Authors: Carol Gould
âBill, while you are in England, who is taking care of your daughter?'
âOh, she's here!' he said brightly. âI've got her tucked away in my lodgings. She's all I've got in the whole wide world.'
Nora was amazed. âHow old is she?'
âOld enough to enrol for ATA, if they ever let girls fly,' he said, grinning. âJo's her name. Her mother was called J'phine because when she was born the local witchdoctor couldn't spell Josephine so he abbreviated it. Now her living daughter is a regular Josephine, spelled right.'
âNew ATA pilots have to be quick learners, or so we are told,' Nora said, starting up the engine. âNo more talking, Bill. But when she's ready I want to meet your girl. Just remember that in this country she will always be a second-class citizen, a half-caste mongrel.'
Bill looked back at her as if she had spoken in another language, but his voice was drowned by the fully revved aeroplane, which taxied along the field's edge as a young blonde child watched from a battered jalopy.
In the common room at Hatfield, Valerie Cobb was surrounded by a huddle of angry women.
âI've heard nothing so far,' she asserted. âAs far as I am concerned, we will all sit out the war, and you should be jolly pleased to have jobs as instructors. Some of you are weather officers â a damned sight better than hole-punching.'
Stella and Angelique had been joined in the huddle by an oddly dressed teenager, and all eyes turned. Those lady pilots present were in flying suits, and her brightly spotted summer dress made them blink.
âDid you fall off the banana boat?' teased Angelique.
The girl blushed. âMy Dad is a pilot out there. He's just taken off.'
Valerie walked over to her and put an arm around her shoulders. âYou're a long way from home.'
âI want to train and I want to start today.' Her strong American twang seemed to bounce of the walls.
âTrain as what?' asked Marion Wickham sharply.
âShe wants to be one of us.' Valerie had read her and was intrigued.
âMy father is Bill Howes. He was decorated in the last war and now he's too old for medals or for making love,' she said, her eyes a blank.
âWhat an extraordinary thing for a child to say,' Amy exclaimed. âAre you alone with him?'
âI've never been alone in my life,' she replied, and at that moved to the door and wandered off on to the field.
Noel Slater had arrived. âWho is the waif?' he asked, scowling.
âShe seems to have materialized out of Bill Howes,' Angelique replied.
âI thought he was a bachelor,' Noel said, placing his goggles on the table, disrupting a pile of neatly stacked playing cards.
Valerie experienced an instant desire for the child to be kept away from Slater. Could she persuade the naive American to sequester the brightly clad daughter? Her thoughts were jolted by shouting.
It was Noel again.
âYour Jerry boyfriend is on the premises,' he hissed.
Valerie's heart began its involuntary pounding. She excused herself as the girls bickered amongst themselves. Crossing to a secluded spot on the airfield, she found Friedrich.
âYou shouldn't have let yourself be seen here today,' she murmured.
âI need to organize this aeroplane â can you do it? Can you fly with me?' He was immaculate and magnificently dressed: Valerie imagined submerging beneath the power of his loins â how many times might they make love till ripe old age would part them?
âIt is impossible for me to accompany you â you know that,' she said.
âMake believe I'm one of your father's hunting partners â Tim Haydon, or one of the others from the acceptable breed.'
She frowned at him. Did he see all of life as a pogrom?
âI have too many problems to surmount on the ground, Friedrich,' she said.
His hand was limp as she took it, the dampness and cold shocking her own palm. âYou know how many times they have done an about-face on me,' she continued. âMy girls are going out of their heads. They need to be in the air.'
âYou will do nothing?' Kranz looked poor and shabby now.
âPlease don't leave â I'm taking a cottage, Friedrich. I'll look after you.'
Kranz walked off â leaving Valerie alone, as a thin mist descended on Hatfield. Noises from ceaseless activity gradually seeped back through her deadened ears, and she turned away, heading back to the common room and her angry women. For a moment, outside, she stopped and listened. In the common room the radio voice droned on:
Britain was at war.
At the Air Ministry, Beaverbrook was fuming. As he fumed, Valerie smoked and d'Erlanger looked on, wondering when he could stop burning inside. Outside, the factories were beginning to churn out aeroplanes and their chimneys spewed clouds of industrial waste, while from many other European chimneys belched clouds of human ash.
âI'll turn to the coalfaces â to anything, for men to ferry these aircraft from the factories to the battlefield bases,' thundered Beaverbrook.
âBritish Airways has a few elderly ghosts creaking round the runways,' said d'Erlanger. âWe can let you have them, if they're still standing. Remember Valerie still has all these good women waiting for an opening.'
âThen get them mobilized!' shouted Beaverbrook.
âMy women have been put on hold too many times,' retorted Valerie. âI cannot keep their hopes rising and falling like this for ever.'
âAll that was
before
the war!'
âWhy should that matter?' she asked. âIt is outrageous enough that before war was declared, the committee changed its mind, but this time I am not about to go back to my girls empty-handed.'
âYou won't,' stressed Beaverbrook. âI promise you.'
D'Erlanger smiled, and as the other man rose, Valerie continued to smoke, determined to finish this cigarette before leaving the room. It was unspeakable that at this moment of her greatest triumph her body churned uncontrollably as
she allowed thoughts of Friedrich Kranz to intrude. When she had ventured into this chamber her mind had been in neutral, a facility she had acquired at puberty when being pursued by huntsmen.
She rose at last, keeping her mouth shut, thinking she might bring a curse over her girls once more if she uttered another word. Beaverbrook's arm was outstretched, and as his palm and hers touched, she looked at d'Erlanger and recalled her last handshake, which had brought so little. They left Beaverbrook's office and Valerie remained silent. If only intimations of Friedrich would leave her flesh! It was a sensation embedded more deeply as each day passed. Meanwhile d'Erlanger, so close, seemed far away.
What did he want?
Outside, as dusk descended in a sudden rainstorm, Valerie and d'Erlanger stood drenched, oblivious to the weather as people rushed past.
âI suggest we celebrate,' he said, gripping her arm so hard that it hurt and she awoke.
âI have an errand to run, Gerard.'
Letting go of her arm, he looked down at the wet pavement, smiling to himself.
âAre you mobilizing the girls?' he asked.
âNo. Something else. An errand.'
This time when d'Erlanger had grabbed Valerie's arm she was awake when it hurt.
âFriedrich Kranz wants something?' he asked accusingly, his eyes wild. People turned as they walked past. Gentlemen did not usually behave this way in front of government buildings. Gerard d'Erlanger did.
âGerard, you are breaking my arm for the war effort â
that's treason.' Her taunt struck home and he let go abruptly, causing her to lose her balance. Gracefully she righted herself.
âKranz is an unwelcome visitor in this country,' he growled. âWe are not interested in his business acumen, nor in his manufacturing wizardry. Aside from that he is an arrogant sod who is out of his depth in this country and who would never be allowed into my London club. You've allowed him intimacy. That disgusts me.'
âBy intimacy, what do you mean?' Valerie's hair was soaked and she could smell the dank odour of wet wool rising from her sodden jacket.
âYou have welcomed him into your own private club â your body.'
âHow interesting â women aren't allowed into men's private clubs, yet we welcome men into ours, you say?' she said, smiling.
âIt enrages me that you could be prejudicing the monumental task ahead because of some Austrian.'
Valerie's height brought her face to face with d'Erlanger and he moved to wipe the rain from her mouth with his lips. She backed away and ran to her car. Inside, the smell of wet wool seemed worse and she wanted to strip off. What would happen if she drove naked through Whitehall? She rolled down the window.
Gerard bent down to speak:
âThe Ministry is earmarking you for Head of ATA and they know your every move, Valerie,' he said.
Valerie sighed with weary relief as the car left Whitehall. Beaverbrook had brought her the best news of her flying life and she would mobilize her girls. Ten aces would be
brought to an appointed place where they would master fifteen different types of aircraft. Driving down the Mall she noticed sandbags being hauled on to the pavements. Women in overcoats, carrying shopping and pushing prams, hovered alongside the hauliers.
What separated her girls from these females?
Lighting a cigarette, she accelerated and raced towards home. Her visceral churning had begun again. She would mobilize Friedrich Kranz.
Like Biggin Hill, Hatfield Airbase had acquired a wartime atmosphere without much alteration to its buildings. Evening patrols changed over from the daytime lads who headed for their pint, and on this evening Friedrich Kranz slithered amongst the aircraft parked in a far corner. Looking splendid in a city suit, he avoided guard posts but was unlucky near a cluster of old Moths requisitioned from a nearby club. He was amazed to discern a mere boy approaching him through the mist and as he fumbled for his papers Cal March's uniform confronted him.
âI am on an urgent diplomatic visit on behalf of the Polish ambassador,' Kranz explained smoothly, sounding more Polish than a Pole.
Cal was charmed by the tall, distinguished foreigner and marvelled at the elegance of the script on the diplomatic papers. He let Kranz move on, excitedly contemplating how he would tell the others at his lodgings about this encounter.
Entering the main building, now no longer decorated with the flying-club banner but adorned with RAF colours, Kranz saw danger approaching yet again. Stopped once more, he knew he would have to impress these older uniforms.
The uniforms examined his documents and were unmoved.
Should he try the Polish ambassador line again?
âMy mission is confidential but I can tell you it is on behalf of the Polish Ambassador.'
âWho's he, then?' asked a uniform.
Kranz mumbled and it worked. He had succeeded, and was being directed towards the new CO's office.
âMay I use the men's room first?' he asked.
They nodded. The two who had challenged him had succumbed to the persona.
Once in the latrine, nerves returned and Kranz fumbled furiously with a set of keys.
A figure loomed. Bill Howes. âYou a new recruit, Bud?' he asked officiously.
âNot exactly,' Kranz stuttered.
âWhere do you hail from?'
âPoland.'
âI've got a Polish sister-in-law back home.' Howes' voice was a bellow and Kranz felt seasick when he slapped him on the shoulder.
âHow delightful to meet you.'
âHowes, call me Bill. I can fly anything. These RAF guys don't know a thing. Put 'em in an Anson and they're sunk.'
âCould you please tell me how to get to the locker room?'
âSure thing. You are a new recruit, aren't you? Secret mission?'
âYou could say that.' Kranz smiled. Would the gods allow him to enlist the American's help? He fought seasickness and held on to the persona. Howes pointed to the door and as they left Kranz felt the eyes of the two uniforms, now joined by Uniform One, hovering at the entrance to the latrine. Cal March was babbling but three stern faces silenced him and he followed Howes down the corridor.
âSee you later,' yelled the Yank, leaving him alone, back
at the reception area. When the coast was clear Kranz strode through the large chamber and detoured into the dingy storage section which housed endless rows of lockers. All were locked, and he fumbled again with his keys. Tampering nervously in a corner, he dislodged a padlock and to his delight was rewarded with a treasure trove. Donning a uniform that the gods had sent down in a perfect fit, he stuffed his suit into his empty kitbag. Why had the Uniforms never searched it?
Leaving through a rear door â
unpatrolled!
he gasped to himself â he found he could blend in with the others. That adorable little boy who had been his first obstacle leaned against a gate and smoked. What would Benno be like by now? Did he still have a son?
âHowdy, Bud!' Kranz jumped. Bill Howes was tinkering with a Fulmar. Darkness engulfed them but their uniforms seemed to glow.
âWhat is that you are doing?' asked Kranz.
Howes looked sharply at him and inquired:
âHow come you turned up at night to sign on?'
âIn truth, I am on secret intelligence work as a night flier.' Kranz grappled for charm.
âMy line of work gets me pretty close to intelligence and I've never heard of night fliers from this dump yet.' Howes was suspicious: that accent?
âActually this Fulmar has been designated for me,' Kranz asserted, the American no match for his cunning. âDon't ask me for a chit â as you know, anything printed must not be on my person.'
Now a pawn in the thrall of charm, the American handed over the keys.
âGood luck, Bud.'