Read A Kiss for the Enemy Online
Authors: David Fraser
It would have been a great deal less easy without the aid of his platoon sergeant. In the few weeks of their service together, Anthony had come to the conclusion that Sergeant Chester was probably the best and certainly the nicest man he had ever known. A coal miner in civil life, a reservist who had originally served seven years from the age of sixteen, Chester was strong, very quiet and a mountain of loyal common sense.
They'll dig fast enough, sir,' Chester said, âwhen they've had a few mortar bombs among 'em. Like B Company.' For Chester's stories were gathered by the reliable word-of-mouth network of communication to which every senior noncommissioned officer in the battalion appeared connected, however widely they were dispersed. Chester passed on news only when it was true.
âYes, I gather those bangs last night were on B Company. On the canal line.'
That's it, sir. Jerry mortars. Very accurate they were. Two men and Corporal Jackson copped it.'
They had stood to arms throughout the previous night but although the darkness was full of distant firing nothing had happened on Anthony's Company front. He had been round the positions in the grey light of a drizzling dawn. Private Verity stood to attention in his slit trench. He wore his groundsheet, for the minuscule waterproof protection it afforded. He also wore an enormous, infectious grin. Verity
was very young. He looked about fifteen. Anthony had seldom seen him without a smile. Some NCOs would have been irritated by his unfailing, irrepressible good humour. âWhat have you got to grin about, Verity?' they would have barked. Not so Sergeant Chester.
âVerity's a good lad, sir,' Sergeant Chester would say. Anthony thought so too. Something touched his heart as he looked into the sodden trench of this young man with his huge smile and his innocent good nature.
âAll well, Verity?'
âChampion, sir. Will the Jerries attack us today?'
For Verity's zeal for battle was as unaffected as it was untypical. Mostly the men moved, grumbling but enduring, from one place, one task, one hazard to another. Verity was that curiosity, an enthusiast.
âI don't know if they will or not. Anyway, you'll deal with them, won't you Verity?'
âI will, sir!' More grinning as Verity tapped the butt of his rifle. He was a notably bad shot.
âPlease, God, make me worthy of these people,' prayed Anthony. âI know terribly little, like most of them.'
Withdrawal, thought Anthony, was a muddled, depressing business. There had been exhilaration in that first great bound forward into Belgium on 10th May. Since then, all had been puzzlement, rumour and retreat. And all the time the enemy â despised by the British at the outset as likely to be undernourished, drugged by lying propaganda and lacking in initiative â was assuming in their minds magical proportions. From the first days euphoria and overconfidence began to be replaced by confusion, resentment and, inevitably, disquiet. The resentment fed on anecdote. Allies, both French and Belgian, were described in tale after tale as cowardly, ill-disciplined and, most certainly, disloyal. They didn't want to fight. They preferred the Germans to each other and to the British. Resentment fed, also, on stories about other arms of the British service, invariably unfavourable.
âDid you hear that, sir? RAF have refused to take on the Jerries until they get a day off?'
âWhen we came over, sir, there was a line of hundreds of tanks in the docks. Tank chaps, too. Black berets. Where are
they now? Why've we seen none of them? Jerry tanks going where they bloody like.'
âI expect there's a good plan,' said Anthony. âWe can only see a tiny bit of the front. As for the Air Force story, I don't believe a word of it.' The men grunted. They liked him. They liked his thoughtfulness, his way of giving them his whole attention, of never seeming patronizing or stuck up. They liked the way he laughed and somehow included them in the joke. They thought him bright, too: able to read a map, able to express himself â to find the way and to convince. They liked all that. It made them feel they were in sound hands. But they wanted to believe that others had betrayed them, let them down. Fear needs scapegoats. And beneath their patient humour the men were beginning to feel unease which was not far from fear, unease which stemmed from a sense that they were part of a machine under imperfect control. This unease could make them more vulnerable to stark physical fear when it came. The individual soldier's resilience and courage could be, and Anthony sensed it, undermined by mistrust of the powers in whose hands he was.
âPity the lads don't know a bit more of what's going on,' said Sergeant Chester. âIt's hard for them, like.'
Now perhaps â even probably â there was going to be a fight, and Anthony would command these men in battle. It was 20th May. They had withdrawn to places not far from those whence they had moved forward ten long days ago. A lot of Belgium must have been given up, but it wasn't the end of the world. As for the rumours of a big break through south of them, south of the Franco-Belgian frontier, behind their right flank, Anthony was sceptical. An elderly officer had said to him at the Depot,
âThings are never as bad in war as the fellows in the rear areas tell each other. They panic first. I remember March '18.'
It had the ring of truth. But the Germans seemed to have dealt the French some nasty blows and certainly the Allied plan to hold from the Maginot Line northward, forward of Brussels, had gone up in smoke long ago. Now, however, it looked as if there was going to be a fight.
So that it was the last straw suddenly to be removed from
his platoon and sent miles into the blue simply because he could speak German! He made one last attempt to demur.
âWhen will I be released, sir? Am I to hand over â'
âGod knows when you'll be released, Sergeant Chester is perfectly competent to command your platoon, now shut up and get off.' His Company Commander relented. âThe CO had a direct order to send you but he told me it will be for under forty-eight hours. Probably only twenty-four, if that. Off with you, and mind you wring the last drop of information out of the Huns!'
Heavy hearted, feeling a deserter, Anthony made his way southward. From his inadequate knowledge of the situation he tried to satisfy the driver's curiosity.
âIs it true what they're saying, sir â?'
âI don't know. Now step on it, I've got to be there as quick as possible.' Mercifully they were, as his Company Commander had forecast, crossing the main refugee flight paths.
On arrival at the brigade headquarters to which he was to be attached, more than an hour later than planned, Anthony's first impression was of a fatigue infinitely greater than his own. He reported himself and was curtly gestured to wait in a corner of the barn where most activity seemed to be. He waited. Waiting was a feature of Army life which even the inexperienced soon learned to accept. After about twenty minutes in the corner of the barn, while officers scurried this way and that, he was surprised to hear his Christian name uttered. Was it conceivable somebody meant him?
âAnthony!'
Anthony's face broke into what he felt must be the widest smile it had ever expressed.
âRobert! What the hell are you doing here?' It was indeed Robert Anderson. They had not seen each other since one weekend in London, in their early days in the Army. Robert had done his initial training in Scotland. Anthony had had no recent news of Robert's whereabouts or duties. Now he experienced, for the first time, the ineffable joy of unexpectedly finding a familiar and beloved face, feeling a warmth from sudden association with other, happier times, amongst the confusions, deprivations and anxieties of war.
âWhat the hell â?'
âI'm a Staff Officer! I know â you find that incredible! So do I! Well, I'm a sort of Staff Officer, anyway. Attached. Why are you â?'
Anthony explained his presence.
âWonderful! I'll introduce you â' Robert took him in hand. âThey're very nice here,' he whispered to Anthony, âbut they're absolutely whacked. It's pretty good chaos, but never mind!'
Ten hours later Anthony was ordered to return to his battalion. Astonishingly, a small truck was travelling northward to Corps Headquarters, passing through the village where (according to the brigade location map which he regarded with misgiving) his own battalion was now deployed. He hitched a lift. As he huddled beside the driver he exhaustedly reviewed the day just over. The driver hummed a tune. He did not feel that the presence of an unbidden second lieutenant imposed silence.
âYou want to go to Vencourt, sir, don't you?'
âYes, it's where my battalion's meant to be.'
âWe go through it. Came down that way this morning. Not bad most of the way.'
âIt's a decent road is it?'
âRotten road, like road, sir, if you get me. I mean not too many civvies on it. Refugees. What with them and the Frogs it took us an hour to go three miles yesterday.'
They drove on in the darkness. The road was packed but traffic was moving, albeit slowly.
âThat right what they're saying, sir, that we're pulling out?'
âNo, I'm sure it's not. We'll sort it all out, I'm sure of that.'
âJerries pretty tough, ain't they, sir!'
âYes. But we'll beat them. In the end.'
Traffic ahead seemed momentarily clearer. Suddenly the driver swore and braked.
âFâ me!'
There was a small knot of people in some sort of uniform on the road ahead. They paid no attention to truck or horn. They appeared to be wearing overalls. One came silently to Anthony's window. His overalls looked more like pyjamas. They were all over the road, waving their arms. The driver lifted his window flap.
âHey! Fâ off! You're blocking the f-ing road!'
Vehicles behind him sounded their horns. Several more of the pyjama'd group ran to Anthony's window. He was aware of grinning, slavering mouths, incomprehensible, whimpering sounds, and fingers scratching at the talc.
âF-ing loonies!' said the driver disgustedly. âGaols, loony bins, they're emptying 'em all!' He negotiated his way forward without too much scruple and Anthony heard a yelp.
âSteady! They can't help themselves, poor creatures.'
âWe don't want the old Luftwaffe to find us halted here head to tail, neither, do we, sir?'
They drove on. Anthony's mind went back to the morning.
At first it had seemed as if he was, indeed, wanted for the interrogation of prisoners, that he had not been despatched on a fool's errand.
âGet down that lane,' the Brigade Major said to him suddenly, half an hour after his arrival at the barn. âJust down there you'll find a Military Policeman with some SS prisoners. For God's sake try to find out what there is in front of us south of the main road. Then we'll send them back, but if they've got anything red hot we need it here and now, not when Division and Corps have digested it. We'll all be dead by then.'
âI'm not sure I know the questions to ask, sir. I speak German but I'm not â'
âOf course you're not. You know nothing, our Intelligence Officer's dead, you're not a soldier, you're useless, but you speak German and you just might be better than nothing. Look at this map.'
Anthony did.
âThat's where we think the Germans have got to.'
Anthony had seen no map like this. He stood, appalled.
âThis is what we're trying to do. Find out anything you can about the strength of Germans south and east of Arras and where they are. And who they are. Now get down that lane.' Anthony got.
It was about eleven o'clock in the morning â scorching hot, dusty. Anthony moved as fast as he could. He imagined from what the Brigade Major said that the guarded prisoners were only a few minutes' walk away. The lane was hedge-lined. It seemed empty. He looked at his watch. God, he'd been walking
for eight minutes. Should he run? Was he on the wrong lane? Even if he got some useful information, a thing almost inconceivable, precious minutes would pass before he could bring it back. Should he go back and ask for a despatch rider? He'd probably be instantly shot for disobedience! The Brigade Major had seemed particularly ill-tempered. Then as he walked rapidly down the lane, Anthony saw to his left, in a field, an astonishing sight.
Tanks. British tanks. Lined up facing south. A low ridge to their front. A Corporal on a motorcycle came careering up the lane towards Anthony. As he approached his motorcycle engine stalled. The man jumped off, put the machine on its stand and started, with what looked like energetic expertise, to do something to the engine.
âFâ thing, fourth time today!' he said to nobody in particular.
Anthony drew level, walking rapidly. âCorporal, do you know if there's a Military Policeman with some prisoners further down this lane?'
âThat's right, sir. By the first house.' He seemed to have done something satisfying to his motorcycle and threw his leg over to try another kickstart. Then his attention was caught by the line of tanks in the field beyond the hedge.
âChrist! First I've seen!'
âGood to see, aren't they!' said Anthony. âI've just passed a lot of bloody infantry coming up this lane, two miles back,' said the Corporal. âBloody knackered! Been marching for three hours, they said. Meant to be joining up with this lot.' The engine started and he drove unsteadily off. Anthony hastened on down the lane. Next moment he heard a roar of engines. Instinctively he moved towards the shallow ditch. He had heard the Luftwaffe before.
This was not the Luftwaffe, however, and Anthony told himself he was a nervous fool. The noise came from the tank force starting up their engines. Anthony felt cheered. âBy the first house,' the Corporal had said. He started to run. His task could not now be far away. He could see as yet no house, but he was keen to start his interrogation, his extraction of vital information which might transform the battle for the gallant tank force, whose engines now sounded fainter.