Dunkirk Spirit Part 43

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'Well,' said Charlie finally. 'The fact that all the leaves have fallen in a clear clockwise spiral indicates that something will happen soon.'

'Something?' asked D'Arcy. 'You surprise me.'

'You have to see it like this.' Charlie pointed a blackened finger into the mug. 'You take the top of the spiral, here. That's your in-sti-gating event and all other subsequent events are what will follow. So now we have to determine just what will happen.'

'Please.'

'It's all down to shapes,' he explained. 'A triangle means good fortune, but a square means you need to be cautious, and a circle that's great success.'



'So what do you see?'

'Squares,' said Charlie.

'And what about those?' asked D'Arcy. 'It looks like a load of ants.'

'Well, ants ain't good. They're trouble.'

'What would const.i.tute a good sign, then?'

'Grapes. That's happiness.'

'Perhaps they aren't ants. Perhaps they're grapes.'

'That's not the way about it.' Charlie shook his head. 'You have to see these things as a whole. Squint your eyes and now what does it look like?'

'Actually, it looks a bit like a boat; like Noah's Ark.'

'Well, that's good. Boats mean a visit, particularly from a friend.'

'I think we should leave it there,' said D'Arcy, standing up. 'On a hopeful note.' He stretched out his arms and yawned. 'How much longer?'

''Till when?' asked Charlie.

'Until low tide,' insisted D'Arcy.

'For Heaven's sake!' Charlie exhaled, showing his irritation. 'Give it a rest, will yer! You won't make it come 'round any sooner if you keep asking.'

'Have we got any playing cards?' asked D'Arcy.

'No we 'aven't and, before you ask, we don't have any chess sets, draughts boards, snakes 'n' ladders or tiddly b.l.o.o.d.y winks.'

Beside the barge and towering above them was the wreck of an armed French trawler. Her steam funnel, painted yellow and black, had been ripped apart like the skin of a banana. Charlie had thoroughly searched the boat, finding nothing more than a bag of tart green apples and a bottle of calvados. At Captain D'Arcy's suggestion they had scratched marks on the label and divided the bottle into portions to be consumed, not immediately as Charlie had suggested, but hourly until the tide should drop sufficiently for them to wade ash.o.r.e. It was a way of pa.s.sing the time.

'What time is it now?' He turned and shouted at Charlie.

'What?'

'I said, what time is it now?'

''Alf five.'

With the monitor gone, now cruising the horizon in company with a destroyer, the coast with its fires and billowing smoke had the air of a forlorn and lonely land, charred and smouldering. The distant explosions beat out a warning to trespa.s.sers like jungle drums.

'Fancy another cuppa, 'arsy?' shouted Charlie.

'What?'

Charlie waved the teapot. 'I said d'you want another?'

'Oh, why not?'

19:45 Friday 31 May 1940.

RAF Biggin Hill, Kent 'h.e.l.lo, Simon,' said Ginger.

'Oh, h.e.l.lo,' said his kid brother, lacking all enthusiasm.

'How are things?'

'Don't ask!' said Simon. 'Dad's in a terrible mood.'

'Why?'

'He has to finish the Anderson shelter or he'll get into trouble.'

'I thought he did it ages ago.'

'No,' said Simon. 'He dug the hole, then said his back hurt and it's been sitting there ever since, filling with water.'

'I'm sure you must be a big help to him,' said Ginger, smiling.

'You bet! I've been bailing the blooming thing out since I came home from school. I wish I was in the RAF. Have you killed any Germans yet?'

'Hundreds!'

'Liar!'

'Is Mum there?'

'I'll go get her. And think of me working my fingers to the bone to keep this family safe.'

'I will.'

'Neil, darling! How are you?'

Ginger tried to answer but his mother was too quick for him.

'Are you getting enough to eat? And dressing warm enough? I'm told it can get very cold up there.'

'Mum! Please! I'm twenty years old. I know how to dress myself.'

'I am so glad you are not flying bombers,' she told him. 'They talked about it on the news. Attacking enemy aerodromes. And they said some of our planes are still missing. Their poor mothers.'

'Mum, I told you. I'm lucky. I'm just patrolling the coast. Nothing ever happens.'

'And they said nearly eighty Germans had been shot down. I'm so glad you're not doing that sort of thing.'

Ginger was in danger of running out of conversation. 'I've one bit of news, mum. I'm now flying in the squadron leader's section. I'm their new Blue Three.'

'You were Red Two before,' she reminded him. 'That's not a demotion is it?'

'Hardly, mum. It's an honour to be the squadron leader's wingman. You should be proud.'

'I am. I am. But it's all a bit confusing really. You're still a pilot officer, aren't you?'

'I'm still a pilot officer, mum. It doesn't mean I have to be a sergeant again.'

'Well, I'm very proud. You clever boy!'

Ginger felt a horrible rush of emotions and he suddenly craved a cigarette. He also wanted a whisky. Just as soon as he put the telephone down he was going to get hammered. He corrected himself. Just as soon as he put the telephone down he was going to do the right thing and call Peeky Beaky's parents to break the news of his fiery death. After that he would call Spotted d.i.c.k's widower father and give him the good news that his only son was in all probability a prisoner of war. After that he would get hammered.

'How's Gran?' he asked.

'Oh, don't ask!' His mum lowered her voice and he imagined her cupping a hand around the mouthpiece. 'She's developed this really funny thing about shoes.'

'Shoes?'

'She's been all through the wardrobe and her boxes in the loft. You know how much stuff she brought with her. I had no idea she had so many shoes!'

'Give them to the refugees,' suggested Ginger.

'Well, I would,' confided his mum. 'She says not one single pair fits! But they do! They all fit perfectly.'

'Really?'

'She dragged me all around town yesterday looking for a pair that did fit.'

'And?'

'And there wasn't a single pair she liked. Sometimes,' said Ginger's mum. 'Sometimes...' She left the threat hanging as she always did. Ginger wondered just what she might ever do if pushed hard enough. She could hardly send Gran to her room. She already believed that the neighbours were tunnelling beneath the floorboards.

'Take her to see Doctor Stewart again,' he suggested.

'I don't know why I bother. I really don't. She's got a cabinet full of medicines and pills but she never takes them.'

'Mum!' interrupted Ginger. 'They're calling us to a briefing now. I'll try and call you tomorrow.'

'It is Wood, isn't it?' asked Bonzo, the squadron leader, knitting his brows. 'Groupie keeps getting you confused with some chap called Steele.'

'Can't imagine why,' said Ginger.

'I was looking for him everywhere.' Bonzo cracked a narrow smile, sending the waxed points of his moustache upwards like two blonde semaph.o.r.e flags. 'Anyway, I just wanted to say welcome to my section. I know you had a spot of bother today. It happens to us all. That's why I need a new wingman, of course.'

Bonzo hesitated. The words dead man's shoes flashed before his eyes. 'Where was I?' he asked suddenly. 'Oh, yes. Go see Sergeant Merrill and get your guns sighted to four hundred yards. I like to biff 'em as soon as I can.'

'Yes, sir.'

'And I demand that my wingmen stay tight. I want to be able to see you out of the corner of my eye.' He halted to remove a piece of lint from his shoulder. 'And I like to keep radio chatter to a minimum. I heard your Red Section today. You were like a lot of silly schoolboys. I won't have any of that.'

'No, sir.'

'Anyway, I just wanted to come over and say welcome to Blue Section.'

Ginger nodded and turned back to the bar.

'Another whisky, please Williams.' He slid forward his gla.s.s.

'Is that another large one, sir?'

20:45 Friday 31May 1940.

Bergues-Hondschoote Ca.n.a.l, France 'I really hate this time of day,' confided Guardsman Samson.

'Yeah, why?' asked Sergeant Harris.

'Well, it's like when I was a kid.' He popped half a biscuit into his mouth and crunched away, using the few good teeth he retained at the back of his mouth. 'I'd be playing in the street. It would just be getting dark. Next thing, me mum's standing on the step, her arms folded so I know she's in a bad mood, and I've got to go to bed. I really hated that!'

'Never bothered me,' the sergeant told him. 'Now, my favourite time is about five-o'clock when the sun's just going down. Have you noticed how all the colours seem stronger somehow?'

Samson made an mmm sound as he delved with a finger to remove a solid wad of compressed biscuit from a gap between his molars.

'We'd be coming up to the end of the day. The whole countryside would be bathed in that golden light. The birds would be twittering and you could smell the warm corn and watch it sway in the breeze, like the sea or something.'

'And then you'd be off down the pub.'

The sergeant gave a gentle laugh. 'Yeah, down the pub. Work up an appet.i.te, not that I didn't have one anyway. Sink a couple of jars and stroll home to dinner.'

'Your misses a good cook?' asked Samson.

'I was thinking of my mum, actually,' said Sergeant Harris. 'My misses couldn't cook for toffee.' He looked sad for a moment and then resumed his thread. 'But my mum, she was a good cook. Nothing in the fancy line, mind you. Just good English grub.'

'Like what?'

'Well,' mused Sergeant Harris. 'Sundays we always had a roast of some kind, depending on what was to be had. Maybe a chicken or maybe a rabbit, or a nice belly of pork...'

'What sort of tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs?'

'We always had three veg, not counting potatoes, of course.'

Dunkirk Spirit Part 43

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Dunkirk Spirit Part 43 summary

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