Authors: Yelena Kopylova
whole battalion. He watched i the R.s.m.
strutting about like a stuffed [peacock, and the company sergeant-majors folI lowing suit, for all the world
like dominating
cocks shooing their families together. The
lance-corporals acting as markers, the corporals
and sergeants were outdoing themselves in throat-tearing commands.
. . . And the officers, the second-lieutenants,
the lieutenants, the captains, all batmen-spit
and polished; and standing apart, yet commanding the whole, was the major.
Charlie's eyes were fixed tight on him. Although
he couldn't make out his face from this distance
he told himself he didn't look any different in
his clothes.
In his clothes!
Would anybody believe him if he were to tell them
that that dominating figure was the man who was to be the means of getting him his freedom. . . . But
wait! what had he let himself in for! Could he do it
now?
Orders were ringing out: "By the right quick march! Left!
right. Left! right." A band was playing, the mass was moving, feet were stamping, arms swinging: rank after
rank disappeared, until, just as if a wave had
washed over the place, the square was empty.
In the strange silence, he again asked himself the
question, Could he do it now? Could he name the major?
If he did his promotion would likely be squashed;
these
things could be fixed. But say he were still allowed to get his commission, life would become unbearable when the
story got around. He was wise enough to know you got no medals for disgracing a major, and under such
circumstances.
And then there was Slater.
You're a loser; you were born a loser.
No, if it meant being tied
to Victoria for life, well, that would have to be.
Anything was preferable to being the butt of Slater's
maliciousness which, were he to return to the platoon now as a private, would mean one or the other of them ending the conflict.
He straightened his shoulders, picked up his gear,
and walked out of the hut, across the square, through the alleyway, around the circle of lawn and up the
steps and into the wartime life of an officer.
T
IHE second-lieutenant looked extremely
smart. He was unusually tall but he was straight with
it. When he was saluted in the street he answered the
gesture almost as smartly as it was given. But he'd
have to get out of that; Radlett had hinted as much.
He liked Radlett, at least he didn't
dislike him; but he wasn't at all keen on
Lieutenant Calthorpe; very old school,
Calthorpe, without the good manners one would expect
from that kind of upbringing. He spoke to some of the men as if they were serfs.
The captain was as different again, a very understandable fellow Captain Blackett; but the
major, oh, the major, he talked as if he were still
in the Boer War. Radlett said openly he was a
fumbling old duffer.
It was funny, Charlie thought, how some people were able to voice their opinions of others and get off with it.
For instance now if he had called the major a
fumbling old duffer ten to one he would have been up on the
carpet before his breath had cooled. Radlett acted
and talked like an old hand but he was almost as new to the game as he himself was.
As he left the Central Station to board a bus
that would take him across the water to Nellie's, the
glow that had been with him since early morning began
to fade. Another man in his position would be making for home. He had two homes but he was going to neither:
the home among the hills was too far away to get
there and back comfortably in a forty-eight.
Moreover, you had to chance getting transport. And the
home where his wife resided was barred to him now for good and all. So there remained only Nellie's; and
even about this visit he was feeling a little trepidation, for he hadn't done as he promised and written
to her.
It had been understandable in the first two or
three weeks because everything had moved so fast. He
had been kept at it all waking hours. They
called it a crash course in pips, and it was
certainly that all right, for as Radlett so
grotesquely illustrated in his garrulous way, the
only thing they didn't ram into you was how to die with your guts hanging out. Did you yell, "Carry on,
men!" before you pushed them back, or let them
drip as you waved your fellows on crying, "Good
luck! chaps."
Anyway, he had forty-eight hours and he was
going to enjoy it. Why not? He would take Nellie
out. Knowing Nellie, she'd get quite a kick out of his
change in fortune. But then it might not come as a
surprise to her after all, because if she had visited
home and run into Betty, Betty would surely have
told her. Yet again it had been a good three
weeks before he had informed Betty of his change in
position. Still, he was looking forward to seeing
Nellie.
A passenger walking down the aisle happened
to catch the end of the cane that lay across Charlie's
knees, and when he had retrieved it from the floor and
handed it back to him, saying, "I'm sorry, sir,"
Charlie smiled at him and said, "That's
all right," and the man jerked his chin and smiled back, saying, "Good-day to you."
"And to you."
Amazing the difference a pip made and, of course,
the style of the uniform, the leather belt and the rakish cap, not forgetting the trench coat. Oh yes, the
trench coat finished the ensemble off.
But let him be honest with himself. He
liked the difference it made and the deference it commanded.
He had felt a different being since first donning this
uniform; it had magical properties, it enabled one
to issue orders, although until now he had been
mostly on the receiving end. Even so, when he'd had
to deal with the men in the platoon to which he had been assigned, he had carried it off all right.
He felt that in a way he had an advantage
over the other officer trainees for he was the only one of his bunch who had served in the ranks, so he
prided himself that he knew how the men would view him, and above all things at this period he wanted their
opinion to be, "Oh, he's a decent enough bloke.
Mister MacFell."
Second-Lieutenant. How long would it be before
he was fully fledged? Was it as Radlett said, you
only stepped up when the other chap above you
fell down dead? Radlett had the uncanny
knack of putting his finger on the realities; it was a
known fact that there was rapid promotion on the
battlefield. Well, he didn't want his
promotion that way, so he'd better make up his
mind to be satisfied to stay as he was. . . .
The twilight was deepening as he neared
Nellie's house and it had begun to drizzle.
Before going up the steps he adjusted his cap, then
his collar, and finally tucked his cane under his arm.
On entering the hall he was assailed by the usual
smell of stale cooking, and he thought for a moment,
Why does she stay here, there's no need? She could
let her flat and get a better place.
He rapped smartly on the door!
Rat-a-tattat! Rat-a-tat-tat! drew himself
up to his full height and waited.
Again he knocked, louder this time, and when there was no reply his shoulders took on a slight droop.
He was knocking for the third time when a voice
came from the stairway to his right, saying, "It's no use knocking there."
He walked to the foot of the stairs and looked
upwards. A woman was leaning over the banisters and
as he stared up at her she said, "I'm
sick of telling 'em, one after the other, it's no
use knocking there. They should put a notice up."
Slowly he mounted the stairs until his face was
directly below that of the woman's, and now he said,
"She's left?"
"Left! I don't know so much about leaving,
I'll say this much for her, she tried to. No, she
didn't leave, they carried her out."
"What do you mean, she's not . . . ?"
"Well, it isn't her fault. She tried hard
enough, and she might be even yet for all I know."
He now ran up the remainder of the stairs and round
on to the landing until he faced the woman and, his tone brisk now, appealed, "Please explain; she . .
. she was a dear friend of mine."
"She was a dear friend of everybody's if you ask
me."
"She's my sister-in-law."
"Is she? Oh, well, you got the gist didn't
you? She tried to do away with herself, gassed herself.
They all use gas, it must be the easiest way.
..."
"When did this happen?"
"Oh, four days ago. And it was someone like you
knocking on the door that saved her, one of
her pals." The woman now peered up at Charlie
and demanded, "Why wasn't she taken in hand? A
bit of a lass like that on her own. And then them there every night. I tackled her about it once and she invited
me in with them. Mind, I didn't go, but she said it
was tea and buns and a bit of a sing-song,
TCP 11
that was all. Well, I ask you. Anyway, she was
off work for a week, cold or something, and it was
likely being on her own got her down. One of her
pals came up and asked me to look in on her.
Well, I did; but I couldn't keep it up for
I'm out all day you see, munitions, and I've
got two bairns and I've got to pick them up from
me mother's every night. Anyway, I came in this
night and there were these two sergeants hammering on the door. They were the same ones that asked me to go in and see to her. And then they said they could smell gas.
Well, that's about it. They did smell gas. Then
there was the divil's fagarties: the doctor, the
polis, the ambulance." "Where is she now?" "Still in hospital, I should say." "Do you know which one?"
"Not really; it'll be the infirmary likely." He turned from her without saying, "Thank you", but the look that he left with her caused her to lean over
the banisters and yell after him. "Don't take it out on me mister! Anyway she brought it on herself,
drink and men. Can't tell me it was all tea and
buns and ..."
Her voice faded away as he banged the door
closed behind him.
Neighbours! Someone lying alone ill in a room and
nobody bothering, except the soldiers. Even
back on the hills, even as dour as some of them
were, they would travel miles in all weathers
to give a helping hand to each other in times of trouble; and in the poorer quarters of the town, in the
back-tobacks, he'd like to bet no one would have lain
for a day without someone coming in.
It was in the third hospital he visited that he
found her. He could have found out immediately by going to the police station, but somehow he baulked at this for it would be admitting that she had by her action touched on something criminal.
Yes, a stiff-faced nurse said, they had a
Miss Chapman here, but it was long past visiting
hours; and moreover, she was under surveillance and rather ill. Was he a relation?
"Yes," he said; "I'm her brother-in-law and I'm on a short leave. I'd
appreciate it if I could see her for a moment or
so."
He had to pass the staff-nurse, then the night
sister before he was admitted to the small side ward,
and then he was told briefly, "Ten minutes at the
most."
The nurse stood aside and allowed him to enter; the
door closed behind him; and then he was standing in the small, naked room, where the green-painted walls
lent a hue to everything, even to the face on the
pillow.
He walked slowly to the bedside. On closer
inspection he saw that the face wasn't green, but
white, a dull, pasty white, and so much had it
altered since he had last seen it that he thought for a moment there had been a mistake and he had been shown
the wrong patient. That was until the eyes opened, and
then there was Nellie looking up at him. The
expression in her eyes remained slightly vacant
for a moment or so; then he watched her lids slowly
widen and her lips part three times before she whispered,
"Charlie."
He did not speak for he was finding it impossible
at the moment to utter a word, but he bent over her and clasped her hands between his own.
"Charlie."
He nodded at her now.
"Thought. . . thought you'd gone." Her voice was like a croak.
He shook his head slowly.
"Forgotten me."
"No . . . held up ... one thing and another."
They continued to stare at each other; then without
letting go of one hand he turned and pulled a chair
to the side of the bed and sat down, and as he leant
towards her she muttered hoarsely, "Know what I
did?"
For answer he said softly, "Forget about it;
you're going to be all right."
He now took his handkerchief and wiped the gleaming
blobs of sweat from her brow, then he tucked the
bedclothes closer around her chin, and as he did so he
felt the steam from her body on his hand. She was ill,
very ill and so changed. Of a sudden he wanted to gather her into his arms and comfort her, soothe her, saying,