Octavia's War (39 page)

Read Octavia's War Online

Authors: Beryl Kingston

BOOK: Octavia's War
13.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘When April with its showers sweet, the drought of March has pierced to the root, and bathed every stem with that juice whose virtuous power engenders the flowers, when Zephyr too with his sweet breath has inspired in every holt and heath the tender crops and the young sun has run its half course in the sign of the Ram, and small birds make melody…' Then she paused. ‘Spring you see,' she explained. ‘April showers, spring flowers, young crops, birds singing. We're off to a sunny start.'

And so to her great relief they were. But it had been more by accident than design.

 

At the end of the afternoon she walked slowly through the hall on her way back to the staff room, deep in thought. She didn't notice Smithie's approach until they were almost toe to
toe. Then she glanced up to find herself looking straight into her headmistress's eyes.

Octavia knew at once that her star pupil was troubled and that whatever it was would have to be tackled delicately. The droop of her shoulders was a disquieting sign. ‘How did everything go?' she asked.

‘I like my first form very much,' Lizzie told her. ‘They're dears.' Then she paused, not quite sure whether she ought to confess her doubts or not. She didn't want to look a fool. Not on her first day.

‘But?' Octavia prompted. And waited patiently.

Her patience and concern provoked an admission. ‘I'm afraid I made a mess of my first lesson.'

‘Come in and tell me about it,' Octavia said and led the way to her study.

It was a searching interview but not an unpleasant one. Octavia took her through the lesson step by step, listening and prompting, and when they'd finished she sat back in her easy chair and smiled at her new recruit. ‘It seems to me,' she said, ‘that you handled a potentially difficult situation extremely well.'

‘It didn't feel like that to me,' Lizzie told her.

‘That's because you were in the middle of it. I'm telling you how it looks to me. You made your first mistake and you learnt from it and that's fine because that's what mistakes are for. Your pupils will have come out of your lesson aware that Chaucer is worth studying, which is no mean feat. They also know you're fond of them, which is the secret of all good teaching. And you've learnt that you've got to have your opening move ready and organised before you enter the classroom. If I can offer you a bit of advice, I'd start the next lesson with a look at ‘The Wife of Bath'. I've never met a class yet who didn't warm to
her
. There's an excellent picture of her in the collected works in my teaching room.'

‘I remember it,' Lizzie said. ‘You showed us all of them one after the other as soon as we'd read Chaucer's description and we had to compare and contrast.'

‘Exactly so.'

It's all right, Lizzie thought. I am going to be able to do this. But she was noticing how much older her Smithie looked and how tired.

‘She's an extraordinary woman,' she told her father at dinner that evening. ‘There she is in the middle of a war with a school to run and God knows what to attend to and yet she takes the time to put me on my feet again. Extraordinary.'

‘She always was,' Tommy said. ‘Even when she was a mere slip of a girl.'

He sounded wistful, which seemed rather peculiar. Why should he be wistful about Smithie? ‘I didn't know you knew her when she was a girl.'

‘Eighteen,' he confirmed. ‘I was at school with her cousin. But that was in the dark ages. How did you get on with your form? Are they nice?'

 

The term continued and, once she'd got into the habit of planning exactly how her lessons would begin and gathering all the material she needed to make them run the way she wanted, Lizzie began to enjoy it. The sixth form were highly taken with ‘The Wife of Bath', admiring her red stockings and her hat as big as a shield. ‘Can't you just see her?'

‘Five husbands,' they said and quoted, ‘withouten other company in youth.'

They were happily comparing the portrait with the description when there was a distant explosion.

‘Doodlebug?' Iris wondered.

‘They haven't sounded the sirens,' Margaret pointed out

Seconds later there was another explosion, marginally louder.

‘Should we go down to the cloakrooms?' Sarah asked. And while Lizzie was wondering what to say, the question was answered by the arrival of a fifth-former with a ‘message from Miss Smith' to say they were to stay where they were unless the alarm went.

‘Very odd,' the staff said to one another in the staff room. ‘Why didn't they sound the alarm?'

‘Maybe they forgot,' Joan Marshall said.

They forgot all through the next day and the day after that, when there were really rather a lot of explosions, some at a distance, others uncomfortably close.

‘If these
are
doodlebugs,' Phillida said, ‘it's funny they don't sound the sirens. I think they're something else and they're not telling us.'

‘I'll ask my father,' Lizzie told them. ‘See if he knows.'

 

It was the first time in her life she saw him being diplomatic and the sight struck ice-cold into her brain.

‘Yes,' he said, ‘they were bombs. We're not entirely sure what kind so I can't say very much about them at the moment. I'll let you know if and when we get any more information.'

Lizzie watched his guarded face and felt suddenly and terribly afraid. If he can't tell me, she thought, and he obviously can't, they're keeping it hushed up, and if they're keeping it hushed up, that means it's something too horrible for us to be told, in case they alarm us. Don't they know how our imaginations work?

‘In other words,' she said, ‘you know but you've been given orders not to tell anyone.'

He looked shamefaced. ‘Well, I wouldn't go so far as to say that.'

‘I would,' she said. ‘It's obvious. Oh, come on, Pa, I'm not a child. I've got a husband in Belgium and God alone knows what could be happening to him out there and I have to face that every day of my life. I think I've got a right to know what might be going to happen to me. I don't believe in secrecy. I think it's much better to know the worst than to imagine it. It's all right. I understand about careless talk. I shan't pass any of it on if you tell me not to, but I need to know and you need to tell me.'

‘I can't, little one,' he said. ‘Official secrets and all that.'

‘Official secrets, my aunt Fanny,' she said angrily. ‘I'm your daughter. You can tell me. Nobody has official secrets from their daughter.'

Her insistence made him laugh and laughter loosened his tongue. She was right. It was unkind to keep her in the dark. ‘It's another flying bomb,' he said, ‘only worse than the doodlebugs. It carries the same amount of high explosive so it's just as destructive as they are, but it's not a pilotless plane, it's a rocket. It flies at speeds greater than the speed of sound, so we can't see it coming – or hear it coming for that matter – and the gunners can't shoot it down. The Germans can launch it from small transportable rocket pads almost anywhere, it's got a much longer range than the doodlebug and they've got thousands of the things in stock. Now can you see why the authorities want to keep quiet about it?'

‘My God,' she said. ‘It
is
bad.'

‘Yes,' he said. ‘It is. But keep it under your hat until it's official.'

* * *

It was official nine days later, when so many rumours were going the rounds that it was deemed less harmful for people to know what was actually going on than to keep them guessing and speculating. It surprised the authorities that Londoners took it phlegmatically.

‘It's just one damned thing after another,' Emmeline said to Octavia, when the news broke. ‘But what did I always say? If it's got your number on it it'll get you. No good worrying about it. We must just try and look on the bright side. At least we haven't got to keep jumping in and out of the cellar. I'll tell you one thing though. When this lot's over and we've caught the monsters who've been doing this, we should put a bullet through their rotten heads and string them up from the nearest tree.'

 

‘She's so fierce,' Octavia said to Tommy when they were in bed that Saturday night. ‘She doesn't have hysterics any more, she just gets angry.'

‘That's a healthier reaction,' he said. ‘She's got every right to get angry. We all have. It's an evil war. Which is why we've got to make damned certain the new League of Nations, or whatever we're going to call it, has a military arm this time and can insist on its decisions being carried out.'

‘When do you go?' Octavia asked.

‘Wednesday, for my sins.'

‘I shall miss you,' she said. ‘Just make sure they make the right decisions.'

‘Yes, Miss Smith,' he said, giving her a mock salute. ‘And if I do all the right things and they make all the right decisions, will you marry me?'

‘When the war's over,' she said and sighed. ‘I can't look after the school and cope with the rockets
and
arrange a wedding.
I should buckle under the strain.'

She'd tried to speak lightly, as if it was a joke, but he was so keenly attuned to her that night that he sensed the anxiety behind what she was saying. He propped himself up on his elbow and looked down at her, lying beside him, her face silver-edged and serious in the moonlight. Oh, how he loved that serious face. ‘What's up, Tikki-Tavy?' he said. ‘What are you worrying about?'

The tenderness of his voice provoked an honest reply. ‘It's those bloody rockets,' she said. ‘I keep thinking, what if I've made the wrong decision? What if one of them falls on the school and my girls are killed or injured, or on their houses, which they easily could, couldn't they, because there's no knowing where they're going to fall. Bloody awful things. It's my responsibility to care for my girls and my teachers. That's what I was appointed to do. And I do care for them. They're like my family. I love them dearly. And what have I done? It was my decision to keep them here. I'm the one who's supposed to protect them and look after them and what I've actually done is expose them to danger. Oh, I know the staff had a part in it. You don't have to tell me that. I mean I know it was a democratic decision. But I could have overruled them. I had the power to do it. And I didn't because I wanted to stay here too. I was being selfish and not thinking straight. And now we're entrenched. They keep saying “We've got to see it through” and it makes me feel absolutely dreadful every time they say it. Anything could happen, Tommy, and if it does it will be my fault.'

‘That, if you don't mind me saying so, is illogical,' he told her. ‘You didn't start the war and you didn't design the rockets.'

‘No but…'

‘What you're suffering from, my darling, is the weight of command. There isn't a leader alive who hasn't felt like that at some time or other. Except Hitler and you can't count him. And it's worse if your decisions mean that someone is going to get killed. Monty and Eisenhower face it every day and on a large scale. You think of all the men who were involved in the invasion and how many of them were killed. We have a decision to make, we weigh up the consequences, we make the decision. Then we have to watch the men under our command get shot and die in agony. Weight of command.'

Hearing the bitterness in his voice and watching the anguish on his face, she knew he was talking about the first war and his part in it. It was something she'd never heard him do before. ‘You too,' she said.

‘I've never forgotten it,' he said. ‘It stays with you for the rest of your life. Watching men die. I remember the first one as if it were yesterday. Only a kid. Couldn't have been more than seventeen. If that. He did as he was told and he had both his legs shot away. His guts were spilling out of his body and he was trying to push them back in with his hands and there was blood everywhere. He kept crying for his mother. I shall remember it to my dying day.'

‘Oh, Tommy,' she said, putting a hand on his arm, ‘my dear, dear man.'

‘Never told a soul till now,' he said gruffly. There were two moon-silver tears running down his cheeks. ‘Couldn't face it.' He brushed the tears away. ‘Anyway, I know what you're feeling, Tavy. We all feel it. That's the thing.'

‘Were you afraid?' she asked. They were talking so freely now and with such honesty it was possible to ask him.

‘Terrified,' he told her. ‘We all were. Shit scared. Only you couldn't show it, of course, not if you were an officer. You
had to keep a stiff upper lip. All that sort of thing. Keep up morale. Bloody stupid because we're all afraid under fire. Me, you, all of us.'

‘Yes,' she said. ‘You're right. We are. I certainly am. Only I'm like you. I can't show it. I have to keep up a bold front, especially to the girls. It does help, you know. It's necessary but it's bloody hard to do.'

‘The weight of command,' he said.

‘Yes,' she said. ‘I suppose so. Have you got a cigarette?'

He found his cigarette case, and lit up for both of them and for a few minutes they smoked and recovered.

‘I haven't talked like that since Pa died,' she told him.

He drew in a lungful of smoke. ‘I've never talked like that
before,
' he said. ‘Not to anyone.'

‘Then I'm honoured,' she said.

‘Don't keep things from me, Tavy,' he said. ‘Tell me when things are bad. I might not be able to help much but I don't like to think of you battling on and feeling alone.'

She took the last drag on her cigarette. ‘I love you very much,' she said. And kissed him.

Being under fire from a weapon as implacable and powerful as the German V2 bred a weary fatalism in the beleaguered citizens of London. There was no way they could defend themselves against an invisible attacker and nothing to be gained by worrying about their lack of defence. All they could do was get on with their lives and enjoy whatever pleasures came their way. The pubs did a rollicking trade and the cinemas were crowded with people watching the latest Hollywood musical and luxuriating in a technicoloured world where heroines were always beautiful and never smudged their lipstick, heroes were always square-jawed and impossibly handsome, good always triumphed and there was no such thing as war. ‘Load a' cobblers,' they said to one another, as they emerged into the grime and dust of their down-trodden world, ‘but it cheers you up a treat.'

Tommy confided to his old friend Tubby Ponsonby that he'd be quite glad to be out of it for a few days. ‘I shall worry about my Lizzie, naturally,' he said, ‘but I couldn't do anything to protect her even if I
was
here.'

‘Make the most of the great US of A, old fruit,' Tubby said. ‘That's my advice.'

Her father's departure left Lizzie in a quandary. It had been
very good of him to offer her a home when she came back to London and she
was
grateful to him, of course she was, but the house was too full of ghosts to be a comfortable place for her to live in. The garden and the old nursery were particularly difficult places, for although they triggered cheerful memories of all the stupid games she and her brothers used to play when they were young, they were a daily reminder that they were in France now and in danger, just like Ben, and that brought that awful scrabbling anxiety back into her belly again. The stairs and the parlour were even worse. Every time she looked up at the stairs she could see her mother drifting down them in that flowing, fluid way of hers, wearing one of her lovely evening dresses and looking young and alive, and the memory was so painful it made her ache with grief all over again. The parlour had been shut up, according to Mrs Dunnaway. ‘I polish it now and then,' she said, ‘but he never goes in.' Lizzie could understand why. On one poignant occasion she'd gone into the room herself to look for one of her father's books and it had been painful in the extreme. The minute she opened the door, she could see her mother in the sharpest and cruellest focus, sitting in her easy chair beside the fire with Pa facing her, just the way they used to do when she came in to kiss them goodnight as a child, when the world was peaceful and sunny and there was no such thing as a Blitz. She was overwhelmed with a grief as tearing and terrible as it had been when her mother was killed. She fell into the chair as if she'd been thrown there and cried for a very long time. No, she thought, as she passed the safely closed door on her way to the kitchen each morning, I can't stay here. Not without Pa anyway. I must find somewhere else. It wouldn't be easy, she knew that, because so many houses had been bombed and weren't fit to live in, but she would try. The next morning she
put cards in the shop windows of all the tobacconists within walking distance of the school and on the spur of the moment wrote a shorter appeal and pinned it to the staff notice board at school. Then she waited.

She got an answer at break the next morning and it came from the new art teacher, Fiona Fitzgerald, who wandered over to find her while she was pouring herself a cup of tea.

‘About this flat you're looking for,' she said, putting out a paint-smeared hand to pick up a cup. ‘I suppose you wouldn't be interested in sharing with me, would you? I live over the newsagent's. Mr Pearson's. You put a card in there yesterday.'

Lizzie was a bit surprised. She hadn't thought of sharing with another teacher. But it was a possibility. ‘Well, I might,' she said. ‘Could I see it?'

‘You could come back with me this afternoon, if you like. It's a bit of a mess but it would give you an idea.'

So they cycled to the newsagent's together. It was a small flat and it
was
in a bit of a mess with the breakfast things left on the kitchen table and milk bottles and letters on the floor at the top of the stairs but it had two bedrooms on the second floor and a sizeable kitchen.

‘I use the front room for painting,' Fiona explained, ‘so I live in the kitchen. I used to share with another student before the war but I live on my own now and – well – to tell you the truth, I don't like it on my own. Not with the rockets. I'd rather have some company. What do you think?'

‘Could we give it a try perhaps?' Lizzie asked. ‘For a week or something. See how we get on.'

‘I don't see why not,' Fiona said. ‘A week sounds fine to me. We could go halves on the rent, couldn't we?'

‘I ought to warn you, though,' Lizzie said, ‘I've got rather a lot of books.'

‘I ought to warn
you
I make a pig's ear of the place at Christmas,' Fiona confessed. ‘That's my muckiest time because of the decorations and making cards. But you know the sort of chaos there is when there's a lot of artwork going on. You must have seen it when you were a pupil. You'd better take a look at my workroom though before we decide. You ought to know what you're in for.'

It looked like an extension of the art room at Roehampton. There was an old kitchen table in one corner, covered in paint pots and piles of paper and brushes standing in old jam jars, an easel set to catch the light with a large unfinished work on it and canvases stacked against the walls.

Lizzie laughed. ‘Yes,' she said. ‘I see what you mean.' And she walked over to look at the work on the easel. It was a study of a row of weary-looking women standing in line outside a butcher's shop. There was something about it that reminded her of Henry Moore's picture of people sheltering in the underground during the Blitz. ‘It's good,' she said. ‘You've caught their weariness.'

The compliment pleased Fiona but she didn't comment on it. ‘So what do you think?' she asked.

Lizzie and her books moved in at the end of the week, courtesy of her father's wheelbarrow, and by Sunday evening she and Fiona had kept one another company through several explosions, all of them fairly distant, had exchanged life histories and had told one another about their love affairs, which in Fiona's case were plentiful and entertaining. On Monday morning Lizzie put their dirty dishes in the sink and left them to soak and they went cycling off to school together like old friends. By the time Tommy finally came home, the move was complete.

He was rather put out. ‘I know she's not been home for very
long,' he said to Octavia, ‘but it seems most peculiar to be in the house without her.'

‘She's got to live her own life,' Octavia told him. ‘You knew she wouldn't stay with you forever.' And she changed the subject. ‘How was the conference?'

‘Sensible,' he said. ‘They're going to call the new organisation the United Nations and it's going to have an army, you'll be pleased to know. There are forty-six nations involved in it already and if they sign up to it they will have to pledge to supply armed forces in the event of any crisis.'

‘I'm glad to hear it,' she said. ‘We should have thought of
that
when we set up the League and then we wouldn't have had all this terrible trouble.'

‘How have the rockets been?'

‘Bloody awful,' she told him. ‘Croydon's been really hammered, so Dora says. But at least we haven't had any in Wimbledon yet.'

 

Dora had been a full time warden ever since the doodlebugs began. There'd been no work for her at the estate agent's for a very long time apart from arranging the occasional let and she was useful and in demand as a warden. For the last six weeks she'd been on duty six days out of seven.

‘My David's having to look after himself,' she told her mother. ‘Just as well he's sensible.'

‘He could come here and stay with me, if you like,' Emmeline offered. ‘I'd look after him for you. I don't like to think of him being on his own.'

But Dora said it wasn't necessary. ‘I leave him things to heat up,' she said, ‘and he has his friends in to keep him company. He's a big lad now.'

‘That's all very well,' Emmeline complained to Octavia
later that evening. ‘He
is
a big lad, there's no denying that, but he's still young. He still needs looking after, especially with these damned rockets. Dora can be very hard sometimes. Maybe I ought to go over in the afternoons now and then, and give him his tea when he comes in. Only she'll probably say I shouldn't. I don't know what to do for the best.'

Octavia said she didn't know what to advise, which was more or less true, because Em would go her own way no matter what anyone said. But in the event the LCC solved her problem for her. At the end of October, Edith had a letter offering her one of the prefabs on Clapham Common. She was scatty with excitement, making lists of all the things she would need, and all the things she would like but probably couldn't afford, examining her post office book to see how much money she'd got, collecting tea chests and cardboard boxes so that she could start to pack.

‘Not that we need all that much,' she said. ‘That's the beauty of a prefab. It's all built in. It'll only be beds and bedding and a few pots and pans and things.'

‘And china and cutlery and a door mat and chairs and curtains,' Emmeline said. ‘You'll need nets being on the common or you'll have everybody looking in at you. You can take the bedding you've been using here, if you like. That'll be something to get you started and I shan't need it. We could go to Arding and Hobbs for the china. I'd suggest Ely's but they're a bit pricey. What do you think?'

They were so happy shopping and packing that it was several days before Emmeline realised that Edith would be living just along the road from Dora and David. ‘What a bit of luck,' she said. ‘He can come home to you when our Dora's out. That'll be much better.'

‘He'll eat all the cake,' Joan warned.

‘You and your cake,' Edith said. ‘Put that tablecloth in the tea chest for me, there's a good girl.'

They moved a month later and the house was very quiet and very empty when they'd gone. Emmeline spent the rest of the day drifting from room to room like a ghost, picking things up and putting them down again, tweaking the curtains and brushing up imaginary dust.

‘Now it's just us,' she sighed, as she and Octavia sat down to dinner on their first changed evening. ‘I shall miss them.'

‘And Tommy,' Octavia said. ‘When he's not gadding about the planet. What's in the evening paper?'

‘They're going to lift the blackout,' Emmeline told her. ‘
Lights are going on again in all our railway stations,
it says here. And about time too. I'm sick to death of being in the dark. Those damned rockets will get here no matter what we do, so why not have a bit of light?'

It was certainly cheering to think that they wouldn't have to stumble about in the dark any more and, like her cousin, Octavia felt in need of a bit of cheer. The Normandy invasion had been four months ago and yet the Allied armies were still battling their way towards Germany and had suffered a costly defeat at a place called Arnhem: the rockets were still causing far too many deaths and far too much destruction: the rations were as small and the food as dull as ever, the city as run down and dusty. If change was coming, it was coming very slowly.

‘Concentrate on the future,' Tommy advised. ‘That's what Tubby and I are doing.'

But the future seemed too distant for concentration and the present crowded it out. It wasn't until she had an unexpected phone call that there was any indication that her life would change in any way.

Emmeline was out visiting Edith and the girls and Octavia
was alone in her study, marking books and drinking yet another cup of tea, when the phone shrilled into her thoughts.

A cultured voice asked if she could speak to Miss Octavia Smith.

‘Speaking,' Octavia said, putting down her red pencil.

‘Kathy Ellis,' the voice said. ‘We met when you gave evidence to the Parliamentary Committee on the future of education.'

‘I remember it well,' Octavia said. And waited.

‘We were wondering whether we could tempt you into meeting us again,' Miss Ellis said. ‘There's an old friend of yours on the committee now and he's very keen to meet up with you again and we have one or two proposals we would like to put to you.'

Octavia opened her diary. ‘It would depend on what day you had in mind,' she said. But although she was being cautious, excitement was bubbling in her chest, making her feel warm and hopeful and useful, and she knew she would meet up with Miss Ellis and this mysterious ‘old friend' and listen to their proposals no matter what date they suggested.

 

They met at County Hall in a panelled room overlooking the grey and choppy waters of the Thames, on a cold, inauspicious day in the middle of December. The papers that morning were full of bad news. The Germans had started a sudden counter attack through the Ardennes forest and had advanced thirty miles into Belgium. Octavia had read the paper on her way up to Waterloo and she was still frowning as she walked into the room. There were only two people there: Miss Ellis, looking exactly the same as she remembered; and a middle-aged man in a battered brown suit and horn-rimmed spectacles with a lot of thick fair hair, worn in a cowlick over his forehead.
There was something vaguely familiar about the cowlick but she couldn't really say she recognised him.

‘Brian Urquhart,' he said, holding out his hand towards her. ‘We met at the College of St Gregory and All Souls. Rather a long time ago, I'm afraid. You came to give us a talk about how children learn. Best thing I ever heard. I've never forgotten it. I don't suppose you remember me.'

Other books

Bajo la hiedra by Elspeth Cooper
My AlienThreesome by Amy Redwood
Friends for Never by Nancy Krulik
Sticky Beak by Morris Gleitzman
The Truth by Jeffry W. Johnston
Longest Whale Song by Wilson, Jacqueline
Strange Tide by Christopher Fowler