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Authors: Michelle Cooper

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BOOK: The FitzOsbornes at War
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Then from Henry:

Dear Sophie (and Veronica, if she is there),

How are you? I am
good
well. We have moved into the gatehouse now, but you can still send letters to the main house. The workmen are bilding ramps on the terrace, so that people in weelchairs can get down to the lawn. The drawing rooms look HUGE now they are empty! They are perfect for roller-skating but soon they will be filled with beds, as that’s where all the payshents will sleep. They will have fizical therapy (I don’t know what that is) in the dining room and music room, and the nurses will live on the first floor. We’ve moved all Aunt C’s furnicher and other stuff to the second and third floors. Only Barnes knows exactly where everything is, so we’ll be up a gum tree if anything happens to her.

Estella bit one of the workmen on the leg, but he deserved it because he yelled at her and tried to kick her after she walked on some wet cement. So now I am not allowed to take her anywhere near the house when we go for swims in the lake. The workman was not hurt, he was wearing thick trowsers.

Sophie, could you please write and tell Aunt C that the school she has found is NO GOOD! I just read the school pamflet and it sounds worse than my last school! Anyway, I am too busy here to leave. There are still big boxes in our sitting room that we haven’t unpacked (I think your stuff is in one of them). The first thing we did was get Toby’s room ready, for when he has leave. He has the second biggest room. I made a shelf for his books and put his gramofone by his bed, with all his records, so I think he will like it. I am in the attic, far away from Aunt C! You and V can have the other attic room when you visit.

I have to go now to help Jocko. We are sharpening hayforks to use as weapons, because the Milford LDV (now called the Home Guard) only has two rifles to share between fifteen men. Barnes says they should use Estella as an attack pig. Aunt C has given them her
opra
opera glasses, so that the lookout can see if the Nazis are coming. If he sees any, he will give the signal, and we will put up our roadblocks and throw petrol bombs at them.

Love,

Henry

P.S. If you haven’t bought my birthday present yet, I would quite like a single-barrelled shotgun and a box of cartridges. I would share it with the Home Guard, of course. Otherwise, I would like a new fishing net with extendible handle.

P.P.S. Aunt C has just bought two Spitfires for the RAF! They cost £5,000 each! She heard Lady Bosworth had bought one, so she bought two! She is allowed to name them, so one is ‘Queen Clementine’ and one is ‘Queen Matilda’. Aunt C wanted to give the Spitfires to Toby, but I explained he already has one. But maybe he could have these as spares, or lend them to his friends.

And then there was Veronica’s letter. If only
hers
had arrived through Julia’s letter slot, too . . . but getting hold of it was a rather fraught business. I’d been growing more and more anxious, as Veronica’s ‘few days’ away became a week, then ten days, and still no word from her. I even went so far as to try to contact the Colonel, with no success. Then came the mysterious summons at work this morning. Two gentlemen arrived and claimed they had come to escort me to Whitehall.

‘You aren’t even in uniform,’ I said, looking them up and down suspiciously. ‘Why should I go anywhere with you?’ For all
I
knew, they were Tyler Kent’s henchmen, sent to wreak some awful revenge on me.

‘We have written orders to collect Miss Sophia FitzOsborne,’ said one of them, and he handed a piece of paper to Miss Halliday.

‘Is this Colonel Stanley-Ross’s signature?’ she asked me.

‘Well,’ I said reluctantly, ‘it
does
look like his writing . . .’

And when we all trooped downstairs, the black motor car parked by the front doors
did
seem very official. However, I made sure my car door opened from the inside, and I kept a careful watch on our route – which, it turned out,
did
lead directly to the Foreign Office. But this was almost as frightening as finding myself being dragged off to the East End and tossed into the Thames. What had happened to Veronica? What couldn’t they tell me over the telephone? Was she hurt, kidnapped . . . even
dead
?

So I was in a complete state by the time I was ushered into a windowless room in the depths of the building. The sight of the Colonel did little to allay my fears. He was glaring at another middle-aged gentleman, this one in an army officer’s uniform, who was glaring right back. They reminded me of two tomcats I’d once seen circling each other, keeping a precise, unchanging distance between themselves as they hissed and snarled and spat.

‘Sophie!’ said the Colonel, wrenching his stare from the army officer to give me a bright smile. ‘
Terribly
sorry to interrupt your work like this.’

‘What’s going on?’ I asked.

‘Absolutely
nothing
to worry about,’ he said. ‘Have a seat. Oh, this is Major Beckett.’

The Major jerked his head in my direction, and I tried to remember whether a colonel out-ranked a major. I
thought
so – but then, the Colonel wasn’t in the army any more, was he? He was with the Foreign Office now. I also noticed another man in khaki, much younger, hunched expectantly over a notebook.

‘So!’ the Major said to me in a belligerent way, as though we were already halfway through an argument. ‘Miss Veronica FitzOsborne has written a letter. In
code
.’ He brandished a piece of paper. ‘I have been informed that
you
will be able to read it.’

I couldn’t see why Veronica would write anything work-related in Kernetin, but at least if she was writing letters, she wasn’t dead. I nodded.

‘You will read it aloud,’ ordered the Major. ‘My secretary will transcribe it as you speak. Is that clear?’

I was beginning to understand why the Colonel disliked him.

‘Yes,’ I said. ‘May I have the letter?’ Then, as I read the first line, my indignation spilled over. ‘This is
my
letter!’ I cried. ‘My own personal, private letter from my cousin, addressed to me, and you’ve opened it!’

‘Any material sent by persons in the Foreign Service while carrying out duties abroad is subject to security,’ said the Major, puffing out his chest. ‘May I remind you that this nation is at
war
, Miss FitzOsborne?’

‘That’s “Your Royal Highness” or “Princess Sophia” to
you
,’ I snapped, and the Colonel gave a little cough of barely suppressed amusement.

‘Please read the letter aloud,
Your Highness
,’ said the Major through gritted teeth.

Fortunately, Veronica was a step ahead of everyone else, as usual.

Dear Sophie,
she wrote,

I expect they’ll open this, even though it’s private correspondence, and make you decode it –

I looked up to glare pointedly at the Major.

– but I thought I should write a quick note to let you know I’m all right.

Thank you for insisting on me packing a second evening gown, because much of my work involves interpreting conversations at dinner parties, which go on for hours, in rooms that are like saunas. I can’t say much about that, of course, but I do wish I’d had a chance to visit this city before the war. It must once have been beautiful, but now nearly every building façade is scarred from machine-gun fire and bomb blasts, half the windows in our hotel are boarded up, and the nearest church is a burnt-out shell. As for the people: the few who are in power are fat, well-dressed and smug, and everyone else is starving, homeless and terrified. The Americans ought to come over here so they can get an idea of how an entirely Fascist Europe would look. Perhaps then they’d stop dithering about entering the war.

Anyway, I’m sorry this trip is taking so long, but I can see I’m needed here for another week, at least. None of the others speak much Spanish, you see, which can be a bit frustrating – for me as well as them. There was one particularly obtuse army officer who questioned absolutely
everything
I interpreted. Once I told him our waitress had said that a certain route out of the city was closed, but he insisted on sticking to his plan, and of course, it turned out a bridge had collapsed and we had to take a three-hour detour. Luckily he’s gone back to England now.

I glanced up. The Major had turned a peculiar shade of blotchy purple.

I should be home very soon, and in the meantime,
please
don’t worry about me. I do hope that you are well and Toby is all right. Regards to Julia and Rupert.

Love,

Veronica

‘You see?’ burst out the Major, whirling upon the Colonel. ‘Exactly as I suspected, clear evidence of Communist partisanship!’

‘Really,’ drawled the Colonel, raising an eyebrow, ‘I fail to see anything of the
sort
. All I heard was a brief description of an unnamed city that’s recovering from a terrible war.’

‘Only a Communist would use inflammatory words like “starving” and “homeless”!’

‘Oh, is
that
what’s upset you?’ The Colonel tilted his head in an attitude of mock sympathy.

‘It’s the general tone of . . . of
disrespect
!’ The Major’s face was almost the colour of a blackberry by now. ‘And what about calling the Falangists “fat”? What if one of the Spanish authorities had got hold of this letter? It could have jeopardised the entire mission!’

‘The letter was sent in the diplomatic bag, so how could they have got hold of it? And if they had, how would they have been able to read it? After all,
your
intelligence people couldn’t.’

The Colonel must have won the deciding point in whatever game they were playing, because he then reached for his hat.

‘Come along, Sophie, I’ll give you a lift back to your office.’

‘Yes . . . Well . . . I’ll have that document
back
, thank you!’ said the Major, waving his hand at me in a peremptory way. But I’d already tucked the paper inside my jacket.

‘It’s
my
letter,’ I declared, and I bolted out the door before he could stop me.

‘Well done, Sophie,’ said the Colonel, looking very pleased with himself, once we were safely settled in his motor car.

‘What on Earth was
that
about?’ I burst out, in a rush of uninhibited relief.

‘Oh, just a bit of healthy rivalry between the army’s intelligence people and the Foreign Office,’ he said.

‘There doesn’t seem to be much “intelligence” about it,’ I said. ‘You do realise you’re supposed to be fighting the Nazis, not one another?’

‘Yes,’ he said, pretending to look chastened. ‘Yes, you’re absolutely right.’

‘I don’t suppose
you’ve
seen Veronica?’ I asked.

‘No, I’ve been busy elsewhere,’ he said. ‘But she should be back soon, and she really is doing a marvellous job. Don’t pay any attention to old Beckett, he’s just jealous the Foreign Office is having more success than the army. Apparently Veronica got our man an audience with one of Franco’s ministers – turns out he’d been a friend of her grandfather.’

‘I still think the whole thing sounds very dangerous.’

‘Well, when she gets back, you can tell her not to go on any more trips abroad,’ he said mildly – knowing perfectly well that diverting Veronica from a course she’s set upon is like trying to turn back the ocean.

10th August, 1940

BOOK: The FitzOsbornes at War
8.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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