Authors: Yelena Kopylova
"Oh aye!" The last chair was swung round by one hand, and there he was looking at Arthur, what was left of him, a stump of a body and one arm.
"Charlie!"
Arthur's voice was a mere whisper at first,
and then it exploded into almost a yell as he now
shouted, "Charlie! Why Charlie! Polly said you were here. Aw, man!" The hand was thrust out
towards him and he was gripping it; then before he could speak Arthur was addressing the half-dozen men who
had made up the group and was crying at them. "This is Charlie, the fellow I told you about on the farm,
he was me boss but we were like mates . . . Eeh!
what am I sayin"?" Arthur now pulled his hand away and flapped it towards Charlie. "You'll have
me court-martialled for talkin' like this, forgettin'
meself." His voice dropped now and he stared up
into Charlie's face for a moment in silence before he
said, "Sit down, won't you, Charlie?"
Charlie sat down and, speaking for the first time andwitha tremor in his voice, he said, "It's good to see
you, Arthur."
"And you, Charlie. Eeh! and a major. Who would
have believed it!"
"Yes, who would have believed it."
"Oh no offence, man. You remember me sayin'
to you that day, why didn't you put in for an officer.
Did you take me advice?"
"No, I'm afraid I didn't, Arthur; they
. . . they just sprung it on me."
"They knew good stuff when they saw it."
"Huh!" Charlie turned his head to the side; then casting his eyes about him and noticing that the men
were still looking at him, he said, "Nice ward this ...
the whole annexe."
"Oh aye. Aye, they do us proud. Well"-
Arthur now leant towards him-"they owe us somethin', don't they, and they're payin' us in the only way
they can."
"Yes, yes, I suppose so."
"How are things with you, Charlie? I heard you were badly knocked up, but I see they've left you
your limbs, and that's something."
Yes, it was certainly something. Having been
riddled with shrapnel, he thought he had come off
badly, but these poor devils in here, God! why
did they go on? Yet the atmosphere was cheerful,
bright, you could even say happy. But, of course, this
was the stiff upper lip attitude, putting a face
on things. He wouldn't like to be inside one of their
minds at night.
He answered Arthur now saying, "Oh, I got
some shrapnel here and there."
"Oh aye. . . . Have they got it all out?"
"Well, not quite, so I understand; they've had a few goes but it roams you know."
"Aye, shrapnel has a habit of doing that. .
. . Nurse!" Arthur hailed a young
nurse who
was passing and as she came towards him he said,
"Bet you didn't know I had a major for a friend?"
"How do you do, Major?" She inclined her head towards him, smiling widely.
He had risen to his feet and he answered,
"How do you do?"
"We were brought up together, would you believe that?"
"I believe everything you tell me, Arthur."
"Then do you believe I love you?" He had now
placed his only hand on his heart and with his face poked towards her and in what he imagined to be dramatic
tones he said, "An' the morrow I go to Sir
Humphrey to ask him for your hand."
"And you'll get mine across your ear-hole if you
don't behave." She had come close to his side
now and she caught hold of his hand and, looking across at Charlie, she said, "He's impossible, this friend of yours, Major; he's a philanderer, no girl
is safe where he is." She now patted Arthur's
cheek, and as she made to go away he said, still in a
bantering tone, "Don't leave me, love."
She was about to make a jocular rejoinder when a
strange sound came from the other side of the room and
she said quickly, "Oh
dear me! I've got to go. I can see you'll be
needed later on, Arthur." She nodded at him, and
he nodded back at her now in an ordinary
fashion, and when she had left them he muttered below
his breath, "One of the chaps, he gets depressed
like, howls like a banshee. I make him laugh."
He grinned at Charlie now. "I make "em
all laugh. Funny, isn't it?"
Yes, yes, it was funny. This wasn't the
Arthur he remembered. Less than half of him
remained, yet in that half he had grown another
personality. He remembered the dour, ignorant
boy that used to irritate him, he remembered the
youth who became a bundle of nerves through fear
instilled by Slater. But those people were no more, the war had cut him into bits, yet had left him with a new character, a different character, a strong character. It was a fantastic thought but nevertheless true, he was sure, that Arthur was happier now than he had been in his life before. He
had no responsibility, he was being cared for
by pretty nurses; he was sure of good food and
warmth, and he hadn't to worry about the wherewithal
to provide them; what was more, this Arthur was liked as the other Arthur, the young Arthur, never was.
He was now leaning towards him whispering,
"You heard Slater got it?"
He felt the old desire to open his mouth and
gasp for air, but he pressed his lips together
tightly before saying, "Yes, yes, I heard."
"Died bravely on the field of battle.
By God! that wouldn't have happened if I'd come across
him. An" I mean that, Charlie, I do. That was
one thing I prayed for, to come across him. God! he
led me hell. An' you had a taste of him an'
all, hadn't you?"
"Yes, yes, I had a taste of him."
"Couldn't understand our Polly; she was so upset.
She got to like him, man, and when he lost his stripes
through her she wanted to pin medals on him herself."
"Lost the stripes through her, how do you mean?"
"Oh well, she was about to have the third bairn and things went a bit wrong and he thought she was a gonner and he wouldn't leave her. He told the doctor he
was on leave and he stayed by her for three days, four
I think, before they came and took him. I wish
I'd been there when they stripped him down. Of
course you can't say that to her. She talks about him as if he were a bloody hero." He
TCP 15
paused now, then ended, "Funny, what the
war's done to us lot, isn't it, Charlie?"
"Yes, indeed, Arthur."
"How's things with you, Charlie, I mean you happy
like?"
"Well, you could say yes and no, Arthur.
Victoria and I are getting divorced."
"No! No, man! Is ... is that why you've
sold up the farm?"
"What!"
"I said is that why you've sold up the farm and
things?"
"Sold the farm? I haven't sold the farm."
Arthur blinked his eyes, then looked down towards
the blanket sagging from his waist, and he said now,
"Well, Polly must have got it wrong. She heard
a rumour, likely it was only a rumour, but she
heard that you were selling up and likely going
to Australia or some such place as that. She thought it was because you were in a bad way and wouldn't be able
to manage any more."
His mouth was open, he was drawing in great draughts
of air. No! No! He yelled at himself he had
to keep steady; there was something afoot that he must see into, and now, right now.
He wasn't cware that he had risen from
the
chair but he was bending over Arthur now, saying,
"Look, Arthur, I'll be back, but there's something I've got to see to."
"Have I said something wrong, Charlie, I mean
startled you in some way?"
"Yes, I suppose so, Arthur. There's something
not right over there. I ... I have no intention of
selling the farm."
"No!"
"No, none whatever. I'll be back, Arthur.
I'll be back." He squeezed the hand held out
to him, then turned and hurried down the ward.
"You're in no fit state to drive a car,
Major."
"Then I can take a taxi." Doctor Arlet
looked across his desk at the tall, solemn-faced
figure before him and he closed his eyes for a moment and shook his head as he said, "I think you know the
position as well as I do, Major, any extra
physical activity, over-excitement at least for the
present. ..."
"I am aware of all that, Doctor." "Then why take unnecessary risks?" "Doctor, I am being
given to understand that my farm is being sold
up, I want to know
what it is all about. I left my sister in charge.
The farm is my only means of livelihood, that
is if I'm given the opportunity to work it."
"Why don't you get your solicitor, or
better still your friend, Miss . . . Miss-was He
looked about him as if searching for a name, until
Charlie said, "Chapman."
"Yes, Miss Chapman. Now she would go out
there." . . .
"She lives out there and I'm now under the
impression that she knows more about it than she said, her intention being not to worry me. Now, doctor, whatever
way I get out there I'm going, and the frustration of
being kept here is going to be more detrimental than my driving a car or sitting in a taxi."
"I'm. . . I'm not worried about the journey out
there, Major." The doctor's voice was tight
now. "What I am worried about is your reaction
to whatever situation you find out there. Doctor
Morgan's report said ..."
Charlie now put his hand to the side of his head as
if he were shutting off his hearing and he said, "I know, doctor, only too well Doctor Morgan's
opinion, and I respect it, and also from where
I'm standing if this thing
inside here moves to the right then I won't need
to worry any more about the farm or anything else. But
there's a fifty-fifty chance it will give me a
break and move to the left, or even north or south,
and if that should happen then I'd be pleased to let you all get at it and hoick it out."
The use of the dialect word brought a twisted
smile to Doctor Arlet's mouth, and he said on a
sigh, "Well I won't say I'll wash my
hands of you, but I'll say, for your own sake, go
careful, both physically and mentally. Now"-he
rose from his seat-"a taxi I think would be the best bet, although it's going to cost you a pretty penny
to get out there."
"I think I'll just about manage it."
"All right. I suppose you'll have to stay
overnight but I'll expect you back tomorrow, mind.
Is that a promise?"
"That's a promise."
He left the taxi on the main road. The
driver, looking at him, said, "Will you be all right, sir?"
"Yes, I'll be all right."
"Have you far to walk?"
"A couple of miles or so."
"Do you think you'll manage it?"
"Oh yes, I'll manage it. If I can't
walk I'll slide; the sun's forgotten to come round
this way." He indicated the frost-tipped ridges
of the fields and the stiff grass.
As he left the road and walked down the bridle
path he knew that the taxi driver was still watching and he thought, I must look awful, like death.
It was a few minutes after he heard the taxi
start that he stopped and looked about him. The sky was lying low on the hills, the light was grey, yet
let the sun appear and the sky would be pushed back and the light would be white and clear. He drew in great
draughts of air. If it wasn't for the anxiety
within him he'd feel like celebrating his return
by leaping over the walls ahead and running across the
fields. But would he ever run across the fields again?
No mental excitement, no physical exertion,
they said. One might as well be dead.
When he came to the copse he was out of breath and not
a little fearful. What would he say to Betty? Or
what would she say to him? That was more to the point. He hadn't seen her since her visit to the hospital.
He'd had two letters from her since, both
saying that
she was too busy to get away. But that was before
Christmas. He hadn't questioned her not visiting him
since he had been brought North again. That was
Betty, she wasn't given to sentimental
sympathy, and so over the weeks her absence hadn't
troubled him. Nellie had come and that was all that
mattered. Only now was he telling himself that it was
strange that Betty hadn't once come to visit him
over the past weeks.
The change struck him immediately he left the
copse. It was in the silence and the absence of any
animals. The cows would be inside but you could always
see sheep sprinkled over the hills yonder. The
only sound that came to him was from the burn. It was
running high. His step slowed as he approached the
gap in the stone wall; then he was in the middle of the yard gazing about him. The place was deserted. Was he
dreaming? There was no one here, nothing. His mouth opened wide, he gasped at the air, then took his gloved
doubled fist and pressed it against his ribs as he warned himself to go steady. He looked first towards the cowsheds, then turned his head and looked towards the house, then again towards the cowsheds.
Now he was in the cowsheds and being unable
to believe what his eyes were seeing. The stalls were
empty, dry, they had been cleaned out. He turned