Authors: Yelena Kopylova
house did the hurricane of her temper sweep through
the place, when she threatened to make a bonfire of
every stick in it.
Now she was gone, and he'd soon be gone and he
might never come back again. What then? The place
would go to Betty; he had made a will to that effect and it was about that he must talk to her. If anything
happened to him Victoria would likely put a
claim in, as was her right. But under the circumstances she might not. Anyway they could fight that out between them.
She brought him a meal on a tray and while he
ate they exchanged hardly a word. He did ask
how she was getting on with the men; and her answer was, all right, but she kept them in their place, for after
all they were Germans, weren't they, and she was a
woman alone here.
After he had finished his meal and she had poured him
out a second cup of tea she repeated those words
by saying, "Have you ever considered my situation now that I'm alone here among these prisoners?"
"You'll not be alone as long as
Arnold's there. Where is he, by the way? I thought
he would have popped over."
"It's his time off. Anyway he's gone into
the town. And what use would he be if any of them
attacked me? He can't straighten that back of
his."
"I don't think you need worry about that."
"Huh!"-she screwed her small tight
buttocks down into the couch-"I'm as attractive
as the next; true I'm not like a full blown
horse"-he took it that she was referring
to Victoria-"but when it comes down to the needs and seeds, looks won't bother men."
He closed his eyes for a moment, then turned and
looked into the fire before saying heavily, "I
wasn't underrating your looks in any way, you know
that, but Heinrich is a gentleman, what he says
seems to go with the others. Moreover. ..."
"Moreover, nothing!" She spat the words at
him. "Will you never grow up, Charlie? He's a
gentleman!" She mimicked his voice. "So is the bull; he's the best of his breed but if he thinks
at all there's only one thing on his mind. And it's
the same with them, more so "cos they're frustrated."
"All right, all right, Betty." He
was shouting now. "You can have it your own way; Wetherby may come, that's if you get married, but the stipulation still stands that when I return you'll have to find a place of
your own. You won't have to do it emptyhanded, I can
assure you, you've worked hard here, no one harder, so
you're entitled to half the profits that are standing when I come back ... if I come back. If I
don't"-he shrugged his shoulders-"well, then you'll have it all your own way. I've already put that in
writing, and also the business of you drawing cheques on the bank while I'm away."
She stared at him for a moment, then bit on her
lip. "You'll come back," she said.
He rose from the chair and walked across the room
to the window and stood looking out for a moment before he spoke again. "At the present moment I don't much
care, the only thing I want is to be posted,
anywhere, Land's End, John o" Groats,
overseas." He swung round and looked down the
room towards her. "Ginger Slater is my
sergeant. He's been giving me merry hell$3
"Gingerff1 'allyes, Ginger$3
"Good God! How did he become a sergeant?"
"Because he's smart and he's got a head
on his shoulders and he's wily."
"But why should he want to take it out on you? I
knew he didn't like you very much, in
fact at times I thought . . . well-was She
turned away and put her hand on the mantelshelf and
looked down into the fire, and he came towards her
now, repeating, "Well what?" and she turned to him and ended, "Well, at times the way he used to speak to you and you stood it, well, I thought he had something on you."
"What could he have on me?" He stared down at her as she bent and lifted a log from the side of the
hearth and pressed it into the red glow of the fire, and she was dusting her hands as she said, "Oh well, it was just a thought."
"What was?"
"Well, that he had you where he wanted you 'cos you were over pally with Arthur."
"What! You mean. . . ?"
The look on his face told her how wrong she
had been, and she repeated, "Well, it was just a
thought."
"Just a thought. My God!"
He turned from her. She must have been thinking all
these years that he and Arthur . . . No
wonder she had treated him like muck. He had the
strong desire to tell her the truth, but common sense
prevailed for he knew she was her father's daughter
TCP 9
and nothing but vengeance would satisfy her.
"Well, what is he getting at you for?"
He turned and faced her. "He can't forget that
he was flogged on the cinder path."
Her face stretched in amazement. "You mean
he's borne that grudge all this time and now he's
holding it against you?"
"What else?"
"You must be mistaken. Father flogged all the
lads."
"He flogged this one too often."
"It's unbelievable, he must be crackers."
"No, he's not crackers, he's just got a long
memory."
She was nodding, about to speak again, when the sound of the front door bell clanged through the house and she
looked at him slightly surprised, saying, "The
front door, who can that be?"
He watched her hurry from the room; he heard
her go across the hall and open the door; he heard the
murmur of voices; and then she was coming
back into the room, followed by Florence Chapman.
He felt a slight flush creeping over his
face. It was almost two years since he had last
met his mother-in-law. He had got on well with
her. She had done her best to try and smooth
the situation that had arisen so soon after his marriage.
He went towards her holding out his hand and she
took it, saying, "Hello, Charlie."
"Hello, Florence." It had been her
suggestion that he call her by her Christian name.
"Come and sit down." He led her towards the fire.
"Will you have a drink?" Betty was addressing her now. "Tea? The kettle's boiling."
It was evident that Betty was ill at ease yet
at the same time curious why this woman who had never
set foot in the house since a week after her
daughter's wedding should be here now.
"I wouldn't mind a cup of tea, Betty,
thank you."
The request didn't urge Betty to run to the
kitchen, but looking directly at Florence she
asked, "Is anything wrong?"
Florence looked from her to Charlie, then back
to her, and she said slowly, "Hal's ill, very ill.
The doctor doesn't hold out much hope.
I... I was going to get word to Victoria and
Nellie, I was about to send one of the boys in this
afternoon, when Archie said he saw you." She turned to Charlie. "He
was up on the hill, and he guessed it was you, because as he said, he knew your walk." She smiled
weakly. "And so I thoughts if you wouldn't mind
telling them when you get back . . . that's if you're
going back tonight?"
He'd had no intention of going back tonight for where
would he stay? But he nodded his head now, saying,
"Yes, I was going back. I can go right away;
there's nothing to stop me. I'm sorry to hear about
Hal ... What is it?"
"His kidneys, and he's just been out of
hospital a month."
"Oh!"
He couldn't prevent a sardonical thought
crossing his mind. It didn't look as if his
father-in-law was going to live long enough to gain any benefit from their joined lands. It had been a bad
bargain all round.
She stared at him sadly for a moment, then turned
her gaze back to Betty, saying, "You need never
have anything on your conscience, Betty, for you
did your duty by your mother, and I think I can say that at times it mustn't have been easy for you, yet here I
am with two daughters, who had everything they ever
wanted, and what did they do? Under one pretext or
another they faded out of our
lives." She now looked at Charlie and, her
voice breaking and her eyes filling with tears, she
said, "We haven't seen either of them for six months.
In a way I could understand Victoria's attitude
but not Nellie's. I ... I don't know what's
come over that girl. I'm afraid for her,
Charlie."
"Oh, Nellie's all right, Florence. It's
a long way out here you know, and she's got a job, and
nobody's their own boss these days."
Florence now shook her head and sighed, while
Betty, having heard all she needed to know, got
up to go out and make the tea.
Florence looked at Charlie where he was sitting
opposite her, and she smiled at him as she said,
"You look well, Charlie, very fit."
"Well, they either make you or break you."
"Yes, I've . . . I've heard it's
pretty tough, especially for the-was She paused in
slight embarrassment, and he finished for her
on a laugh, "The conscripts? Yes, they make it
tough for the conscripts, Florence. But now my only
regret is I didn't join up before,"
"Really!"
"Yes, it's an eye-opener, you think you know people, men. But after all, our circle out here is very
small, isn't it, Florence?"
"Yes, I suppose so, Charlie. B. . . but
I'm surprised you're liking it."
"Ah, I wouldn't say I was liking it,
Florence, just let's say I'm learning from it."
Charlie watched her now look down towards her
gloved hands, thinking that it wasn't only the men who
were different out here, the women, too, seemed to belong to another generation. Florence's coat rested on the
toes of her buttoned boots, her felt hat was
set straight on the top of her grey hair. How
old was she? In her mid-forties yet somehow she
looked elderly. Back there in the town the women were
wearing skirts up to their calves; he'd actually
seen one marching along wearing a coat that came just below her knees. But these, of course, were exceptions.
Yet, as Johnny kept prophesying with his rough
wisdom, what Newcastle did the day, Shields,
Gateshead and likewise towns did the
morrow. Hang silk bloomers on the line and
there'd come a time when you wouldn't be able to buy a pair of woolly ones for love or money.
"How is Victoria?"
He now looked towards the fire before admitting,
"I... I haven't seen her for a while."
"How long is a while, Charlie?"
"Some months."
"Oh, Charlie!"
"It's no good saying Oh, Charlie, like that,
Florence, you know yourself it should never have happened, we're poles apart. I'm not blaming her, I
blame myself, I'm so blooming easily led it's a
wonder they don't shear me twice a year."
"Oh, Charlie!" Florence smiled sadly at
him. "You know what your trouble is, you're too
nice. And I'm as much to blame for this mess as
anyone. Hal wanted you to rnarry her. I needn't
go into that, you know why, and I wanted everything for Hal that he wanted for himself, but . . . but I also wanted you in the family. I thought somehow you would soften her, change her; I should have known that you can't change people, at least not people like Victoria." She gave a wry smile now. "She was christened after the old Queen and it's strange but she has a lot of her
traits, she'll have her way or die. . . .
Anyway, Charlie, go and tell them haw things are
with Hal, that he's very, very ill, and that they must come and see him. He'd not asked for them until last
night, and because of that I somehow deluded myself into thinking that
he wasn't as bad as he is, but I know now that his
time is running out. . . Look"-she got quickly
to her feet, her eyes full of tears"...I ... I
won't wait for the tea, I'd better be getting
back, he misses me."
"I'm sorry, Florence." He was holding her
hand tightly. "If there was only something I could do for you."
"You can do that for me, Charlie"-her voice was breaking-"go and see them both, tell them that they must come. If they don't they'll have it on their conscience for the rest of their lives."
They were already in the hall when Betty pushed open
the green-baized door and came through carrying a tea
tray, and she stopped and looked at Florence in
surprise and said, "You're not going?"
"Yes, yes, Betty, I... I feel I
must get back; Hal worries when I'm not there.
Goodbye." She didn't wait for Betty
to approach her but went out of the front door, and
Charlie followed. He helped her up into the trap,
then he stood aside while she turned the horse
around; and he remained standing on the drive until she disappeared from his view.
Betty was waiting for him in the hall and he said
flatly, "I'd better get a move on." He
til
lit
looked at his watch. "I can't hope to get
another lift, I'll have to get up to Knowesgate
Station and catch a train. I expect it'll be quicker
in the end. What time is it?"
As he spoke she turned and looked at the hall
clock. "Three o'clock."
"I'd better be off then, Betty." He