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Authors: Sian James

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BOOK: Love and War
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I put the letter in an envelope and ask Mali Vaughan, the girl sitting in the front desk, to take it to Gwynn.

‘I said I’d go out to the pub with Jack Jones tonight,’ I tell Ilona Hughes after supper. ‘Will you come with us?’

She gives me a look I can’t quite interpret.

‘He’s a very nice man, Ilona, very decent and thoughtful. What’s the matter? You always say I should go out and meet people instead of stagnating here every night.’

‘Why is it all right to go out with Jack, someone you don’t care about, but wrong to go out with Gwynn? It seems contrary, that’s all.’

‘How is it that you don’t understand? It’s obvious. I feel safe with Jack. Because I’m not in love with him, I suppose. Even if someone told my mother-in-law I’d been seen with him, I wouldn’t mind. He’s a colleague of mine, I’d tell her, and there’s nothing wrong with my seeing him from time to time. She could think what she liked as long as I knew it was innocent.’

She gives me another long look. ‘Or perhaps you intend to paddle in shallow water for a while before you take the plunge... Something like that. Yes, I’ll come with you. I’ve got nothing better to do.’

‘He’s coming round at nine. Apparently he’s going to see Mary in the holidays, but perhaps he’s beginning to see sense because he didn’t mention getting married.’

How was I to know that Ilona would bring up the subject within about half a minute of his arrival?

‘Well, Jack, are you getting married in the Easter holidays, or not?’

‘No,’ he says, ‘as a matter of fact, I’m not.’

‘Why not? Did you decide against it, or did she?’

‘It’s all right, Rhian,’ he says, noticing, I suppose, the way I’m glaring at her. ‘Don’t worry, I was going to tell you sooner or later.’

‘So you may as well tell both of us,’ Ilona says blithely, ‘because she’ll tell me everything eventually.’

‘It was her father,’ he says. There’s such a long pause, then, that I get my coat on, thinking it’s as much as he’s going to say. It was her father who had... advised postponing the wedding, perhaps.

‘What about her father?’ Ilona asks. ‘What exactly did he say?’

Jack sighs. ‘It’s a long story.’

‘Well,’ Ilona says, settling down more comfortably into her chair, ‘let’s have it. It’ll do you good to get it off your chest.’

Jack looks at each of us in turn, seeming none too anxious to unburden himself.

‘What does her father do?’ Ilona asks. ‘Start there. What does he look like? How old is he?’

‘Works on the railway. A clerk, I think. Quite ordinary-looking. Short and thick-set. About fifty.’

‘And the mother?’

‘A step-mother. Quite ordinary-looking, too. A bit younger.’

I try to help him. ‘I remember Mary saying she didn’t get on very well with her step-mother.’

‘She seemed all right. She seemed concerned about her. There are two step-sisters, too, about seven and eight. But I only saw them for about ten minutes and then they were off to bed. There’s a dog as well, nearly blind. A big yellow dog. Carlo.’

‘Let’s get back to the father,’ Ilona says in her most patient voice. ‘He seemed quite a nice chap, did he?’

‘Yes. He took me out to his local after supper. I deserved a drink, he said.’

‘Did he mention Alun Brooke?’ I ask.

‘Don’t take any notice of that girl,’ Ilona says. ‘She’s obsessed with Alun Brooke.’

‘Mary hadn’t told them about Alun Brooke. They didn’t know she was engaged to him. They didn’t even know of his existence.’

‘He didn’t
have
any existence,’ Ilona says, her eyes turned to the ceiling. ‘That’s the whole point.’

‘But the Head had sent them a telegram asking them to phone him at school, and he told them about him – I mean Alun Brooke – and about Form 3C and about me and how he was convinced she was having a mental breakdown. And a lot more, it seems – Alfie Morris and so on.’

Jack looks very upset.

Even Ilona seems a little downcast. ‘Yes,’ she says, ‘I get the picture. The father, Mr Powell, this rather old, quite ordinary-looking man, thanks you for being kind to his daughter and advises you to hold your horses until she recovers her mental stability. Something like that.’

‘Something like that,’ Jack says. ‘Yes, that’s right. Something like that.’

There’s another long silence. The small fire, which we’ve decided to let out, collapses quietly into the grate. For a time, we stare at the dying embers.

‘Well then, we’d better go,’ Ilona says. ‘They shut at ten.’

I don’t feel at all like a first visit to a pub, but I dare not say so.

‘The thing about a pub,’ Ilona says as we sit down at a small round table in a rather dark and very crowded room, ‘is that everyone is here wanting to talk, to escape some stress or forget some trouble. No-one is here for any grave or serious purpose. That’s what’s good about a pub. People talk and argue but it’s not a debating society with voting at the end. It’s nothing at all really, but a pleasant way of wasting time.’

‘They’ve sold out of beer,’ Jack says. ‘There’s only this stuff. Drink up, Rhian, it’s good for you.’

It’s dark and unpleasant, not unlike the ten-year-old iron tonic I recently found for my mother.

‘It’s stout,’ Ilona tells me. ‘A bit of an acquired taste. Leave it if you don’t like it, I’ll finish it for you.’

Some men are singing a hymn in the other bar. A superb counter-tenor orbits the last verse, but the general feeling in our bar is that he’s showing off. ‘It’s that Ieuan Harris again’ someone mutters. A pub is obviously not the place for choir practice.

After about five minutes, Ilona gives Jack money for another round. It’s not the thing, she tells me, for women to go up to the bar.

Apart from us, there are only two women, with about twenty-five or thirty men, and none apparently in the other bar.

‘Of course, they’d like it to be men only,’ Ilona says. ‘Welshmen are always happiest without women around. Even at funerals they try to keep us away. They pretend it’s because we’re not up to it emotionally, that they want to protect us, but of course it’s not that. Even death is more bearable in a black huddle of men... With the women in floral overalls seeing to the food.’

We watch Jack pushing his way through the smoke with two more glasses of stout.

‘Take Jack, now,’ she continues, ‘I bet he’s never brought a woman to a pub before tonight.’

‘No, I haven’t,’ Jack says. ‘And now I’ve got two.’

‘He doesn’t look too miserable.’

‘No. I feel happier than I have for a long time. Except that Gwynn Morgan is just coming over, look, so I’ve got the feeling I’m going to lose at least one of you.’

‘Drink up,’ Ilona tells me.

Gwynn sits at my side without a word. My heart is thumping so loudly, he must be able to hear it. Ilona lights a cigarette. Jack stares at his drink. I can’t think of anything at all to say.

I suppose this is what I’d intended all along. After all, wasn’t I well aware that he comes to the Ship most nights?

‘How’s the wife?’ Jack asks, after what seems an interminable time.

‘How’s the portrait going?’ Ilona asks. ‘What do you think of it? Is it good?’

Words start to flow. I try to listen to them, even to add a few of my own. Soon the room is thick with words and smoke. Gwynn’s knee is pressed hard against mine.


I bob un sy’n fyddlon
’ starts up from the other bar. For a few moments we listen to tenors and basses exhorting us to enlist on God’s side against the Devil. After a verse or two, Jack joins in.

I smile tenderly at Gwynn. ‘Such a pleasure to see you here,’ he whispers, after the thorough trouncing of Satan’s legions. ‘Now I’ve got everything I want under one roof.’

I clutch his arm. ‘Wine, women and hymns.’

‘That’s right,’ he says.

When we leave, it’s very dark and the sea is loud and rough. The four of us stand for a while clutching the cold railings, listening to the waves crashing on to the rocks. The singers, still in good voice, have started on an anthem and the wind accompanies them as they walk up Marine Terrace.

‘It’s too cold here,’ Ilona says. ‘I’m going home. Are you coming with me, Jack?’

‘We’re coming, too,’ Gwynn says.

They lead the way and we follow. Ilona has taken Jack’s arm, but in spite of the darkness, I’m not so daring.

‘What did Celine say about your call-up papers?’

‘She didn’t make such a fuss as you did.’

I can’t see the expression on his face, but his voice sounds as though he’s rather proud of it; the fuss I made.

‘It came as such a shock to me.’

‘You think of me as an old man, do you?’

‘I suppose it must have been that. A venerable old man. Far too old to go to war.’

‘Too old, too old for anything,’ he says, his voice still full of pride and tenderness.

I want him to crush me in his arms. My mouth is dry. My flesh and my bones desire him, but I’m too nervous even to take his arm.

Ilona turns back towards us. ‘Jack and I are going for some fish and chips. What about you two?’

‘No, I’ve got to get home,’ Gwynn says. ‘Will you go with them, Rhian?’

‘No, I need to get back, too.’

He and I walk up Hill Street on our own.

‘I had quite a shock to see you in the pub,’ he says. ‘Will you come again?’

‘I expect so.’

‘And another shock to see Jack with Ilona Hughes. How long has that been going on?’

‘There’s nothing going on between those two. No, Jack’s accounted for. He’s seeing Mary Powell again in the holidays. Though they’re not getting married. Not at the moment, anyway.’

‘I know. He told me about her mother.’

‘About her mother? He didn’t tell us anything about her mother.’

‘Her mother died in an asylum, it seems. She became ill when Mary was born and never recovered. Mary’s father took Jack out to a pub and put him in the picture.’

We don’t speak for some minutes. The hill seems steeper than usual.

‘But that doesn’t mean anything, does it? Mary doesn’t have to be insane because her mother was.’ My voice is shrill.

‘No, I know. All the same, no-one could say that she’s altogether normal, could they? No-one could describe her as well-balanced.’

Poor Mary. I’m ashamed of my anger and impatience towards her; I should have been kinder. I look up at Gwynn. ‘How cruel life is.’

‘I know, love, I know. Life seems pretty terrible for everyone at the moment.’

‘That’s true.’

I find I’m almost pleased about it; the way it evens things out. ‘It’ll certainly be terrible for me when you go away. I won’t be able to bear it.’ I put my hands over my ribs to steady the sudden thumping of my heart.

‘And I thought you were still angry with me,’ Gwynn says.

‘No. Didn’t you get my note?’

‘No.’

‘I sent you a note by a little girl from 3C. Mali Vaughan. Third period this afternoon.’

‘I didn’t get it. I was in my room all afternoon.’

‘Where the devil did she take it? She certainly took it somewhere. She came back looking very pleased with herself.’

‘She probably took it to the Head. She’s not very bright, Mali Vaughan. What was in it?’

‘Nothing much. A few words of love, that’s all.’

If he’s worried, he doesn’t show it. As we reach Sea View, he puts his arm around my shoulder and pulls me towards him. For a second or two, I can feel his breath on my cheek; I can smell his skin. Gwynn receives his call-up papers; a catastrophe I hadn’t anticipated since he’s already over forty.

We have a quarrel in the Art room at lunch time. I’d thought he was a pacifist, as I am. He says he is in principle, but that he still intends to join up. He says, yes, he’s quite aware of the power of propaganda, thank you, is quite aware that the Germans are not all savages nor the Allies all avenging angels, but he also believes that the Germans were the original aggressors, that it would be better for the world if the Allies win and that, in any case, he’d be proud to help liberate France.

I’ve been a Welsh Nationalist and pacifist almost since I can remember. I believe that an independent Wales would be neutral like Switzerland, Ireland and Sweden, but since she is legally part of Great Britain, then individuals who think as I do should follow their conscience and refuse to join the English army.

He says my concept of Wales is over-romantic, that the Welsh way of life I talk about is no different from the way of life of any poor, radical, non-conformist section of society in any part of Britain.

I say that our language and literature make us a separate nation so that we are set apart from any other section of society. We are a nation with a national culture and if that’s an over-romantic idea, I admit to being over-romantic.

He says that no man is an island, that Wales, whether a separate nation or not, is part of the main.

I say that war is never right and that he’s capitulated to the propaganda of the English press.

BOOK: Love and War
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