Authors: Chaz Brenchley
Tags: #Fiction, #Horror, #Haunted Hospitals, #War Widows, #War & Military
âOh lord, no, Sister, never that. Perhaps it's fellow feeling, but honestly, you'll find most of the chaps here short of a nose or so. It's why the colonel is such a particularly dab hand at fixing them up, he gets such a lot of practice.'
It was hard to be quite sure whether he was being ironic or simply truthful, even grateful. Ruth's doubt must have shown on her face. On her other side, another man â no more nose than lips, eyelids two droops of skin he hadn't learned to blink yet, he had to wipe them with a handkerchief at the ever-ready â said, âJust take it at face value, Sister, whatever we say. Whatever value you care to give our faces.'
âAh,' she said, âI see. A double act. Which of you is the straight man?'
âOh, he is,' but they said it both together, as though rehearsed. She laughed, and hefted the pot. âWho wants a top-up, before I send this to be refilled? Dark and chewy by the feel of it, who likes their tea well stewed?'
By the meal's end this was her table, these were her men. The staff were not so easy to win over; she would need to do that with work, make a reputation that would spread through her own ward and further out. Patients were a breeze by comparison. She need only be interested, amused, impressed. All of which she actually was. Let them think her clever but won over, charmed despite their faces and despite their futures. Here and now, that was enough.
By the meal's end she had in honesty had enough. She wanted her privacy and her bed in short order. And was halfway there, heading for the door with goodnights still smiling on her lips, when a hand arrested her elbow. She stopped, by force of necessity; and turned round expecting Aesculapius but hoping for anyone else, anyone at all; and was relieved and frustrated both at once to find Judith Trease standing there saying, âOh no, you can't sneak away on your own. Not now, not tonight.'
âWhy not?'
Whyever not?
was closer to the surface of her thoughts, close to her tongue but could still be swallowed back, not to be too sharp with her new friend. She could still â just â manage a question rather than a snarl. âI'm off duty now, I think. What's so special about tonight?'
âMy dear, we are never off duty here. And Friday night is dancing, of course. Who doesn't want to go dancing on a Friday night? And you're new, everyone will want a turn with you. I'm sorry, but that's the way it is.' She didn't seem sorry at all, there was laughter in her eyes, in her voice. It might have been sympathetic, perhaps. âDid no one think to warn you? It's a brutal exposition, but we do all have to go through it.' And then, tugging Ruth out of the general way and going on more quietly, âWhat it is, other hospitals with patients like ours, they've found that it helps the men no end to go out of an evening now and then. To learn that girls will still dance with them, despite  . . . despite everything. East Grinstead, elsewhere, the townsfolk have been extraordinary, by what we hear. But here of course the men can't mix so readily, they're more than patients and who knows what they'd say if they were drunk, if they were seduced into it? So the colonel wants them to dance, and Major Black won't let them run away to town, so we have dancing of our own. And there aren't enough of us girls, there never could be. So we're all obliged. I am sorry â' and perhaps she was after all, seeing how absolutely Ruth wanted to escape â âbut you do not get to skip this. If you utterly hate it, trip over someone's feet and make a fool of yourself. They'll let you be after that, they have nice manners bred in their bone; but you honestly can't refuse.'
Well, she wouldn't, then. Nor would she fake a clumsiness she didn't own. But Ruth hadn't danced with anyone since Peter â well, since Peter. She didn't want, she hadn't ever wanted to feel another man's hands that way, to follow another man's rhythms, to learn again â and again, and again â that the world was very full of men and none of them was Peter.
She could do this, she would do this. She really didn't want to.
She stood with Judith against the wall and watched while patients and orderlies together cleared all the tables to the side of the hall.
Of course young Tolchard was by the piano; of course he couldn't play dances one-handed and the duets were a party trick, apparently, not standard issue. Someone else took the stool and left him standing, stranded almost. He had a pint, he could look busy enough with that. For a while, Ruth wondered â worried, almost â if it might fall to her to be the one who had to ask him to dance.
She needn't have worried. It would probably always prove a waste of effort, by definition, worrying about Tolchard. She had looked away for a minute, distracted by the first figures starting to turn and sway in a cheerful polka. Strauss, she rather thought, though she wouldn't have liked to say which Strauss. Peter would have frowned at her for that:
you either know
, he would say,
or you don't know. There are facts, and then there's guesswork.
She still thought it was possible to know, absolutely, and to be wrong. It had been one of the arguments between them, in the days when they could still argue.
At least she wouldn't have to argue Tolchard out of his brown study. One of his friends had nudged him, or else his own good training had done the job. Another couple took the floor and that was him, she recognized his tow head from behind, so surely that she didn't need to glance at the piano top to confirm his abandoned pint. He was dancing with one of the nurses. Local girls they were, by and large, while the senior staff was like her, fetched in from far away. No doubt Aesculapius had his reasons.
If it was witchcraft she didn't know whether it was his or hers, whether he read her mind or she summoned him with a thought; but his voice was suddenly in her ear, warm and soft as old worn leather. âSister Taylor, will you dance?'
It was, clearly, her duty. What she was here for. Not with Aesculapius, necessarily, his ego didn't stand in need. But perhaps he held a
droit de seigneur
, perhaps all the men else were politely waiting. If she had to get over this before she could do that, give time to him before she could give it to those who needed her, before she could slip away at last, too long delayed â very well, then. Let it be now.
âOf course,' she said. âShall we?'
His hands, his body were slightly and so entirely wrong. He was a little too tall, a little too heavy. A little too dominant, that too. Peter used to lead with a charming hesitation, as though all he ever did was to suggest, perhaps, a move this way or that. The major was no less subtle, but much more assertive. He guided, she followed, that was that.
Still. The man could dance. They slipped into the music like a hand into a glove, contained but not restrained. There was a little skip in her tired feet, to say that it had been too long. This night might be duty, this dance might be professional courtesy or hierarchical responsibility or any one of a dozen other complicated things she had not unravelled yet, but there was a lesson here too, something of a revelation.
She might, perhaps, go dancing again. For herself, for her pleasure. She might be able to do that.
Soon, perhaps.
Before six months were up. There must be dancing in the town, even if the men didn't go there. She'd ask the girls, the nurses  . . .
Young men count beats, watch where they're going, worry about the girl in their arms and the people around them: what she's thinking, what everyone else is thinking, what he dare risk now or later. What she'll think if he does, what she'll say.
Older men, experienced men, seem not to worry at all. Their tongues not bound up by all those strings of anxiety, they like to talk as they dance.
He said, âSettling in, then?'
âNot in the least.' As he well knew, he must know. Any reasonable woman would take weeks to find her feet in an establishment like this. She'd give herself months, if she could afford it. âI wish you'd warned me.'
âDo you?'
âYes, actually.' She did like to be treated as a grown-up, given the facts and allowed to make a true decision.
âWould you still have come?'
âYes, actually.' She did think that was true. However unlikely.
âI couldn't have told you about Major Black and his  . . . doings. Only that it was a hospital full of burned airmen. I thought that might cut a little close to the bone for you.'
âIt does. Regardless of Major Black.'
Major Black and you
, she didn't absolve him of anything that happened here. âEven so, I think I would have come. For six months.' It wasn't hope, exactly, she didn't allow that; but a postponement of despair, a chance to think beyond the cloying grey hopelessness, a time and a place where she needn't be yearning constantly for that bullet, waiting for the bomb to fall. She thought she might have come for that.
Or for the pain of it, perhaps. All these hopeful, determined young men who had pulled their ripcords and fought their way through fire and hurt and despair to find some value in life restored. Even if it was temporary, a pint of beer and a dance with a pretty girl before they went off to death and glory, trained and prepared and almost eager. Perhaps she was a masochist, seeking out the pain determinedly, more and more, unsatisfied.
They reminded her of herself, where they ought surely to remind her of her husband.
Oh, Peter  . . .
Sometimes she blamed herself, of course she did. How not? She was apparently not enough to live for. That had to be her own fault, surely.
She said, âWhere is Major Black? Does he not dance?' He was lean enough, fit enough, from what she'd seen of him. He had that killer grace that cats exhibit, movement under absolute control. Self-aware, self-satisfied. Sufficient. Dancing with him, she thought, would be an exercise in concealment, beauty without revelation. The opposite of art. But still, very likely beautiful.
âNot he. He'll be out with some of the men, not wanting to waste a moonlit night. Making them miss their dancing â well, that's probably an element of his training. The importance of sacrifice, teaching them to give up what's unnecessary. Keeping them focused. Major Black is very strong on focus.'
âYes. I had rather gathered that. And you? Where do you stand?'
âOh, I'm with him all the way. Except on a night like this, obviously. He's out there in the moonlight with a squadron of cold and disgruntled young men, and I'm in here dancing by lamplight with a warm and pretty girl. I believe I know who has the better of the night.'
Ruth wasn't sure which of them had the better of the conversation. That was the trouble with clever men â clever men in general, and this one in absolute particular â that you could never be quite certain that they weren't actually that little bit more clever than you allowed for, that they weren't dancing you into a corner. Unfolding all your secrets and privacies like envelopes, learning too much from the twitch of your eye and the touch of your guilty body beneath their firm, manipulative, analytical fingers.
She might think that she had pumped him, but she shouldn't be so sure.
Blessedly, the tune wound to an end, their feet lost the thread of rhythm and they fell apart into two separate unrevealing people, politely smattering applause at the pianist. And before she could even think of fumbling for an excuse, an alibi, a lie, she didn't need one after all.
Because here was Tolchard, Bed Thirty-Four in high fig, rampant in his youth and insolence: looking spruce in a clean uniform, his hair brushed as vigorously as the serge and so glossy it looked almost lacquered.
âBeg pardon, sir, but I believe you've had your ration. My turn with Sister Taylor now.'
âImportunate puppy.' His superior officer growled at him but only because that was expected, part of the show, masculinity on display. In fact, Major Dorian had already stepped away, ceding possession. Neither of them troubled to consult Ruth. It didn't matter; this was what she was here for, after all. She was a bone to be wrangled over, by young men much in need of wrangling. It hurt her heart to watch them at it, all around the floor. She could distract herself easily enough, though. There was the pleasure of dancing rediscovered, the pleasure of so much male company, the soft rub of flattery â
a warm and pretty girl
, Major Dorian had called her â like velvet on bare skin, to soften the scratch of uniform wool.
And, more immediately, seeing these two face off like two grouse sparring at a lek, she could wonder about men and their hierarchies, where Major Dorian stood in the chain of command, whether he actually was Tolchard's superior in any way that mattered. Likely not; he might have a voice in the younger man's future â he might have the ultimate voice, indeed â but a psychiatrist was surely a step to the side, not in the direct line. This was Colonel Treadgold's command, and Tolchard was his guinea pig. If by his own will or by military doctrine the boy belonged to anyone intermediate, that would surely be Major Black. She thought he had sold his soul at the crossroads, and had no wish or ambition to redeem it.
She didn't think it was healthy, quite â or at all â but she could recognize a fact when it slapped her in the face.
Oddly, she seemed to be blushing as he turned away from Aesculapius, as those eyes of his found hers. It must be the heat in here, though she hadn't thought a hallway with mounting stairs could get so warm. Perhaps it was the exercise. She hadn't danced in so long  . . .
Dancing with Tolchard was an exercise in difference. His ruined hand was set firmly in his pocket, casual as ignorance, not to be seen or thought about. His face couldn't be put away so easily, but they could overcome that. She was professionally used to wearing her own face like a mask, making believe that nothing she saw could affect her. Nurses need to be made of granite, or to seem so. If they crumble, they must do it from within.