away from here by eight o’clock at the latest. The show’s at eleven.”
“Very good, sir.”
Rhodes went into the naval garage next day and spoke to the petty officer in charge of transport, looked at the battered little khaki-coloured van with the canvas top, and decided to start at half-past seven. Punctually at that time next morning the little vehicle drew up outside his rooms driven by a dark-haired girl, a Leading Wren.
He put his raincoat on and went out to it. “ ’Morning,” he said a little awkwardly. “Have you had your breakfast?” He was oppressed by the knowled
ge that he was bad with girls.
She smiled at him and said: “Yes, thank you, sir. I had mine in the Wrennery before I came out.”
He got into the bucket seat beside her. “All right. You know where we’ve got to go to?”
She slipped the gear in and the van moved down the road. “I think I know the place,” she said. “They marked it on the map for me last night.”
The morning was bright and fresh, the sun shone, and the little birds chirped at them from the hedges. The old underpowered van ground its way very noisily and rather slowly up the long steep hill out of the town.
Sub-Lieutenant Rhodes said diffidently: “She doesn’t get along so fast, does she? Do you think we’ll make it by eleven?”
“I think so, sir. She does a steady thirty on the level.”
“I suppose she’s very economical in petrol.”
The Wren said: “She does about twenty-five to the gallon. That’s why she doesn’t go so fast, I suppose.”
They relapsed into shy silence. The old van trundled noisily through the Devon lanes to Totnes and on towards Newton Abbot. Once Rhodes lit a cigarette and offered one to his driver, not quite certain in his own mind whether he was violating the King’s Regulations by doing so. The Wren refused the cigarette and drove on in silence; the relationship between officer and rating was maintained, though the awkward tension in the van increased.
Rhodes did not dare to turn and look at his driver. He became very much aware, however, that the Wren was rather an attractive girl. He thought it was a pity that she was so shy.
They reached their destination with a quarter of an hour to spare. It was a bare, scorched hill behind a little country house that had been taken over by the Army and neglected; there was a small camp of hutments in the field beside it. They passed two sentries who scrutinised their passes and drove the van into the car-park.
Immediately it became most evident to Rhodes that this was not a party of his grade at all. The cars that came into the park disgorged colonels and brigadiers, air commodores and group captains, admirals and captains in profusion. They parked diffidently between the Bentley of a divisional commander and the Packard of a vice-admiral. There seemed to be nobody there lower in rank than a commander. Sub-Lieutenant Rhodes got out of the van awkwardly and looked around, trying to brush the dust from his jacket.
He said to the Wren: “You’d better hang about here. I don’t suppose it’ll last more than an hour.”
She said: “Very good, sir.” She watched him as he made his way towards the demonstration, suddenly rather sorry for him. He looked terribly diffident and out of place, she thought, amongst all those high officers.
Twenty minutes later the show was in full swing.
* * * * *
By noon the show was over, and the Packard and the Bentleys were sliding out on to the road, bearing their admirals and generals back urgently to their more humdrum work. The little Austin van was the last left in the car-park, but it was nearly one before Rhodes came back to it. A subaltern walked with him to the van; the Wren heard the last words of their conversation.
“It’s terribly good of you to give me all this dope,” said Rhodes. “If I think of anything else I’ll give you a ring.”
The army officer said: “Okay—you’ve got the number?” He dropped his vocie. “If you think any more about that other thing, come up again and have a chat about it.”
Rhodes said: “I will do that. Thanks so much for your help.”
He got into the van. The Wren pressed the starter and they moved out on to the road. As soon as they were clear of the sentries he turned to her.
“I say,” he said enthusiastically. “Did you see the big one?”
She said: “I saw them all. I got a good view from the bottom of the bill.”
“Aren’t they the cat’s whiskers?”
The Wren hesitated. She did not quite know what to say. Never in all her life had she imagined such appalling, terrifying things as she had seen in the last hour. She could not force herself to think of them as—weapons.
She said weakly: “What are they supposed to be for?”
He said: “Burning up Germans.”
She was silent for a moment, sick and horrified. Presently she said: “Are you allowed to do that to … to people?”
“The Germans use them. As a matter of fact, they’re all right in the Hague Convention.” He paused. “But did you see the distance that the big one goes?”
She said vehemently: “But they’re beastly things.”
He turned and glanced at her; she was flushed and rather pretty, evidently feeling strongly about it. He shrugged his shoulders.
“The Germans started using flame-throwers—at any rate, in modern times. If we can build more horribly, outrange them, smother them with their own blazing oil … so much the worse for them.”
He relapsed into silence, thinking moodily about his dog. He knew that he had offended the girl. He was not surprised; indeed he had expected it would happen some time or another; he was bad with girls. The only thing that he was really good with was animals, he thought. The little friendly creatures that depended on you, that had to be cared for, that must never be let down. Those were more satisfactory companions than any girl.
The Wren drove on in silence, shocked and hurt. She had not been in the Navy very long, and this was the first time that she had seen the use of weapons and what they entailed. She was twenty-two years old; in civil life she had kept the books and acted as cashier in a shop in Norwich, run by two aunts. The aunts had created a high-grade business in antique furniture and art fabrics; the shop itself was an old Tudor house, carefully and rather expensively modernised. The Wren had led a very sheltered life until she joined the Navy, mostly with women. With men she was usually on the defensive; she did not understand them. Generalising, she considered men to be brutal and insensitive. Sub-Lieutenant Rhodes confirmed her views.
I am sorry to say that their high sentiments broke down before the pressure of their baser appetites. At twenty minutes past one Rhodes said awkwardly:
“Have you had lunch?”
“No, sir.”
“We’d better stop and get something.” And then he realised that he had forgotten all about his cheque the day before. He had meant to cash it, and he hadn’t. He fumbled awkwardly in his trouser pocket, feeling the milled edge of the coins; he had about four and sixpence. This was terrible.
The Wren was a girl of his own type, although she was a rating. He had never had anything to do with Wrens before, but it seemed to him to be essential that he should offer to pay for her lunch. Four shillings and sixpence might possibly buy lunch for one at one of the hotels along their route; it certainly would not provide for two. He wrestled in silence with this problem for a few minutes as they drove on; then said casually:
“We’d better stop and get a snack at the next pub we come to. Bread and cheese and beer.”
The Wren said: “Very good, sir,” a little distantly.
Presently they came to the “Coach and Horses”; he made her pull up outside it. “This’ll do,” he said, getting out. “I expect they can fix us up with something here.”
The girl did not move from her seat. She smiled at him brightly. “I’ll wait till you’re ready, sir.”
He was appalled. “But won’t you come in and have something to eat?”
“No, thank you, sir. I’ll just wait here.”
“But aren’t you hungry?”
She was very hungry, and she was getting very much annoyed with this young man. She said curtly: “I’ll just wait here, if you don’t mind, sir. We aren’t supposed to go drinking in public-houses with officers.”
He was very much embarrassed. He stood there looking at her, slowly blushing; even in his confusion it did not escape him that she grew prettier than ever when she was angry. Knowing that he was blushing, he grew irritated himself.
“There’s no need for you to blow that kind of raspberry at me,”
he said. “I was offering to pay for your lunch, but I’ve only got four and sixpence on me, so this is the best I can do. I forgot to cash a cheque before I came away.” He withdrew his hand from his trouser pocket and looked at the contents. “Four and eightpence halfpenny, to be exact.”
She felt suddenly that she had been very rude, but she did not know what she could say. “It’s frightfully kind of you to want to pay for my lunch,” she said. “But I’ve never been inside a public-house in my life.”
He said: “I say, I’m awfully sorry. You’d rather go on till we find a café, would you?”
“But you want beer, don’t you?”
“Not specially.”
She knew he wanted a glass of beer; men always did, so she believed. She was awkward and embarrassed in her turn, and uneasily conscious of two pounds ten shillings in a note-case in her pocket. He had done his best to be friendly, after all. She said:
“Do you have to drink whisky and beer and stuff like that in there?”
“No—you can have something soft. Would you like a glass of lemonade? I expect they’ve got that.”
She got out of the car. “All right,” she said. “Which door we go in at?”
He took her into the private bar; it was deserted and empty. Rhodes ordered a pint of mild, a lemonade, and bread and cheese for two. The girl glanced around her at the clean wiped tables, the varnished woodwork, and the brewery advertisements, vaguely disappointed. She had expected to see a haunt of vice; instead it was all rather like a church vestry.
Rhodes brought the plates to her at the table. “I say,” he said. “Would you mind telling me your name? Mine’s Rhodes—Michael Rhodes.”
She said: “I’m called Barbara Wright.”
They talked for some little time about the road, and Dartmouth, and the Navy. Presently she came back to the subject that was troubling her.
“Those things you went to see this morning,” she said. “We aren’t going to have them in Dartmouth, are we?”
He did not answer that, mindful of security; moreover, he did not know. He said: “The Germans will be using them against us when they invade. We’ve got to be prepared.”