Authors: Carol Gould
When she had recovered from culture shock and settled back into the routine of self-denial that had become the norm in damp, sunless London, she headed for Maylands,
where she knew Barbara would be misbehaving at 2,000 feet or less. Recently the world's press had latched on to the Rothschild heiress's antics, and on tour Sally had read more about the British aerobatic ace than about Amy Johnson or Edith Allam.
On this warm afternoon Sally itched to be on a tennis court but her mind switched over to aeroplanes when Barbara's short, stocky figure emerged from the cockpit of a Puss Moth, her broad grin a welcome sight.
âYou're back!' Barbara exclaimed as an admirer aimed a huge camera towards the pair and the shutter snapped.
âWho's a legend, then?' Sally said, her height overshadowing the other girl.
âOh, Sally, don't be ridiculous. You are the legend, not I. Imagine being photographed with Big Bill and one of the Three Musketeers â that picture has been in every paper in Britain.'
âThat's only because Ted Tinling is in it, and he's English.'
âThey should invite him back to design some gorgeous clothes for the flying girls.' Barbara and Sally had entered the flying club common room, where strange faces greeted the pair.
âHaven't you heard, Sally?' Barbara asked, throwing her goggles on to the card table. âValerie Cobb is being asked to recruit some girls to fly in a Civil Air Guard. Apparently Hitler means business. Daddy says Jews are being singled out and thrown out of top jobs in Germany â lawyers, doctors, scientists, industrialists, the lot. You know Stella Teague, that ballerina who mucks about in Moths? She's been flying over to Romania and rescuing these people. Some chap called Goebbels collects their life's savings in
a barrel and then he lets them get on an aeroplane with the shirt on their back.'
âWhat about Valerie Cobb?'
âShe has two thousand hours, and the Air Ministry wants her to find a handful of girls with hundreds of hours who are sound of wind and limb, to stand by for some sort of civil air patrol.'
âI've got three hundred hours, Barbs,' Sally mumbled, sinking into a chair.
âYou never know â this Nazi Party may destroy us all.'
âThose Europeans need a good game like tennis to divert them,' said Shirley. âIf a sport took hold and everybody had to wear white pants they'd forget the swastikas and just start producing masses of little Tildens and Helen Willses. What do you think, eh?'
âBe serious,' Barbara said, pulling a cigarette pack from her flying suit pocket and lighting up mannishly. âI don't know about you, but I want to be there when Valerie needs women. Something tells me our knowledge will lead to bigger things. Look at the Poles â they've got girls in their Air Force. Daddy says someone like that Shirley Bryce might end up being Chief Ground Engineer to the RAF.'
âShe's a bloody genius.'
âIt's in the genes,' Barbara said, puffing furiously.
Sally waved at the smoke. âGenius?'
âThat's why Hitler wants the brilliant folk out.'
âHere we go again â the Jews are smarter than any other race!'
âWe may not be smarter, but we've learned to use our attributes to the best advantage. Someday the Jews will have their own country, and when they start tilling the soil
the rest of the world will find some reason to attack them. Anyway, Shirley is undoubtedly the best and the brightest â there is no-one in the RAF who can match her abilities.'
âHow do we get Valerie to remember us to the Air Ministry?'
âWe don't, Sal.' Barbara stubbed out her cigarette, ignoring the cluster of male fliers who had joined them at the table and were feigning a card game. âYou and I have to keep plugging on and accumulating hours until she starts recruiting.'
Sally leaned across the table to whisper in her ear:
âWhat is it about you? Those chaps are dying to have an audience with the ice hockey champion.'
âNonsense,' Barbara hissed. âThey're drooling over
you
.'
Both girls rose, and as they passed the men an assortment of eyes lingered on Sally's exquisite figure, her athletic, almost masculine arms and legs tempered by a supremely feminine bosom, and her bottom tightly clad in a Tinling creation that bordered on the risqué.
âKeep moving, Sally Remington,' Barbara muttered, swinging her goggles. âYou ought to be ashamed of yourself, dressing like that over here. This is not Hollywood.'
Moving in to the main entrance area, the girls stopped in their tracks.
âMy God, it's the lady herself, in the flesh.'
Valerie Cobb stood in the fading sunlight and lit a cigarette, her gracefully shaped hands an elegant complement to a figure clad in perfect summer tailoring.
âNow or never,' Barbara said, squeezing her companion's arm. âHello, Val,' she said casually.
Turning around in a flash, Valerie's gaze took in the
small figure and she smiled. âBarbara Newman â proficient in all types of biplane, with two hundred and eighty-seven hours since first licence granted.'
âYou remember me, Val?' asked Barbara.
âGood Lord â who could forget you? In any case, I have just been examining club records,' she explained, her glance moving to Sally Remington. âThe Ministry has given me permission to do so. Am I correct in thinking that lady is Sally Remington?'
âYes!' Barbara exclaimed. âTennis champion.'
Valerie turned to Sally:
âProficient in things like Spartans, if I am not mistaken?'
âWe met when you and Shirley came to Wimbledon last year,' Sally squeaked in awe.
âYes â our first day off since we joined forces in 1931.'
âWill you be able to use us, Val?' Barbara demanded.
âAt the present time, I have a list of six girls who have five hundred hours or more. You haven't enough experience. For God's sake, please try to accumulate some more. Try for R/T, navigators' and instrument licences. In the meantime, until I can recruit, you could be helping the Army Co-op â they need anti-aircraft practice, and those hours count.'
âHow do we keep in touch with you?' Barbara was eager, her face animated.
âNo need. I shall be checking every girl's records week by week, from now onwards, and as your papers become more impressive, so you stand a better chance of war work.'
âDo you and Shirley still share that hut?' Sally asked.
âIt will soon be empty. My father thinks civilized man is on the brink.'
âSo does mine,' said Barbara. âDo you still write poetry?'
âNot any more,' Valerie responded, smiling at the two athletes. âPerhaps when the Nazis come over, none of us will have anything to do, and such pastimes will win a girl bread coupons.'
Nodding to the pair with the same abruptness as her manner of speech, she shook hands briefly and then was gone.
âThat woman is a menace.'
Barbara and Sally turned around to discover Noel Slater, the flight engineer who virtually lived at Maylands and who had most recently fought a lone battle to prevent club funds being ploughed into the building of a ladies' lavatory.
âWould you prefer Hitler?' snapped Barbara.
âShe means to put the likes of you up against the man himself,' he said, leering at Sally's tanned legs.
âBetter us than you, mate.' Barbara was relentless.
âSo, Sally Remington is back!' he exclaimed, grinning.
âThat's right, Noel,' she crooned, towering over the diminutive flight engineer.
âWhy?'
âTalented fliers like myself are needed by that menacing woman.'
âWhat about Wimbledon, my dear?' His voice had taken on a whining tone, and he was standing too close to Sally for comfort.
âBecause of my absence, Noel, the entire tennis season will be brought to a halt for the duration of the inevitable war.'
For once he had stopped chattering and seemed bemused.
Barbara grabbed Sally by the arm and ushered her away.
In the new lavatory the two girls laughed nervously. But when they had stopped, the reality of Valerie's words began to permeate their good humour.
âThey've a thousand hours, most of those girls,' Barbara lamented, sitting on a polished ledge. âMarion Wickham has about nine hundred, and she's the least qualified of Val's inner circle. They are all qualified instructors, and the boys are already training with them, seven days a week without a space free.'
Outside, the noise of a motor was carried on the warm afternoon air, Valerie reversing rapidly out of the forecourt and blowing dust in through the lavatory window. Barbara Newman and Sally Remington wanted to be part of her contingent more than anything in the world, more than marriage and babies and more than peace in their time. Though their parents could not understand this passion and wished for a cure to come down â if not from Heaven, then at the Hunt Ball â the pair, like hundreds of women of all ages who in 1938 were the cream of the nation's aeroplane pilots, craved a war above all else. If they had to train men to fight in the air they would do so, and if they had to ferry Moths they would do that as well, but most of all they wanted wings on their shoulders and the licence that went beyond their A, B, C, and Ds and which only men could bestow â the right to fly war machines and perhaps come back alive for Olympic Gold and a Wimbledon Championship in the peace they had helped to win.
Shirley Bryce was in dirty overalls.
Infatuated with aviation, the well-dressed Austrian named Kranz sat in the hut listening rapt to her readings of Valerie's poetry. In between verses she would describe their enterprise to him, embellishing it with wild tales of narrow escapes.
âI see my next fortune being made from sleek war machines. Don't you?' said Friedrich Kranz.
Shirley looked up from the poetry book:
âWho knows? You fell out of the air and into our hut, so how would I know how you'll get rich?'
Friedrich laughed. âAt home I manufactured these things. It's interesting how acceptable they were until the new regime came along. They were regarded as the best machines in the world, and I designed them myself. Suddenly I am under the thumb of a maniac and must turn a life's work over to him.'
âI have Jewish blood too.'
Friedrich laughed. âHere, thank God, it doesn't matter. At least, not yet.'
âYou're wrong. It does matter.'
âIf Hitler comes here, you'll wear two stars, including one for cohabiting with another woman. She'll wear a star for cohabiting with a Jewess.'
âVal and I don't cohabit,' snapped Shirley. âWe're just chums.'
âDear lady, I've offended.'
âWell, I am very fond of her,' admitted Shirley, picking up Valerie's poetry notebook.
âThat's strictly private!' Valerie had arrived. She grabbed the book, nearly striking her mate.
Freidrich rose. âKranz, Friedrich.'
âYes, I know. You look very much like a Franz who wants to fly.' She was stunningly dressed, and he was thunder -struck. In a split second of rudeness Britain's top woman pilot had made yet another conquest.
Kranz gushed:
âMay I tell you about some Polish lady pilots I have left behind?'
âSit down first. My head aches.' She looked down at Shirley.
âVal, Friedrich wants to build aircraft here.'
âIn Hunstanton? You'd have more luck applying to be Poet Laureate.'
Kranz sat. âThere are a number of Polish ladies ferrying aeroplanes to Bucharest. They are helping to evacuate undesirables. Soon they too will be outcasts. Could you use them?'
Valerie, still standing, paused and looked at a random page of her poetry. âHow is it that you have knowledge of undesirables, as you call them, in Romania?'
âThese people are lawyers, doctors, scientists and industrialists like myself. It is still possible to reach civilisation from Romania, but not for long. Hitler is aiming to include every country in the world on his agenda.'
âInclude them for what?' She shut the book loudly.
âPurification,' Kranz replied coldly. âThere is a creeping terror in the German-speaking world, and though your
partner tells me such things exist here, I cannot believe you could imagine what true terror is like.'
Valerie turned on Shirley. âWhat on earth have you been telling him?'
âWe were reading your poetry.'
âAnd the rest? Mr Kranz, you need me for something.'
âI know you are amongst this country's best. The RAF is unprepared, and when Hitler comes it will all happen as a great surprise. Mobilization will be last-minute and planes like yours will be confiscated.'
âThank you for telling me how we are running our lives. Why do I figure in your aircraft business? I can't save these people.'
Shirley made noise and tea, offering her two cents:
âHitler can't be all that bad with so many German faces smiling out from the newsreels.'
âMr Kranz seems to think he is â bad, I mean,' commented Valerie. âHe wants to save the faces that aren't smiling.'
Kranz took his cup, his hand looking old compared with the rest of his body.
âIs Sir Henry Cobb not your father?' he asked.
Shirley made more noise.
Valerie had had enough:
âUnless you want a joyride in a crippled Spartan, Kranz, your visit is over.'
Friedrich rose slowly, feeling an overwhelming hunger. âI won't detain you any further. You and I will need each other again soon.'
âI never recall having needed you in the first instance.'
Usually the shrewd, sometimes flirtatious business-
woman, she felt a controlled fury overtaking her judgement. What did he want?
Shirley fussed and kept him happy on his way to the door, where a bitter wind tried to enter the hut. He tipped his hat.