Authors: Yelena Kopylova
appreciate things, but there's t'others if you get
me meanin', sir. I'm sorry if you think I've
spoken out of turn, sir."
Charlie nipped on his lower lip for a moment; then his
voice coming from deep in his throat, he said, "Thank you. Thank you. Miller. I may as well tell you
that I've been thinking along similar lines myself, but it's heartening to know that one has a little backing."
"Good. Good for you, sir. One last thing I'd like
you to know, sir. You're . . . you're well liked
among the men."
Charlie smiled broadly now as he said,
"Well, if that's the case it's because I remember, as I gather you all know, that not so long ago
I was one of them, and in a way I suppose"-he
shook his head-"I still am. That's the trouble, if trouble it is. ... Anyway, what about that tea?"
"On the double, sir, on the double."
As the man went out of the room Charlie sat down
on the chair Miller had vacated and he thought,
That's the only piece of ordinary conversation I've
had with a man for months.
He fingered the pip on his shoulder. Was it worth
it? It was questionable. What was he talking about,
remember Slater!
He had made use of the first half of his full
day's leave by paying a quick visit to the
farm. He had not intended to do this but he had heard of a transport lorry having to make a delivery to a
camp up on the fells. It only took a little
back-hander to the driver to persuade him to pick him
up again an hour later.
Betty greeted his unexpected arrival with her
usual lack of enthusiasm. Her only comment about his
commission was, "Well you look tidier in that than you did in the other rig-out."
Everything on the farm seemed to be working well,
except she voiced her usual tirade against the
prisoners; they didn't like a woman over
them, she said, but she let them know what was what. His reaction had been, poor devils, but, of course,
merely as a thought. When he had enquired if she had
heard anything about Nellie, she had answered,
"How do you expect me to get news here except
what I can gather from outof-date papers? She
doesn't bother to come over here"-meaning Florence Chapman"...and I can assure you I have no time
to trail over there. So what has she done now, the
smart Miss Nellie?"
But he didn't inform her what Nellie had
done, only to say she was in hospital with
pneumonia, and when he had bidden her good-bye and
left the farm and was walking through the fields-his
fields-he had asked himself which was preferable, to be living alone back there with Betty, or to be in the
army? And without hesitation he plumped for the latter.
What it would be like after the war he dreaded to think; but then again there mightn't be any after the war for him if he was sent over there. And that was a journey that could quite easily come about in the near future, for although the
battalion wouldn't move as a whole, it was being
broken up and sections sent hither and thither almost every week.
It was a quarter to three when he arrived
at the hospital. He hurried along the
corridor, past the wards where every bed had its
visitors, to the small side ward. He didn't
stop to ask the nurse for permission to enter but went
straight in, then came to a stop at the sight of the
soldier sitting by the bedside holding Nellie's
hand. He noted immediately that Nellie looked much
better for she was sitting propped up against the
pillows; he also noted that the fellow sitting by her
side had a possessive look about him. The
soldier was quickly on his feet, he was a sergeant,
and
although he didn't stand to attention he stood slightly away from the bed.
It was Nellie who spoke first. "Hello,
Charlie," she said.
"Hello, Nellie." He moved to the bottom
of the bed.
"Don't you remember Alec? You know, he and his
pal were together that night you called."
"Oh yes, yes." He smiled towards the
sergeant now, and the man, relaxing somewhat, smiled
back at him, before turning to Nellie and saying,
"I'll wait outside a bit, dear, eh?"
"Yes, Alec." He went to take her
hand, then changed his mind, but he smiled widely
down on her before turning to go out of the room.
"Come and sit down, Charlie."
He took the chair by the bed. "How are you? You
look better."
"I'm feeling fine now. You did remember him,
didn't you?"
"Yes, yes, of course, Nellie, I
remembered him."
She looked at him for a moment in silence.
"He's . . . he's been a very good friend to me,
Charlie."
5Just
"Yes, I'm sure he has, Nellie."
"He ... he was a bit embarrassed to see you,
I mean being an officer."
"He needn't be."
"I got your letter."
"Good."
"I... I couldn't write back, I felt so
tired."
"I didn't expect you to. I'm so glad
though to see you looking so much better."
She nodded at him, then turned her gaze from him
and looked down towards her hands as she said,
"Mother"11 be here today. She's going to make arrangements to take me home for convalescence"-now she slanted her eyes towards him-"and to see that I don't try anything funny again."
"You won't. And I'm glad you're going
home."
"I don't mean to stay there, Charlie, I
couldn't, but I'll be glad to rest for a time. It
isn't that I'm physically tired, it's . . .
it's more in my mind."
"I know."
"Charlie."
"Yes, dear?"
"Alec wants to marry me."
As he stared into her eyes there rushed
through his mind a voice as if coming from a deep well, shouting, "Charlie! Charlie! will you marry me?"
"Do ... do you care for him?"
"I like him."
Who else had said that? Polly.
"Enough to marry him?"
"It all depends, Charlie. I'm lost, I'm
lonely."
"But I thought. ..."
"Don't say you thought I had lots of
friends, Charlie, please don't. They were soldiers,
young fellows who hadn't a fireside to sit beside, and
I wanted to laugh and dance and sing; I wanted all
kinds of things, Charlie, to make up for what I
lost. You know what I'm saying, Charlie?"
He was silent, lost in the depths of the revelation
in her eyes. When his gaze dropped from hers and he
bowed his head and she said, "I didn't mean
to embarrass you, Charlie," his chin snapped upwards and his voice was loud as he cried, "You're not
embarrassing me." Then he closed his eyes and
covered the lower part of his face with his hand, saying,
"I'm sorry, I'm sorry Nellie."
She gave a small laugh now as she said,
"Don't apologize, it's nice to hear someone
shout; they've been going round here for days whispering as if they were just waiting to lay me out, which I suppose they were, at first anyway."
"Nellie"-he gripped hold of her hands
now-"I'm married, I'm still married to Victoria
and she's your sister, but I've never wished for
freedom more than I do at this moment. Now do you
understand me?"
He watched the colour spread over her face;
then, her voice a whisper, she said,
"That's all I wanted to hear." But now her head gave an impatient shake and her face twisted for a
moment as she said, "No, it isn't. No, it
isn't . . . Charlie-was
"Yes, dear."
"W. . . will you put it into plain words?"
Bringing her hands to his breast now, he pressed
them tightly there, and he stared at her and gulped in his throat before he said, "I... I love you,
Nellie. I think I must have always loved you."
She lay now looking at him for a full minute
before she spoke, and then she said, "You're not just saying it, Charlie, because I'm down? You see I know you,
you'd swear black was white if it meant pleasing
somebody. That's true, isn't it?"
"I suppose so." He nodded at her. "It could have been once, but not any more; the easy-going, good old
Charlie was shot dead some months ago. I'll
tell you about it some time."
"Victoria?"
"Victoria."
"Will you divorce her, Charlie?"
"Yes, as soon as this business is over."
"Kiss me, Charlie."
He kissed her. His arms about her, he
lifted her up from the pillow and with her arms around his neck they clung to each other. When he laid her
back they laughed into each other's face and, his hands on each side of her head, he pressed it into the
pillow, then he kissed her again.
Following this, they were silent for some little time. Their fingers interlocked, they remained looking down at their hands until she said, "I'd like you to know something, Charlie." When he waited she went on, "The
lads, the soldiers, I haven't been with one, I
mean I haven't let any of them sleep with me."
He looked away from her for a moment before he said,
"Playing the big fellow, I should say it wouldn't
matter to me if you had, but. . . but I'd be lying."
She stared straight into his face now as she asked,
"We won't be able to be married for some long time, will we, Charlie?"
"No, I suppose not. Some months ago I was
about to go to a solicitor, I'd all the proof I
needed, but then almost overnight this happened"-he touched his shoulder"...and . . . and I was in a fix because the proof was in the army, high up. But the minute I'm discharged the proceedings will start. I can assure you of that,
dear."
"But that could be a long time, Charlie, or
never."
"Don't say that, Nellie. Don't say that."
"But it could, Charlie, so listen to me. Once I
am home back . . . back in my own place,
I want to come to you."
He made no response to this for some seconds;
then taking her joined hands, he brought them to his
lips, and as he held them there the door opened and her mother came in. . . .
Florence Chapman, taking in the situation, stared
at them fixedly for a moment; then walking towards the
bed, she said "Well! Well now!"
Charlie had risen to his feet and was holding the
chair for her and as she sat
down he said, "Nice to see you, Florence." Her face was straight as she turned it up towards him,
saying, "I don't think I can return the
compliment, not at the moment, Charlie."
"I can understand that, Florence." Florence stared at him. It was only a matter of months since she had
last seen him, but he didn't appear the same
Charlie. The flatness had gone out of both his manner
and voice, even his stance was different, but perhaps that could be put down to his uniform. It was hard to believe that this was the same young fellow who had caused
havoc in her family. But of course he wasn't
really to blame for that, that had been Hal's doing,
God rest his soul, Victoria had merely been a
tool.
And what a tool her daughter had turned out
to be, for she was now man mad. But hadn't she always
been man mad. And of all the men she had to marry it
had to be poor Charlie MacFell. But why was she
thinking poor Charlie? That adjective could no
longer be applied to him for here he was chancing his arm again, and of all people with Nellie, while he was still tied to Victoria. Well, she'd put a stop to that.
What next? she wondered. She looked now at her
daughter and, forcing a
smile to her face, she said, "You're better?"
"Yes, Mother, much better."
"I've just had a word with the sister. She says if you keep up this progress I can take you home
next week."
"Aw, that'll be good."
"And it'll be for good I hope? I was talking
to Ratcliffe in Hexham the other day. He could
sell your house and. ..."
"No, Mother." Nellie had pulled herself up from the pillows as she said again, "No, Mother,
I won't sell the house and . . . and I must
tell you now, far better be above-board, Mother, but
I mean to return to the flat once I get on my
feet. And another thing ... I can say this,
Charlie, can't I?" She looked up at Charlie
now and when he nodded to her she went on, "Charlie and I love each other. It's no news to you that I've
always loved him, and ... if he hadn't been forced
..."
"That's enough, Nellie! Nobody forced him.
Nobody forced you, Charlie, did they?" She now
turned her heated face up towards Charlie, and
he, looking down at her, said quietly, "No,
you're right there, Florence, no one forced me.
Coerced would have been a better word, quietly
coerced."
"Charlie!" Florence Chapman stared up
into the long face. He had changed, changed
completely, indeed he had; the old Charlie would
never have come out with a thing like that. That's what an officer's uniform did to one, she supposed. Yet
she had always known that he wasn't as soft as he
made out to be; there was a depth there and a sly depth if she knew anything about it. But he was right, he had been quietly coerced, and she, as much as
Hal, had had a hand in it, and when things had gone
wrong almost from the start she had known periods of
remorse and guilt. But remorse or guilt