‘Thanks,’ says Kitty. ‘I don’t think they meant any harm.’
‘No, of course not. Just horsing around.’
He guides them to the bar.
‘Got any brandy?’ he says to the barman. ‘These young ladies are suffering from shock.’
‘Oh, no, I’m fine,’ says Kitty.
‘Yes, please,’ says Louisa, treading on her foot.
The barman produces a bottle of cooking brandy from under the counter and furtively pours two small shots. The soldier hands them to Kitty and Louisa.
‘For medicinal purposes,’ he says.
Kitty takes her glass and sips at it. Louisa drinks more briskly.
‘Cheers,’ she says. ‘I’m Louisa, and this is Kitty.’
‘Where are you based?’
‘The big house.’ Louisa nods up the road.
‘Secretaries?’
‘Drivers.’
‘Take care at night,’ he says. ‘More killed on the roads in the blackout than by enemy action.’
Kitty drinks her brandy without being aware she’s doing so. She begins to feel swimmy.
‘So who are you?’ she says. ‘I mean, what are you?’
‘Special services,’ he says.
‘Oh.’
‘Sorry. I don’t mean to sound mysterious. But that really is all I can say.’
‘Are you allowed to tell us your name?’
‘Avenell,’ he says, pushing back the sweep of dark hair that keeps falling into his eyes. ‘Ed Avenell.’
‘You’re a knight in shining armour,’ says Louisa. ‘You came to the rescue of damsels in distress.’
‘Damsels, are you?’ Not a flicker on his pale face. ‘If I’d known, I’m not sure I’d have bothered.’
‘Don’t you like damsels?’ says Kitty.
‘To tell you the truth,’ he says, ‘I’m not entirely clear what a damsel is. I think it may be a kind of fruit that bruises easily.’
‘That’s a damson,’ says Kitty. ‘Perhaps we’re damsons in distress.’
‘You can’t distress a damson,’ says Louisa.
‘I don’t know about that,’ says Ed. ‘It can’t be much fun being made into jam.’
‘I wouldn’t mind,’ says Louisa. ‘You get squeezed until you’re juicy, and then you get all licked up.’
‘Louisa!’ says Kitty.
‘Sorry,’ says Louisa. ‘It’s the brandy.’
‘She’s really very well brought up,’ Kitty says to Ed. ‘Her cousin is a duke.’
‘My second cousin is a tenth duke,’ says Louisa.
‘And you still a mere corporal,’ he says. ‘It just isn’t right.’
‘Lance-corporal,’ says Louisa, touching her single stripe.
The young man turns his steady gaze on Kitty.
‘And what about you?’
‘Oh, I’m not top-drawer at all,’ says Kitty. ‘We Teales are very middle-drawer. All vicars and doctors and that sort of thing.’
Suddenly she feels so wobbly she knows she must lie down. The brandy has come at the end of a long day.
‘Sorry,’ she says. ‘We were up at four for the exercise.’
She starts for the door. Apparently she staggers a little, because before she knows it he’s taking her arm.
‘I’ll walk you back,’ he says.
‘And me,’ says Louisa. ‘I was up at four too.’
So the gallant commando takes a lady on either arm, and they walk back up the road to the big house. The soldiers they pass on the way grin and say, ‘Good work, chum!’ and, ‘Give a shout if you need help.’
They part by the porch.
‘Corporal Kitty,’ he says, saluting. ‘Corporal Louisa.’
The girls return the salute.
‘But we don’t know your rank,’ says Kitty.
‘I think I’m a lieutenant or something,’ he says. ‘My firm isn’t very big on ranks.’
‘Can you really break people’s necks?’ says Louisa.
‘Just like that,’ he says, snapping his fingers.
Then he goes.
Kitty and Louisa enter the cloister and their eyes meet and they both burst out laughing.
‘My God!’ exclaims Louisa. ‘He’s a dream!’
‘Squeezed until you’re juicy? Honestly, Louisa!’
‘Well, why not? There’s a war on, isn’t there? He’s welcome to come round and lick me up any time he wants.’
‘Louisa!’
‘Don’t sound so shocked. I saw you simpering away at him.’
‘That’s just how I am. I can’t help myself.’
‘Want to come into the mess?’
‘No,’ says Kitty. ‘I really am bushed. I wasn’t making it up.’
Alone in the attic nursery Kitty undresses slowly, thinking about the young commando officer. His grave amused face is printed clearly on her memory. Most of all she recalls the gaze of those wide-set blue eyes, that seemed to see her and not see her at the same time. For all his staring, she never felt he wanted something from her. There was no pleading there. Instead there was something else, something vulnerable but all his own, a kind of sadness. Those eyes say that he doesn’t expect happiness to last. It’s this, more than his good looks, that causes her to keep him in her thoughts right up to the moment she finally surrenders to sleep.
2
The rear wheel of the motorbike slews on the chalk slime of the farm track, making the engine race. Its rider swerves to regain traction and slows and leans in to the turn, swinging round the barn end into the farmyard. Chickens scatter, squawking, only to return as soon as the engine cuts out. This is the time that kitchen scraps are thrown out. There are crows waiting in the birches.
The rider pushes his goggles up and rubs at his eyes. The roads have been slick and dangerous all day, and he’s thankful to be off his bike at last. Mary Funnell, the farmer’s wife, opens the farmhouse door, one hand holding her apron hem, and calls to him, ‘You’ve got a visitor.’
Larry Cornford pulls off his helmet to reveal a tumble of golden-brown curls. His broad friendly face looks round the yard, his eyes blinking. He sees an unfamiliar jeep.
‘Thanks, Mary.’
The farmer’s wife shakes out the contents of her apron and the chickens make a rush for the scraps. Larry pulls his satchel out of the motorbike’s pannier and strides into the farmhouse kitchen, wondering who his visitor might be.
Rex Dickinson, the medic with whom he shares this billet, is sitting at the kitchen table, smoking his pipe and laughing uneasily. With his owl glasses and his long thin neck and his teetotalism Rex is always the butt of jokes, which he takes with patient good humour. Everyone likes Rex, if only because he wants so little for himself. He’s so modest in his needs that he has to be reminded to use his own rations.
Facing Rex, dark against the bright rectangle of the kitchen window, is a lean figure Larry recognises at once.
‘Eddy!’
Ed Avenell reaches out one lazy hand for Larry to grasp.
‘This housemate of yours, Larry, has been putting me in the picture about divine providence.’
‘Where in God’s name have you sprung from?’
‘Shanklin, Isle of Wight, since you ask.’
‘This calls for a celebration! Mary, put out the cider.’
‘Cider, eh?’ says Ed.
‘No, it’s good. Home-made, with a kick like a mule.’
Larry stands beaming at his friend.
‘This bastard,’ he says to Rex, ‘ruined the five best years of my life.’
‘Oh, he’s one of your lot, is he?’ says Rex, meaning Catholics. He himself is the son of a Methodist minister. ‘I should have guessed.’
‘Don’t put me in a box with him,’ says Ed. ‘Just because we went to the same school doesn’t mean a thing. The monks never got to me.’
‘Still protesting?’ says Larry fondly. ‘I swear, if Ed had been sent to a Marxist-atheist school, he’d be a monk himself by now.’
‘You’re the one who wanted to be a monk.’
This is true. Larry laughs to remember it. For a few heady months at the age of fifteen he had considered taking vows.
‘Has Mary fed you? I’m starving. What are you doing here? What outfit are you in? What kind of uniform do you call that?’
The questions tumble out as Larry settles down to eat his delayed supper.
‘I’m with 40 Royal Marine Commando,’ says Ed.
‘God, I bet you love that.’
‘It gets me out of the army. I think I hate the army even more than I hated school.’
‘It’s still the army, though.’
‘No. We do things our own way.’
‘Same old Ed.’
‘So how are you winning the war, Larry?’
‘I’m liaison officer attached to First Division, Canadian Army, from Combined Operations headquarters.’
‘Combined Ops? How did you get in with that mob?’
‘My father knows Mountbatten. But I don’t do anything interesting. I get a War Office-issue BSA M20 and a War Office-issue briefcase and I ride back and forth with top secret papers telling the Canadians to carry out more exercises because basically there’s sod all for them to do.’
‘Tough job,’ says Ed. ‘You get any time to paint?’
‘Some,’ says Larry.
‘First he wants to be a monk,’ Ed says to Rex, ‘then he wants to be an artist. He’s always been a bit touched in the head.’
‘No more than you,’ protests Larry. ‘What’s this about joining the commandos? You want to die young?’
‘Why not?’
‘You’re doing it because you want to give your life to the noblest cause you know.’ Larry speaks firmly, pointing his fork at Ed, as if instructing a wayward child. ‘And that’s what monks do, and that’s what artists do.’
‘Seriously, Larry,’ says Ed. ‘You should have stuck with bananas.’
Larry bursts into laughter again; though in fact this is no joke. His father’s firm imports bananas, with such success that it has achieved a virtual monopoly.
‘So what are you doing here, you bandit?’ he says.
‘I’ve come to see you.’
‘Is your journey really necessary?’
These days it takes real clout to wangle both a jeep and the petrol to run it.
‘I’ve got an understanding CO,’ says Ed.
‘Will you bunk here tonight?’
‘No, no. I’ll be on the road back by ten. But listen here, Larry. I was trying to track you down, so I stopped at the pub in the village. And guess what happened?’
‘He’s been struck by a thunderbolt,’ says Rex. ‘Like St Paul on the road to Damascus. He was telling me.’
This is Rex’s dry humour.
‘I met this girl,’ says Ed.
‘Oh,’ says Larry. ‘A girl.’
‘I have to see her again. If I don’t, I’ll die.’
‘You want to die anyway.’
‘I want to see her again first.’
‘So who is she?’
‘She says she’s an ATS driver from the camp.’
‘Those ATS girls get around.’
Arthur Funnell appears in the doorway, his shoulders slumped, his face wearing its habitual expression of doom.
‘Any of you gents seen a weather forecast?’ he says. ‘If it’s more rain, I don’t want to know, because I’ve had enough and that’s the truth.’
‘Sunny tomorrow, Arthur,’ says Larry. ‘Back into the seventies.’
‘For how long?’
‘That I can’t tell you.’
‘I need a week’s sunshine, you tell ’em, or the hay’ll rot.’
‘I’ll tell them,’ says Larry.
The farmer departs.
‘He wants help bringing the hay in,’ says Rex. ‘He was telling me earlier.’
‘He should get himself some Canucks,’ says Larry. ‘They’re all farm boys. They’re bored to death in the camp.’
‘Who cares about the hay?’ says Ed. ‘What am I going to do about this girl?’
Larry pulls out a pack of cigarettes and offers one to Ed.
‘Here. Canadian, but not bad.’
They’re called Sweet Caporal. Rex lights up his pipe as Larry pulls gratefully on his after-dinner cigarette.
‘I’m stuck in bloody Shanklin,’ says Ed. ‘There’s no way I can get back over here till the weekend.’
‘So see her at the weekend.’
‘She could be married by then.’
‘Hey!’ exclaims Larry. ‘She really has got to you, hasn’t she?’
‘How about you find her for me? Give her a message. You’re the liaison officer. Do some bloody liaising.’
‘I could try,’ says Larry. ‘What’s her name?’
‘Corporal Kitty. She’s a staff driver.’
‘What’s the message?’
‘Come to Sunday lunch. Here at your billet. You don’t mind, do you? And the other girl can come too. The horsey one.’
‘How’s she horsey?’
‘Looks like a horse.’
He stubs out the last of his cigarette. He’s smoked it twice as fast as Larry.
‘Quite decent,’ he says.
‘So who’s laying on the lunch?’ says Larry.
‘You are,’ says Ed. ‘You’re the one billeted on a farm. And Rex too. I’m issuing a general invitation.’
‘Very big of you,’ says Larry.
‘I’ll be out on Sunday,’ says Rex.
‘Sunday your big day, is it, Rex?’ says Ed.
‘I help out here and there,’ says Rex.
‘I’ll do my best,’ says Larry. ‘How do I reach you?’
‘You don’t. I’ll just show up here, noon Sunday. You produce Kitty. But no sticky fingers in the till. I saw her first.’
*
Next morning a pale sun rises as promised, and by eight o’clock a mist hangs over the water meadows. Larry rides his motorbike the short distance to the big house with his helmet off, wanting to enjoy the arrival of summer at last. Soldiers in the camp, stripped to the waist, are playing a raucous game of volleyball. The pale stone towers of Edenfield Place gleam in the sun.
On such a day before the war he would have tramped off alone up the Downs, carrying an easel and a fresh canvas, a box of paints and a picnic, and painted till dusk: precious empty days, few enough but intense in memory, when the world simplified before him to the play of light on form. Now like everyone else his time is filled with the tedium and pettiness of war. The cause may be great, but the life is diminished.
He leaves his bike in front of the house and goes through to the galleried hall. The first person he meets coming down the sweeping staircase, taking the steps two at a time, is Johnny Parrish.
‘We’re running late,’ says Parrish. ‘CO’s morning briefing’s now at 0830.’
‘Not like Woody to run late.’
‘Bobby Parks is joining us. He’s one of your lot, isn’t he?’
Parks is in Intelligence at Combined Ops. Larry has not been told he’s coming, but this is par for the course. Communication between the various branches of the organisation is erratic at best.
He checks his watch. He has a good fifteen minutes.
‘I’ll go and find the ATS drivers.’
‘Motor Transport Office in A Block. Who are you after?’
‘Corporal Kitty. I don’t know the rest of her name.’
‘Oh, Kitty.’ Parrish raises his bushy eyebrows. ‘We’re all after her.’
‘Just passing on a message for a friend.’
‘Well, you can tell your friend,’ says Parrish, ‘that Kitty has a boyfriend in the navy, and if, God forbid, her sailor buys it one day, an orderly queue will form at her door, and your friend can go to the end.’
‘Righto,’ says Larry cheerfully.
Captain Parrish goes into the dining room where breakfast is laid out for senior staff. Larry makes his way down the passage past th
e organ room to the garden door. Outside there’s a wide stone-paved terrace enclosed by a low stone balustrade. This terrace is raised above a second grass terrace, which in turn is raised above the extensive park. An avenue of lime trees crosses the park, leading to an ornamental lake. On either side of the avenue, laid out in grid formation between the lake and the house, lie row upon row of Nissen huts.
Larry pauses to admire the camp. The anonymous engineer who devised its plan has instinctively worked to counterpoise the neo-Gothic riot that is the big house. The camp is a modernist vision of order. Military discipline asserts control over the mess of life. What can be made straight is made straight.
He passes down the stone steps to camp level. A soldier heading for the ablutions huts gives him a grin and a wave. Larry is still new as liaison officer to the division, but the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry are a friendly crowd, and seem to have accepted him. Johnny Parrish calls him their ‘native guide’.
The door to the transport office stands open. Inside, two ATS girls are drinking tea in their shirtsleeves. One is stocky and red-faced. The other is tall and blonde, with a long face that might be called ‘horsey’.
Larry says, ‘I’m looking for Kitty.’
‘Who wants her?’ says the horsey girl.
‘Just delivering a message. Purely social. From a friend she met in the pub last night.’
‘The commando?’
‘Yes.’
The horsey girl’s manner changes. She throws a glance at the red-faced girl.
‘What did I say?’ Then to Larry, ‘She’s in the lake house.’
‘Thanks.’
He needs no directions to the lake house. It’s a shingle-roofed hexagonal wooden structure built out over the water, linked to the shore by a jetty. The jetty is roped off, and a sign on the rope reads: Out of bounds to all ranks.
He steps over the rope and crosses the jetty to tap softly on the closed door. Getting no answer, he opens the door. There, seated on the floor with a book resting in her lap, is a very pretty young woman in uniform.
‘Are you Kitty?’ he says.
‘For God’s sake shut the door,’ she says. ‘I’m hiding.’
He comes in and shuts the door.
‘Down,’ she says. ‘They can see you.’
He drops down to sit on the floor, below the level of the windows. All he has to do now is pass on his message and leave. Instead, he finds himself taking in every detail of this moment. The moving patterns on the walls thrown by sunlight reflected from the surface of the lake. The folds of her brown uniform jacket, discarded on the floor. The pebbled leather of her shoes. The way her body is curled, legs tucked beneath her and to one side. Her hand resting on the book.