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Authors: John Preston

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BOOK: The Dig
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After cleaning myself off as best as I could, I headed back to the cottage. As the path rounded the bend near Sutton Hoo House, I saw there was a light on upstairs. The curtains were half-drawn. In the gap between them stood the silhouette of a figure, staring out into the night.

The moment dawn broke, I was up and out of the house. All the way to the mounds I kept dreading what I might find. First, I unpegged the tarpaulins and rolled them back. Then I looked inside. I had to have another look to make sure. As far as I could tell, there was no damage at all. In fact, there was scarcely evidence of any rainfall — apart from a general darkening of the soil. For a moment I even wondered if I’d imagined the whole thing.

I spent the next hour and a half waiting for John and Will to arrive, growing increasingly impatient and wondering what could be keeping them — until I remembered that it was a Saturday and they wouldn’t be coming at all.

However, the boy Robert did come out to help. I gave him a broom and we spent the next hour or so sweeping away the puddles of water from around the edges of the tarpaulins. When we had finished I said, “Time for some tea, don’t you think?”

“Yes, please.”

We went into the hut and I boiled the kettle on the Primus stove. I spooned the tea from the caddy into the pot and then poured in the water. Steam rose and gathered under the roof. I held the mug cupped in my hands. As I did so, I noticed the boy held his mug the same way. While we were waiting for the tea to cool, he said, “Do you know who built your ship, Mr. Brown?”

“Not exactly, no. Not yet. I thought at first it was the Vikings. But now it looks as if it was the Anglo-Saxons. The
Vikings, they didn’t invade until about AD 900. But if it’s the Anglo-Saxons that would make it older. Much older,” I added.

He thought about this, then said, “But there’s something I don’t understand.”

“What’s that?”

“Why anyone would want to bury a ship under the ground.”

“Probably so that the ship could take whoever was buried inside from this world into the next.”

“But where is this next world, Mr. Brown?”

“Ah, well. No one is absolutely sure about that.”

“How do they know it’s there if nobody is sure?”

“They don’t know. Not exactly. They just … hope.”

“But surely they should have some idea?”

“I suppose they should really. I can’t say I’ve ever thought about it like that before.”

“I mean, I know where Norwich is, even though I’ve never been there.”

“It’s more complicated than that,” I told him.

“How?”

“Because it just is. It’s something you’ll understand better when you’re older.”

He went back to staring at his tea. But not for long. He looked up and seemed about to speak. Then he stopped himself.

“Go on, boy.”

“Do you think there will be a war, Mr. Brown?”

“I don’t know. I hope not.”

“Mr. Grateley thinks there will be. So does Mr. Lyons.”

“Do they now?”

I took out my pipe and began cleaning it. Running my penknife round the inside of the bowl and then tapping it on the wall of the hut to dislodge the bits and pieces.

“What was it like?” he asked.

“What was what like?”

“Fighting.”

I filled the pipe with a wad of tobacco and lit it. Smoke drifted up in front of my face.

“I didn’t fight,” I said.

“You didn’t fight?” he repeated, his voice rising in astonishment.

“No.”

“Why ever not?”

“Because they wouldn’t have me. They reckoned I wasn’t medically fit. On account of an illness I had when I was about your age.”

“What sort of illness?”

“Diphtheria.”

“Oh … Mr. Spooner and Mr. Jacobs both fought.”

“Yes, I know they did.”

“Were you very sad about not being able to fight?”

“Yes, I was.”

“Most of your friends must have gone.”

I nodded.

“Did many of them die?”

“Sixty-one men from my village alone.”

Now we both sat and stared down at our tea. Strips of grass showed through the gaps in the floor — greener than usual for being so thin.

“If the Germans do invade, Mr. Brown, do you think they will sail up the estuary and land at Woodbridge?”

I laughed and said, “I don’t think there’s much chance of that.”

“They might do, you know.”

“Why do you say that?”

“Because it’s been done before.”

“Who by?” I said, humoring him.

“By the Vikings.”

He was quite right, of course, although I’d never thought of it before. I must have been too stuck in the past to join it up to the present. Now that it had been, I couldn’t help wishing it had stayed where it was.

“Come on, then,” I said. “We can’t stay here nattering all day.”

I threw the dregs of my tea through the door. Robert followed my example. However, he had more tea left in his mug than I did and it splashed over my boots.

By the time we came out, I reckoned it was safe to climb down the ladder into the ship. Even at close quarters there didn’t seem to be any serious damage. Nothing but a few minor slippages. The ribs of sand were still quite hard and the pink patches were showing up just as clearly as before. I’d been toying with the idea of making a start on the center
of the ship. But without Will and John to help shift the earth, there wasn’t much I could do on my own.

The next best thing seemed to be to carry on round the sides. It wasn’t long before I found something that made my heart sink — signs of a filled-in hole. It descended straight from the middle of the barrow, right to where the burial chamber might be. The remains of the robbers’ flute. You could see the change in the soil quite clearly. It was like a chimney dropping down into the ground.

So they’d been here all right. Just as I feared. However, it was impossible to tell at this stage if the hole extended all the way into the ship or stopped short. At one side of it were the remains of a burnt-off post. There was a central core of black surrounded by a red ash band. I reckoned this was probably the remains of a fire that had been lit by the robbers. My suspicions were confirmed by some shards of pottery that I found close by. These weren’t Anglo-Saxon — nothing like it. More like sixteenth century, I’d say.

When I had finished troweling and brushing, the post jutted up eight inches in the air — a good deal narrower round the base than it was round the top. As I was clearing away the last of the sand, I looked up to see Reid Moir framed against the sky.

“There you are, Brown,” he said, as if this was the last place in the world he expected to find me.

He showed no sign of wanting to come down the ladder. Probably he was bothered about muddying his clothes. Instead, he waited at the top for me to join him.

“So, this is it, then?” he said when I’d done so.

“This is it,” I confirmed.

He nodded, his head moving smoothly up and down like a pump handle.

“Bigger than Snape, then?”

“Oh, yes. Bigger than Snape. Definitely.”

“And Oseberg?”

“Still too early to say.”

“Hmm … You realize what this means, don’t you? We — Ipswich, that is — will be the envy of every museum in the country. In Europe even. Just think of that.”

“I know,” I said. “I have been.”

He gave a smile of sorts. “Now then, Brown, I hope you haven’t gone around telling anyone about anything.”

“How do you mean, Mr. Reid Moir?”

“I mean, I hope you haven’t told anyone what has been discovered here.”

“No,” I said. “No, I don’t think so.”

“Good. That’s a relief.”

“Except for my wife.”

“Oh …” he said. “Your wife? Can she be trusted to keep quiet?”

“I would have thought so. To be honest, she’s not that interested in archaeology.”

“So much the better. The last thing we want is anyone else sniffing about and trying to steal our thunder.”

I thought Reid Moir might have finished. But I was wrong. “I assume you have been keeping a field book. With everything properly detailed. Sketched, measured and so forth?”

“Of course.”

“Show it to me, please?”

I fetched the field book from the shepherd’s hut. Reid Moir started to leaf through the pages. Slowly at first and then more quickly. And then he stopped. With the book still open in his hands, he looked up.

“But, Brown, this is the most frightful mess. I mean, just look at these drawings. They’re desperately crude. And some of the entries are in pencil. Don’t you realize this could be an important document? One that reflects on everyone concerned with the excavation. Just think, man. Surely I don’t need to remind you who you are working for.”

“For Mrs. Pretty,” I said.

“What? No, no … Now don’t bandy semantics with me, Brown. You know perfectly well what I am talking about. You must make more of an effort with your presentation. I hardly need point out that we are in a very delicate position here. The last thing we want is criticism from other quarters.”

Closing the book and handing it back to me, he said, “I also notice you appear to have a child working here.”

I explained that Robert was Mrs. Pretty’s son.

“I see … Nonetheless, it creates a sloppy impression. Try to ensure he is less visible in future, will you?”

For the rest of the day I carried on smarting over Reid Moir’s comments. I was so angry I even stopped work early. When I arrived back at the cottage there was a parcel from Maynard.
Inside it was a large green-bound volume and a letter explaining that this was the only information he had been able to find on the Oseberg dig. I looked at the account of the excavation. It certainly seemed thorough, and there were plenty of illustrations. Unfortunately, it was in Norwegian.

I wrote to May, saying that in future I will pack it in and go home rather than be dictated to. That evening at supper, I dare say I was a bit quieter than usual. By way of making conversation, Billy asked me if I had ever heard the story of Colonel and Mrs. Pretty’s courtship.

“No,” I told him. “I don’t believe I have.”

“It’s quite a tale,” he said. “Isn’t it, Vera?”

Vera agreed that it was quite a tale. With no further encouragement Billy was off, with Vera making appropriate noises in all the right places. Apparently Colonel Pretty had lived up in Lancashire, close to Mrs. Pretty’s family — or Miss Edith Dempster, as she was then. The Dempsters had made their money from building gasometers. Miss Edith was an only child. Her mother had died when she was young and she had stayed on at home, looking after her father. He’d been in poor health — although Billy didn’t know with what.

Every Sunday, the colonel used to see Miss Edith in church. When her father’s health permitted, he would pay her a visit. And then, on her eighteenth birthday, the colonel asked Miss Edith to marry him. However, she turned him down, saying she couldn’t possibly leave her father on his own. The following year he proposed again — also on her birthday. Once again she said no.

The colonel, though, was nothing if not perseverant. The next year he was back again. And the next. But still the same thing happened. Every year he would come — always on Miss Edith’s birthday — and every year she would turn him down. This went on for seventeen years.

“Seventeen years!” repeated Vera in a dreamy sort of way. This while looking over at me to make sure I’d taken it in.

Finally, the old boy had died. When the colonel came round next year, he made his proposal. And this time she said yes, she would marry him. But by now she was in her mid-thirties. As for the colonel, he was over fifty. Nonetheless, they married and moved down here to make a fresh start. They were here for about ten years. And then something quite unexpected happened. At the age of forty-seven, Mrs. Pretty fell pregnant.

“Forty-seven!” repeated Vera again. Except this time I nearly beat her to it. Before supper I’d been so angry I couldn’t concentrate on anything else. But now all that had disappeared. For the first time in a long while I wasn’t thinking about the ship. Apart from anything else, I’d never heard of anyone that age having a child.

At first there were no problems, Billy said. But then midway through her term Mrs. Pretty had caught typhus. Although the baby — Robert — was fine, her health had never recovered. Not fully. As for the colonel, he had died of a heart attack in the spring of 1937. Died on his birthday by an odd sort of coincidence.

None of us said too much afterwards. When I went up to bed, I found I couldn’t sleep. Not for a while anyway. I
couldn’t get this picture of the colonel out of my mind. Every time I shut my eyes I saw him climbing up these stone steps to a big front door — and then going back down again. I wondered how he’d stood it. Year after year of being turned down. All the time hoping that one day his luck might change.

I woke just after four o’clock. Lying in bed, I waited for the sky to lighten. Eventually dawn broke with an angry flourish. As I walked out to the mounds, purple bands spread themselves across the horizon. The water in the estuary was all ruffled up with a mass of white-crested waves rushing this way and that.

As the morning went on, my spirits began to lift. I became convinced that the grave-robbers never reached the burial in the Sutton Hoo ship. They tried — obviously — but stopped short for some reason. I’d dug out around four feet of the flute when it just dwindled away. Underneath it, the soil was all thick and sticky again. Perhaps they were frightened of being buried, or maybe they just became disheartened.

I explained to John and Will that from now on we would be concentrating on the middle of the ship, rather than following the lines of the rivets. They didn’t see anything unusual in this. Or if they did they were too tactful to say so.

Once again, I proposed working down in layers from the surface. First moving in one direction, then coming back in the other, taking off about six inches at a time. With our coal shovels attached to the ends of long ash handles, we began shaving down the area. These ash handles came in very handy,
allowing us to toss the earth right out of the trench to be barrowed off.

All day, we continued shaving away, keeping a careful watch for any changes in the color of the sand. It was while John and I were working on the section west of the center of the ship — Will was on wheelbarrow duty at the time, with Robert helping out — that I came across a darkened discoloration. It was no more than quarter of an inch wide, running crossways across the ship. First of all I took it to be the remains of another of the rib timbers. But the more I thought, the less sure I was. It could be another of the timbers, of course. On the other hand, it could be all that was left of one of the walls of the chamber itself.

BOOK: The Dig
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