Authors: Carol Gould
âNo,' Shirley said, her gaze still fixed on Amy's spiralling aerobatics.
âIs it a code?' another demanded.
âIt is indeed,' Marion said solemnly.
âWhat are you telling them?' Shirley snapped, turning on Marion.
âHTTMPFGG' Marion continued, unperturbed. âSomething to baffle Hitler, invented by the women of ATA.'
âCareless talk costs lives,' one lady reporter muttered.
âSo does careless journalism,' Marion countered.
âDo you have any comment, Miss Bryce, on your partner's alleged liaison with the man in custody?'
âWhat man in custody?' Shirley's nerves vibrated.
âPavel Wojtek. It's all over the front pages, miss.'
âNever heard of him. HTTMPFGG â much more important.'
Shirley could not refrain from smiling as the newsmen
slunk off, stymied. âThey are quick, you know â obviously they've twigged that Balfour fancies Angelique. Next thing, they'll be off to the House to stop the war meetings and unravel the code.'
Marion was laughing so hard she cried, and when she reached inside her flying suit pocket for a handkerchief a film canister rolled out on to the ground. She bent to pick it up and remembered that day before war had been declared â the last day on which she had worn her flying gear as Marion Wickham.
âWhat the devil is that?' Shirley demanded.
âI found it the day Edith left in such grand style,' she replied, examining the small canister closely.
âSilly fool. It could be crucial intelligence material, dropped by a pilot.'
âNonsense â Maylands was teeming with reporters that day, and the war hadn't even started.'
âYou can still have intelligence without a war,' Shirley observed.
âWhat a provocative image,' Marion muttered.
âPardon?'
âCould you have war without intelligence?'
âWars are always made by men, and you know what I think about their lack of intelligence.' Shirley reached for the film.
âOh, no, you don't,' Marion snapped, pulling away.
Amy was coming in to land, and despite a heavy mist her approach was perfect and she hit the mark with absolute precision.
âImagine someone like that having to be tested,' Shirley said, still eyeing the film.
âValerie wanted total democracy,' said Marion, âand I think Amy was bending over backwards not to be given preferential treatment.'
Marion stuffed the Kodak roll back into her pocket as Valerie and Amy jumped from the aircraft and approached. Both looked exhilarated.
âAll set for the day of judgement, ladies?' the Commanding Officer asked brightly.
Shirley resented Valerie's patronizing tone, which she seemed to adopt whenever there was a third person present.
âAmy will be in, you'll be pleased to know, provided she passes the oral,' Valerie continued, and Marion offered Amy a congratulatory handshake. âShirley, you will go next.' She stared icily at the ground engineer with whom she had once shared giggling, sleepless nights under the Hunstanton starlight.
âDon't you dare lose that film, Marion,' snapped Shirley.
âWhat film is this?' Valerie asked.
âOh, nothing,' Marion replied, glowering.
âKeep Amy company until I come back for you,' the CO ordered, and with that instruction the partners marched towards the waiting aircraft to embark on the crucial test, an examination that would turn a ground engineer into a pilot if she kept her nerve.
âDo you mind if I relieve myself, Amy?' Marion asked as soon as the aircraft engine came to life.
âIf you don't think you'll be disobeying the CO's orders.'
âShe isn't my CO yet.'
âI'll come with you.'
Amy meant well, but Marion had an urgent mission to
perform and she did not want company, not even the famous aviatrix.
âOh, Amy, do you really want to have to contend with all those reporters? Stay here where you're safe.'
Amy had turned pale and seemed to sicken.
âI'd rather not be alone this morning,' she said, her pleading look piercing Marion with an awful suddenness.
âIs something wrong? It's not Jim again, is it?'
âRight at this very moment I am my own worst problem.'
âCome with me, then.' Marion had a terrible urge to take Amy's hand, as if she were a small child on her first trip to school. They walked together and Amy's colour returned to her aging face.
âHaven't you just got married?'
âYes, and someday I can tell my grandchildren I spent my honeymoon with Amy Johnson.'
âWhere is Alec?' asked Amy.
âHe's had to report,' Marion replied. âThe Ministry is going mad trying to clear Hurricanes from Brooklands and Langley, and he's been lucky enough to be detailed little trips to France. They're making them bring back unserviceable things.'
Amy gasped, and had stopped walking.
âI wasn't supposed to know that,' Marion continued, âbut Cal March, that Cadet who's latched on to Alec, spilled it all in the car after the wedding. Why couldn't he be clearing Oxfords from here, in Hatfield, or Masters from Woodley?'
âBecause those jobs are going to be left to us, Marion. For most of the girls, that's news from heaven.'
They walked on for a bit in silence.
âHave you heard about those two Americans who had an accident at Perth?' Amy asked.
âTwo girls?'
âNo, ATA men â the two vicars from Virginia. Noel Slater harassed them on an approach and they had a bad one, but somehow they've ended up here.'
âThat sounds like Slater, too.'
âThe only reason why I am telling you is because Alec may be in just as much danger within our shores as he might be going to France.'
âWith all due respect, Amy,' Marion said, âit's the working-class boys who are getting the rotten work. I'll wager Delia Seifert will get the plum jobs while that poor illiterate American girl Jo will probably be sent out on faulty equipment.'
âWe're all at risk, Marion. A barrage balloon has no way of differentiating class when it decides to collide with a ferry pilot.'
They had reached the main building, and a grim Marion rushed on ahead.
âWill you forgive me? I'm expecting a message from Alec.'
Marion evaporated around a corner, and Amy made her way timidly into the common room where Barbara Newman and Stella Teague were playing cards. They ignored her, which was just as well â she so wanted to be invisible.
Marion watched from a distance as Amy settled into a chair where the card game was progressing, then marched into Sean Vine's office without knocking.
He looked up, surprised. âYou should be airborne, Marion,' he said, frowning. âHave you failed already?'
âSean, listen carefully. When that American woman was here Alec and I were on the airfield for her send-off, do you remember?'
He nodded.
âWhen all the reporters had gone I found this Kodak on the tarmac. I completely forgot all about it, what with getting married and all that, but here it is. You've got a darkroom, haven't you?'
âWhat's in it for me?'
âWe'll strike an agreement: if you can pull strings to get Alec off the Hurricanes and on to a job that keeps him on home soil, you can have the film, whatever's on it.'
âDo you have reason to believe it's sensitive?'
âThat's what Shirley said â intelligence.'
âHow does she know about it?'
âThe bloody thing dropped out of my pocket just now â and she saw it.'
He reached out. âLet me have it.'
âDo we have an agreement, my sweet?'
âLet me see.'
Marion dug into her pocket and removed the canister. Still holding it, she showed it to Vine. He opened a drawer and drew out a magnifying glass, peering with great interest at the printing on the side of the roll.
âOkay, Mrs Harborne. Agreed.'
âWhy?'
Sean dropped the magnifier and glared at her stonily.
âWhat do you mean, why? I thought you wanted your beloved husband back.'
âJust out of curiosity, what is it on the side of that film that has made you say yes so quickly?'
Now Marion was standing over Sean, straining to see the tiny print without the aid of a glass.
âNothing special, really,' he said, dropping the canister into the pristine crystal ashtray.
âMind if I smoke, Sean?' she quipped.
âYes, I do.'
âMake sure the cleaners don't pinch it,' she said, picking up the film canister for one last look and then dropping it back with a loud âplink' into the crystal.
âI'll see what I can do for Alec. I promise.' He took her hand, and she was reminded of the brief coupling they had known, just over a year before, when she was still pure. Alec had done a transatlantic ferry job for huge money on behalf of a Canadian, and she had got it into her head that he might never return. Sean had been kind, his long, feminine fingers introducing her to sensations to which she had thought only loose women were privy, and when his fingers had made way for his robust appendage she had become terrified and had tried to push him from her taut body. Only then had she comprehended the unearthly strength that could charge a man's loins when he was driven by a relentless boiling that sent his substance into her bloodstream and made her cry out as if held against her will inside a maelstrom. Marion had never understood Alec's lack of shock and surprise when they had made love for the first time and he had discovered her impurity. Perhaps, she had thought at the time, he had grown accustomed to disappointment, from the first realisations of the limitations of class, to the poverty his parents had left him as their legacy.
âPlease let me know what is on the film, Sean,' Marion said. âI had better get back, now â I'm childminding.'
âReally?' Sean looked alarmed.
âAmy Johnson, silly.'
âWhen do you test?'
âNow.'
Marion grinned at her former lover as he pocketed the film canister, which under his glass had revealed its German markings. He could not wait to get to the darkroom. When the aviatrix had been gone a few moments he grabbed the telephone, and there seemed nothing he could do to stop his hands from shaking.
Shirley Bryce was furious with Valerie for having made her ATA flight test such misery. It was not so much the technical aspect that enraged her as Valerie's businesslike manner, which seemed to negate everything that had happened during the past eight years. Shirley had no trouble taking the Tiger Moth trainer up and doing a few turns, medium and steep, when Valerie suddenly closed the throttle.
âYour engine's cut,' she snapped. âNow make a forced landing.'
Shirley felt panic rising, and searching frantically for smoke to check wind direction, thought she might land in the nearest field. Somehow she managed to make it back to Hatfield and to perform a near-perfect touchdown within feet of Amy and Marion.
âNow you will wait until Marion has had her flight test, then there will be an oral interview.' She turned away, taking Marion by the arm and leading her to the Moth.
Amy stood alongside Shirley.
âWhat a nightmare,' Shirley groaned.
âI thought Valerie was very polite, as test administrators go,' said Amy.
âHot-tempered MP fancies girls â don't forget, Marion,' she murmured, looking up as the Moth soared.
Marion's test seemed to last a far shorter time than Shirley's and the Tiger Moth slid in to Hatfield to deposit back its valuable cargo. Valerie and Marion approached, smiling.
âBelieve it or not, my nerves are jangling,' Amy said.
âToo bad, Mrs M,' Valerie chirped, smiling at her celebrated candidate.
The foursome walked briskly to the main building, and for the rest of that day three of the nation's most supremely talented pilots were subjected to a gruelling examination that tested them twice as rigorously as any RAF cadet â because in the eyes of society they were just girls, and in the eyes of the Air Ministry they were an inferior species of pilot known as women.
Alec had promised Cal he would make a detour to the ugly terraced house in Shoreditch after leaving Hatfield. It had not troubled him to double back on a limited petrol supply â he could tell the boy ached to see his mother and that he had put aside fears of fatherly animosity. Journeying through the streets that had already felt the pain of enemy bombs, they came upon the March family home and Cal jumped from the car to bang vigorously on the front door. Time passed and he banged again, this time to be greeted by the appearance of his mother, hesitantly opening the peeling wood a fraction. Inside it was dark, and Cal pushed his way past Bridie. She peered out at Alec, who stared back from his seat in the car as if she were stealing his most precious personal property.
There was an acrid smell in the usually tidy house, and Cal's face screwed up into a wince that stopped Bridie from hugging him. They had not seen each other for months, but the putrid smells and the darkness and unhappiness that hit out at the boy from these walls made him shun affection.
âWhere's Dad, then?'
âGot some sort of driving job â down by the coast,' she said.
âLoads of money for you, Mum?'
âHe comes home on the odd occasion â I don't see much of it.'
âWhat's that horrible pong?'
âNeighbour's cat, love â you do ask a lot of questions.'
He moved to her, and let her hold him while he rummaged in a pocket for the pile of coins he had accumulated from his small wages.
âHere's enough for a few months.'
She ogled the money, and for a moment Cal pictured her as a child receiving her first allowance.
âYou don't look old at all, Mum,' he said, smiling. âWe could be brother and sister.'