Authors: John Wilcox
‘Not too cold for you, dear?’
‘No, thank you.’
‘Good. It’s not been too cold for the time of the year, has it?’ Without waiting for an answer, the woman poured a colourless liquid into a glass and handed to Polly. ‘This is just a drop of gin, dear, just to relax you a bit. Like a drop of gin, do you?’
Polly shook her head but took the glass anyway. What had to be had to be.
‘Yes, that’s the idea. Just knock it back, there’s a good girl.’ Mrs
Smith watched while Polly drank the gin – it was neat, of course. ‘Yes, that’s the way.’ A pause, then: ‘First time is it?’
Grimacing at the taste of the gin, Polly nodded.
‘Yes. Well, you’re only young, lovey, so I’m sure it’s for the best. How long has it been since you had your last … you know?’
‘I’ve missed two periods. I’ve never been late before. And I’m being regularly sick in the mornings, although there’s not much of a bulge yet.’ Polly looked closely at Mrs Smith’s hands. They seemed clean enough.
‘Yes. Best not to leave it any longer.’ The woman pointed at a door. ‘Now, if you go through there you’ll find the lav. Even if you’ve been recently, do what you can ’cos it all helps, see. When you’ve finished, come back in and just slip your clothes off and I’ll get a nice clean towel for you to lie on, ’cos this rubber might feel a bit cold to your bum. Put your clothes on that chair there. I’ll be back in a minute.’
The toilet was outside, in a little yard. There was no toilet roll, only pages torn from the
Birmingham Mail,
through the corners of which a piece of wire had been pushed and then hung on a nail driven into the wall. Polly tore off a piece and wiped the lavatory seat but, even so, decided to sit on her hands. No pee came and, deciding not to use the newspaper, she adjusted her clothing and moved back into the room. There, she stripped off her clothes and, carefully folding them out of habit, laid them on the chair. Then she stood with her back to the fire, her hands modestly folded across her breasts, shivering.
Mrs Smith re-entered, carrying a cotton pad and a small bottle. She gestured to the bed. ‘Just lie on that, dear, and take a sniff of this. It’ll put you out and when you wake up it’ll all be over.’
Polly climbed onto the bed and, despite the towel, the mattress felt cold and hard. She stared wide-eyed and trembling as Mrs Smith upended the bottle onto the pad and then approached her. The woman then paused, holding the pad well away from her.
‘Don’t be worried, love. I’ve done plenty of these, particularly since the war started. You won’t feel a thing. Just a bit sick, like, afterwards. Now, put your head on the pillow and take a good sniff of this.’
Firmly – almost roughly, as though tired of Polly’s despair – she put her left hand under Polly’s head and, with her right, pressed the pad onto her nose and mouth. Polly wanted to cough but within seconds found herself slipping away into oblivion.
She regained consciousness what seemed like only seconds later and immediately felt the need to vomit. Looking desperately to both sides of the bed she saw a zinc bucket on the left and was sick into it. She lay for a moment, hanging over the side, before vomiting again, perspiration dripping down her nose into the bucket. Exhausted, she lay back, her eyes closed, and felt Mrs Smith pull a blanket over her and begin wiping her face with a damp cloth.
‘All over now, dearie,’ she heard. ‘Not as easy as I would have liked but I’ve had worse. Still, it’s all done now. I’ve got rid of everything.’
The nausea had receded somewhat, but Polly felt a hard, unrelenting pain in her stomach. She forced her eyes open. ‘Was it a boy or a girl?’
The woman shook her head. ‘Didn’t notice. Never do. And it makes no difference now, dear, does it? Anyway, it’s all gone. Got rid of it.’
Polly stifled a groan as she thought of her son or daughter being flushed down that cold lavatory in the yard. But Mrs Smith was continuing: ‘You just take this aspirin now with a drink of this water and lie to get your breath back, so to speak.’ Her tone became apologetic. ‘Then I’m afraid I shall have to say toodle-oo to you because I’ve got another client at seven. Have you got far to go?’
‘No. Walking distance.’
‘Well, don’t rush. Close your eyes and I’ll wake you if you go to sleep.’
Polly did not go to sleep, in fact, and not just because she remained in pain. Her brain seethed in a tumble of contradictory thoughts. She felt relieved that something that she had been dreading was over – both the decision and the act. But she quickly became consumed with an intense feeling of guilt. She had just consigned her son or daughter to oblivion – but not merely
her
child but also Jim’s or Bertie’s. She put a hand to her hot forehead. Ah, she still did not know and now never would. What sort of woman was it that killed her unborn child without knowing who had fathered it? Why a whore, of course! She shuddered.
The walk home seemed to take for ever and she had to pause to lean by the side of a privet hedge protecting a front garden and vomit once more. An elderly lady put a concerned hand on her shoulder: ‘Are you all right, dear?’ She gave a distant smile, nodded and trudged on.
‘Goodness,’ said her mother when she arrived home. ‘Wherever have you been? You look as white as a sheet.’
‘Just a bit of overtime, Mum. Sorry, I forgot to tell you. I think I’ll go to bed now, if you don’t mind. I’m feeling a bit under the weather. Don’t worry. I’ll be right as rain in the morning.’
Once between the sheets she was dimly aware of her mother fussing and leaving a cup of tea on the bedside table, then she slipped into a deep sleep. In it, she dreamt that she was lying between Jim and Bertie, while shells screamed overhead. She was comforting them in the middle of the barrage, turning to one, then to the other, kissing and fondling them, cooing that she loved them both, each the same. Then they were suddenly on top of her, both at the same time, and she woke in the darkness, perspiration pouring down her face.
The tea was cold but she drank it. Then, on a sudden thought, she slipped out of bed and knelt down, beside the chamber pot, and prayed to God to forgive her for what she had done and, despite her sins, to keep both of her boys – her lovers – safe until the end of the war.
The letters that Polly wrote to her boys the next evening arrived together, as they always did, to end a period of two weeks without hearing from her that was beginning to cause concern to Jim and Bertie. She explained to them that she had been ‘just a bit under the weather’, but was feeling fine again. She enclosed, as she invariably did now, packets of cigarettes for them both and a little parcel of the sweet biscuits that Bertie loved. However, she asked if they would mind if she only wrote once a week to them both, because work was becoming more demanding, with long shifts, and she was sure that her letters were becoming equally boring, because ‘nothing happens to me, except work’. She had been to the moving pictures, though. And did they know that the funny little fellow with the bowler hat, Charlie Chaplin, was British? She had read that in the
Birmingham Mail,
so it must be true.
The autumn crept into Christmas, their second in Flanders, and
then a winter when the wind blew over the battered plain of the Salient and everyone in the front line wondered when and where the Big Push would be. For Jim and Bertie, as for all their comrades facing the Germans in that series of watery ditches that formed the line in Flanders, the deadly monotony of trench warfare in that tight, sodden pocket before Ypres was stressful in the extreme.
By March of 1916, few remained of the original draft of Territorials and Reservists who had fought with the pair in the First Battle of Ypres in 1914. The deprivations from the first two battles, the constant bombardment, the sniping and the losses resulting from the patrols and raiding across no man’s land had produced a steady reduction in the ranks manning the line. Although no major clashes had taken place since the summer of 1915 in the Salient, there was nothing tranquil about the line and no day passed without casualties, many of them fatal. Indeed, a wound so serious that it meant the recipient had to be sent down the line and on to England for treatment – a ‘Blighty One’ – was coveted. But those caused by the ever-present explosions of razor-sharp fragments of shrapnel were to be feared, for, apart from death, they could cause horrific injuries, including disfigurement.
All officers and senior NCOs were alerted to distinguish between genuine wounds and those that were self-inflicted. Single bullet wounds in the hand and forearm were viewed with extreme scepticism, for where the land between the two front lines was narrow – two hundred yards or less – the Germans had been known to obligingly respond to a cry of ‘Go on, Fritz, give us one’ by putting a bullet into the hand or arm so invitingly held aloft.
The pressure, however, sometimes drove men to further extremes. A cry of ‘Sergeant, come quick’ sent Jim hurrying down the trench one morning in the dark hours before stand-to. There, sprawled on
the slimy duckboards, lay the figure of a young infantryman. His head was hideously disfigured, for a bullet had entered the roof of his mouth and exited through the top of his skull. Strangely, however, his right boot and sock had been removed and placed on the fire step near him. Jim stood stock-still in wonder, before he realised that the boy had put the muzzle of his rifle in his mouth, curled his big toe around the trigger and pressed it down. It was to become a not unusual occurrence as the war wore on during 1916.
Jim, in fact, was now beginning to worry about Bertie. This was not the concern that he always felt about the little man – that he would be found dozing on duty, that he would be arraigned for being incorrectly dressed or that he had fallen foul of Sergeant Major Flanagan again. Indeed, the stripes earned by the pair had proved to be a deterrent of a kind to Black Jack, who found it difficult, for instance, to put a lance corporal on permanent latrine duty. And, when he put his mind to it, Bertie was a competent soldier, still one of the best marksmen in the battalion.
No, the characteristic that was starting to cause Jim anxiety was a kind of fey depression that was emerging in the behaviour of this most buoyant of men. Bertie was beginning to exhibit a fatalism about the war – that it was becoming crueller by the day, impossible to be resolved by any conventional means and that death was the only outcome for them all. It must be said that this attitude seemed, superficially, to be not uncommon along the line. But the average Tommy used it as a form of defence, a faux fatalism that concealed a cheerful scepticism about the conflict and the way it was being conducted by the generals on both sides. ‘Bugger them all and bugger us, too,’ summed it up.
Yet Lance Corporal Bertram Murphy was serious and was beginning to read strange things into the daily happenings of life
on the Salient. Jim, whose attitude towards religion was one of lazy scepticism and who had always regarded Bertie’s devotion to the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church with respect and a touch of envy, had thought at first that his friend was beginning to lose his faith. The rosary, for instance, had not been produced during the shelling for some time, and Bertie’s calling on the Holy Mother to give them succour during particularly bad moments had virtually ceased. Then the little man surprised his friend.
‘You know, Jimmy boy,’ he said one early morning when they were both standing guard, ‘God
is
with us in this cruel, awful place.’
‘Oh yes,’ said Jim. ‘Where’s the old chap hiding then, Bertie?’
‘Ah, son, you can’t see him. Now I was thinkin’ a while back that he didn’t exist, you know, what with all this terrible killin’ stuff and us bein’ forced to live in holes in the ground with the rats. Then I got to thinkin’ it through.’
‘Oh good. Tell me, then.’
‘That’s just what I’m doing, is it not, if you’ll let me.’
‘For goodness’ sake get on with it, then.’
‘So I will. So I will. So I remembered, of course, that although everything in the long run is his will, it’s us, here on earth, that fucks it all up, see? He doesn’t control everything we do. He has to let us get on with it and that’s what we’re doing now, with this terrible war – buggering things up. And the good Lord can’t – or won’t – stop us; it’s up to us to stop it. But he is still with us, here, in the middle of all this misery, and he shows to us that he is.’
‘What! With all the shrapnel tearing off blokes’ balls, arms and legs? How does he show it?’
‘Just think, Jim. What happens when the Very lights, the star shells go up? Eh?’
‘Well, we all freeze. Nothing happens. We stop what we’re doing.’
‘
Exactly
.’ Bertie thumped the sandbags in delight. ‘He stops the bloody fighting, just for a minute, but it’s enough to show that he’s with us. To remind us that he exists and that we ought to stop this rubbishin’ war.’
Jim frowned. ‘But they’re star shells. We send ’em up, and so do the Germans, to illuminate people moving in no man’s land and to prevent surprise attacks.’
‘There you are.’ Bertie thumped the sandbag again. ‘That proves me point. You said it yourself – “to stop surprise attacks”. We may send ’em up but the good Lord prompts us to, to stop the killin’ just for a minute or two. He
stops the war,
son. You can call ’em Very lights or star shells. But I reckon they’re starshine. That’s what those lights are, starshine.
His
light, to remind us he’s there. And I feel much better as a result.’
Jim gave him a long, penetrating look. ‘Well, I think you’re daft, Bertie, but if it makes you feel better to think that, then I’m happy too. Mind you, if we could put one up Black Jack Flanagan’s arse, then I think we would both be delirious.’
‘Aw, Jim lad, I’m being serious.’
‘So am I and God would surely be happy too.’
‘Are you never serious?’
‘Sometimes. Like now. Stand down. It’s the end of your guard.’
Jim knew that things were building up on the Western Front. He read the newspapers that his father sent him out from home and he talked with those officers, usually during the quieter watches of the night, who were happy to discuss the pattern of the war with young, intelligent NCOs. He understood the basic strategic position. Four hundred and seventy-five miles of trench line now stretched from the Belgian coast, sweeping across the face of France to the very foothills of Switzerland. Until the autumn of 1915, the
French were grimly holding on to four hundred miles of its length, while the British Expeditionary Force faced the enemy along a mere seventy-five miles. The Brits had proved that they could fight, at Ypres, Mons and Loos. But more was needed. The attrition of trench warfare over such a long front was imposing immense burdens on the French, who were beginning to bleed away a generation of young men at Verdun, and the British now had to assume a bigger share of that burden; to take over a larger portion of the line. So it was to the Somme, in the heartlands of Northern France, that Britain’s new army made its way.
Never before had Britain sent abroad so many men – a civilian army who had answered the call of Kitchener’s powerful poster, even after the great man had met his death in the icy waters of the North Sea. Kitchener’s New Army – no Reservists (except for officers, alas often elderly, brought out of retirement) or Territorials this time, but clerks from their desks, butchers from their blocks, barristers from high tables, miners from deep labyrinths, shepherds from the hills, artisans from their factories, weavers from their looms and teachers from their blackboards – took on the khaki and trained hard. Many formed into ‘Pals Battalions’, from the same district or even company, so that they all knew each other. They were inexperienced and, alas, only hurriedly, if enthusiastically, trained. But they were confident and proud, inspired by the deeds of the young men who had gone before, like Bertie Murphy and Jim Hickman, and they marched in masses into the Somme – often behind their own pipe bands that had never seen Scotland – and they took over the old French section of the line, where it had faced the Germans from Hébuterne to Thiepval, on the Ancre, from Thiepval to the banks of the River Somme itself. Reinforced by the veterans of the Gallipoli disaster who landed in the south of France and marched to the north to stiffen the new arrivals,
these were the young soldiers who were to launch the ‘Big Push’ that was to be known as the Battle of the Somme.
It began on the morning of 24th June, 1916, with the longest and most extensive barrage of artillery fire that had been known in warfare up until that point. Some seventy miles to the north, across the Belgian border, Jim and Bertie, disgruntled that they had not been allowed home leave for more than a year and yearning to see Polly, were on rest and recuperation leave from the trenches at Poperinghe when the news filtered through that the Big Push had been unleashed – and, thanked God it had not sprung from the Salient.
In fairness, it had been clear for some time that the reinforcements that had been flooding across the Channel were not destined for the old mud and bloodbath before Ypres. The regiments that garrisoned the Salient rarely seemed to change; only their constituent parts were supplemented to stem the steady erosion caused by the dead and the wounded.
‘It’s because they trust us to know where the Jerries are, you see,’ said Bertie. ‘We’re good at it. I wish we weren’t.’
They were sitting together in a billet at the west of Pop. A sergeant’s mess had been established there but Jim preferred to spend off-duty time, as ever, with his old friend. The first day of the attack on the Somme, three days ago, according to the British army newspaper the
Wipers Times
had met with great success, with breaks through the German lines at several places.
Hickman threw down the paper with disgust. ‘I don’t believe it,’ he said. ‘From what I can see, the Germans – who got there first, don’t forget – have had plenty of time to establish themselves on high ground, a bit like here, and set up really good defensive positions. We’ve seen here how good they are with concrete and stuff. With the heaviest bombardment in the world, I still don’t see us just breaking through ’em on the first day.’
‘Hmm.’ Bertie was distant, his eyes looking out of the dirty window, but unseeingly. He was clearly not interested in the Somme. ‘Jim,’ he said, ‘it’s amazin,’ ain’t it, that you an’ me have survived this long amidst all this killin’?’
‘What? Well, I suppose so. We’ve just been lucky, I suppose. Although we’ve been out here long enough now to know what to do. How to get by, so to speak.’
‘Yes, but think of all the good lads that have gone. Many of ’em were the old Regulars who knew more about anythin’ than we ever did. But they went down and here we still are.’
Jim sniffed. ‘Yes, well, best not to think about it. Just keep your head down and get on with it.’
They were both silent for a while. Then: ‘One of us is bound to get it soon,’ said Bertie. ‘I do hope it’s me rather than you. You’ll be better able to look after Polly, that’s for sure.’
‘Stop talking rot. Shall we go to the pub tonight? Have you got any money?’
Bertie fished in his pocket. ‘Sergeant, darlin’ boy, I’m rich. Look. About twenty francs. Mind you, I was richer yesterday. I sent twenty-five shillings from me pay back to me dad. He’ll spend it on Guinness. Wish I could.’
‘Ah, come on. The wine here is not bad. I’ve got ten francs left. Let’s get plastered and you can thank God that we’re not on the Somme. Shame they can’t distil your starshine here. I suppose it would be like getting pissed on communion wine.’
‘Don’t be blasphemous, Jimmy. Someone might be listening.’
Poperinghe had changed to some extent, since their visit in 1914, but overall it had remained unaltered. It was right at the extreme range of the German big guns on the ridges and so escaped the kind of bombardment that had devastated Ypres itself. But the enemy
occasionally indulged itself from a distance in firing gas shells at the town. As always, the efficacy of a gas attack depended upon the direction of the wind, and a recent innovation at Pop was the establishment of a noticeboard outside the town hall, which gave daily indications of the state of the wind vis-à-vis a gas attack in terms of ‘Safe’ or ‘Dangerous’. Otherwise, the little town retained its gruesome charm as a kind of military tourist spot, near enough to the front line to make it convenient for short-term leave (and sudden recall when a large-scale attack seemed imminent) but also far enough away to give it relative safety. And its streets remained narrow, crowded and full of bars and brothels, offering British soldiers an opportunity to put behind the misery of the trenches for a short time and to spend their shilling-a-day pay. The noticeboard that day had signalled that the wind direction was safe, and so for Jim and Bertie that night the Café des Allies beckoned.