Authors: Liz Trenow
Tags: #Historical, #General Fiction, #Twentieth Century, #1940's-1950's
Sitting down for dinner, we toasted to absent friends, and Mother said, “To Harold, my dear husband.” The room went quietâit was the first time in many months that she had referred to him by name. “I thought I'd never recover,” she went on, “but I'm still here, thanks to you girls. I know he's up there watching, pleased to see us all getting on with it in spite of everything.”
“To Harold, my mentor and my friend,” Gwen said, lifting her glass, and we all did the same. In the somber silence that followed, the telephone made us jump. I ran out into the hall, my heart banging in my chest.
“Stefan?”
“Stephen. I'm just about to catch a train to London and if I can make it, I'll get a connection from Liverpool Street and be there eleven-ish. Is it okay to arrive so late? Sorry I couldn't let you know before, but they've only just released us.”
“Of course it's okay. It's wonderful. We've got a feast lined up.”
“Is there enough? I don't want to make you short.”
“There's loads. And you will stay here with us, of course?”
“What about Grace?” The pips started.
“I don't care what Mother thinks. I'm a big girl now. And I love you.”
“I love you too,” he said, just before the line went dead.
⢠⢠â¢
Vera had gone home and Mother and Gwen had giggled their way to bed by the time Stefan arrived, shortly before midnight. He was in already in mufti, carrying his small brown suitcase and an army-issue kit bag, his face streaked with railway soot and gray with exhaustion. I made cocoa and we sat at the kitchen table holding hands, just looking at each other, drinking in the joy of being together. Then, faintly, I heard church bells. I raised the sash, and the peal was clear now, echoing off the wall of the mill opposite.
“What's that for?” he asked, looking alarmed.
“This is the first Christmas Eve for four years they've been allowed to ring the church bells,” I said. “Now there's no fear they'd have to use them to warn about an invasion.”
“Bells or no bells, it's enough for me to be back here with you.” He hugged me from behind, nuzzling my neck. “It's two and a half years since I left Westbury. In that police van. Remember?”
I nodded, barely able to speak with happiness. In the warmth of each other's arms, we welcomed the chill night air, listening to the peals ebbing and flowing in the breeze. As they ended, I closed the window. When I turned around, his face registered something.
“Have you got my writing case? The one I left with you?”
I tiptoed upstairs to get it.
He unzipped it, took out a buff envelope from one of the pockets, and set it aside on the table. “Photos of my familyâyou've seen them before.” From another pocket, he pulled out a small piece of blue and white silk, with two tassels threaded into it. “This is a part of my prayer shawl.” I felt the weave: good quality twenty-twenty-four rep. “You know I don't pray. But every English boy has a cricket bat, and every Jewish boy has a tallith. Mother insisted I bring it, to remind me.”
Finally he pulled out a small, red felt drawstring bag and put it on the table in front of me. “This was my Mother's. I want you to have it.”
Hands shaking, I pulled it open. Inside was a silver band, set with small pearls and sapphires. Stefan, church bells, and now a ring, I thought; a perfect Christmas.
He took it from me, slipped it onto my wedding finger, then looked up with a huge smile.
“Let's get married. Soon,” he said.
That night, we barely slept. We seemed to have been elevated to another plane, beyond the clinging desperation and anxiety of imminent parting that wartime so often brought. Exhaustion made our lovemaking lazy and languid, climbing slowly till we balanced on a pinhead of intensity before falling in a torrent of relief and joy.
Afterward I lay awake for hours, my whole body glowing.
⢠⢠â¢
I spent the morning of my wedding dayâSt. Valentine's 1944âwith my head in the toilet. Gwen brought a cup of weak tea and rested it on the side of the sink.
“I feel dreadful,” I groaned. “I haven't eaten anything different from the rest of you. Do you think it's just nerves?”
“Everyone's nervous on their wedding day,” she said, then added mysteriously, “but could it be something else?”
I couldn't think what she was talking about. But then, as I retched into the bowl once more, it dawned on me. “I haven't been counting,” I said, wiping my mouth. “But it does seem a while. Oh hell, I can't be, can I? I thought I'd been careful.”
“It's just as well you're getting married today,” she said, laughing unsympathetically. “Otherwise you might have some explaining to do.”
The rest of the day went by in such a spin I barely gave it another thought till later. It was a plain ceremony in Westbury Registry office with just Mother, Gwen, and Vera as witnesses. I wished so much that Father could have seen usâany concerns he'd had about Stefan would have melted away as soon as he knew he had joined up to fight for the Allies.
Mother had spent days at the sewing machine: a simple knee-length dress and jacket in cream Shantung silk for me, and pale green silk blouses for Vera and Gwen as my “matrons of honor.” She ran out of time to make anything for herself, so wore her best tweed suit.
Stefan, of course, wore his Pioneer Corps dress uniform. It made him look taller and more handsome, but at the same time rather formal and remote, not part of our world. Was it the uniform, I wondered, or just the natural nerves of a young man on his wedding day? Even after the ceremony and a couple of glasses of sparkling wine at the White Hart, he seemed tense and quieter than usual.
Never mind,
I thought,
just wait till we get to our hotel. I know how to make him smile.
We had only one night together before he had to return to the Pioneers. In the almost deserted hotel, the “honeymoon suite” was dominated by an imposing four-poster bed. From the window was the perfect Suffolk view: a village street lined with wood-beamed houses, sloping down to a ford complete with Muscovy ducks and, in the distance, an imposing flint church. In the bay were two Lloyd loom chairs. He sat down and lit a cigarette, apparently oblivious to the view.
“Come and give Mrs. Holmes a cuddle,” I said, jumping up onto the bed, admiring the soft white quilt and lace-trimmed linen. “I've got something to tell you.”
He turned, but his face seemed hardly to register that I'd spoken. He did not move.
“Stefan?”
“For Christ's sake, it's
Stephen
,” he snapped. “Don't you realize how important it is?” He went to the basin, straightened the mirror, wetted his hands, and ran them through his hair.
“I'm so sorry,” I said gently. “It's hard to think of you as anything other than the Stefan I love so much. I thought it would be okay when we are alone?”
He shook his head, stony faced. “Not even then,” he said through his teeth.
“Okay, you'll be Stephen from now on, I promise, even in private. Or do you prefer Steve?” My stomach knotted with confusion and disquiet.
“Whatever you like. Just not Stefan.” His voice was taut as a warp.
“But it's not just that, is it?” I climbed off the high bed and sat in a chair. Whatever was biting him?
He stayed at the basin with his head bent, knuckles white from gripping the sides of the porcelain. I waited, rigid in the uncomfortable chair, hardly daring to breathe.
What was it he couldn't tell me? What could the worst thing be? He didn't love me anymore? He'd found out I was pregnant and didn't want the baby? Bad news about his family? He'd committed some terrible crime and was about to be court-martialed?
“Lily?” His head was still down, his voice muffled.
“Yes? What is it? Tell me.” My thoughts ran wild, but the one thing I failed to imagine was what he now said.
“When I wore that uniform today, it was,” he hesitated, “not right.”
“Not right? What was wrong with it?”
He loosened his grip on the basin, straightened his back, and came to sit down opposite me. “Me wearing it was wrong.”
“Why? You're in the Pioneer Corps, aren't you?”
“Not any longer. I've been transferred.” His eyes still refused to meet mine.
“Where to?”
“This is the problem. I am not allowed to tell you.”
I struggled to understand. “Why is it so secret? Where are you going, what are you going to do?”
“I don't know any of these things yet. But even if I did, I couldn't tell you.”
“But I am your wife.” He'd disappeared inside himself again. “Stefâ¦Stephen?”
In the silence, I could hear my heart hammering.
“I'm sorry, Lily. I cannot tell you any more. Please do not ask me. You just have to accept it.”
Shock was turning to fear. “Is it dangerous? Are you going to the front line?” Another terrifying thought. “Behind the lines?”
He shook his head. “I cannot answer, Lily. Please understand.”
His secrecy was exasperating. “But why? Did you choose this?”
He shook his head again. “No, they asked me. I could not refuse.”
“
Could
not?”
“Did not
want
to refuse.”
“But why you?”
“My languages, I think. German, French, English.”
“So you said yes to this, thisâ¦thing. Even though you know it is dangerous?”
“I do not know it is dangerous. All I know isâ¦it is very important. We have to push them back, to liberate France, Holland, Belgium, Germany and⦔
I began to get a glimmer of understanding. “And your family?” I said gently.
He nodded. “And the others. So we can be ourselves again.”
“What about the danger to you? Being⦔
He put his finger to his lips. “I am not Jewish,” he said firmly, emphasizing each word. “Not anymore, remember? Not for the moment.”
There was something about the simple way he said this, his tone of absolute resolve, that made it suddenly, perfectly clear. Now I understood. Everything he had done since coming back from Australia was about avenging his country, his race, his family. This was the most important thing for him, so vital that it was worth completely reinventing himself, denying his heritage. So that he could, perhaps, one day recover it.
For the first time, I started to appreciate how hard that must have been. And now, I assumed from what he refused to say, he was planning something even more difficult and dangerous: to go among the very people who would certainly kill him if they discovered his true origins.
I broke the long silence. “I'm starting to understand. But you must also understand this: you are the most important person in the world to me. Whatever you do, you must promise me you will come home safely.”
He sighed deeply, the tension in his neck and shoulders visibly melting as he slumped back in the chair.
“I will do my best. Thank you for understanding,” he said simply, closing his eyes, overcome with weariness.
“Shall I order some tea?” I said.
Later, when I told him about my missed period and morning sickness, he reacted at first with disbelief and then with utter joy. I lay in bed suffused with love as he pranced crazily around the room stark naked, grinning insanely, whisper-shouting for fear of disturbing the rest of the hotel, “I'm going to be a father, an oh-so-English father.” The image stayed in my head for weeks, long after he had gone.
⢠⢠â¢
Mother was over the moon when the doctor confirmed my news. She was back to normal, thankfully, running the house and cooking with great ingenuity on scarce rations. Last year's carefully stored fruit and vegetables had run out or rotted in the cellar, but in the kitchen garden the new seedlings were already a few inches high and our fruit trees were in flower.
“My goodness, how exciting. I'm going to be a grandmother. I'll write to John immediately and tell him he's going to be an uncle.” Then she added, a little wistfully, “I do wish Harold were here to enjoy it too. What a world to bring a poor little mite into.”
“Come on, Mother, it'll all be over by the time he's old enough to know anything different,” I said cheerfully.
Gwen congratulated me too, and said all the right things, but her eyes weren't smiling. I tried to reassure her life would continue as normal when the baby arrived. With the naïve optimism of every first-time mother, I imagined my child gurgling happily in his cradle as I took phone calls, scrutinized accounts, and made rounds of the mill floor.
Pressure from Camerons and the ministry was more intense than ever. All the looms were weaving nonstop for eighteen hours a day, and I was grateful when Gwen offered to manage the evening shift. Struggling with morning sickness and the exhaustion of early pregnancy, I usually crept up to bed immediately after supper.
The lengthening days of that spring brought with them an air of anticipation and excitement, even optimism. We really believed the end was in sight. Something was going to happen soon, though we didn't know precisely what. Robbie intimated we were weaving parachute silk not only for our own airmen but for the Allied fliers too. The country was gearing up for a big push into Europe.
And then, at the end of March, came the telephone call I dreaded.
“It's been confirmed. I've finished training. I am on my way,” Stefan said.
I sat down on the hall floor, feeling dizzy, trying to understand what he was saying.
“What do you mean, âon your way'? Where to? When?”
“You know I can't say, silly, but soon. Can you come to London tomorrow?”
My head whirred, trying to picture that page of my diary. And then I realized nothing was more important than this. Everything else could wait.
“Of course. What time?”