Chapter Two

The bus was passing through Charing before Clare came back to sit beside him and shut off the memories. The rolling countryside was bleak now in the early winter and the paint was peeling from the signposts that stood at each crossroads, white pillars of wood or cast iron, the pointing arms that once gave the names of towns and hamlets now amputated and taken away, so that the stranger, whether a travelling Briton or a bewildered German paratrooper, remained lost.

They played a game and he knew Clare had sensed he had spent the time while she had been away brooding over the past. She had suggested it. They rated each house they passed with up to ten points. Ten meant they could live in it; one meant it was suitable for a troublesome relative or bureaucrat. Most of the houses they could see from the road rated up to five. Every now and again they would see a white card taped inside a window, ‘Stirrup pump kept here’, or the ‘W’ showing where an air raid warden lived.

Suddenly the bus stopped on the outskirts of Ashford and they saw Sister Scotland standing up and glaring at the corporal of Military Police who now climbed on board and asked to see all travel documents. Sister Scotland, more concerned that her patients had enough pillows and blankets, had accidentally left the large brown envelope of documents – including, it now seemed, all the case histories – on her desk.

The corporal took off his cap with its red cover and scratched his head. ‘But, ma’am, a Navy bus loaded with men, and entering a restricted zone!’ He put his cap back squarely on his head and adjusted his red armband, then looked down at the highly polished toecaps of his boots. His flattened nose showed he was a boxer, but neither the ring nor the training course organized by the Corps of Military Police had prepared him for encounters with irate hospital sisters.

‘Forbidden zone fiddlesticks! We’re going to Willesborough. These officers are convalescing and due to have physiotherapy.’

‘I don’t doubt you for a moment, ma’am, but…’

‘I should think you don’t! Count the number of officers, add their arms and legs, and divide by four and you’ll find the answer’s wrong because some have limbs missing.’

‘That won’t be necessary, ma’am, but the only hospital is the civilian one here in Ashford, so…’

‘Oh damn and blast it!’ Sister Scotland said in a burst of anger, ‘we’re opening this new place. We’re the first – staff and patients. Ruckinge Lodge it’s called. Phone somebody and check it – here, I’ll write down my hospital number.’

‘No one told me, ma’am,’ the corporal grumbled, ‘and you’ve no documents, and this is a military area. No one allowed in, civil or military, without a special pass. It’s to do with the Germans invading, you see. And it’s no good giving me that phone number; it’ll be a civil number. It’s London, too, and I ain’t paying for no calls.’

‘The invasion hasn’t actually started, has it?’

‘No, ma’am, and there’s no call to adopt that attitude.’

Yorke leaned forward. ‘Corporal, you know as you go out of Ashford on the Folkestone road there’s a big house with tall brick chimneys that lies back on the left, almost hidden by the beech trees?’

‘With the sort of gatehouse beside the drive, sir?’

‘Yes. The gatehouse has diamond panes in the windows.’

‘I know it, sir.’

‘That’s where we’re supposed to be going. It’s only three or four miles. Why don’t you lead us there with your motorbike. Then you can confirm that we’re expected.’

‘Oh I could do that, sir. I noticed they had builders and removal vans there, bringing in beds and things. That was a week or so ago.’

‘Yes, converting it. It’s going to be an annexe of St Stephen’s Hospital, in London.’

‘I’m sure you’ll be comfortable, sir. It’s a nice house. Bit cold, I expect; them places is usually draughty. Just right for an ’ospital. Mind you, though,’ he said with a sideways glance at Sister Scotland as he climbed out of the bus, ‘‘ospitals depend on the matrons.’

Sister Scotland’s snort of annoyance was partly offset by her sudden promotion, and she looked suspiciously at Yorke. ‘You seem to know this area.’

Yorke shrugged his shoulders. ‘Anything that gets us moving. The heating seems to die the minute the bus stops.’

 

Clare sat on top of the five-barred gate, a picture from a fashion magazine, in a speckled grey tweed suit and black brogues, and as he leaned against it, looking across the rolling fields towards the smooth green folds flecked with white chalk forming the North Downs beyond, she said: ‘Now tell me about the medal, and how you hurt your arm.’

‘How did you know the columns of Bernini’s baldacchino spiral the other way?’

She looked puzzled for a moment. ‘Oh, you mean the twisted stocking. Well, I’ve been to St Peter’s. Before the war.’

‘Obviously! But you were wrong; they spiral clockwise.’

‘Probably. I was contradicting you because I was angry.’

‘Angry? What on earth for?’

‘No girl likes to be told her stocking seam is crooked. Not in front of all those men.’

‘But I was only teasing.’

‘I know, but I’d been on duty all night – and…’

‘And you forgot that at least one of those men at five o’clock in the morning was sufficiently interested in your legs to notice a crooked seam!’

‘Men are always interested in sex.’

‘Not before dawn in a hospital ward after a night’s bombing.’

‘My husband always…’

She broke off and he waited for her to continue, but she ran her hands through her hair and jumped down, smoothing her skirt and twisting her hips to check the seams of the thick, light grey knitted stockings. ‘Come on,’ she said, ‘let’s walk.’

Her husband – her late husband, rather – always what?

A blackbird raced along the far side of the hedgerow, raising the alarm, setting the tail of a distant magpie twitching as it pecked at the grass, and starting a plover cartwheeling in the air with its plaintive ‘pee-wit’. A gust of wind whipped up an eddy of brown leaves and across the fields towards Ashford a siren began wailing on the same note and finally died after a minute or two.

‘The all clear,’ Clare commented. ‘I didn’t hear the warning.’

‘The wind’s changed. It carries the sound now.’

‘You’ve changed, too,’ she said quietly, taking his hand as they walked.

‘I’ve grown older,’ he joked, worried at the tone of her voice.

‘No, in the last few moments. When I mentioned my husband.’

‘Is that surprising?’

‘Yes,’ she said in her direct way, ‘you’re simply going for a walk with Nurse Exton, one of the war’s widows. She mentioned – or was going to, anyway – her husband.’

‘I’m jealous,’ Yorke said bluntly. He was conscious that he was wearing old grey flannel trousers, now mud-stained, and a white rollneck jersey that was shapeless, and his left arm was cocked up awkwardly in the sling so that walking was difficult, his body feeling twisted and clumsy. He pictured the smart RAF uniform, wings, the jaunty cap, the wearer slim and moving gracefully, no mark or blemish on him; no distorted arm, no hand that looked as though it had been put through a mincing machine. She would have a framed photograph in her room, probably more than one, and each with some loving message written across the corner.

‘You might well be,’ she said unexpectedly. ‘He was the complete opposite of you.’

They walked another fifty yards in silence except for their shoes occasionally grating on a piece of gravel, before, gripping his hand a little tighter, she said: ‘He was taller, with curly blond hair. He had a mouth that women dreamed of, and a laugh that bubbled. He wasn’t a serious old stick like you. He lived for flying. Died for it, too, three years ago.’

And, Yorke thought to himself, it would be just my luck that I fall in love with his widow and so many years after the crash I find myself walking along a country lane with my head and heart full of romantic ideas, and this bloody flier appears between us like the ghost of Hamlet’s father.

‘Are you Mrs or Miss Exton?’ he asked and for a reason he could not understand found himself dreading the answer.

‘Miss. It’s my maiden name. He was called Brown. Mundane. He hated it.’

Another fifty yards. Whoever owned this land had the hedger and ditcher at work early in the season, ready for the winter’s rain. The amount of chalk in the soil – washed down over the centuries from the Downs – was shown by that warren, where rabbits had dug white streaks from the topsoil of yellow clay. Stop talking about the husband, he told himself; do not stir up memories or provoke comparisons.

‘You shouldn’t be jealous,’ she said, almost in a whisper, as though talking to herself.

‘I know; it’s a corrosive feeling. I’m ashamed of myself, but I feel it, and that’s…’

‘He’s dead; there’s nothing to be jealous of.’

He stopped and swung her round holding her shoulder with one hand, and before he could stop himself said bitterly: ‘He was the first man you loved enough to marry. You have all those memories. Your honeymoon, the private jokes, tunes, places – St Peter’s in Rome. Paris? Florence? I have nothing to be jealous about? I’m jealous of all those memories.’

She clung to him now, tiny yet tense; he thought she was tense with anger and instead of silencing him it made him go on and on like a stuck record. ‘The man who first shows you the view from the Spanish Steps, who is with you when you first smell Gauloise cigarettes as the cross-Channel ferry berths, who explores the Louvre with you and shows you the treasures in the Piazza Navona, and comments how muddy are the Arno and Tiber, and how the uniforms of the Swiss Guards seem tawdry: yes, I’m jealous, I’m sick with jealousy.’

He managed to stop himself adding that their memories, the memories and shared experiences of Ned Yorke and Clare Exton were, so far, of bedpans and bottles, the bared teeth of pain, the stink of his own suppurating flesh, the clinking of the lid of that white enamel dish which held the scalding water. Those things, and one brief moment as a bomb hissed down towards them.

She looked up at him, white-faced and stricken, and reaching for his face and holding it between her hands whispered: ‘Answer me truly, because we’ve known each other only – how long, a month? Have you really fallen in love with me, Lieutenant Yorke, or am I just an available nurse, a pretty young woman for a wounded sailor to dally with until he goes back to sea?’

He tried to clasp her with the arm in the sling as well as the right arm. ‘What do you think?’ His voice came out harsh, not at all the way he wanted it to sound, but his vocal cords were suddenly constricted, tightened by unknown muscles.

She looked away. ‘Until now I thought – well, you’ll soon be back at sea. But when you talk so bitterly of Rome and Paris, I’m not so sure; I’m suddenly confused. Ned, I swore I’d never fall in love in wartime. I’m not afraid of being alone; I’m afraid of being left alone for ever. You’ll never understand that it’s the men who get killed who are the lucky ones: the women who are left die thousands of times, at every anniversary, every time particular tunes are played, jokes made… Have you ever thought of that, Ned? The bereaved keep on dying; the dead die only once.’

‘I know, but it was like that, wasn’t it?’ he demanded bitterly. ‘You went to all those places on your honeymoon? Or before, probably. And now, as you say, you die again every time you remember. How can I compete with that?’

‘What about you?’ she asked angrily. ‘How many girls have you taken there? How do you know what it’s like? Why should you be jealous of him, and me not be jealous of her – or them? They’re still alive – I may even meet them and never know they shared anything with you.’

‘There’s never been a “her” in that sense; I’ve been to all those places, but never with anyone I loved.’

‘Never a girlfriend?’ she challenged.

‘Oh yes, plenty; enough to make me…’

‘Make you what?’

He tried to laugh it off, realizing he had talked himself into a comer. ‘Make me appreciate a girl with a crooked seam who tried to save me when she thought a bomb was landing close.’

‘Oh that,’ she said offhandedly. ‘A nurse’s duty is to her patients. You were the nearest.’

The shock of the remark made him let her go. ‘Do you mean that?’

She looked up and smiled impishly. ‘Why be upset? You were the nearest.’

‘Suppose I hadn’t been?’

‘We’ll never know!’

‘But…’

‘Ned,’ she said, arranging his sling and avoiding looking at him, ‘why question everything? You were the nearest. I did my duty as a nurse – or I did what I wanted to do as a woman. Why analyse everything? Now,’ she said, turning him round and tugging his arm to make him walk, ‘tell me how you hurt your hand. And the medal.’

‘I don’t know what happened with the hand.’

‘Oh,’ she said impatiently, ‘don’t sulk, and don’t suddenly get modest and understated: it’s so boring! I’m curious, nosy like all women. I want to know about you – if only to gossip to the other nurses!’

‘I’m not being modest or understated,’ he protested. ‘I was in a destroyer and we were attacked by bombers. We were hit several times. One bomb burst on the bridge, on the other side from where I was standing.’

‘And then what happened?’

‘The destroyer sank. Or so they told me. I was knocked out.’

‘Oh, Ned, come on! It’s you, and I want to know all about it. Do I have to squeeze it out of you?’

He stopped and swung her towards him. ‘Yes!’

She put her arms round him. ‘I can’t squeeze too hard because of the sling.’

‘That’s just about right,’ he said, and he could feel her breasts hard through the tweed material.

‘I’m waiting,’ she said. ‘I’m supposed to be squeezing the story out of you, remember?’

‘I came to sitting in a Carley float with four other chaps.’

‘A Carley float?’

‘A sort of small raft made of very light wood, like a square quoit, with a net across the open part.’

‘Who were the others?’

‘One of the bridge lookouts. A Polish naval officer. A wardroom steward. And a Polish seaman.’

‘Why Polish? Were you serving in a Polish ship?’

He shook his head. ‘No, we had some on board and some Polish refugees, that was all. Other survivors were also paddling round in Carley floats.’

‘How long were you in the float?’

‘A day or two. We managed to keep together, and another ship picked us up.’

‘And the medal?’

He shrugged his shoulders. ‘They usually give one to the senior surviving officer.’

‘But surely you weren’t commanding the destroyer, were you? You’re much too young.’

‘I didn’t command her to begin with.’

‘Oh – but you did at the end. You survived.’

He nodded. A quarter of them had survived; the rest had been killed by the bombs bursting on the Aztec, been killed in the water when the bombers had flown back and forth, methodically machine-gunning the survivors, or died of exposure. The Teds had been trying to make sure the Polish civilians died – and ironically every one of them had survived; only their rescuers died.

His arm, particularly the hand, had obviously been slashed by the explosion on the bridge; he had lost a lot of blood in the Carley float, and fuel and lubricating oil had soaked into the wound. And three days later they had been picked up by a submarine, more dead than alive; three days without food had been unimportant; three days without water had been worse. But three days with oil soaking into the wound had been painful and, as it began to swell, grotesque, too.

‘A penny?’ she said.

‘That’s an old trick.’

‘You should be flattered, Lieutenant Yorke. Miss Exton wants to know your thoughts: she might get jealous, too.’

‘If she knew my thoughts at this moment she might also get embarrassed.’

‘I doubt it,’ Clare said. ‘You can’t shock an old widow woman who’s spending the war nursing rough sailors.’