Authors: Jessica Stirling
âAt least he'll be safe till the war's over.'
âWouldn't be too sure of that, love,' Steve said.
He pulled a rolled-up copy of the
Daily Express
from his waistband, unfurled it and gave it to Breda to read the banner headline:
Germans Torpedo Germans.
âMy dad ain't German,' Breda said.
âIt wasn't just POWs went down with the ship,' Steve said. âIt was mostly Italian internees. Hundreds of them.'
Breda tried to make sense of the text but her eyes had gone funny. She lifted the paper closer to her nose and peered at the photograph below the headline.
âSays here, they're safe in a Scottish port.'
âA few,' Steve told her, ânot many.'
âWhat's the boat called?'
âThe
Arandora Star.
Used to be a liner before the war but there wouldn't be much luxury for anyone on this trip.' Breda continued to stare blankly at the newspaper. Steve went on, âShe got plugged off the Irish coast by a U-boat, Monday, an' most of the Italians were drowned.'
âWe don't know my daddy was on board, do we?'
âNope, an' it might be months until we find out one way or the other. The government will have to publish a list, I suppose,' Steve said, âeventually.'
âWhat am I gonna tell Ma?'
âYou don't have to tell her anything.'
âIf he is dead then she's legally a widow.'
âThere won't be no money, Breda.'
âMoney? Wha'cha mean â money?'
âFrom the government: compensation.'
âI wasn't thinkin' of money,' Breda said. âI was thinkin' if Leo's dead Ma could get married again.'
âThat's none of my business,' Steve said. âI just thought I should be the one to bring you the bad news.'
âYeah. Yeah, thanks,' Breda said. âNow the coppers 'ave Harry King under lock an' key, 'ow long before they fetch 'im up for trial?'
Steven shrugged. âThree months, maybe four. They'll need time to build a watertight case against him.'
âWill they 'ave enough evidence to hang 'im?'
âThey might,' Steve said. âHe's been up to some big money deals tradin' arms to foreign governments, so I've heard. Now we're at war an' they've rewritten the rule book they might nail him for treason unless he gives them some real big fish in exchange for his neck. They already pulled in most of the small fry, here an' in Brighton.'
âBut not you, Stevie?'
âNope, not me,' Steve said; he paused. âAn' not Vince neither. We're just a couple of ordinary Tommies, far as the army's concerned.' He paused again. âFunny thing is nobody seems to know what 'appened to the loot.'
âThe loot?'
âThe dough your old man stole.'
âYou mean the three grand?' Breda said.
She saw him smile, or, rather, almost smile, for the little dimple at the corner of his mouth was anything but endearing. âYeah,' he said. âThe three grand.'
âMaybe the cops got it,' Breda said.
âThen again maybe they didn't.'
Breda drew in a stiff little breath. âHey, don't look at me, chum. Think I'd be standin' 'ere chattin' with you I had three grand stowed away?'
âYou might,' Steve said, âif you was keepin' it safe for Leo.'
âFat lotta good it'll do 'im if he's dead.'
âThat's what we reckoned, me an' Vince.'
âWell, if you do find it,' Breda said, making light, âdon't forget to share it with Leo's nearest an' dearest.'
An' who might that be?'
âMe, of course,' said Breda.
âYeah, that's what we figured too.'
Breda wasn't sure if she was being threatened but it gave her the shivers just to think what a beast like Vince might do to her to lay his hands on three thousand quid. She kept her voice as even as possible and casually changed the subject. âWhen do you leave for your training camp?'
âThis afternoon.'
âWhat about Rita an' your kid?'
âGoin' off to stay with her folks in Croydon.'
âIs it safe in Croydon?'
âSafe as anywhere,' Steve said. âIt's not likely I'll hear anything about Leo, not in an army camp. But if I do, I'll certainly tip you the wink. The paper, keep it if you like.'
âYou do think he's dead, Stevie, don'cha?'
âI think he might be, love. I really think he might be,' Steve said and, for old times' sakes, gave her another cuddle which, oddly, made her shiver too.
Whatever patriotic urge had moved Vivian to volunteer for fire watch duties had died long ago. She regretted her impetuosity all the more now that Basil had taken to spending the night in her house in Salt Street.
Crawling into bed beside him at four o'clock in the morning, she was not entirely consoled by a drowsy kiss and a mumbled, âGoodnight, Chucks,' before he rolled over and went back to sleep.
âI do wish you'd stop calling me Chucks,' she said.
âMy mother used to call me Chucks whenever I'd been a good, brave boy,' Basil explained.
âWell, I'm not your good brave anything,' Vivian said. âGod knows, fire watching was bad enough in winter but these summer nights are worse. The sheer boredom of standing on a rooftop and scanning a clear sky for hours on end could drive a person cuckoo.'
âMore coffee â Chucks?'
She opened her mouth to chide him again but he looked so impish in pyjamas, dressing gown and slippers that she hadn't the heart to pursue an argument over something as trivial as an endearment.
She watched him pour coffee from the Georgian pot he'd unearthed from the back of a cupboard, had rinsed and polished and brought into service at the breakfast table. He had also cleaned her house from top to bottom and seemed as much at ease with a carpet sweeper in his hand as a stopwatch or a rehearsal script. Vivian's only constraint on his fastidiousness was to warn him, on pain of death, not to lay a finger on her desk in the office, a stricture that Basil wisely took to heart.
As a reward for his consideration she stopped leaving cigarette butts burning on the edge of the dining table, wet towels strewn on the bathroom floor and her corset draped on a chair in the living room.
She also purchased a new silk dressing gown, new nightdresses and even some lingerie suited to the fuller figure and had been gratified when Basil, modest as he was, had remarked upon it by wiggling his eyebrows and whistling softly through his teeth. As a lover Basil was no better than he should be but as a house guest he was absolutely perfect and, in her mellower moments, Vivian wondered how she'd ever managed without him.
âToast?'
âThank you.'
âNow, eat your boiled egg like a good girl.'
A girl she was not, and never would be again. Love had come late, but, she told herself, better late than never. Obediently, she topped her egg while Basil gazed adoringly over the rim of his coffee cup.
âI see,' he said at length, âthat the US Senate has accused the Allied Purchasing Committee of haggling over prices for warships.'
âReally?' Vivian said, through a mouthful of toast. âIs there anything you can do with that for the programme?'
âI doubt it,' Basil said. âToo political. There are probably faults on both sides. I'll pursue the piece on Woolton's latest round of restrictions on the serving of food in posh restaurants. That'll be popular with folks in the Midwest. We'll bring in someone from the ministry on the pretext of explaining the thing and ambush him with an ordinary housewife struggling to make ends meet.'
âI thought Bob Gaines was doing a report on the “Ready for Anything” speech in the House. He was down there for it, wasn't he?'
âIndeed, he was,' Basil said.
Vivian dabbed her lips politely with a napkin before she put a shot across her lover's bows. âHave you heard anything from the Home Office in respect of my request for access to an internment camp?'
âOn that score the Home Secretary is intractable.'
âAdamant, or just in need of persuasion?' When Basil did not answer, she went on, âThis ship going down off the coast of Ireland â¦'
âI knew you'd bring that up. We might interview a widow, I suppose, if only we knew who the widows were.'
âBasil, you know how much getting into one of these internment camps means to me. I need material for my book.'
âYes, dear, I know. However, even if I did manage to get you into one you'd only get to see what they wanted you to see.'
âThis country is becoming more like Nazi Germany every day,' Vivian said. âWhatever happened to a free press, let alone civil liberties? We have a right, a positive right, to know what's happening to all the Italians who've been spirited away without a word to anyone.'
âHave they arrested David yet?' Basil asked innocently.
âApparently not,' Vivian said. âStop trying to distract me. I want to see inside one of these camps for myself.'
Basil put down his cup and, reaching across the table, took her hand. âWhat would you do in exchange for, say, a Home Office
carte blanche
?'
âPractically anything.'
âWould you marry me, for instance?'
âBeg pardon?'
âIt's simple. If I succeed in getting you a
carte blanche
, will you marry me?'
âHah!' Vivian said. âYou're daring me to take you on, aren't you? Well, my dear Mr Willets, given what you've told me about the Home Secretary's intractability, never mind all the brouhaha with the War Departmentâ'
âYes, or no, Vivian?'
âWell, let's see just how desperate you are to make an honest woman of me. My bet is that it's just a ruse to soften me up because you know you'll never pull it off.'
âBut if, somehow, I do?'
âAll right, damn it, if you do, I will.'
âScout's honour?'
âScout's honour.'
Basil dipped a hand into the pocket of his dressing gown, brought out a long manila envelope and a small leather-bound box and placed them neatly side by side on the tablecloth.
Cagily, Vivian said, âWhat's that?'
âIt's a letter to the commandant of an internment camp at Congleton Grove, which is up near Nottingham, I believe. It grants limited permission for you and one other to visit the camp and talk with the internees.'
âGood God, Basil, how did you do it?'
âBribery, corruption and a deal of special pleading.'
âAnd the box? What's in the little box?'
âYour engagement ring, of course.'
âWhat a devious swine you are, Basil Willets.'
âAren't I just,' said Basil, and giggled.
âIsn't this a bit early even for you?' Bob Gaines said.
âLook who's talking,' Pete Slocum said. âYou guzzled that gin like it was branch water. Will I send our man downstairs for another bottle?'
âNot unless you're planning on getting pie-eyed before lunch,' Bob said.
âI have every excuse.' Pete Slocum sank back in the sofa, crossed one long leg over another and stirred the air with the toe of his shoe. âTossed out of Berlin, barred from the Ruhr and now we neutrals aren't even welcome in Paris. Is your girl still sleeping?'
âHell, no,' Bob said. âShe's been gone for hours.'
âWill she be here for the party tonight?'
âWhat party?'
âMy welcome home party,' Pete Slocum said. âYou don't think I'm passing up the chance of a boozy do just because you knocked up some tart.'
âShe isn't a tart,' Bob said, âand she isn't knocked up.'
âJust pretending, was she?'
âShe panicked a little, that's all. She was late by a week and jumped to the wrong conclusion.'
âLondon's a far cry from Passaic Falls, chum. Big city girls will always make you pay for your folly. Didn't wise old Uncle Pete warn you that this one was dangerous?'
âIt was a genuine mistake,' Bob said. âA miscalculation.'
âWas her husband walking in on you also a miscalculation?' Pete Slocum asked.
âIt certainly wasn't intentional,' Bob answered. âSusan was pretty damned cool about it, though.'
âShe's a pretty damn cool lady.' Pete paused to remove the olive from his glass and pop it into his mouth. âHas she asked you for dough yet?'
âSusan's not like that.'
âWell, if it ain't your dough she's after it must be you, body and soul,' Pete Slocum said. âJesus, Bob, I can't leave you alone for five minutes 'fore you get yourself in trouble.'
âShe's not in trouble.
I'm
not in trouble.'
âYou shake hands with your lover's husband and you think you're not in trouble?' Pete reached for the cocktail shaker and poured more of the mixture into his glass. âDon't you get it yet, you dope? She's got you on the ropes. She's your girl now, your responsibility. Next thing, you'll be invited to meet her folks.'
âNot if Susan has anything to do with it.'
âDitched her family too, has she?' Pete Slocum said. âDitched the family, ditched the husband. Now it's just you and her against the world. Gaines, you're cooked.'
âMaybe,' Bob said, âbut it's me that's cooked, not you. Keep your big nose out of it.'
âSure, I will, just make sure you bring her along to the party tonight.'
âWhy?'
âSo that I can look Medusa in the eye.'
âDo you want me to bring her sister, too?'
âShe has a sister? I thought you saidâ'
âKidding, Pete, just kidding,' Bob said and, putting down his glass, went into the bedroom to sleep.
The little scrap of paper that Breda had preserved was soiled and crumpled but the numbers Mr Jessop had printed upon it were still legible. Tongue between teeth, she dialled the number and pressed the receiver against her ear as if she expected to be answered in a whisper.