Authors: Jessica Stirling
He rose from the chair, lifted her on to him and, locking her legs about his hips, rode her across the room until they fell, still locked, on to the big broad bed.
While much of Europe was falling to German advances and British soldiers were piling up on the beaches of Dunkirk, a number of âheap big pow-wows', as Basil called them, took place in the smoke-filled offices of Broadcasting House in the course of which BBC administrators and representatives from the Ministry of Information sought to protect their personal agendas. Basil, of course, would have none of it. The subject of
his
programme, he said, was Britain on the brink and if that wasn't dynamic enough for his overlords then he would gladly turn in his stopwatch and let someone else take the strain.
Favourable comments in the press and reports from the CBC that several regional stations in North America had picked up the programme for re-broadcast indicated that
Speaking Up
's blend of reportage, comment and discussion was having the desired effect and Basil vowed that, within the parameters required by military censorship, he would continue to deliver what the public wanted without treating listeners on either side of the Atlantic like dolts.
Susan barely had time to bathe, change her clothes and snatch a few hours' sleep as crises piled on crises and the production staff struggled to keep on top of the news.
She saw little of Bob outside the studio save for an occasional snatched âlunch' in the flat in Rothwell Gardens and heard nothing at all from Danny who was probably as busy as she was and not, she told herself, sulking.
âNot a word?' Vivian said.
âNot so much as a postcard.'
âYou have written to him, haven't you?'
âA couple of letters. I haven't had much time.'
âDidn't he reply?'
âNo.'
âWhy haven't you telephoned him?'
âHe isn't allowed personal calls.'
âDoesn't his silence concern you?' said Vivian.
Susan hesitated. âI suspect he's playing tit-for-tat and he'll come round in his own good time.'
âFor God's sake, girl, he's your husband. You can't just prance about as if you were footloose and fancy-free.'
âYou're a fine one to talk.'
âThat's the second time you've told me that,' Vivian said. âMay I point out that I'm an old maid and Basil's a widower and that anything we choose to do hurts no one. Let me ask you one question and beg the favour of a straight answer: do you think Danny would do this to you?'
âDo what to me?'
âTake a lover,' Vivian said.
âHe wouldn't dare.'
âI see,' said Vivian. âWhat's sauce for the goose is not â repeat not â sauce for the gander?'
âBe all right if I were a chap, wouldn't it?' Susan said. âGive me one good reason why a girl shouldn't have a little bit of fun too.'
âIs that all it is, a little bit of fun?'
âNot so little, if you must know.'
âDon't tell me you're in love with Robert Gaines?'
âOf course not. I'm not in love with anyone.'
âWhat about Bob Gaines, what if he's in love with you?'
âHe's not that much of a fool,' Susan said. âIt's a fling, that's all, a nice little fling for both of us.'
âWell, I just hope you're right,' said Vivian. âAnd I just hope that Danny doesn't catch on.'
âFat chance of that happening,' Susan said, âgiven that he's chained hand and foot to a desk in Evesham.'
Monday, mid-afternoon: they lay together in sweltering heat in a few hours stolen from their hectic schedules.
âDon't fall asleep,' Bob said.
âIf I do, I'll never waken up,' Susan said.
âHave you anything round here to eat?'
âNot much,' Susan said. âEggs, I think.'
âFresh?'
âProbably not.'
He moved against her, cupped her breast and touched her nipple lightly with his thumb. The window was open an inch or two but there was no breeze and the air in the flat was stale and lifeless. Something was going on in Rothwell Gardens, some vaguely military thing, but neither Bob nor she had the energy to look out to see what the shouting was about.
âAre you working this evening?' Susan asked.
âNo option. I've promised the
Post
a piece
on the paddle-wheelers that made the run to Dunkirk. It's a gift of a subject and I have all the notes I made in Ramsgate so it shouldn't take more than a couple of hours to knock off.'
âWe also need your material for Tuesday, remember.'
âYou never let up on a guy, do you?'
The sheet that had covered them had been discarded and she could see all of him, no part hidden. He was flaccid now and had carefully removed the rubber and, like a true blue gentleman, had wrapped it in a handkerchief and hidden it in his shoe to dispose of later.
She said, âWhy did you never have children?'
âBeg pardon?'
âWith your wife: children?'
âWhat the hell sort of a question's that?'
âI'm just curious.'
âWhat sort of a father do you think I'd make,' he said, âwhen I spend nine-tenths of my life out in the field?'
âLike a farmer.'
âForaging for news; yeah, right.'
âWouldn't you like to have a son?' Susan said.
âYou're not trying to tell me you're pregnant, are you?'
âNot even in jest, darling; not even in jest.'
The sound of gunfire from the gardens was startlingly loud in the cloying afternoon heat.
âShooting traitors, I expect,' said Susan.
âBlanks,' Bob told her. âHome Guard drill, maybe.'
âYou didn't answer my question.'
âPearl didn't â let's be polite about it and say she just wasn't ready for motherhood.'
âYou mean she didn't like sex.'
âOh, yeah, she liked sex well enough. She just didn't like doing it with me.'
Susan sat up. âWhy ever not?'
âShe thought I was too demanding.'
âYou are, you know, far too demanding.'
âIs that a complaint?'
âFar from it.'
âLook,' he said, not moving, âI really must shove off.'
She lay back on the pillow. âMe, too. Baz will have fits if I'm not back by four. The running order for Tuesday's gone to pot. Major Cazalet's been called away, apparently, and left us rather stranded.'
âWho's doing the piece on the Emergency Powers Act?'
âAt the moment, no one. The ministry are griping at the very idea. We're trying to persuade Walpole to do it but he isn't at all keen.'
âViv?'
âBasil thinks it should be a man.'
âThat won't please her highness,' Bob said.
âWouldn't know. She's not speaking to me these days.'
âBecause of us?'
âI think she's worried about her brother.'
âHave they arrested him yet?' Bob said.
âNo, but they should have. He's a black-hearted villain through and through.'
âHow well
did
you know him?'
âNot as well as he'd have liked.'
Another round of rifle fire peppered the air, followed, anomalously, by the blast of a whistle as if the drill were a football match governed by the rules of fair play.
âProudfoot wasn't one of them then?' Bob said.
âOne of them?'
âOne of your paramours.'
âJust how many “paramours” do you think I've had?'
âDozens for all I know,' Bob said.
âOne,' Susan said. âJust one.'
âAnd a husband?'
âHusbands don't count.'
âWell, who am I to disagree?'
âI'm sorry. I didn't mean to be insensitive.' She tangled her legs with his and rested her head against his shoulder. âForgive me?'
âNothing to forgive.'
âDid you love her â your wife, I mean?'
âShe was the only girl in Paterson, the only girl for me.'
âAs it turned out she wasn't, was she?'
âNo, she wasn't,' Bob said. âIt was my mistake, not Pearl's. Hey, enough with the Freudian stuff. I really do have to go home and do some work.' He kissed her on the nose and swung his feet to the floor. âWho's first for the bathroom?'
âI am,' Susan said.
The building and its plumbing had baked in hot sunshine for weeks and the water from the taps was cool but not cold. She stood upright in the bath in the cramped half-tiled bathroom and, squeezing a sponge with both hands, trickled water over her breasts and belly.
Danny had nailed plyboard across the pebble glass window and the room, even in daylight, was dark. She had left the door to the kitchen open an inch to let in light but the flow of water from the taps and the gurgle of the cistern above the lavatory drowned out sounds from the living room.
Crouching, she splashed water into her lap, then, refreshed, stepped out of the bath and dried herself with the big bath towel that Danny had given her last Christmas.
She was relaxed after lovemaking but aware that time was pressing. If she couldn't find a cab it would take her all her time to make it back to Broadcasting House by four o'clock. She had eaten nothing since breakfast. She would pick up a sandwich from the snack bar at Green Park or, if the worst came to the worst, scrounge something from Larry who always had food to spare. She pulled out the bath plug, wrapped the towel around her and padded through the kitchen into the living room.
Danny, motionless as a statue, stood in front of the empty hearth, arms folded across his chest.
âWhat do you think?' he said.
âThe glasses?' Susan said. âThey suit you. How long have you been here?'
âCouple of minutes.'
âWho told you? Was it Vivian?'
âNo one told me. I came up to town to collect my spectacles an' dropped in on the off-chance you'd be here. I didn't mean to intrude.'
The bedroom door opened. Barefoot and struggling into his pants, Bob came into the living room.
âSusan, I thought I heard â¦' he began.
âRobert,' she said, âI'd like you to meet my husband.'
âOh, peachy,' Bob Gaines said, âjust peachy,' and, not knowing what else to do, stepped forward to shake Danny's hand.
The tinkle of breaking glass in the front shop wakened Nora instantly. She dug Matt in the ribs and, reaching for her dressing gown, had just put one foot on the floor when the door of the bedroom burst open and a uniformed constable switched on the ceiling light.
Matt sat up, blinking. âWhat the â¦'
âMrs Leo Romano?' the copper growled.
Nora, mouth hanging open, nodded.
âGot her, sir. In here,' said the copper and a man in a double-breasted lounge suit and snap-brim hat stepped past the constable into the room.
Matt reached for the alarm clock on the bedside table and squinted at the dial. Twenty minutes past five. For a moment he was convinced that the alarm would go off, his dream would end and he'd get up and make ready to go to work.
âPut that down, please,' the lounge suit said.
âIt's just a clock,' said Matt.
âIt's a weapon,' said the lounge suit and directed the constable to remove the object from Matt's hand which, swiftly, the constable proceeded to do.
Matt knew then that it was no dream and, with a roar, pitched himself out of bed. One copper, then two, threw themselves upon him, locked his arms behind his back and jammed his face into the wallpaper.
âThis 'im, sir?'
âNo, it's the woman we're after, just the woman.'
Clad only in her nightdress and dressing gown, Nora was taken by the arm and hustled towards the door. Past the peeler's broad shoulder Matt caught a glimpse of her terrified face and, enraged, kicked at the constable's shins.
âNow, now, you dirty old sod, you've 'ad your fun for one night,' one said and, jerking Matt by the arm, forced him down into a praying position by the bed. âStay there like a good lad, an' be thankful your name ain't Romano.'
âBastards,' Matt shouted. âNazi bastards.'
A gloved hand shoved his face into the mattress and a gloved hand whacked his ear.
And then they left.
Matt clambered to his feet, crept on to the landing and looked down the stairs into the corridor that led into the kitchen.
He crouched at the top of the stairs until the shop door slammed, then, clutching his pyjamas to his belly, leaped down into the corridor, ran through the kitchen into the shop and out through the open door into the street.
The motorcar was already halfway to the corner, a van with blacked-out windows hard on its tail. Matt pursued the van for a hundred yards, cursing at the top of his voice, then, badly winded, gave up the hopeless chase and limped back to Stratton's to find help.
âHow the hell do I know where they've taken 'er, Dad?' Ronnie said. âI'm a fireman, not a bloody copper.'
âYou want some more of this?' Breda shook the bottle of brandy that she kept for emergencies.
âYer.' Matt held up his tea mug. âI mean, what they want with Nora? She's Irish, for God's sake. She never done no 'arm to no one.'
âDidn't they tell you anythin'?' said Ron.
âNot a bleedin' thing,' Matt said. âNear tore me arm off, they did, when I tried to stop them.' He raised his left arm to shoulder height and winced. âLucky it ain't broke. Didn't even let 'er dress. I mean, nightie an' dressing gown; what sort of a way's that for a woman to go out in public? Where's Billy?'
âStill asleep,' said Breda.
âNot even a warnin',' Matt went on. âThey broke the front door an' just barged in. Can they do that, Ron?'