The Raindow and the Rose
Nevil Shute 1958
When colour goes home into the eyes,
And
lights that shine are shut again
With
dancing girls and sweet birds' cries
Behind
the gateways of the brain;
And
that no-place which gave them birth, shall close
The
rainbow and the rose:-
Still
may Time hold some golden space
Where
I'll unpack that scented store
Of
song and flower and sky and face,
And
count, and touch, and turn them o'er,
Musing
upon them; as a mother, who
Has
watched her children all the rich day through,
Sits,
quiet-handed, in the fading light,
When
children sleep, ere night.
RUPERT BROOKE
CHAPTER
John Pascoe must have created
something like a record for a pilot in civil aviation, because he went on
flying a DC6b across the Pacific from
He was unmarried; back in the dark
ages before ever I knew him there had been a divorce. He was the healthiest man
of his age that I have ever met; at the time of his retirement he used no
spectacles and still had all his own teeth. He was a very good tennis player.
He was athletic in most ways ; on his summer leaves he used to go on packhorse
trips into the Canadian Rockies for the fishing, and at Nandi in the Fiji
Islands where he was based in his last year of airline flying he did quite a
bit of skin-diving, using an aqualung. I knew him for nearly thirty years; in
fact, he taught me to fly when I was eighteen at Duffington aerodrome near
Leacaster where my father was a solicitor.
Buxton is a little place in north
I don't think the population of
Buxton can be more than three thousand, though it is the centre of a prosperous
grazing district. It has one hotel, so bad that the commercial travellers avoid
it and drive long distances to do so. It's not a place that I would care to
live in personally, but I'm not Johnnie Pascoe. There was quite a bit of minor
flying to be done there, though, and I suppose that's why he went. He had a
Tiger Moth fitted up with a canister for spreading fertilizer from the air and
he did a bit with that, and he had two Austers for instruction and occasional
charter flights. He had a ground engineer called Billy Monkhouse to look after
these three aeroplanes, who was nearly as old as he was. He lived in a small
house just by the aerodrome and got a ‘woman in each day to do for him, went duck shooting with the locals in
the autumn and trout fishing with the Shire Clerk in the spring. He got the
sort of life he wanted, I suppose.
He always looked about the same,
from the time I first remember him when I was a boy. He would have been about
five foot nine in height with partially grey hair, regular features, rather a
fine face, very tanned, a little lined towards the end. He hadn't got a very
great deal of humour in him, rather stiff. Women liked him, but I don't know
that he liked them very much; at any rate, he gave the impression of being
careful. 'Once bit, twice shy,' he told me once, and I suppose he was speaking
of the divorce. 'But that doesn't seem to stop one being bitten ...'
He was born a Canadian, in
Well now. I emigrated to
That year we had a terrible July. I
was sitting there one evening half asleep, listening to the radio and the wind
outside and the rain beating on the window. The
'It is reported from
I was a bit upset when I heard this
news. We all knew Johnnie Pascoe because for a time
When I went for briefing and ran
through the flight plan with Dick Powell I asked the Control Officer, 'Did you
get any more on Johnnie Pascoe than was on the news?'
'Not much,' he said. '
'Is it right he got a fractured
skull?'
'So they say.'
'They got that over the radio?'
'That's right. They've got a
transceiver at the
I had already got the weather gen
for my flight, but I went back and saw the Met Officer again. I asked him,
"What's the form for tomorrow - on the west coast of
He turned to his chart, and stood
tapping his pencil against his teeth, silent. Then he laid it on the chart.
'There's this depression stationary at the eastern end of the
'Get a clear interval before the
second one comes up?'
'We might. I could tell you better
tomorrow morning. If we do, it'll deteriorate again. It's like that at this
time of year, of course.'
I went out to the aircraft and put
all this out of my mind. You must do that and I had got into the habit of it
years before; when you're doing pre-flight checks you only want to think about
the pre-flight checks. It was a miserable night with a strong gusty south-west
wind that was going to make us fifteen minutes late on schedule, with drifts of
rain lashing against the machine.
Presently I got my clearance from
the Tower and taxied out to the runway, and took her off. When we were on our
way and climbing upon course I had time to think about Johnnie Pascoe again, and
the more I thought the less I liked my thoughts. The west coast of
We flew at twenty-three thousand
feet, and even at that height we had a rough trip. When we were half an hour
from
'We've been monitoring their
frequency,' he said, 'but there's been nothing fresh. I don't suppose there
will be till the morning. The woman's there alone.'
'What woman?' I inquired. 'Over.'
'They're tin miners,' he explained.
'Mr and Mrs Hoskins and two children. They've got a surface working. They just
dig up earth and wash the tin out of the soil, I think. They've got a
diesel-engined boat. Don Hoskins took it round to
I frowned. 'They've got some
neighbours? Over.'
'There's not another house for
thirty miles.'
'For the love of Mike!' I said.
'Who's looking after Johnnie Pascoe?'
'The woman is,' he replied. 'She
pulled him out of the machine and got him to the house.'
I thought very quickly. 'What's the
strip like?'
'They land an Auster there in fine
weather,' he said. 'Somebody was saying it's only about a couple of hundred
yards long, on top of a little hill.'
'Is there a data sheet for it?'
'I think there might be. Would you
like me to look and see?’
'I wish you would. I'll come up to
the Tower when we land.'
We got in to Essendon at about a
I left the office and ran through
the rain to my car in the park, and drove to the Tower. The controller was up
there waiting for me. He had the data sheet for the
It certainly wasn't. The plan
showed it as one tiny runway six hundred and thirty feet long, little more than
two hundred yards, and only forty feet wide. It ran approximately north-west
and south-east, more or less across the prevailing wind. The approaches were
quite unobstructed, and it had a hard surface. It was built upon a ridge
because the ground fell away quite steeply towards the west; at one point it
was marked : 'Cliff 50 ft' only a few yards from the runway. To the east the
slope was more gradual and here was the legend : 'Ground soft and uneven'. The
homestead was marked upon the plan about a quarter of a mile from the strip,
and a secondary plan showed the general position of this lot in relation to the
The rain beat and drummed on the
glass walls of the control room all around us as I stood looking at this data
sheet, taking it all in. 'It's pretty small,' I said at last.
He nodded. 'They don't use it much.
The
I waved the data sheet. 'This is
the only strip in the vicinity?'
He nodded again. 'They used not to
have a strip at all.
Then they made this about two years
ago. I suppose it was the best that they could do. It's a big job, of course,
just for one man and his wife.'
I stood there, thoughtful, looking
down on Runway 260, still lit up. 'Any more on Johnnie Pascoe?'
'Not since I spoke to you. I should
say they've closed down for the night. They'll be speaking on the morning
schedule, at
I turned to him. 'How did all this
begin?'
'The kid got sick two days ago,' he
told me. 'The mother got on the radio about it, and they got the doctor on the
other end. He diagnosed appendicitis, and said she'd got to be brought into
hospital at once.'
'Easier said than done.'
'That's right. Rhys-Davids knows
the form out there better than anyone. He's the pilot-instructor at the
That's the sort of thing that
always happens, of course.
He went on, 'They sent a machine
out from
“Over this place where it says, "cliff"?'
'Could be.'
I glanced down at the paper in my
hand. It was several hundred yards to the homestead. 'She got him to the
house?'
He nodded. 'She couldn't carry him,
of course. But she must be a pretty good kind of a girl. She had the child out
there at the runway in her arms ready to pop it into the machine, so that the
pilot wouldn't have to leave his seat. She put the child down and pulled Pascoe
out of the wreckage. She says he's got a big dent in his head where the skull's
caved in, a broken thigh, and possibly other injuries.'
'Christ!' I said softly. I could
imagine the scene - just one woman in the rain and the wind, with all that on
her plate. 'What did she do then?'
'She did all right,' he said. 'She
left him lying on the ground and ran back with the child to the house. Then she
ran back again with a couple of hot water bags and blankets. She knows about
shock, apparently. Then she ran back to the house again and got on the blower
to
It was just about as bad as it
could be. 'He's unconscious?'
'Semi-conscious. He asked for a
cigarette and smoked it while she was getting the sled.'
'What's the form about the
weather?'
'They're hoping for a few hours
clear tomorrow. Then it's likely
to close down again.'
A sudden gust of wind whistled
about the Tower. 'Do you know what they're planning to do?'
'I haven't heard,' he said. 'If it
clears they'll almost certainly send out a machine from
'Is there anyone at Buxton now? I
mean, if it doesn't clear? Any other pilot who could fly an Auster down
from there?'
He shook his head. 'I haven't
heard. They may be sending somebody up there tonight. So far as I know, Pascoe
was the only experienced pilot there.'
I stood in thought for a moment
while responsibility descended
squarely on my shoulders.
Johnnie Pascoe had taught me to fly, and whoever they had at
I turned to the controller. 'Mind
if I use your telephone?'
I got on an outside line from the
Control Tower and rang Peter Fosdick at his house, our operations manager. He
was in bed, but I got him out of that. I told him what the form was, and asked
if he could spare me for a day or two to go over on this thing. He grumbled a
good bit, but he'd got plenty of time to rearrange the crews because I wasn't
flying till the afternoon. He couldn't very well refuse, and besides, he knew
Johnnie Pascoe, too.
The controller had heard all of
that, of course, because I was speaking from his desk. I replaced the
telephone. 'I'm going over on Flight 117, the freighter,' I told him. 'There'll
be a change in the flight plan. I'm going to ask them to go into Launceston and
drop me off before they go on to
I folded the data sheet about that
rotten little airstrip and put it in my pocket, and went down to the car. I
looked in at the office and told the clerk about the freighter stop at
Launceston. I grabbed one of the Tasmanian maps and went out to my car again,
and drove off home. I live in the suburbs at Essendon not very far from the
aerodrome, in a fair-sized single-storey house on the corner of two streets. I
left the car out in the road instead of driving into the garage, and went into
the house.
Sheila had gone to bed ; she came
out in her dressing-gown to meet me in the hall. 'You're late, Ronnie,' she
said. 'Did you have a bad trip?'
'Not too bad,' I told her. 'But
there's been a bit of drama in
'I heard it on the news. I'm sorry.
Why did you leave the car outside?'
'I'm going over there,' I said.
'See if there's anything that I can do. There's a freighter in about an hour's
time. I want my leather coat and helmet.'
She stared at me, astonished. Your leather
coat? I haven't seen that for years.'
'We haven't given it away?'
She wrinkled her brows. 'I don't
think so.' She stood in thought. 'I remember wrapping it up in newspaper so
that it wouldn't make other things dirty ... I put mothballs in with it ... I
think it might be in the trunk under Diana's bed, underneath my stole.'
'Would the helmet be with it?'
'It might be. Peter had that last,
two years ago, when he went to that fancy-dress party at school.'
Diana woke up when we pulled the
trunk out from under her bed, and sat up sleepily, 'Wha's the matter?'
'It's all right, darling,' Sheila
told her. 'Go to sleep again. We just want Daddy's coat. He's going flying.'
At eight years old one is easily
satisfied. 'Is that all?' she said. She lay down and turned on her side; I pulled
the bedclothes over her and tucked them round her shoulders for the night was
chilly, and she went to sleep immediately. The coat was there in newspaper and
we found the helmet in the chest of drawers in Peter's room. Sheila said
softly, 'He puts it on sometimes, in front of the looking-glass.'
We closed the door quietly behind
us. 'You'd better have something, Ronnie,' she said. 'Dripping toast and
cocoa?'
It was a good idea, because I
should be up all night. She went into the kitchen and I went into the bedroom
and stuffed a little haversack full of pullovers and warm clothes. There wasn't
room for pyjamas but I could do without those in favour of long woolly
underwear. Whatever things were like at Buxton, I was going to be damn cold at
some time or another. I could see that sticking out a mile.
Sheila was busy in the kitchen. I
put the haversack down in the hall beside my coat and wandered out into the
workshop. Peter and I were planning a surprise for Diana, because we were going
to build her a doll's house, a big one with six rooms, for Christmas. I had got
the plywood and the lengths of small, sawn timber, and we had laid out the
baseboard. I stood looking at the drawing, pondering this thing. I had another
project on hand for Peter for Christmas, a flying model aeroplane with a small
diesel motor, but that I was building in a corner of the workshop at the
aerodrome to make it a surprise.
I stood pondering the doll's house
in the workshop, savouring my home. Sheila came to me in a few minutes. 'Don't stand
mooning there,' she said. 'The toast's ready.'
'What colour shall we have the
drawing-room?' I asked.
'Pink,' she said. 'Pale pink walls.
She likes pink. Now come and eat your toast.'
I left the workshop and went
through to the kitchen and ate the little meal she had prepared for me.
Presently I glanced at my watch, and it was time to go.
She said a little anxiously, 'Don't
go and buy it yourself^ Ronnie.'
'I won't do that,' I promised her.
'There's trouble enough over there already.'
I put my old leather coat on in the
hall, and kissed her; she came to the door with me. 'Will you be able to ring
me?' she asked.
I thought for a moment. 'After
dark,' I said. 'I'll ring you after dark tomorrow night and let you know the
form.'
I drove back to the airport and
locked the car up in the park. In the office the flight crew were getting ready
to take off the freighter. We exchanged a few words about Johnnie Pascoe and
went out to the machine; we took off on time and settled down to a long flight
against the headwind. I sat on the floor with my back against the freight,
dozing a little; it was very cold and draughty and noisy in the unfurnished
shell. I was glad of my leather coat. It was nearly
We had radioed the airport control
to ask them to get a car to meet us, to drive me sixty miles to Buxton. It was
waiting for us with a very sleepy driver, and I got in beside him and we
started off. It was a quarter past five when we got near the little town, and
the driver asked me where I wanted to go.
'Better take me to the hotel,' I
said. I remembered it from my forced landing, years before. 'What's its name?'
'The Post Office Hotel,' he said.
'They won't be open yet. They don't get out of bed till about nine.'
We drove into the deserted street,
black and silent and wet. 'Well, take me there, anyway,' I said.
He stopped in front of the hotel. I
got out and knocked on the door for a few minutes, with no result. Then I went
exploring round the back with my small torch and found that the kitchen door
was unlocked. 1 went back to the street and paid off the taxi, returned to the
hotel kitchen, and switched on the light.
It was a pretty dirty sort of
place, and smelt a bit. It was warm, though, with the residue of heat from the
stove. I was hungry again and there was nothing much to do for an hour, so I
started ferreting around and found the larder, smelling a good deal worse than
the kitchen. There was an electric cooker there, so I made myself a cup of tea
and boiled a couple of eggs and cut some bread and butter.
It was still dark outside at
It didn't take me long to find the
police station. There was a light on in the front office, and when I opened the
door a young constable got up from a desk. Behind him on a table was the black
metal case of a transceiver. I had -come to the right place.
He said, 'Guid morning,' in a
strong Scots accent. 'And what can I do for you?' He could not have been in the
country very long.
'My name is Clarke,' I said. 'Have
you heard anything about me?' He shook his head. 'Well, I'm a captain with
Australian Continental Airways.' I went on to tell him briefly why I'd come to
Buxton. 'They told me at Essendon that Mrs Hoskins would be speaking in the
morning schedule at
'Not at all,' he said. 'There'll be
others coming to hear that. Mr Monkhouse, the ground engineer, for one, and
Sergeant Farrell from the house. Nae doubt they'll be making a great effort to
get him out of it today.'
I nodded. 'Have you heard a weather
forecast this morning?'
'Only what came through on the
'What was that?'
'Stormy, with low cloud and rain.'
I offered him a cigarette and we
stood smoking for a time, not saying very much. Presently a very old Ford
Anglia drew up in the street outside; the constable glanced out of the window.
'Here's Mr Monkhouse.'
He was an oldish man, shaved and
presentable, dressed in a roll-neck sweater under a soiled sports coat. He had
once had red hair, now turned mostly to grey. He had a merry face and, I
guessed, some affinity for beer that might have prevented him from rising
higher in his life than ground engineer at a small Tasmanian aero club. His
face struck a faint chord of memory in my mind; I introduced myself, and then I
said, 'We've met before, haven't we?'
'
‘You've got a memory,' I remarked.
'Cor,' he said, 'I remember you
before that. I was a GE with the
I smiled. 'That's right. Captain
Pascoe taught me to fly. He was at Leacaster instructing.'
'So he was."
I glanced at him. 'You're English?'
'Not me - I'm Aussie. But I been
all over. Went to
You've been in aviation a long
time.'
He nodded. 'Pretty near as long as
Captain Pascoe, and that's saying something.' He glanced at me. "You come
to fly him out?'
'We'll see what the form is,' I
replied. 'The
'There's an Auster and a Tiger,' he
said. 'Tiger's got a super canister in the front cockpit.'
'Take you long to get it out?'
'Three or four hours. But the
Auster would be better. Got a blind-flying panel. Stick a stretcher down in the
rear fuselage of that, too.'
'It'll take a stretcher?'
He nodded. 'Captain Pascoe had it
modded, special. Both of them. We got a special stretcher, narrow each end like
a coffin lid. Take out the front passenger seat and it fits just nice.' He
paused a moment in thought. 'He had it with him yesterday, so I suppose it's
bust. Knock you up another one in half a day, do for the time being.'
'Is the Auster okay?'
'Filled her up and did the daily
last night,' he said. 'Case anybody wanted her.'
The sergeant came in from a door
that led into the house, buttoning his jacket. He went to the transceiver and
turned it on to warm up, and we stood silent, listening. Presently it came to
life, and
The announcer said, 'This is 7 HT.
7 HT calling all regular stations. Good morning, everybody. This morning I'm
taking 7 KZ first, and after that we'll take the regular schedule. 7 KZ, if you
are listening, will you come in, Mrs Hoskins.'
There was a momentary pause, and
then, "This is 7 KZ,' said a woman's voice. 'How are you today, Mr
Fletcher?.' And then, 'Over.'
'I'm fine. How are your two
patients? Over.'
'Well, Betty's better, Mr Fletcher.
There's no doubt of that. Her stomach doesn't feel so rigid, and she drank a
little milk. Captain Pascoe, he seems just about the same. I gave the second
injection at
'Is he conscious?'
'Well, it's hard to say, you know.
I don't think he can say anything. I don't think he's feeling much pain,
though. Sometimes his eyes are open, and then it's as if he's looking at things
in the room, you know. It's hard to say. Over to you.'
'I'll put you through to the doctor
in a minute, Mrs Hoskins. Before I do that, tell me about the weather. What's
it like with you this morning?'
'Just the same, Mr Fletcher. There
don't seem any difference to what it was yesterday.'
'There should be a fine spell this
morning, according to the Met. It ought to be clearing soon from the west, away
over the sea. Is there any sign of that?'
'Well, to tell the truth I haven't
looked, Mr Fletcher, only just out of the window. If you'll hold on a minute
I'll go out and see.'
'I'll wait, Mrs Hoskins. Take your
time; there's no hurry.'
We waited silent, staring at the
set. If it was true there was a break coming, I would try and make it in the
Auster. That was, if
In a few minutes she came on again.
'Mr Fletcher? This is Mrs Hoskins here. It's quite right what you said. It's
showing a little line away over on the horizon, like as if it was clearing
behind the rain.'
'Good-oh. They forecast a fine
morning and it looks as though you're going to have it. I'm going to switch you
through now to the doctor; he's waiting on the line. Before I go off, though,
we shall want to speak to you again before the machine takes off, to get the
latest weather from you.
Can you be listening again at
'I'll be listening at
'He's here with me, Mrs Hoskins.
I'll put you through to the hospital now, and Don will speak after that.'
I lit another cigarette and we
stood listening to the consultations. The doctor took the child first, and from
the tenor of the conversation there seemed to be no doubt that she was better.
The pain and the inflammation were less than they had been, and the temperature
was now below a hundred. So far as Pascoe was concerned, there did not seem to
be much change. The doctor was principally concerned about infection of the
head wound, and he gave her very elaborate directions about dressing it, making
her write them down as he dictated slowly.
In the end he said, 'Well, that's
all for now, Mrs Hoskins. I'll be speaking to you again from the airport at
We listened while the woman talked
to her husband, but there was nothing much in that. He was weatherbound, as all
the fishing boats were in Recherche or
The announcer allowed them two or
three exchanges, and then he cut them short. He said, 'Before we go on with the
morning schedule, has any other station anything to say about
At the set the sergeant touched a
switch and spoke into the microphone. 'This is 7 PC, Buxton. There is a Captain
Clarke here wants to speak. Over.'
‘Okay Buxton. Put Captain Clarke
on.'
I went to the microphone and said,
'Clarke speaking.
Have you heard anything about me
from Essendon? Over.' "Yes, we had a message to say you were coming. We're
very glad to hear that there's a pilot at Buxton. What aircraft have you got
there?'
'There's an Auster fuelled and
serviceable,' I said. 'There's a Tiger with a canister in the front seat that
could be made serviceable in half a day.'
'Okay. Did you hear me talking to
Mrs Hoskins?'
'We heard all of that.'
'This break in the weather that's
coming won't last longer than two or three hours, according to the Met. After
that it's going to clamp down again for an indefinite period, days perhaps. The
Met don't think there's going to be much reduction in the wind velocity. If
that's right, we shan't be able to go round the south coast from here unless we
take the Proctor, and that's not got a hope of landing on that strip. We shall
try it with an Auster taking the doctor as a passenger, with his operating
gear. We don't expect to be able to land properly, but in this wind force we
hope to be able to fly so slowly across the strip into wind that he'll be able
to jump out without hurting himself. But we'll have to go over the mountains to
get there at all, and that may not be possible. Over to you.'
'Clarke here. The wind's dead
across the strip, is it? Over.'
'It is at present, and not likely
to change much, according to the Met.'
'It's a job for a parachute doctor,
surely?' I said. 'Over.'
'I know it is, but we haven't got
one. The RAAF are sending down a
'I can make the
'Are you willing to try and put a
doctor down?' he asked. 'Over.'
I paused before replying. It was
years since I had flown anything like that, but I had been good on Austers
once, when I was instructing at Ballarat before I joined the airline. 'I'm game
to try it,' I said. 'I know what you want. Whether I'll succeed in landing him
- well, that's another thing.'
'What's the weather like with you,
now?' he asked. 'Any sign of this break?'
'Hold on.' I spoke rapidly to the
sergeant, and he led me outside. Twenty yards up the street there was a gap
between the houses and a view across flat country to the west. There was a line
of blue sky down on the horizon.
I hurried back to the police
station and the microphone. "Clarke speaking,' I said. 'It's breaking over
to the west, about twenty miles away. With this wind it might be clear here in
half an hour. Over.'
'The Met only give it about three
hours before it clamps again,' he said. 'I'd like to fly our doctor up to you,
but I don't know that there's time for that. Have you got a doctor therewith
surgical experience, who would be willing to try it?'
'I don't know,' I said. I turned to
the sergeant and asked him. 'Is there a doctor here?' He replied, 'Dr
Turnbull.' I said, 'You'd better speak,' and he took the microphone.
'This is Sergeant Farrell,' he
said. 'Dr Turnbull lives here. He does surgery on accidents and that.'
The sergeant said, 'He's young.
Only come out of medical school two or three years.'
We left it that the sergeant should
take me to see the doctor and we would speak again at
'We'll have to hop around now, Mr
Monkhouse,' I said. 'Will you go to the aerodrome and run that Auster up? I
want to do two or three landings on her before I take off for the
'Take the dual out?' he asked.
'Oh - yes. We shan't want that.'
He went off and got into his little
car and drove away, and I went with the sergeant to the police car. As we got
in I said, 'Tell me about Dr Turnbull. We're going to his house?'
'He hasn't got a house,' he said.
'He lives with the Reverend Haynes - he's the vicar. He has two rooms in the
vicarage and Mrs Haynes does for him.'
'He isn't married?'
'No.
'Does he have his surgery in the
vicarage?'
He slipped the gear in and looked
over his shoulder as he backed the car out. 'He's got a surgery in a room in
the office building, over Woodward's shop. That's where he sees people mostly,
but he won't be there yet. I'll take you to the vicarage.' He swung the car
round into the road. 'We never had a doctor here in Buxton till he came, two
years ago,' he observed. 'He's squatting, you might say. We used to have to get
a doctor out from Devonport before.'
'Do people like him?'
'Oh, aye. He's Tasmanian - his
father has a fruit farm on the
We drove about a quarter of a mile
up to the church. It was a stone-built church with a square tower, very like an
English church as many in
Presently the handle clanked, and
it was opened by a boy of ten, in grey shorts and a sweater. The sergeant asked
if we could see the doctor. He stared at us without speaking, and then he ran
back to the kitchen at the rear of the house, leaving the door open. We heard
him say, 'Mum, there's people to see Alec'
The vicar's wife came to us at the
door, a little grey, a little portly, with a good-natured face, wearing a rough
apron over a black dress; she smoothed worn hands upon it as she came because
she had been getting breakfast. 'Good morning, Sergeant,' she said. 'Did you
want to see the doctor?'
'If we can,' he replied.
She stood smoothing her hands on
the apron. 'I was letting him lie,' she said. 'He was out till four in the
morning with Mrs Jardine's baby. Is it anything urgent?'
'It's Captain Pascoe,' the sergeant
said. 'We want him to fly down to
'Oh ... Had I better wake him, do
you think? He's only had three hours in bed.'
'I think you'd better, Mrs Haynes.
There's not much time to lose.'
'Well, come upstairs.' She turned
and led the way up polished and uncarpeted stairs to the top floor. 11ère the boards were out of sight of the
front door, and were unpolished. She opened a door for us. 'Just wait in there
and I'll tell him.'
It was the doctor's private
sitting-room, and it wasn't much. There was a square of threadbare carpet in
the middle of the floor, an oval table with a knitted doily in the middle of it
and an ashtray upon that. There were two upholstered chairs with broken springs
before a fireplace in which no fire had burned that winter, and one small
wicker-seated chair at the table. There was an antique, horsehair sofa with one
leg missing, supported on a chunk of wood. A faded print of the Good Shepherd
hung above the fireplace. A small bookcase housed an array of medical volumes,
some copies of the Australian Medical Journal, and three or four paperbacked
novels.
We stood in the cold room, waiting,
listening to the murmur of voices in the next room followed by the creak of
bedsprings. We heard the woman go downstairs again, and presently the doctor
came in at the door in his pyjamas, bleary-eyed from sleep, hair tumbled, doing
up the cord of his dressing-gown. 'Morning, Sergeant,' he said thickly. 'What
can I do for you?'
He looked incredibly young. I
learned later that he was twenty-eight, but that morning he looked about
fifteen. He was only about five foot seven in height and he had the clear skin
and staring red hair of a boy, that generally darkens quickly in the twenties.
He was slight in build; both the sergeant and I seemed to tower over him.
'Sorry to wake you, Doctor,' said
the sergeant. 'But it's Captain Pascoe.'
'That's all right,' he muttered.
'What about Captain Pascoe?'
'This is Mr Clarke,' the sergeant
said. He corrected himself. 'Captain Clarke, I should say, with ACA. We're
waiting on a call from
The boy rubbed a hand over his face
and shook his head a little, shaking away his sleep. 'What's he got? Fractured
skull, isn't it?'
'He's got a fractured thigh as
well, they say.'
'What about the other one? The
appendicitis?'
'There's that, too,' the sergeant
said. 'But the report on the morning session was to say she's better.'
The doctor stood in silence.
Presently he plunged his hand into the pocket of his dressing-gown and produced
a packet of cigarettes. He offered them to us and we both took one. He lit them
for us, and lit his with another match. 'I asked Mrs Haynes if she could bring us
up some tea,' he muttered.
'That'll be nice,' the sergeant
said politely.
We stood in silence till the doctor
spoke again. 'I couldn't do two major operations there,' he said irresolutely.
'It's like asking anyone to set
up a hospital with - nothing. And no help. It's not a reasonable thing to ask
of anyone. You'll have to get them out to where the job can be done properly.'
'There doesn't seem to be much hope
of getting them out,' I said.
'Why not? There's an airstrip
there.'
He was stalling; that was evident.
I couldn't help being a bit sorry for him in his predicament. He looked so
young, so inexperienced. He was tired, too. I was tired for I had had no sleep
at all, but then I was a lot older than he was. 'Do you know about aeroplanes
and flying?' I asked.
He shook his head. 'I thought of
learning to fly once, but it costs too much.'
'I'll try and explain,' I said.
'The Hoskins could only make a very short strip there, only about two hundred
yards long and about forty feet wide. It's really no more than a little bit of
road on top of a ridge of hill. To land even the smallest aeroplane on that
you'd need to have perfect weather and the wind blowing straight along the
strip. Well, now we've got a wind that won't be less than thirty miles an hour
any time today, and blowing dead across the strip, at right angles to it. I
can't land in a cross-wind like that. No pilot could, upon a lightly loaded
aeroplane, the sort of a slow aeroplane you'd have to take to use that strip
and not run off the end. Johnnie Pascoe took a chance and tried it yesterday,
to get the child out. He bought it.'
He looked at me, a little sullenly.
'If you can't land there, what's the use of talking?'
'There is one thing that we
can do,' I said. 'We've got a patch of clear weather this morning, that won't
last longer than a few hours. I can take an Auster there and fly slowly across
the strip, with any luck, heading in to wind. I won't be more than five feet up
— I may even be able to
touch my wheels. We'll be flying at about forty miles an hour into a
thirty-mile-an-hour wind, so we shan't be doing more than ten miles an hour
across the strip. I might even be able to hold her stationary for a few
seconds, with the wheels upon the ground. An active man could just step out on
to the strip. In any case, it won't be much of a jump.'
We stood in silence, and in the
silence Mrs Haynes came clumping up the stairs and into the room. She had a
tray with three cups of strong tea on it, and a bowl of sugar. 'I brought you
some tea,' she said comfortably. 'It's still blowy outside, but it looks as if
it's fining up. We might be going to have a nice day.'
We thanked her mechanically, and
she went out. "You could break a leg trying to do that,' he said.
'Anything could happen.'
He was the only doctor that we'd
got. 'I wouldn't ask you to break a leg,' I said patiently. 'We don't want any
more casualties there. If I can't make it so that you can just step out, we'll
come home again.'
'Suppose I were to do that,' he
said. 'I couldn't hope to do much for either of them.' He stared up at me with
some hostility. 'You know all about aeroplanes. Well, you don't know much about
medicine. Am I supposed to do a wonder-operation on a fractured skull with
nothing but a blunt penknife and a kettle of muddy water? Or take out an
appendix? There's not a hope of a successful operation. I can tell you that. I
can tell you another thing. If I try it, both patients will die.'
The sergeant said quietly, 'A cup
of tea, Doctor.' He passed a cup to him and gave me one, and passed the bowl of
sugar.
'If I can land you, I can land
anything else in reason,' I said. 'It may be necessary to drop it. But I can
land your instruments, and anything else you'll need, provided that the weather
holds if a second trip is necessary. A sterilizer, perhaps.'
'Don't talk rubbish,' he said
irritably. 'There's no electric current ...' And then he said, 'There's only
one thing to be done. They'll have to send a party in to them by land. They can
fly in to
I shook my head. 'I doubt if they'd
make
He rubbed his chin. 'They can get a
truck as far as Kallista,' he said thoughtfully. 'Then there's a track to the
I asked the doctor, 'Would they be
alive in four days' time?'
'The girl will,' he said. 'From
what you say, her appendix is subsiding. That often happens. She'd probably be
able to walk out by then.'
'What about Captain Pascoe?'
He was silent. We all stood looking
at each other.
At last I said, 'Well, that's the
position.
'Who's the doctor?' he asked.
The sergeant said, 'It would be Dr
Parkinson. He does air trips for them now and then. Did one last year, to
'Well, why can't they fly up here
and take on more petrol and then fly down the coast from here?'
'They've got to get here, for one
thing,' I said. 'They'd have to go pretty well to Launceston to avoid the
mountains, and then due west another sixty miles against the wind. It'd be a
three-hour flight before they could be here to start the job, in an Auster.
From what the Met say this clear patch is only going to last about three
hours.'
He stood in silence before us. 'I
don't want you to think that I'm afraid of jumping out there,' he said at last.
'That doesn't sound too bad. It's what comes after that that I don't like. I
can't see any hope of a successful operation, in that place. And if I operate
and then he dies, just think what the papers will say!'
It seemed to me that it was time to
be brutal, and I was getting a bit tired of this. 'The papers will be on to
this already, by this time,' I said. 'You'd better think what they will say if
you refuse to go, and then he dies.'
He stood there biting his lip.
'We're all in a bit of a jam over
this,' I said. 'You, most of all, perhaps. We'd better go through the motions
of doing the best we can.'
'There's another way to look at
it,' the sergeant said. 'I know the chance is that you won't be able to save
him, everything against you as it is. But you might save him. He might recover.
Just think of what the papers would say then.'
He stood irresolute. 'I'll add a
bit to that,' I said. 'I'll give you a good break with the Press. I'll tell
them you insisted on going to do what you could, at the risk of your own life.'
He looked up at me. You'd tell them
that? Even if he dies?'
'I will,' I said. 'Especially if he
dies.'
He still hesitated. 'All my other
patients ...' he said. 'There's no telling when I could get back from the
The sergeant asked, You got
anything urgent? Babies coming down, or anything of that?'
'Not exactly... But I can't just
run out and leave the
practice.'
'The district nurse is here,' the
sergeant said. 'And there's plenty of doctors in Devonport, come out in an
emergency.'
'I suppose so. If I went I'd have
to take an awful lot of things with me. Some of them in bottles — liquids. They'd all get broken, wouldn't
they?'
'We'll just have to do our best,' I
said. 'That's all we can do. Pack them with a lot of padding in an old
suitcase, and see what we can do.'
He stood there silent, and I
guessed that he was trying to think up a few more objections. It was time to
cut him short. 'Well, that's all fixed, then,' I said positively. 'I think
you've made the right decision. Look, I'm going out to the aerodrome now to
look over the machine. I'll be back in the police station at
In the car on our way out to the
aerodrome, I asked the sergeant, 'He does do surgery?'
'Well, yes,' he replied. 'He hasn't
done much since he's been here, because there's not been much to do. All the
motor accidents, they go to Devonport. We haven't got a hospital here, you see.
Derek Hepworth, he fell off a roof about six months ago and broke his leg, and
the doctor set that all right. He's a Bachelor of Surgery.'
'Has he done any operations since
he came here? An appendicitis, or anything like that?'
He shook his head. 'Not that I know
about. Anything like that would go to Devonport.'
I was worried. 'Look, Sergeant,' I
said. He turned to me. 'Look, stop the car a minute. Just park here.' And when
he had done so, I said, 'What do you really think about all this, yourself?'
'I don't like it,' he said flatly.
'I don't think he wants to do a fractured skull - at the
'I don't think he does,' I said.
'This is his first practice, isn't it?'
'That's right.'
I bit my lip. 'He must have done a
fractured skull or two, in hospital.'
'Aye,' said the sergeant. 'But
that's different to doing it upon the kitchen table at the
'Is there any other doctor we could
get? Anyone more experienced?'
'We'd have to try in Devonport,' he
said. 'Dr Simpson - he might be the most likely. He's a good surgeon, and he's
not so old. He still goes ski-ing. But whether he could drop everything and
come away at five minutes' notice — that I wouldn't know. He docs a lot of surgery. He might have two or
three lined up to be operated on this morning - maybe some as urgent as Captain
Pascoe. It's just a chance if you could get a man like that to come.'
'By the time we got him here, Dr
Parkinson could have flown up from
'That's so.'
He evidently wasn't going to help
me much; he had nothing constructive to suggest. If a decision had to be made quickly,
and apparently it had, the onus rested squarely upon me. I was rushing into
this, bullying an unwilling and inexperienced young doctor into doing an
operation which he clearly felt to be beyond his capacity. I was doing this
purely on the score of time, because Johnnie Pascoe had a fractured skull and
there was no time to get a better surgeon. But what if I was wrong? What if the
weather forecasters were wrong, as they so often were? What if it should be a
brilliant, sunny day, all day, with a light, gentle breeze that would permit a
proper landing on that strip?
I looked up, and the sky was blue
to the west right down to the horizon, with every promise of a brilliantly fine
day.
I made up my mind. 'I'll fly Dr
Turnbull in,' I said. 'I'll land him if I can, and get back here as quick as I
can. While I'm away, we'll try and get a better surgeon here, and if it keeps
fine, then I'll make a second trip and fly him in as well. That's what we'll
do.'
'Aye,' said the sergeant, 'that's a
good idea.' We went on to the aerodrome.
The aerodrome at Buxton is a square
grass field only about a mile from the town, about six hundred yards long in
any direction. No scheduled air service flies to it because there isn't the
demand; sheep graze on it from time to time and have to be herded off before a
landing. There is one corrugated iron hangar with a tattered windsock on the
gable, capable of housing four or five small aeroplanes. This hangar had a
board on it, PASCOE FLYING SERVICES PTY
Billy Monkhouse had got the Auster
out and was running it up outside the hangar in the strong, gusty wind; he had
two boys to help him, hanging on to the wing struts to prevent it blowing away.
The conditions were not good for flying a light aeroplane, and I hoped that my
hand hadn't lost its cunning. I had a short talk with the sergeant and sent him
back to the police station to ring up Dr Simpson in Devonport and see if there
was any chance that he could come to help us; the ground engineer would run me
back into the town.
I moved over and stood by the wing
tip of the Auster in the cold, bleak wind. Presently the ground engineer
throttled down ; I looked at him in inquiry and he raised one thumb. I moved to
the door as he got out. 'I'll do about three landings and bring her in,' I
said. 'Get the boys to stay on the wing struts while I taxi out downwind.'
I sat in the machine for several
minutes, trying to accustom myself to the size again after years of flying
airliners. There my seat when the machine was on the ground was nearly twenty
feet up; a landing at that height was a good landing. Here it was about three
feet from the ground. I sat there savouring it all. The horizon came just so
upon the windscreen; that was how it must be when landing. The grass looked
so. With a glance down I could actually see one wheel upon the ground ;
I did not think that that would be a help, but it was possible. There was the
throttle and the mixture control, there the flaps. I was glad to note that the
machine had navigation lights and a blind-flying panel of instruments; that was
a benefit that I had hardly dared to hope for.
Presently I waved the chocks away
and nodded to the engineer, and we began to taxi out downwind at walking pace.
I turned her in the strong,
unpleasant wind, waved the boys away, and took her off at once. She was just
like all the Austers that I had flown before, lightly loaded and so wallowing a
bit in the wind turbulence, but light on the controls and easy to fly. I did
one circuit, for the time was short, and came in for a landing. I pulled down
the lever for a little flap but she was coming down so vertically that I eased
it slowly back again. In that strong wind I brought her in at fifty, and we
came down a flight path that must have been close on forty-five degrees to the
ground, moving forward very slowly. I rounded off too high, gave her a little
throttle and floated on till the far hedge looked about right on the
windscreen, and then cut it as she rolled on to the grass.
I did another circuit and another
landing. The third time I brought her down on to the grass tail up at a very
slow speed over the ground, and touched the wheels. I shot a quick glance down;
they were well and truly on the ground and only moving forward a few miles an
hour. I throttled very carefully a little more, and we were motionless, flying
at about a quarter throttle, tail well up. I held her on the ground like that
for a few seconds; then a gust came and I jammed everything forward, and took
off again.
I brought her round, landed just
outside the hangar where the boys were waiting to catch the wing struts, and
taxied her in. It was a quarter past eight. I stopped the motor and got out of
the cabin on to the ground, and helped to push her into the hangar. It was too
rough a day to leave her standing unattended on the tarmac.
The break in the clouds now was
practically overhead ; to the west there was blue sky with a little light
cirrus. The sun, of course, was in the north-east and low down, so that it was
still overcast and cold, arid the wind was no less strong. I was very conscious
that I had had no breakfast, but there was no time for that. I got into the old
Ford with Billy Monkhouse and he started it, and drove out on the road towards
the town.
'With any luck we'll get the doctor
in to them this morning,' I said. 'If this weather holds till dinnertime, we'll
be right.'
CHAPTER TWO
When we got to the police station
it was a few minutes after
The loudspeaker was saying, 'Well,
it's a lovely day here now,
The doctor said, 'It's a job that
needs some help, somebody who knows what to do. The district nurse wouldn't be able to land like that ... There just isn't
anyone round here.'
'How would it be if I asked
His face lightened. I knew what he
was thinking as well as if he had told me, that in that case Parkinson would do
the operation. It would take him an hour or two to get the patient ready, or he
could spin it out so long, and then there was a very good chance he wouldn't
have to do it at all. He would be the junior surgeon, and would stand by to
assist Parkinson.
'That's quite a good idea,' he
said. 'I know Parkinson. He's got a great deal more experience than I have,
with head injuries.'
'Has he?' I inquired. T don't know
anything about him, except that he's a surgeon and he's volunteered to go upon
this job.'
'He does a lot of this flying
work,' he told me. 'I don't say he's the best in
The loudspeaker was saying, 'Well,
'How are the patients, Mrs Hoskins?
Over.'
'Betty's easier,
'Thank you, Mrs Hoskins. I'm going
to call Buxton now, but I want you to stay listening in case I want to speak to
you again. 7 PC, this is 7 HT calling. If you are listening, 7 PC, will you
please come in. Over.'
The sergeant touched the switch.
'This is 7 PC answering 7 HT. Over to you.'
'Thank you, Buxton. If Captain
Clarke is there, will you ask him to speak ? Over.'
I took the microphone. 'This is
Clarke speaking. Over.'
'What's the weather like with you?'
'It's clearing,' I said. 'Quite
clear over to the west, cloud still to the east. Wind about thirty knots.
What's it like with you? Over.'
'We've got low cloud here still,
ceiling about eight hundred feet, mountains well covered. Wind two hundred and
fifty degrees, twenty knots.'
'Not much hope of getting through
from your end?1
'Not from here. How is it with
you?'
'I can make it,' I said. 'Dr
Turnbull here, he's going to try and jump out as I fly slowly across the strip.
He'll make it if anybody can. There is one thing, though. Dr Turnbull would
like help if he can get it, with the operation. Could you fly Dr Parkinson up
here while I'm away? Then if the weather holds I'd fly him down and land him
the same way, making a second trip. Over.'
'Hold on, Buxton.' There was a long
pause while they consulted at their end. I stood holding the microphone and
looking out of the window. There was a hard brightness in the weather that
didn't look too good; it was sunny now, but there was no warmth in it.
'That's good,' I said. 'I should be
back by then, or not much later. Have you got the latest Met report?'
'Not very satisfactory,' he said.
'There's another depression coming up. They think it may clamp down again about
'We'll have to do the best we can,'
I said. 'I can fly round the coast from here at sea level. It's just a question
then of being able to get up to the strip.'
I asked to speak to Mrs Hoskins and
they put her on. I told her that we were coming and that I hoped to have the
doctor with her in about an hour and a half. I told her that we would fly over
and drop the doctor's suitcase first, and I asked her to pick a soft spot of
turf or heather close beside the airstrip and pin a sheet down on it with
stones, so that we could see where to drop.
Then I handed the microphone back
to the sergeant, and we were ready to go. The doctor had a medium-sized fibre
suitcase with him, heavily laden. 'I packed a lot of towels round the bottles,'
he said. 'I think they should be all right.' He was wearing a woollen overcoat
but underneath that he was quite sensibly dressed, in ski-ing trousers and ski
boots, with a roll-necked sweater.
We left the police station and
drove out to the aerodrome again with the ground engineer. The sun was bright
and the sky blue so that everything looked cheerful, though the wind was still
very strong for a light aircraft. We drove up to the hangar and got out. Before
we pushed the aircraft out I crossed to the ground engineer's desk and laid out
the course upon my map, marking it with a thick pencil line; in that weather I
could fly it direct. It was about a hundred and fifteen miles, course one
hundred and seventy-eight degrees magnetic, practically due south. It was going
to take us all of an hour and a half to get there in that wind, and the machine
had fuel for less than four hours. We shouldn't have much time in hand for
messing about. I studied the map again. There were mountains up to four
thousand feet along my route; I could dodge them by flying down the
I folded the map with the airstrip
data sheet and put them both in the diagonal map pocket of my old flying coat.
Then I took the doctor to the aircraft and sat him in it with the suitcase on
his knee, strapping him in with the safety belt. I showed him what he had to
do. 'We'll drop the suitcase first,' I said. 'When I give you the word, just
open the door a little, like this, and hold it balanced on the edge, like this.
Then when I tell you, just push it through and let go.' I paused. 'I shall go
up and we'll make another circuit then. While we're doing that, undo your belt
and get out of your coat - I'll drop that to you afterwards. I'll come right
down on to the strip and hold her there while you get out. You'll have to make
it snappy, because I shan't be able to hold her there for long. But you'll have
time enough, I should think. Anyway, we'll see. We might do a dummy run first,
and see how it goes, and then make another circuit before you get out.'
He licked his lips, and nodded. I
was sorry for him, because he'd obviously never had to do anything like that
before. 'You'll find it quite easy to get out,' I said.
He pushed the door open, lifted and
turned his body, put his foot down on the metal step that hung below, and got
out. 'That's easy enough,' he said bravely. 'It'll be easier without this
coat.'
I nodded. 'You won't have any
difficulty.'
He got back into the machine and I
gave him the suitcase to hold upon his knees, and then we pushed the machine
out into the wind. On the tarmac I got in beside the doctor, closed the door,
and nodded to the ground engineer. While the two boys held the wing struts he
swung the little propeller for me and the engine caught; I let her run for a minute
and then ran her up, trying the magnetos. Everything was in order. I nodded to
him and they pulled the chocks away. With the boys upon the struts I taxied out
a little way across wind, turned into wind, waved them away, and took the
machine off.
In the air it was very bumpy, of
course. The doctor sat gripping his suitcase, tense and obviously anxious. I
turned on course and held the machine on the climb because not far away were
mountains that we had to cross. They lay across our path, snow-covered in the
sunlight. To the east the cloud hung down upon them still, to the west all was
clear with sunlight and blue sky. I pulled out my map and set to work to
identify the peaks, and the course that I must make good over the land. We had
about fifteen degrees of drift.
My business finished, I turned to
the doctor. 'Pretty, isn't it?' I said.
He lifted his head and looked
around, relaxing a little. "Yes, it is,' he said. 'Awfully pretty.' And
then he said, ‘You know, this is the first time I've ever been up.'
I was startled. I suppose I should
have thought of that. On the airline, of course, it is common to go down the
cabin and find passengers who have never flown before. I generally pause and
chat to them, ask them where they are going, let them talk a little, offer them
a cup of coffee and tell the hostess to bring it. It had simply never entered
my head that this doctor, young and active as he was, was totally unused to
flying. With my mind set on other things, upon the need to get a doctor to the
I dared not weaken him with any
sympathy, however. "You've missed a lot,' I said. The thing to do now was
to get him interested. 'Do you sail a boat?'
"Yes,' he replied. 'I do that
a good bit. We've got a sailing dinghy at home.' I remembered that his home was
on the
'This is just like sailing a boat,'
I said. There was no dual control in the machine, for the ground engineer had
taken it out. I took his hand and put it on the stick beneath my own, and flew
the machine like that for a time in the rough weather, so that he could get the
feel, explaining the motions to him as I had so often done before upon the
first flight of a pupil. In a quarter of an hour he was doing it on his own,
and seemed to have relaxed.
It got bitterly cold. We had to go
up to about five thousand to get over the hills, and it must have been well
below freezing there. I had my leather coat and helmet and a muffler and even
so I was cold ; my feet chilled and my hands blue. In his normal overcoat he
must have been much colder. However, over
I identified
It lay in the middle of a sort of
undulating moor. Part of this moor round about the house had been cut like a
peat bog over a fairly wide area; here there were one or two pools of water,
and tumbledown wooden structures, and a few concrete tanks, and pipes running
about the landscape. That would be the tin working, where they washed the metal
out of the surface soil. The house was a white wooden building, single storey,
standing in a fold of the land for shelter, with a little stream beside it and
a kitchen garden. As we circled round, a woman came out on the step and waved
to us.
Then I saw the wreckage of the
Auster Pascoe had flown in, and that led me to the airstrip. Used as I was to
proper runways, I could hardly believe my eyes at first. It was difficult to
see because the button grass was thin upon the ground around it, and so this
thing looked more like a little fortuitous line of soil where no vegetation
grew. I brought the machine round and dropped off height to fly along it and
have a good look. It was no better than a little bit of cart track that led
nowhere. That was what the data sheet had told me, of course, but I suppose I
hadn't really believed that it could be so bad.
I went up again and circled round.
The woman had come out of the house with what looked like a bundle of washing
in her arms and she was doing something a bit to one side of the south end of
the strip. I circled closer to see what she was up to, and saw that she was
putting up a windsock on a little flagstaff; Rhys-Davids must have given her
that. It was a help, definitely, for there was nothing else to tell you the
wind direction except the run of the seas. When she got it up it stood out
stiff and horizontal from the mast, making an angle of about seventy degrees to
the strip.
She was now laying a sheet out upon
the ground, pinning it down with stones. I turned to the doctor, 'I'm going to
do a dummy run over the sheet,' I said. 'Don't put the suitcase out this time.
Next time.'
I brought her round and headed into
wind over the sheet, flying at fifty or sixty on the clock and throttling to
lose height. It was turbulent, of course, but not too bad; we passed fairly
slowly over the sheet ten feet up and I knew that I could get her slower than
that. I put on power and went round again, thinking that I should have to watch
for the increased drag on the machine as he opened the door,, and not let that
fox me. 'We'll put it out this time,' I said. 'Wait till I tell you and then
open the door a bit and hold it balanced on the edge, ready to shove it out.
Don't drop it till I say.'
I took a longer run-up this time,
to give him plenty of time. He got the door open a bit and seemed to have some
trouble with it; it was hinged at the front side, of course, and for the first
time a doubt flitted through my mind. It seemed to require a good deal of
pushing to get it open, and when the trailing edge was standing a few inches
proud the effect on the machine was very noticeable. However, he got the
suitcase down on to the sill and partly out, and then glanced up at me and
nodded.
I brought her in more slowly this
time, and lower, flying at fifty minus. She still had plenty of control and we
were going quite slowly over the ground ; I could have run pretty well as fast.
I reckoned he would take a little time, so when we were fifty yards from the
sheet and about four feet up I shouted, 'Shove it out now!'
He had a great struggle to do so.
The case was only a foot deep, but he had the greatest difficulty in opening
the door so far as that, and the machine yawed a bit, and I had to open up the
throttle a little. I had to keep my eyes on what I was doing, and I could only
sense what was going on beside me. He was working in an awkward attitude, of
course, sitting down and strapped in. We sailed over the sheet while he was
still struggling and I went on as slowly as I could, four or five feet up,
intent upon the flying. Finally I think he levered the door open with the
suitcase and managed to get it out; it fell on the low scrub a hundred yards
beyond the sheet. I shoved the throttle forwards and went up again.
I turned to him. 'I'm sorry about
that door. I didn't think that it would be so difficult, at this slow speed. I
ought to have lashed the case on outside somehow. Then we could have cut the
lashing.'
He looked down at it as we circled
round. 'I think it fell pretty soft,' he said. 'Anyway, it didn't come open.'
I was very worried about the door
now. 'I'm going to make another dummy run,' I said. 'I'm going to put her on
the ground if I can, and hold her there for a few seconds. While I'm doing that
— when I tell you - just
see if you can open the door wide enough to get out. But don't get out this
time. Just try the door, and see.'
I brought her round again; the
woman had gone to the suitcase and was examining it. The ground on each side of
the strip fell away most smoothly at the south end. Here the air turbulence
would be least, and I made my run-up on that. As I approached the strip that
lay crossways before me I brought her in more and more slowly, flying by the
feel of the drop of the tail behind me. Five feet, three feet, one foot up ; we
crossed the near edge of the strip and I put her on the ground, throttled a bit
more and put the stick forward a little. We were motionless on the ground now,
with the tail well up and a good bit of engine power. I shouted. 'All right,
try that door!'
He lifted the catch and shoved it
open. The blast of the slipstream was strong upon it, and to make things worse
I had to open up the throttle to counter the increasing drag. I shot a glance
at him as he struggled. With one hand he could only open it a few inches; with
both hands only an inch or two more. With a sick feeling in my throat I
realized that we were up against something here that I had not reckoned on.
With all my skill in putting down upon that strip, the doctor might not be able
to get out of the cabin of the aeroplane.
I shouted to him to shut the door,
and took off again. When we were well up and circling, I turned to him. 'This
is my fault,' I said. 'Do you think you'll be able to push it far enough open
to get out?'
'I could get out all right if it
wasn't for the door,' he said. 'We weren't moving at all. It's the wind holding
it or something.'
'It's the slipstream from the
prop,' I said. 'I have to keep the motor going pretty hard.'
'If you could stop it for a
moment,' he said, 'I'm sure I could get out.'
I shook my head. 'I can't do that.'
I sat there weighing up the position. There was a red lever at the door hinge;
it was there for the purpose of jettisoning the door as an emergency exit. If I
pulled that down the hinge pins would be withdrawn and the door would fall out
and fly away, leaving a great empty space where it had been. If I did that
while we were flying it would probably hit the tail, and we might both be
killed. If I told him to do it while I held her on the ground it might fall
away safely or we might tie something on to it to keep it from the tail - my
scarf, perhaps. Then he could get out. But after that I should have to take off
with just a great big hole where the door had been, and fly her home like that.
Would that Auster fly safely
without the door in place? I had never flown one like that, nor had I heard of
anyone else doing so. It might be quite all right. Probably it would. I studied
the fuselage. It was a little narrower at the front end of the door by the
instrument panel than it was at the rear end, in way of our seats; the fuselage
tapered forward to the engine. That meant, with the door removed, a great blast
of air would come into the cabin as I flew, building up a pressure. I turned
and scrutinized the structure behind me. The main frame and the wings would
probably be all right, but the big sheet of perspex that roofed the rear end of
the cabin might well go, and take with it the fabric covering of the rear
fuselage. The cover of the fin might go. I did not think that the machine would
be unflyable, but it might be very much damaged. Anything that was going to
happen would probably happen at a very low altitude, just as I was taking off.
That wouldn't be so good, for there would be no time to think, no time for a
recovery of any control lost.
On the other hand, I could put the
doctor on the ground, and Johnnie Pascoe had a fractured skull. And it might
all be perfectly all right, no damage to the aeroplane at all.
I bit my lip and went on circling
round. This was my fault, fairly and squarely. I was the one who was supposed
to know about aeroplanes, and I had boobed, fallen down on the job, with all my
years of experience behind me. In all those years of flying I had had things
happen to me in the air from time to time, sufficient to warn me; I had always
had height, and luck, and perhaps skill, and I had always got away with it.
This time I might not do so, for there would be no height. It would come at
fifty feet or less, a great cracking noise behind me, followed by a jammed
elevator or a jammed rudder, no landing possible ahead, no control, no time to
try anything, no time even to think before we hit the ground, the engine came
back into my lap, the fire broke out. Too bad on Sheila and my children, and I
thought what she had said, 'Don't go and buy it yourself, Ronnie ...'
All this passed very quickly
through my mind. The doctor said after a moment, 'It's sitting like this makes
it difficult to shove it open. I think if I was getting out and put my
back-ride against it, I could squeeze through.'
'Do you think you could?'
'I could try.'
I glanced around, and now there was
a new development. It was bright and sunny where we flew, but over to the west
I saw fresh cloud low down upon the sea at the horizon. I glanced at my watch;
it was five minutes to eleven; before long we must be on our way home or we
should be out of fuel. The Met had been quite right. More bad weather was
coming up; it would be overcast here in an hour and probably low cloud and rain
after that. There would be little prospect of a second trip today.
'All right,' I said. 'Let's try it.
Undo your belt and take off your coat. But look, Alec. Be ready to hang on and
get back into the machine if I tell you. I shan't be able to stay down on the
ground for very long.'
It was the first time I had called
him by his Christian name.
I thought for a moment as I turned
downwind if I dare throttle back upon the ground for a few seconds while he got
out. The windsock stood straight and stiff and horizontal from the mast, and
the air was very bumpy. The wind was still at least thirty miles an hour,
perhaps more; it was around the stalling speed of the machine. I could not
depend upon the woman to help me; for one thing, there was no means of
communicating with her. If I throttled back, if once I let the tail go down,
the machine would lift in the wind and blow over backwards. I put the thought
out of my mind, and turned on final.
He was out of his coat now, and
ready to try it. I thought as I brought her in that I had two things now to
think about at the same time, the aircraft and the doctor. Hitherto the safety
of the aircraft had been my main concern, but now I had to think about the
safety of the doctor and watch what he was doing. Still, in the previous run
the aircraft had been pretty stable on the ground ... I was uneasily aware, as
I brought her in towards the strip, that this was getting near the limit. The
chance that I had taken in putting this little aircraft on the ground across
the strip and holding her there had proved to be a reasonable one. Now,
however, things were getting dangerous. I was asking a lot of this young
doctor, though perhaps he didn't know it. I could quite easily kill him.
Five feet — slower now - three feet — it was bumpier
than ever. A little slower - one foot — and she was on the ground and
motionless with the tail up. It was more turbulent than it had been before; I
could not hold her so for very long. I shouted, 'Try it now!'
He lifted his legs underneath him
and screwed his body round. The seating side by side was very close in that
small aeroplane; to get out backwards he had to put his head well in my lap; my
hand upon the throttle was in his way, and I dare not let that go. I raised my elbow
high and he put his head under my arm, and at the same time I think he pressed
the door back with his body and put one leg out. I dared not look what he was
doing because as the door opened things were happening to the machine; I had to
keep my eyes ahead, my left hand delicately on the stick, my right hand
delicately making tiny movements with the throttle in spite of his head under
my arm jerking my elbow. This was getting very dangerous indeed.
He forced his body backwards and
opened the door farther, and put his left leg down and found the step. The door
was now more than a foot open and the effect on the machine was very bad.
Elevator control seemed much reduced, she needed quite a bit of rudder, and I
had to open up the throttle making things still more difficult for him. All
this I did without thinking, instinctively, only conscious that this aeroplane
was in a bad way. He forced the door still farther open with his backside,
searching for the ground with his right foot.
Then the gust came. I knew that it
was coming; I suppose I saw it blowing the rough herbage. I opened up the
throttle a trifle, I think, but I didn't dare to put her nose down farther for
fear of hitting the propeller on the ground. I shot a glance at him, half out
of the machine and searching for the ground with his foot, and in that instant
while my eyes were averted the gust came down on us more strongly, lifting the
machine. By the time I got my eyes back to the windscreen we were five feet up.
There was only one thing to do then,
and that was to go off again. I gave her a little more throttle and put the
nose down a little more. The doctor was half out of the machine, his stomach on
the doorsill, but he still had his left foot on the outside step. I said as
quietly as I could, 'Get back in again, Alec'
I flew on straight towards the sea,
heading into wind, at a low altitude, flying as slowly as I dared to make less
pressure on the door. The machine handled like a pig, the door held wedged well
open by his body. I hooked my right hand under his shoulder to help him
struggle into the machine again, but the pressure of the air upon the door was
pinching his legs. I shot a glance forward, and then leaned across him and
forced the door open with my right hand, freeing his legs. With that help he
managed to struggle back into the cabin and close the door; the control became
normal again, and I put her into a slow climbing turn.
“You all right?' I asked, metaphorically wiping the sweat from my brow.
'I'm all
right,' he said. 'I could have got out easily but for this damn door.'
A shadow passed across the machine
and it grew suddenly cold. I looked up, and a cloud was passing across the sun.
It was only a small, isolated cloud and the sun would be shining again in a
minute, but others were coming up from the horizon, now dark and menacing. The
weather would not last more than an hour longer at the most; in any case we
should not have fuel to stay so long. I glanced at my watch and was surprised
to see how late it was. In five minutes we must be on our way back to Buxton,
or we wouldn't get there.
I circled for a minute or so, torn
with indecision. I could land him if I jettisoned the door. When I took off
again, without the door ... I turned round again and looked at the perspex
sheet, the fabric covering of the rear fuselage. It looked terribly frail,
accustomed as I was now to a large, all-metal airliner. It would be dicey. With
a heavy heart I came to my decision, wondering if this was cowardice or good
sense. It certainly wouldn't help to have another crash, perhaps another badly
battered pilot. There comes a point, I thought, when cowardice merges with good
sense. I turned to the doctor beside me. 'This isn't any good,' I said. 'We'll
have to go back to Buxton and try something else.'
'I'm quite ready to have another
go,' he replied. 'Let's try it again.'
He didn't realize the risks that I
was running, of course. He didn't realize that our lives had been balanced on a
knife-edge of danger. When I was a younger man I wouldn't have cared two hoots
for that, of course, but now I was forty-six years old. For many years as a
prudent airline captain I had avoided dangers, and to do so was now second
nature to me. The sort of flying that I had been doing in the last twenty
minutes cut clean across everything that I knew to be right. Now it was time to
pull up and stop behaving like a crazy teenager.
I shook my head. 'It's just not
good enough. I'm sorry, but we'll have to go back.'
He resigned himself. 'I suppose
there isn't any way of picking up that suitcase?' he inquired. 'It's got all my
instruments in it.'
I said, 'I'm afraid there's not,'
and set a course for Buxton, angry and mortified, feeling that I had failed. We
flew in silence after that. Cloud was forming again over the mountain tops so that
I had to deviate and go towards the coast, flying over the shoulders close
beneath the cloud to make the distance as short as possible, the coastal plain
on my left hand. Finally we came off the mountain and the flat land to the
north lay before us. The petrol gauge was jumping on the zero stop, which meant
we had about two gallons left, but there were flat paddocks now in front of us.
I started to let down, found Buxton, and came in to land. The Proctor did not
seem to have arrived from
When I killed the motor we sat
motionless for a moment in the silence. 'I'm sorry we couldn't make it,' I said
at last. 'I thought we'd have been able to. It was worth trying.'
He said, 'I'm sorry I was such a
fool about the door.' He hesitated, and then said, 'I'm a bit new to this.'
'You were all right,' I said. 'It
was too difficult for anyone.'
Monkhouse, the ground engineer,
came up to the machine as I opened the cabin door on my side to get out. 'No
go?' he inquired.
I shook my head. 'I put her down,
but she needed quite a bit of throttle. With the slipstream on the door the
doctor couldn't get out.'
He nodded slowly. You didn't
jettison the door?'
I shook my head. 'I thought of
that, but I didn't like to try it. Tell me, will these things fly without the
door in place?'
' 'Course they will,' he said.
'Captain Pascoe took up a parachutist in this one last year, time of the
Pageant. We flew it hours and hours without the door. They fly all right.'
I bit my lip. 'I didn't know that.
I was afraid to jettison it.'
'It's an airworthiness requirement
for all sorts of aircraft,' he observed. 'Anything that can be jettisoned, the
aeroplane's got to fly safely without it. These fly all right without the
door.'
I got out of the machine in
silence. Now that he mentioned it, the airworthiness requirement struck a faint
chord of memory. I have never been a test pilot, never had anything to do with
flying of that sort. I had never had to fly an aeroplane with an escape hatch
open, and I had never bothered my head about it. I should have done, perhaps.
Because I hadn't, Johnnie Pascoe now might die.
I walked a few steps out on to the
tarmac. The sun had gone and lingered as only a faint indication over to the
north-east. It was overcast and grey and bleak, the cloud ceiling at about
fifteen hundred feet, and descending. The wind was much as it had been before,
but in the west it looked dark with more rain coming. I went back into the
hangar and walked round the machine to where the doctor was getting out. 'Mr
Monkhouse tells me this machine will fly all right without the door in place,'
I said. 'Would you be willing to go out again, at once, and have another stab
at it?'
You mean, take the door right off?'
he asked. T wouldn't fall out, would I ?'
The question was a reasonable one,
because the door comprised practically the entire side of the cabin; in that
little aeroplane it was an enormous hole. 'You wouldn't fall out,' I said.
'You're strapped in with your safety belt. But I'm afraid it may be cold for
you.'
'I don't mind that ...' He looked
up at me. 'Now we've started on this thing we'd better see it through. Most of
my equipment's in that suitcase, so I can't do much here. We'll have to be
quick, though, won't we? Because of the weather?'
I nodded. 'I'll get the machine
refuelled right away.' I turned and spoke to Monkhouse, and then I asked him,
'Is there anything to eat here? I've had no breakfast.' I was hungry, cold, and
getting very tired. I had been up all night, and I had done a lot of flying
since I had slept last.
'There's my sandwiches for lunch,'
he said. 'Over on the bench there, with a Thermos of coffee. You can have
those.' I protested a little, but he said, 'I'll go and get some more when
you've taken off.'
I offered to share his lunch with
the doctor, but he refused; the vicar's wife had given him breakfast before we
started. I stood by the bench eating mutton sandwiches and drinking coffee from
the Thermos, thinking what an awful fool I was. I, the great airline captain,
the self-acclaimed expert who had barged in to take charge of this affair, and
put up a black right away. Even Billy Monkhouse, ground engineer in a pipsqueak
show like this, even he had known the fundamental fact I had forgotten in my
arrogance and pride.
Tired as I was, the only thing now
was to go on with it. Johnnie Pascoe would have had a doctor with him now but
for my ignorance. The food and the hot coffee were putting new life into me,
and I braced myself. I could repair the damage I had done. If we got off at
once, we could still beat the weather down to the
It took about ten minutes to fill
up the aircraft with about fifteen gallons of petrol from the old,
hand-operated pump, and to put in a gallon of oil. Then we got in again. I saw
the doctor's safety belt was properly done up, for there was little else now to
retain him in the cabin in bumpy conditions. 'I feel a bit like the young man
on the flying trapeze,' he said.
'Quite happy?' I asked.
He nodded. 'I'll be able to get out
all right this time.'
'Okay,' I said. 'Let's go.' I
nodded to the ground engineer and he swung the prop. I ran her up a bit and
tested the magnetos, and then taxied out on to the aerodrome with a boy on each
wing strut and turned her into the wind for the take-off.
I lifted my eyes to look around
after my pre-flight check, and saw a car drive in off the road and up to the
hangar. It crossed my mind that it might possibly be Dr Parkinson who was
supposed to be flying up to us in the Proctor, and I paused for a moment,
watching. Then I saw it was a taxi by the sign over the windscreen, and the
door opened and a woman got out. Billy Monkhouse could deal with her, I
thought, and I nodded to the boys, opened up the throttle, and took off.
It was bad in the air, very
turbulent, the cloud ceiling down to about twelve hundred with a clammy
coldness of approaching rain. With virtually no side to our cabin the grey
wisps seemed to come right into the aircraft, and perhaps they did, for the map
grew soggy in my hands. I had to deviate towards the coast much more than
previously, and as we went the cloud forced us lower and lower. By the time we
got to
I found the entrance to
I must have known that it was
pretty hopeless then, but I went on. It was my fault that Johnnie Pascoe hadn't
got the doctor with him, and there was always the faint chance that the rain
might stop and the clouds break when we got to the
It was raining all the way from
When we were on our estimated time
of arrival we had been flying for an hour and forty-three minutes. We should be
a little faster going back, I thought, but the margin on our fuel was short and we had no more
than ten minutes in which to find the strip and land the doctor. I approached
the coast in the murk well throttled back. It was featureless, fairly low, but
the cloud ceiling was only about four hundred feet. There was no sign of any
river mouth. I turned right and flew along the coast, getting a bearing of its
run ; south of the
It began to rain harder than ever,
and the visibility grew worse. I had stopped talking to the doctor, and he to
me. The cliffs got higher till their tops were in the cloud; I sat tense and
anxious. Then they dipped down, and there was a river entrance between black
reefs boiling with surf. It didn't look a bit like the entrance to the
I flew across the river entrance at
a safe distance in case there was a headland sticking out in front of us, and
then I turned back and flew across it somewhat closer in. I pulled the little
data sheet of the airstrip out of my pocket, that the controller at Essendon
had given me. It showed the river entrance. It was probably the same, but it
was hard to say. If it were, the course from the entrance to the airstrip would
be about one hundred and ten degrees.
Over the sea the cloud ceiling was
now about three hundred feet. It might be a little higher over the land, I
thought; there is usually a hundred feet or so of clear in weather like that.
It's only in a calm that the cloud descends on to the ground in the form of
fog. I turned westwards and flew out to sea for a couple of miles on the
reciprocal course, and then turned in again and flew towards the coast on one
hundred and ten degrees, climbing into the murk till I could only just see the
sea.
The first rocks passed beneath us
and I sat tense, ready for anything. We came to the cliff and crossed it, and
now button grass was very close beneath my wheels. There was no clear air, or
if there was, I was not game to try and find it. With my heart in my mouth I
thrust the throttle hard forward, eased back on the stick, and climbed up into
the murk. I sat waiting for the crash till the altimeter showed seven hundred
feet. Then I relaxed and put her in a slow turn to the right to find the sea
again, flying blind between the hills.
I said to the doctor, 'I'm afraid
this is no good, Alec. I think we're right over the
He said, 'If there was a beach,
perhaps I could get out on that.'
'I haven't seen one,' I replied. He
didn't know what he was suggesting, although, as a Tasmanian, perhaps he did.
If so, he was just brave and that's all about it. I couldn't have guaranteed my
position within ten miles; we might be playing about over some other river, not
the
I started to let down towards the
sea when I judged that it was safe, watching the altimeter. 'I'm going back,' I
said. 'Back to Buxton. We'll have to wait until this weather moderates again.'
We came out at about a hundred and
fifty feet over a black, rough sea, and started flying northwards. We were
going a bit quicker, but the visibility was worse than ever, and it was raining
harder. I could only see a few hundred yards; I went on for ten minutes keeping
the coast in sight on my right hand, seen dimly through the rain.
Then it suddenly loomed up dead
ahead of us; we seemed to be flying straight into a cliff. I flung the machine
round in a violent turn to port, and we missed it by about a hundred feet. We
were so close that I could see the mutton birds on the rocks; I even fancied I
could see their little eyes and their claws. It was as near as that. I steadied
on a course westwards, straight out to sea, and pulled out the map. 'That was
Penguin Head,' I said as calmly as I could.
If we went on following the coast
like that we should be dead before we got to Buxton. We had practically no fuel
for deviations, but they would have to be made. A course of three hundred and
fifteen degrees for eighty-six minutes would take us clear of all dangers and
would land us ten miles out to sea off the mouth of the Arthur River, with
Buxton about sixty miles away downwind, to the north-east and all low country
in between. I explained the position to the doctor and showed him what I was
going to do, and then I started in to fly my compass course about a hundred
feet up over the sea.
We were pretty cold and miserable
by the time I made my turn, nearly an hour and a half later, and I was getting
very worried indeed about the fuel. However, in a few minutes we passed over
the beach and went on across an undulating country. The clouds were rather
higher here than they had been farther south, and we could fly at about seven
hundred feet most of the way. We went on at a good speed over the ground, but
now the gauge was jumping on the zero stop again. I said to the doctor, 'Tell
me if you see anything you recognize.'
I decided to give it another five
minutes, and glanced at my watch. There was still a light rain falling, but we
could see more than a mile ahead. At four minutes we came to a weatherboard
farmhouse, white-painted. It stood in flat paddocks, and it had a few trees
around it as a windbreak. I could probably land here, and when I realized that,
I knew that I wanted very much to be down safely on the ground. A line of poles
ran from it to a road; I looked again, and saw another set of poles; it was on
the telephone. I went into a turn and said to the doctor, 'Do you know that
place?'
He said, 'I'm not sure, but it
looks rather like Jeff Duncan's property. If it is, they're patients of mine.'
'How far would that be from the
aerodrome?'
'I should think about twelve
miles.'
The needle of the gauge was solid
on the zero stop. 'I'm going to put down there,' I said.
There was a little plume of wood
smoke from the kitchen chimney, which was a help, and a paddock of ten or
fifteen acres downwind from the house; the trees would make a shelter for the
aircraft on the ground. I dropped off height and turned low over it ; there
were some sheep there but the surface looked all right. I picked a clear patch
between the sheep and brought her in and put her down, thankful to be out of
the air. Some people came running out of the house as I taxied slowly forward
to the shelter of the trees, the doctor got out and went to one wing strut, a
young lad to the other, and we got her into shelter and tied her down to a
harrow and a disc plough.
It was Jeff Duncan's farm all
right, and they all knew the doctor. He was soaked to the skin, and stiff with
cold, and trembling. We all went into the kitchen and stood by the wood stove;
they gave him dry clothes to wear and hot whisky and lemon to drink. I drank
tea because there was more flying to do, and rang up Billy Monkhouse at the
aerodrome and asked him to bring over a jerrican of petrol. He told me that the
Proctor had arrived and Dr Parkinson had gone in with his pilot to the police
station to speak upon the radio. I told him to call in on them on his way out
with the petrol and tell them that, again, I hadn't been able to land the
doctor.
When I got back to the kitchen
after speaking on the telephone I found the doctor standing by the stove; they
had opened up the front of it and stoked it up with wood so that it made a warm
blaze. He had his second whisky with hot lemon in his hand, half consumed, and
he was looking a great deal better than he had a quarter of an hour before.
He said, 'I'm sorry we couldn't
manage it, Captain. The weather wasn't very good, was it?'
I shook my head. 'It
wasn't..." It seemed to me an understatement.
'What will we do now? Wait till it
gets better and try again?'
I had very nearly killed him twice,
at least, that day. 'Do you want to try again?' I asked. 'Dr Parkinson's in
Buxton.'
'He'd be much better at dealing
with a fractured skull than I would,' he said. 'He's had much more experience.
But I'd be quite willing to try again, so far as the flying goes.' He smiled.
'I've got a sort of thing about this now,' he said. 'I want to see it through.'
I nodded. 'So do I. I'll have to
get my head down for a bit, though, before going out again. We'll find out what
the Met has to say, and then go for the next clear patch.'
After a time Billy Monkhouse
arrived in his old car. We all went out with him to refuel the machine for me
to fly back to the aerodrome. I asked him, 'Have you heard anything from the
Met? Any more breaks coming?'
'They won't say,' he replied.
'Nothing in sight immediately, anyway. They've started a ground party to walk
in through Kallista.'
'I'll have to get a room at the
hotel and get some sleep,' I told him. 'Who flew the doctor up from
'A young chap called Phil Barnes,' he, told me. 'Assistant instructor at
the club - came out of the RAAF about a year back. He knows the country.'
I nodded. 'He can carry on while I
get some sleep. I suppose I can get into that hotel?'
He rubbed his chin. 'I don't know
that you can. They let four rooms. They've got the boss's mother in one and his
wife's sister and her little girl in another. Then there's Dr Parkinson and
Phil Barnes, each got a room. They turned out the little girl for one of them
and put her in her ma's room.' He paused. 'The best thing you can do is to go
in Captain Pascoe's house,' he said. 'He wouldn't mind.'
'Where's that?'
'Last house out of town before you
get to the 'drome,' he said. 'You'll be all right there.'
'I'll be all right anywhere, so
long as there's a bed/ I said.
As soon as she was refuelled I got
into the machine to take her off light from that paddock and fly her back to
Buxton. The doctor was to go back with the ground engineer in his car. The
I got out of the machine and stood
on the damp concrete floor, cold and unhappy. There was no car there, for Billy
Monkhouse had taken his over to me with the petrol, and he was not back yet. I
rang up the police station while I was waiting for him and spoke to the
sergeant, and told him the position. He said that the Met report was
discouraging. There was no break in sight. Dr Parkinson and his pilot had gone
for dinner at the hotel, with the lady.
'What lady?' I asked.
'A lady came just after you took
off,' he said. 'A Mrs Forbes. Something to do with Captain Pascoe, I think. She
flew across to Launceston from
'Is she a relation?' I asked.
'I don't know that,' he said. 'She
might be. I didn't give her much attention, what with other things.'
I rang off, and soon after that
Billy Monkhouse drove up with the doctor. I told him what I had done, and that
a woman had arrived. 'I know that,' he said. 'She came just as you were taking
off.'
'Do you know who she is?'
'She didn't say. A cousin, perhaps.
I dunno.'
There was no point in bothering
with her; she couldn't help us. I said, 'Show me which is Johnnie's house. Can
I get something to eat at the hotel?'
He glanced at his watch. 'Not at
this time, you can't. Dinner'll be off. Mrs Lawrence'll fix you up something.
She does for Captain Pascoe - lives next door. I'll take you there.'
I got into his little car with the
doctor. He said that he would look in at the hotel and see Dr Parkinson, which
would save my going into town. I think he saw that I was just about all in from
the strain of flying in difficult conditions and the lack of sleep, and indeed
I think I actually fell asleep in the three or four minutes that it took us to
drive from the hangar to the first house on the edge of the little town,
because I know I woke up with a start.
We went and spoke to Mrs Lawrence
in the next house, a fat, comfortable woman washing up after their
'We'll get a doctor in to him
before long,' I told her. 'As soon as this weather lifts.'
She nodded. 'I never knew it be so
crook. It's been like this for days. You go on over and make yourself at home,
and I'll be over in ten minutes. There's a fire laid all ready in the lounge.'
She took a key down from a nail over the sink and gave it to me. 'That's the
back door key.'
Monkhouse drove the car on to the
town with the doctor, splashing on the dirt road through the sheets of rain,
and I went over to the other house. The door opened into the kitchen and I shut
the rain out. I was cold and wet, and the house seemed chilly and unlived in. I
went through into the lounge and dropped down on my knees before the fire, and
lit it. There was wood in the wood box and a good pile outside the back door.
There was no need to stint myself of warmth; I stayed on my knees in my leather
coat for some time piling on the twiggy bits and then the rather larger pieces
and finally the logs. With the shelter from the weather and the increasing glow
from the fire a little warmth began to creep back into me, and presently I
noticed that my coat was dripping water on the fire-irons and the fender. I
stood up stiffly, and took it off, and went and hung it on the back of the
kitchen door. Then I came back to the fire and looked around.
The sitting-room was a pilot's
room, the walls covered with photographs of a long flying life. On the wall
above the mantelpiece was a wooden propeller with queer, curved blades, hung as
a trophy like a pair of antlers. There were little bits of aeroplane all over
the place, most of them old and quite unfamiliar to me. On another wall among
the photographs there was a complete instrument panel hanging like a picture,
but the only instruments on it were a clumsy airspeed indicator, an equally
antique aneroid, an oil-pressure gauge, and spirit cross and fore-and-aft
levels. I wondered idly what sort of an aircraft that had come out of, but I
had no time for his mementoes at that moment. What I wanted was a bed, and I
went out into the little corridor.
There were two bedrooms in the
house, one on each side. I opened the door on the left, and found myself in
Johnnie Pascoe's bedroom. It was a very large room, much larger than I should
have expected to find in a house of that nature. I glanced around and saw that
it was quite well furnished, and then backed out and tried the other door. It
would be better to use his spare room.
It was his spare room all right,
but it wasn't up to much. There was a bed there with a mattress on it, but
there were no bedclothes and no pillows. There was a dressing-table but the
dust lay thick upon it. There was no chair. There was a short strip of worn carpet
on the bare, unstained boards beside the bed and thin, faded curtains joined by
a few cobwebs shrouded the closed window.
I was tired, too tired to set about
cleaning up his spare room and getting it in order. I went back to his own
bedroom. It was spacious, well furnished and comfortable; the bed made up
neatly and covered with a bedspread with an eiderdown on top of that. His
razor, his hairbrushes, were all there on the dressing-table, his washing
things were on the basin by the gleaming taps. His dressing-gown hung behind
the door, his slippers were under the bedside table with the reading lamp; I
opened the door to the built-in wardrobe idly, and it was full of his clothes.
Like the sitting-room, the walls of this room were covered with photographs and
souvenirs, but what riveted my attention was the bed. It looked just
marvellous, exactly what I needed. Johnnie Pascoe wouldn't mind my sleeping
here, I knew. It would be some time before he would use it, anyway, for when we
got him out from the
I put my haversack of warm clothes
on the bed and then Mrs Lawrence came in at the back door and began to organize
a meal for me in the kitchen. I had a word or two with her, and went back to
the sitting-room and put more wood upon the fire. My flying was over for the
day; I was still cold, and started to look around for a drink. I hadn't far to
look; there was a corner cupboard in the sitting-room with three unopened
bottles of Scotch in it, and one half empty. I went and got a glass and some
water from the kitchen and gave myself a drink of his whisky. Glass in hand,
standing by the fire, warm and comfortable for the first time that day, I had
leisure to examine the room.
On the wall over the cupboard that
housed the whisky there was a studio portrait photograph of a very pretty
blonde girl. It was inscribed across the corner in a round, flowing hand, 'For
Johnnie with oceans of love, from Judy', but the ink had faded and some of the
words were hardly legible. The photograph had gone a bit yellow, too, but there
was nothing on it to indicate the date.
I looked around the corner, and
there were other photographs of the same girl upon the walls, and of
aeroplanes, all biplanes except one, which was a triplane. This was a corner of
the room that was devoted to Judy, it seemed, and I studied the photographs
curiously as I stood there, drink in hand, before the fire. They all seemed to
have been taken at the time of the First War. There was a very young man in the
double-breasted 'maternity' jacket of the Royal Flying Corps standing in front
of the triplane - could that be Johnnie? I moved over for a closer look,
thinking of the pilot-instructor who had taught me to fly nearly thirty years
ago. It was Johnnie all right - a much younger man than I had known, but the
same. In the photograph he was very young indeed, no more than eighteen or
nineteen. The drooping wings upon his chest had no ribbons beneath them. The
triplane was a single-seater with a rotary engine and an open cockpit; it had
RFC roundels on the fuselage. I searched my memory for pictures I had seen -
could that have been a Sopwith?
There was one of Judy driving a
golf ball off the tee. There was something wrong about that one, but at first I
couldn't place it. It looked faked in some way, too good to be true. Then I got
it. It was like a photograph of an actress or a model playing golf in one of
the glossy magazines, perhaps in an advertisement, posed carefully by the golf
pro in exactly the right position at the end of the swing, and holding the pose
while the photographer did his stuff. The clothes were very old-fashioned.
There was a very pleasant
photograph of Johnnie and Judy in front of the rotary engine of some fighter.
It was a biplane, a very small machine. The portion of the undercarriage that
was visible looked terribly flimsy, the tyre on the one wheel that was showing
unbelievably small. He had his arm around her shoulders and they were laughing
together at the camera, both very young. The drooping wings had two medal
ribbons underneath them now, and the arm around her shoulder had a thin bit of
gold braid vertical above the cuff. One of the ribbons seemed to be the
Military Cross, but I could not make out the other, nor could I identify the
aeroplane. The wooden propeller behind them had the same curved leading edge,
and I turned and looked at the one over the mantelpiece. The boss, I saw, was
stamped with a lot of letters and numbers and the one word 'CLERGET'. I
wondered if that propeller was the same as featured in that merry photograph,
if Johnnie and Judy had once leaned against it, forty years ago.
There were other photographs of
ancient aeroplanes, one of them an enormous biplane pusher that I thought might
be a Farman, but no more of them featured the girl Judy. I poured myself
another whisky and studied the portrait, wondering if that had been the
marriage that went wrong. It could quite well have been; the date was about
right. It was a very pretty face but rather a hard one, perhaps; the face of
somebody who knew exactly where she was going. The lines of the chin and jaw
were very firm, in spite of the softness of youth. She was very young in the
portrait, but it was quite possible, I thought, that by the age of thirty she
might have developed into a real hard piece. Perhaps she had, and that had been
the trouble. Or again, it might have been his fault. You just can't say.
Mrs Lawrence called me to the
kitchen for my meal, which Johnnie Pascoe evidently had normally upon the
kitchen table. She had done bacon and eggs and fried potatoes; there was bread
and cheese and a pot of jam, and a big pot of hot coffee. I thanked her, and
she said, 'That's nothing. Just leave everything upon the table when you've
done. I'll come in again later.'
'I can wash these few things up,' I
said.
'Captain Pascoe leaves them and I
come in,' she replied. "You'd better do the same.' She looked out of the
window. 'I never saw such rain,' she said. 'I do hope you can get a doctor to
him soon.'
'One or other of us will be flying
down to him the minute the weather clears,' I told her.
She went away, and I sat down to my
meal. It was about
I put the instrument down, and
raised my eyes to the wall above it. There was a photograph there, and after
nearly thirty years my heart turned over because it was a photograph of Brenda
Marshall. It was Brenda Marshall as I had known and loved her from a distance
when I was a boy, when I was eighteen and she was nearly thirty. It was taken
outside the hangar at Duffington aerodrome, where I learned to fly in the same
year that that photograph must have been taken. She was standing beside her
Moth in the white boiler suit she always flew in, smiling a little shyly at the
camera. She had her white flying helmet in her hand, showing her short, curly
hair. It was Brenda Marshall as I had known her in my youth.
It brought me up short, and I stood
staring at it, full of sad memories. The corner of the hangar that showed just
behind the Moth was the corner she had died in, on the stretcher, as I well
knew. I was only eighteen at the time, and hers was the first fatal crash that
I had had to do with. I stood staring at the photograph, remembering her
vivacity. Brenda Marshall ... Johnnie Pascoe must have got hold of that
photograph, and he had kept it all these years. He had taught her to fly, too.
A car splashed to a standstill in
the rain outside the house. I looked out of the window in the semi-darkness,
and it was the taxi. A woman got out of it and spoke to the driver, who
indicated my house. She pushed the gate open and came up through the neglected
front garden to the door. I cursed her inwardly because I wanted to go to bed,
but she knocked and rang the bell. There was nothing for it, and I went to the
front door and opened it for her.
'Captain Clarke?' she asked.
I said, 'Yes.' I did not invite her
in, though she was standing in the rain.
'I just came down to talk things
over with you,' she said. "I'm Marian Forbes.'
She was a woman about forty years
of age. I did not move from the door. 'Is this anything urgent?' I inquired. 'I
got no sleep last night, and I'm just going to bed.'
'You poor thing!' she exclaimed. 'I
know. I shan't keep you more than two minutes.'
Very reluctantly I let her in out
of the rain, and she pushed forward past me into the sitting-room. 'What a
lovely fire you've got!' she said. 'And what a cosy room!' She turned to me
with a winsome air that might have been attractive twenty years ago. 'You know,
there isn't anywhere at all to sit in that hotel, except the bedroom! Don't you
think that's dreadful?'
'What can I do for you?' I asked.
'I'm just going to bed.'
'I know - I know,' she said. 'I
shan't keep you more than two minutes.' She took off her raincoat and laid it
on a chair at the back of the room, and moved over to the fire. 'I just wanted
to have a little talk.'
'What about?'
"Oh dear,' she said. "You
are in a hurry to get rid of me, aren't you? And I've been waiting such
a long time to see you. I got here just before you started off on the last
flight but I was too late to talk to you then.'
The telephone rang, and I picked up
the receiver. It was the exchange to say that there was a two hours' delay to
She said, 'Well, I'm John Pascoe's
daughter.'
CHAPTER THREE
I stood silent for a moment. 'I'm
sorry,' I said. 'I never knew he had a daughter.'
'I don't suppose you did,' she
said. 'He's probably forgotten it himself.'
It didn't seem to be any concern of
mine, anyway. 'We're doing everything we can to get a doctor down to him,' I
said. There's nothing to do now but to wait until the weather clears.'
'That's what they told me,' she
replied. 'I suppose you've known him a long time?'
'He taught me to fly, back in
'That's what they told me in the
hotel.' She paused, and then she said, 'I live in
I wrinkled my brows. 'You weren't
very closely in touch with him?'
She laughed shortly. 'Good Lord,
no! I don't suppose he knows I'm in
It seemed a funny sort of
relationship, but it was nothing to do with me. 'Well, everything that's
possible is being done, Mrs Forbes,' I said. 'While this weather lasts we can't
do much by landing at the
A gust of wind whistled around the house and beat upon
the window.
'They tell me you're a married man,' she said.
I was surprised. 'That's right.'
'Any children?'
'Two.' I wondered what on earth she was getting at.
'I wouldn't want to see anything happen to a man like
>u,' she said flatly. 'Not for the sake of a man like Pascoe.'
There was a hostility in that remark, of course,
hostility to ;r father, and I didn't quite know what to say in reply. I as
evidently dealing with a spiteful woman, and I wanted to go to bed. She had,
however, settled down in front of my re. I wasn't inclined to let her stay
there after that. She would have to go back to the hotel, uncomfortable as it
as.
'Johnnie Pascoe's all right,' I said. 'In any case, I
can look after myself.'
'Are you a friend of his?' she asked.
'Not a close one,' I said. 'He taught me to fly, and
I've flown him off and on since then.'
'Well, I've known him better, and much longer,' she retorted.
'He's an out and out rotter. I don't want to see anybody taking any risks, real
risks, that is, over a man like that, you or anybody else.'
'I thought you said that you had come to help him — from
'That's right,' she said. 'I'm his daughter. If
there's any-ling needs doing — nursing home or
surgeon's fees or paying him an allowance till he's fit to earn his living
again - I've 3t a sort of duty to him, I suppose. Dennis feels like I do bout
that - we'll have to see him right. That's why I came yer. Apart from that, I
don't want to have anything to do with him.'
'Well, you may as well go back to
She was silent for a moment. Then
she said, 'You don't like me much, do you?'
'Lady,' I replied, 'I don't like
you because I've been up all night and I've done quite a bit of flying and
you're keeping me out of my bed. I'll be in a better frame of mind to talk to
you tomorrow, if there's anything to talk about.'
She got to her feet; she was on the
move, anyway. 'If you don't want to listen to what I've got to say - well,
that's the end of it,' she said.
'I don't, if it's just grumbles
about Johnnie Pascoe's character,' I replied. 'That's not material at the
moment. The thing we've got to do is get a surgeon to him.'
'If it's worth it.' She paused, and
then she said, 'I had lunch in the hotel with Dr Parkinson and Mr Barnes, who
flew him up from
‘What about them?'
'When Dr Turnbull told them what
you'd done, they were horrified at the risks that you'd been taking. Dr
Parkinson says he doesn't want to fly with you.'
I was very angry. T never heard
such nonsense. At a time like this things have to be stretched a bit.'
She picked up her bag. 'I don't
know anything about flying,' she said. 'I only know what they were saying in
the hotel - people who do know about it. They think you're crazy. I think that,
too, because Johnnie Pascoe simply isn't worth it. That's what I came to say,
and now I'll leave you to your bed.'
She moved towards the door, but I
stood motionless. I didn't like her spite against her father, but there might
have been a twisted element of kindness in her visit, kindness to me and to my
family. I stood in thought for a moment, and my eye fell upon the portrait
photograph on the wall behind her. 'Was your mother's name Judy?' I inquired.
She looked at me curiously. 'Judy
Lester,' she said. 'That was her stage name. You must remember her.'
Vague memories of childhood flitted
across my mind. 'I think she was a bit before my time,' I said. 'I've heard the
name.'
'Our real name was Lichter,' she
said, 'but she didn't use that on the stage. Why did you ask?'
'Only because there are three
photos of her in this room,' I told her curtly. 'That's a funny thing, if he's
the sort of man you say.'
She was startled. 'Where?'
'On the wall behind you.'
She turned and looked at the many
photographs, and then her eyes fastened on the portrait. She moved close and
squinted at it a little; she seemed to be short-sighted and afraid of the
disfigurement of spectacles. 'That's my mother,' she said. 'I've got a copy of
that photograph somewhere.'
I did not speak. I stood there
thinking what a fool I was to have interested her in the pictures. She would
probably stay half an hour longer.
She looked at the picture of the
girl posed in a golfer's swing, and said, 'That's her, again. Of course, she
was much younger, then.' And then her eye wandered to the one of Johnnie and
Judy in front of the rotary engine of the biplane fighter, the laughing one.
She looked at it for a moment or two, and then indicated the laughing boy in
the RFC jacket with the drooping wings and the two medal ribbons. She turned to
me and asked, 'Is that him?'
'Of course it is,' I said. 'That's
Johnnie Pascoe. Don't you know him?'
'I was only two when he deserted
us,' she said. 'I don't remember him.'
'Didn't you ever meet him - when
you grew up?'
She shook her head. 'We lived in
'You've never met him at all?'
'I flew by AusCan once from
T)id you make yourself known to
him?' I asked.
She laughed shortly. 'I wouldn't
demean myself. Dennis thought I ought to say something, but I said, better not.
All I'd have had to say would have been that he deserted my mother, her and me,
and we'd got on very well without him.' She paused. 'But it was interesting,
seeing him. I saw him once upon a newsreel, too. Opening the airline, from some
place to another.'
I made another effort to unstick
her so that I could go to bed. 'Well, there it is,' I said. 'He's kept those
photos forty years.'
Her lips curled a little. 'Evidence
of a conquest.' She glanced around the room. 'He's got quite a few others to
keep her company. Evidence of other conquests, I suppose.'
She was looking over to the photograph
of Brenda Marshall, standing by the Moth in her white overall with her smile
and her short, curly hair. I disliked this woman very much, her attitude, her
cynicism, her whole way of looking at things. I didn't like any part of her,
and she was keeping me out of bed. 'He's over sixty years old,' I said. 'If he
likes to keep photographs of women who've been kind to him all through his
life, that's nothing to do with us. We've no right to be in this house anyway,
but I've got to use it because I've got to get some sleep. I'll have to ask you
to go away now, and leave me to it.'
She asked, 'Can I use your
telephone to call a taxi?'
I glanced out of the window;
momentarily the rain had stopped, but the clouds were still scudding low before
a high wind. 'It's not raining now,' I said. "You can walk it into town in
ten minutes.'
She flushed angrily. 'All right,
I'll go and leave you to sleep. When you wake up you'd better think of going
back to the mainland. I don't suppose any of the doctors here will want to fly
with you.'
I showed her out, and she marched
up the road picking her way between the puddles, an arrogant, slightly absurd
middle-aged woman in a blue suit and high-heeled, black patent-leather shoes,
most unsuitable for country walking. I went back into the sitting-room and
poured myself another whisky from Johnnie Pascoe's bottle with a hand that
shook with irritable anger. I sat down in his chair before the fire and lit a
cigarette, to cool off for a few minutes before I went to bed. I knew I wouldn't
sleep if I went to bed as angry as I was just then.
That was a bad, spiteful woman, and
I mustn't let her get under my skin. Be objective, recognize her for what she
was, and then the barbs would cease to rankle. To tell a pilot of my age and
experience that his flying was unsafe, that doctors didn't want to fly with him
— that was a shrewd one,
the stab of a woman in the habit of hurting. The worst of it was that it was
very nearly true. I had stretched things to the limit of safety that morning, and
perhaps a little bit beyond. Surely one had a right to do that when a man's
life depended on it? Surely one had a right to call up all one's capital of
skill? If I was prepared to take a chance myself, surely I had a right to make
the doctor take it with me? He hadn't seemed to mind about it at the time.
I took another drink and blew out a
long cloud of smoke. In spite of my efforts I had achieved nothing, nothing at
all. All I had done had been to lose the doctor's suitcase with all his
instruments in it. God only knew when he would get that back.
To take my mind off my own troubles
I got up and moved around the room. I set his barometer, and then I went on
looking at the pictures. There were other photographs of Johnnie Pascoe in the
First World War that I had not examined. There was an informal group of about a
dozen pilots standing in a meadow in summer weather, probably on the edge of an
aerodrome because a quaint, old-fashioned Nissen hut with a boarded end showed
in the background. All the men were very young, and all of them were in Army
uniforms. Three of them wore the RFC tunic, double-breasted. One seemed to be
an American, for he wore a single-breasted khaki tunic buttoned close up round
the neck and the wings upon his chest were the unswept wings of the American
Army. The rest of them wore normal British Army tunics with wings, and these
wore khaki collars and ties; three of them wore Sam Browne belts, and one was
wearing riding breeches and puttees. Scrawled on the bottom of the photograph
were the words, STOMER1918, in white ink that had faded to yellow.
I looked at it closely, and decided
that Johnnie Pascoe was standing on the right, one of the pilots in an RFC
tunic. He had something round his neck that flopped down in a light streak on
one shoulder, and I puzzled over this aspect of his uniform for a few moments.
It looked for all the world like a silk stocking.
There was a very good photograph of
a rotary-engined biplane fighter, taken broadside-on and in flight. It had the
RFC roundels and a design of black and white chequers on the engine cowling and
the front fuselage. It was a very small machine, to judge by the size of the
pilot's head, with a single pair of struts between the wings. I guessed it to
be a Sopwith Camel, but I was by no means sure, because I never saw one. It had
two machine guns mounted on the top cowling. The pilot's head was turned
towards the camera and it might have been Johnnie Pascoe, though it was
difficult to say. The aeroplane was doped a khaki colour, very clean and smart.
It looked like a brand-new aeroplane, taken by some official photographer.
So many photographs of the First
War, all framed and hung close in a group upon one wall ! There were too many
for me to take them all in. All
dated from before my earliest flying days, but they brought back for me the
memories of that first enthusiasm that has lasted from my boyhood. They brought
back memories of slow-revving engines blipping on the switch, of clouds of
castor oil sweeping in blue clouds of the slipstream over the grass, of taut
doped fabric drumming beneath one's fingers, of the smell of acetone in the
hangar. They brought back memories of the rush of air over one's head beyond
the leather of the flying helmet, of the freshness on one's face as one put up
the goggles before going in to land, of carefully judged gliding turns on the
approach, of the final sideslip in over the hedge, of soft landings upon grass.
So many joys that lay behind me, half forgotten, a part of my youth.
They had been part of Johnnie
Pascoe's youth, too, even more than mine. He must have learned to fly, I
thought, in 1916 or thereabouts, fourteen years before I did. If I still sensed
the drama, the adventure of it
all - how much more must he! Probably that enormous pusher two-seater with the
engine behind the pilots was what he had learned to fly in — would that have been a Farman? A
Rumpety? That thing with the long skid in front of the undercarriage - well, I
knew that one. That was an Avro 504K. I had been up for a joyride in an Avro
when I was a boy of twelve, the first flight that I had ever made. When Johnnie
Pascoe learned to fly it was probably still a front-line operational type, with
a top speed of about seventy miles an hour.
When he had learned to fly, flying
had been the greatest adventure the world had to offer, an adventure that led
almost certainly to death. In the First World War the casualties in training
pilots had been staggering, because the aeroplanes were cheap and easily made,
the pilots were needed in a hurry, and nobody understood much about flying
training. When they were sent to
She was a bitter, spiteful woman,
but she was so because it was beyond her capacity to understand. Whatever had
happened between Johnnie Pascoe and his Judy had happened very soon after the
First War. It must have meant enormous readjustments in his mind when the war
ended. When the promise of death, willingly accepted, was withdrawn - what had
there been to take its place? Johnnie Pascoe had gone on flying, anyway; I had
never heard that he had done anything else.
I was growing sleepy now, and ready
for bed. Marian Forbes had ceased to worry me, for she was something different,
like an Eskimo. I threw the butt of my cigarette in the fire. There were a
couple of thick logs smouldering together but there was no flame; the fire was
safe and it would probably last till morning. There were still a couple of
mouthfuls of whisky left in my glass; I stood there finishing them, looking at
the photos in that corner. That, the single-seater with the top wing of
the biplane sprouting from the fuselage at the pilot's seat — that must have been a Sopwith Dolphin. That,
with the backward stagger, might have been a DH5. How he had loved those
days of early youth, to keep so many photographs!
I went through into his bedroom,
for I was very sleepy by that time. Unknown to me, Mrs Lawrence had been in the
house, for someone had removed the bedspread and turned down the bed; there was
a pair of clean pyjamas, Johnnie Pascoe's, laid out on the folded sheet. I had
brought with me only a haversack filled with warm clothing and a few essentials
and my flying helmet; there had been no room for pyjamas and I could get on
without them for a night or two. Now Johnnie Pascoe was providing them for me,
as he was providing everything else in this room.
His razor, his hairbrushes, his
washing things, his towel, were there for me to use if I wanted them. His pictures
were there for me to look at and to savour his early life, even in this room.
There was a very large framed photograph of the earliest Handley Page bomber,
the 0.400, with a Camel flying beside it, perhaps to show the scale of the big
aircraft; the Camel had the same chequered markings that I had seen on the
photo in the other room. There were two pictures of biplane fighters that I
could not identify at all, and one of an SE5. His bed was there for me to sleep
in, his pyjamas for me to wear.
I threw off my clothes and got into
his pyjamas, washed my teeth at his washbasin, and got into his bed. I put out
his bedside light and settled down to sleep, tired after thirty-six hours on
the go. Outside the wind was high and the rain still beat against the side of
the small, exposed house, and drummed on the corrugated-iron roof. Later on I
would ring Sheila, when I woke again. She wouldn't be worrying yet because it
was only about
We must get help to Johnnie Pascoe
the instant there was a break in the weather. I didn't know how long a man with
a fractured skull could live without attention, but no more than a day or two.
I should have asked the doctor, I thought, how much time we had, and yet it
would not have made any difference to events. I had failed in my first mission,
failed because I had forgotten about the door. I knew that Johnnie would not
hold that one against me, for we all have finger trouble now and then, but the
onus was on me to get help to him and repair the error. I would do so even if I
had to tie that doctor hand and foot and shove him in the aeroplane, for
Johnnie Pascoe was dying.
I was very near to sleep now, in
his bed and on his pillow. If he were to die, at any rate he would know that we
were doing everything we could to help him, for he would come back to this
small house beside his minor aerodrome, if a man goes anywhere beyond his
death. This was his home, the only home he had, the shrine that held the
treasured relics of his life. Somewhere in this bedroom with me would be .., would
be the Military Cross, in one of the drawers of his chest, perhaps. Somewhere
there might be souvenirs of Judy .., a silk stocking he had worn around his
neck when flying, forty years ago.
Those rotary engines…the Le Rhones,
the Monos, and the Clergets! They made a sort of crackling hiss, and always the
same smell of castor oil spraying backwards down the fuselage in a fine mist
over your leather helmet and your coat. They were delightful to fly, the
controls so light, the engines so smooth-running. Up among the sunlit cumulus
under the blue sky I could loop and roll and spin my Camel with the pressure of
two fingers on the stick beside the button switch which I used as little as
possible. Looping, turn off the petrol by the big plug cock upon the panel just
before the bottom of the dive, ease the stick gently back and over you go. The
engine dies at the top of the loop; ease the stick fully back and turn the
petrol on again as the ground appears so that the engine comes to life five or
six seconds later.
She would climb at nearly a
thousand feet a minute, my new Clerget Camel; she would do a hundred and ten
miles an hour. She would be faster, I thought, than anything upon the Western
Front. There was the aerodrome, turn off the cock and put her into a volplane.
Turn it on again to try the engine at a thousand feet, and turn it off.
Volplane turns downwind from the hedge, S turns keeping the aerodrome in view.
Try the engine once more with the cock. A turn to the left in the bright sun,
keeping the hedge in sight through the hole in the top plane. A turn to the
right. Now turn in, a little high, stick over the top rudder, the air squirting
in upon you sideways round the windscreen. Straighten out, over the hedge, and
down on to the grass. Remember that the Clerget lands very fast, at over forty
miles an hour, and with that great engine in the nose the tail was light. Watch
it ... Lovely.
I came to rest upon the grass in
the bright sunshine; for an April day it was terrific, right out of the box. I
turned the petrol half on, set the mixture, and pulled my goggles down again to
taxi in to the tarmac. She was throwing a light mist of castor oil over the
fuselage, the windscreen, and me, just the right amount, not too much and not
too little, but you don't want to get it in your eyes or you know it for the
rest of the day. I glanced over my shoulder and took off again, and flew her
over to the hangar in little blips of engine on the switch, my foot working
hard. I put her down right on the edge and rolled forward on to the gravel and
stopped just outside the Bessoneau. Cochran was doing that at London Colney in
a Spad but he was going too fast and ran into a support of the hangar and
brought the canvas roof down on top of him, and then the gas tank burst behind
his back and the whole lot went up in flames. There wasn't much left for the
funeral. Was the C O mad !
I let the motor die and pushed up
my goggles and wiped the oil off my face with my silk scarf. Donk was on the
tarmac with a lot of other people, girls, some of them. I jumped out of the
cockpit and the oil was just right, even all the way round the cowling. It made
her glisten, so that she looked wonderful. I told the mechanics to wipe her
down before the dust got on it, and then to drench out each cylinder with
paraffin.
Donk and Bose and Jerry came up
with the girls. Bose said, 'Meet the Hounslow Wonder. Flies upside down a darn
sight better than right side up. Flies backwards, too, so the breeze can cool—'
Donk said, 'Don't listen to him.
He's not got over last night.'
'I wasn't,' said one of the girls.
'I know it.' She turned to me. "You were just wonderful.'
'Don't tell him that,' said Jerry.
"Now he'll go and drop it. Remember Butch?'
'He didn't drop it,' I said. 'One
wing came off. Introduce me.'
Donk said, 'This is Daisy, and this
is Lily, and this is Judy. This is Johnnie Pascoe. He's as mad as - well, as
mad as holes.'
The others were in ordinary
clothes, but Judy was in uniform, a WAAG, and she was lovely. Even in the two-tone
drab buttoned up to the neck she made the others look like two pennyworth of
muck. My face was oily, so were my hands, and my old maternity just reeked of
it. I turned straight to her. 'I'd like to shake hands, but I'll make you in a
mess,' I said. 'You doing anything tonight?'
She laughed up at me, and it was
perfect. ‘Yes."
'Any of these hoodlums here?'
‘No.'
'Then put him off and come and have
dinner with me at the
She laughed again, and shook her
head.
Donk said, 'She's in
I turned to her again. "You're
not Judy Lester?'
She nodded, laughing.
I touched the sleeve of her
uniform, and started walking on air. 'But what's this in aid of?'
'Part time,' she said. 'I drive General
Cadell in the mornings.'
'Nevertheless,' I said, 'will you
have dinner with me?'
She laughed. 'I can't. I'm on in
the First Act.'
'Will you have supper with me after
the show? I'll make a party.'
'When?'
Tonight.'
She laughed again, adorably. 'All
right. But I go home at
'You won't tonight,' I said. 'What
do you like to eat best?'
'Smoked salmon and ice-cream.'
'Tournedos in between?'
She nodded. And then, on the tarmac
by the Sopwith Camel, she clasped her hands together, bent a knee, put on a
woebegone air, and said, 'Oh sir - I am but a simple village maid. I know not
what you intend by these fine gifts, so far above my station in life.'
I blinked at her, and then the
others burst into a roar of laughter. Donk said, 'You'll know before the
evening's out.'
She drew herself up now with regal
dignity, and said icily, 'Sir, though my father earns his living underground at
the corner of the Edgware and the Harrow Roads, I still have that which a maid
values more than anything on earth.'
Donk said, 'You won't have it
long.'
I was getting the hang of this now.
'Lady,' I said, 'I thought of asking this lot to my party, but I'm not so sure
now. What about you and me just dining alone?'
She laughed at me. 'Not much. I go
with the party.'
'In words of one syllable,' said
Bose, 'if you feed her you've got to feed us all.'
'It's worth it," I said. I
turned to her. 'Can I pick you up at the stage door?'
She nodded, and when she smiled at
me my heart turned over.
'What time?'
'
I nodded. 'I only got it
yesterday.'
'Are you pleased with it?'
'It's a beauty,' I said proudly.
'It's as fast as an SE5 and much handier. It's a hundred and thirty
horsepower.'
'That's terrific' She came apart
from the others with me and I showed her the engine, dripping a little clear
yellow oil and making little sizzling noises. 'Are you taking it out to the
Front?'
I nodded. 'We're forming up a new
Squadron now. I'm to lead one of the Flights.'
'Captain Boswell was saying that
you shot down seven Germans.'
'The eighth shot me down. I was
lucky and got down behind our lines.'
She glanced at the one gold stripe
upon my sleeve. 'Is that how you got your wound stripe?'
'I'm going to cut it in half,' I
said. 'It wasn't worth a whole stripe.'
'Have you ever crashed?'
'Six times,' I said. 'The seventh
is the lucky one. Do you drink champagne?'
She laughed. 'Kind sir, I know not
what to say!'
'You don't have to talk to it,' I
said. 'Just drink it.'
She said, 'Jiminny! Here's the
General coming. I'll have to go.'
I looked, and saw all the high
brass coming, but they were the length of the hangar away. By side-stepping a
couple of paces we could get behind the fuselage. 'Come this way,' I said. 'I
want to give you a kiss.'
She laughed. 'Not much.'
‘Why not?'
"You're all oily. You'll mess
up my uniform. I wear this in the Third Act, for the Grand Finale. Besides, I
don't know you.'
'First part makes sense,' I said.
'Last part - that's damn nonsense.'
'I must go. They're coming.'
I let her go, reluctantly. '
She nodded, and ran quickly to the
dark green Crossley tourer parked by the hangar and swung the starting handle.
When the General came up she was standing stiffly to attention. She saluted him
just as she saluted in the Grand Finale in the footlights with the orchestra
crashing and banging away before her feet, and opened the back door for him to
get in, while we stood laughing. Then she went round to the driver's seat and
got in, let the clutch in too hard, and stalled the engine. The others were all
laughing fit to burst, but I ran over and grabbed the starting handle and swung
it for her. She gave me a lovely smile and got away with a jerk and a crash of
gears.
That afternoon I got my Flight
together for a dog-fight. For the first ten minutes Donk and Jerry and Tim
Collins, a New Zealander, were to set on me and try and get me in their sights,
and then I'd pull out while Jerry and Tim set on Donk and I watched. I wanted
Tim to have a good work-out because he'd only just come down to us from the
We got a beautiful wreath for Timmy
at the florists', from the Squadron, ten guineas, and I told them where to send
it. And then there were so many lovely flowers in the shop I got a bright idea,
and I told the Duchess who was serving us I wanted a bouquet. A really nice
one, carnations and things. She said in her funeral voice, 'To go with the
wreath, sir?'
'No,' I said. 'This is another
thing again. This is for a lady on the stage. In
She gave me a dirty look as if she
was the Second Grave-digger, but she'd had ten guineas off us and she could see
another five coming so she got busy with the carnations and the fern. We got
behind a stand of pot-plants where I thought she couldn't see us and had
another egg-nog. When I got my bouquet it was gorgeous, all pink and white and
green and done up with silver paper round the bottom. Donk and I had a service
flat in High Street Kensington and we took Jerry home with us for the night.
Bose went off to book a table at the
They hadn't got any seats for Picardy
Princess that night, not one in the whole house, but they'd got a box so I
took that. I might have filled it up with the others but I didn't; I wanted to
look at her alone. So I didn't tell them anything about it but just said I'd
join up with them at the
She came hurrying out and dragged
me back into the dressing-room she shared with two other girls, to show me the
bouquet as her dresser had put it out in a great vase. I had never been
back-stage before, and it was all new to me, the shabby walls, the brilliant
lights, the half-dressed girls. She insisted on giving me a buttonhole from the
bouquet to wear at the
The crowd were all at the
Jerry must have been a bit lit up
by that time, I suppose. I forget what made him do it, but in the foyer of the
I was writing to Timmy's mother in
Palmerston North, wherever that may be, next morning, and saying what a
terrible loss he was to the Squadron and how he'd died fighting the Germans
just as if he'd been at the Front, and all the other things - the standard sort
of letter - when Donk came in with the news that Chuck Patterson was killed, up
at Waddington. Chuck was flying in a Bristol Fighter in the gunner's cockpit
and they had a forced landing. The pilot, an English boy called Jenkins, tried
to get into a field and hit the fence and turned it on its back. Chuck was
thrown out, and when he came to, the machine was burning and the pilot in it,
trapped. So Chuck went in to try and get him out, and then the petrol tank
exploded. Chuck died in hospital next day. He and I were in the same year at
McGill together doing first year engineering, and we joined up on the same day.
This sure was a rough sort of war. Judy.
Flowers, lots and lots of them. The
Duchess smiling when I went into the shop.
Funerals, and firing parties. 'Rest
on your arms reversed ...'
The bright sunlight in the chasms
of the cumulus, the brilliance of the white clouds, the blueness of the sky.
The blipping engines and the smell of castor oil and cordite from the guns.
Dancing with Judy, and the softness
of her breasts against my uniform. The whispers in her ear as we danced, that
never seemed to get finished.
The fun of that early summer, and
the laughter, and the deaths. Judy.
The day we had together down at
Henley in the punt, when we changed into bathing things among the bushes and
went swimming in the river, and I took one of her stockings so she had to take
the other off and go back to London without any stockings on at all, Judy
Lester, in Picardy Princess. The footlights, and the songs ...
Dancing with Judy. 'If you were the
only girl in the world ...' The Bing Boys, George Robey.
Sandy McPhail diving on the target
in Staines Reservoir just ahead of me when the CC gear failed and shot off one
blade of his propeller. The engine falling out of the machine, the Camel
fluttering down in weaves and spins into the water with the two machine guns
running wild and spraying the whole countryside with bullets, the white plume
of gas that showed its track. Sandy swimming ashore fit as a flea with nothing to show for it but a
cut lip and a bruised eyebrow, and the colossal binge we had at Murray's to
present him with a medal for saving life — his own. The laughter, and the kisses,
and the drinks.
Judy.
The investiture at
The day we got our orders for going
to France in ten days’ time, the day I didn't have a drink all day but picked
up Judy at ten past eleven at the stage door and walked her out under the trees of Leicester
Square amongst all the tarts, and took her in my arms and told her, and asked
her to marry me.
Judy.
The exhibition of formation flying
and stunt flying that we put on for a bunch of brass hats from the War Office,
nineteen of us at full squadron strength. The pilot from South Africa with
ginger hair who got his fin and rudder taken off by Ben's propeller and went spinning
slowly down doing everything he knew to get control again, although he must
have known that you can never hope to fly a Camel without rudder because of the
gyroscopic torque. The explosion when the tank burst as he hit the ground and
the great column of black smoke that acted as a windsock for us all to land by,
all eighteen of us. The Australian from
The special licence. Judy.
The military funeral at Feltham in
the morning, the Union Jack over the coffin on the gun carriage, the Dead March,
the muffled drums, the firing squad, the prayers. The frantic rush back to the
flat for a bite to eat and a couple of drinks before getting married to Judy in
the afternoon, the flowers, the old slipper, the confetti at the railway
carriage. Skindle's at Maidenhead, the calm summer evening, and Judy.
Judy.
The relief and the release from
tension in the morning, the little secret smiles, the breakfast tray in bed
with the sun streaming in on us. The familiar hiss and crackle of a flock of
Clerget Camels that brought us hopping out of bed and out on the verandah in
our night things as the Squadron peeled off one by one and started in to beat
up Skindle's. Jerry doing a full roll below the level of our window, Donk
running his wheels along the river so that they made two light furrows on the
water for a hundred yards and set the moored punts rocking. Bose going through
the telephone line and taking away a length of it streaming from his
undercarriage. The blipping engines, the waving pilots, the startled onlookers,
and Judy waving at them in her nightie in the sun ...
Judy.
Judy back in the show that evening,
and the whole Squadron in the stalls chi-hiking at us and Judy ad-libbing back
at them across the footlights, the laughter, and the fun. The four of them that
set on me during the Grand Finale and dragged me out and through the little
door and shoved me on the stage beside her, the glare of the footlights, the
welcome from Daisy Holmes, the leading lady, as she gave us the centre of the
stage, the orchestra switching from the Grand Finale to the Wedding March, the
shouts and the laughter and the cheers from the audience, the many curtains.
The impromptu supper on the stage with all the cast and all the Squadron, the
champagne, the toasts.
The quiet of the night drive
through the moonlit streets of
Judy.
The hectic rush to get the Squadron
fit for operations in the next three days, the lining up of sights upon the new
machines, the swinging of the compasses. The new pilot who was posted down to
us from
Judy.
The early breakfast on the last
morning, the serious last kisses, the little gifts, the promises to write. The
parade upon the tarmac with all the machines lined up, the speech from the
General, the girls and the relations in the background. Taking off for Lympne
to refuel before the Channel crossing, the Major in front and the three Flights
behind him, each in a V formation. Curtis in A Flight getting in Donk's backwash
on the take-off and sticking in a wing and cartwheeling upon the aerodrome. The
dive upon the hangars and the crowd and the zoom up in farewell, the turn on
course beneath the low grey clouds, the excitement and the pain of leaving. The
sense of stripping off the non-essential before battle.
The sea-crossing from Lympne, with
Calvert turning back when we were five miles out because his motor quit, and
going down into the sea with no boat near, a couple of miles offshore. We
couldn't do a thing to help him, but Bose and Roger circling round for ten
minutes, hoping somebody would see. Calvert all right, but the Camel slowly
sinking when they had to leave. Hodson cracking up in landing at Gravelines.
The new hut for a mess, the search for furniture for it, the air raid the first
night, the letter to Judy.
Judy, who now seemed so far away.
The first patrol across the lines,
leading my new Flight.
The three Fokkers two thousand feet
below, the dive in to attack with our six Camels, the hideous surprise when
they just put their noses up and climbed away from us till they were on top and
in the sun and diving down on us. These new D7S can certainly outfly our
Clerget Camels. The dogfight and the turning, turning, covering Phil Thomas and
trying to work our way back to our own side of the lines before another lot of
Fokkers came along and made the numbers even. The one that I got in my sights
and fired ten rounds at till the gun jammed, the sight of Jerry firing straight
into a Fokker while another one was on his tail, with Phil on his. The infinite
relief when they climbed away from us and made for home, probably short of
fuel. Jerry cracking up on landing with his plane shot all to hell, and mine
the worse for wear with two bullets in the lower port front spar.
The working out new tactics with
the Major to exploit our better manoeuvrability in a dog-fight. Bose bringing
back his first patrol with Roger missing, shot down by a Fokker somewhere to
the east of Kemmel Hill. Bose telling us the Fokkers were at twenty thousand
feet, a good five thousand feet higher than we can get. The Dolphins and the
Writing to Judy, telling her about
the piano we got for the mess to play her songs on.
Phil Thomas dead. Diving on a
two-seat L VG over Sailly that was escorted by two Fokkers, and then jumped on
by four or five more Fokkers that came down out of the clouds. Jerry got the
LVG and sent it down in flames; he said the observer jumped out and went down
in a parachute. Dick saw that, too. I was busy with a Fokker that went down
smoking and out of control, a probable. Then I saw another Fokker on Phil's
tail as he was flying straight and trying for a hopeless shot, miles away.
Trying to get over to the Fokker to relieve Phil, and Hodson trying too,
watching the Fokker shoot him down. Hodson got the Fokker for a certain kill just
after he got Phil. Passing pretty close to Phil as I pulled out and seeing half
his face was shot away, certainly dead. Telling the Major when we landed that
I'd said he wouldn't last a fortnight, and he hadn't.
Sam Cooper missing.
Writing to Judy, telling her what a
pretty little town Gravelines is. Waiting for a letter from her, but she hasn't
written yet.
Writing to Phil's mother at a place
called Northwood somewhere near
Writing to Sam's wife at a place
called
Writing to Judy telling her about
the wildflowers here, and the grand party we had with 74 on Tuesday when it
rained all day.
Bose missing, and Bose turning up
again after being shot down in flames. The ground machine guns got him going
home from a patrol across the lines at about five hundred feet. The engine went
on fire so he stopped it, and got out on to the wing. He found he could
volplane it without engine by reaching in to grab the stick among the flames
although his hand got burnt. He tried to land it but there was a hedge and he
went into that and got thrown into it. He sure was lucky. He'll be in hospital
a week or two, and in the meantime Peters has his Flight.
Jim Peters killed, his first patrol
as Flight Commander. The rear gunner in a Rumpler got him. These high-flying
two-seaters are just murder because you have to fight them up at fifteen
thousand feet where we have no performance. It takes three Camels to tackle a
Rumpler at that height. The rumour that we may be going to get Dolphins.
Andrews and Davies, both in Donk's
Flight, killed. Donk's Camel like a colander. He says he's getting ulcers.
Fokkers.
The arrival of four pilots straight
from
A letter from Judy!
Judy.
Four pages, but she writes pretty
big. She says everything's very dull, and I never tell her anything about the
war. She's not sure, but she thinks she's going to have a baby.
I sure wish I hadn't done it.
Writing to Judy to say that's marvellous.
Peter Stanley killed upon his first
patrol. A Pfalz. God didn't help him and I couldn't. But I got a Fokker,
certain, which makes nine. Drinks in the mess.
Writing to Peter Stanley's mother
at a place called
Getting the woofits now, because I
don't sleep too good. Bose back and flying with his hand in bandages - they
tried to send him home but he won't go. The little black-haired Irish girl that
he got tangled up with at the hospital. That's bad luck, because it takes your
mind off flying and you can't have that when you're on Camels in this year of
grace.
Pancaking my Camel coming in to
land after a patrol and wiping off the undercarriage. Saying it was because I
got shot up, and knowing it was really just bad flying. The third Camel that
I've used up since we came out here. Hoping that we'll come to the end of them,
and get on Dolphins.
Jim Sanders killed.
I got another Fokker, which makes
ten. I just got mad and went for him with three of them on my tail, all
missing. Turns were a bit funny till I found that the port ailerons were shot
up, not working, the controls shot through. Donk says that brandy is the best,
last thing at night. But still not sleeping.
Writing to Jim Sanders's wife, in
Reading the English newspapers.
'The Fokkers saw a Flight of Camels coming down on them, so they turned and
raced for home.' Cutting it out and pasting it up on the wall by the bar. Good
for a belly-laugh.
Bose missing, believed killed. He
had his Flight out on patrol and jumped a solitary Pfalz, but it was there as a
decoy and about ten Fokkers came down out of the sun. Don Curtis was shot down
and killed, and Bose last seen going down with smoke pouring out and two
Fokkers following him down to finish him off. Nobody saw him crash, but he
won't get away with that one. They got one Fokker. They say one of the Fokker
pilots got out with a parachute. He fell about a thousand feet before it
opened.
Writing to Mrs Boswell. He was
older than the rest of us, and had two kids. A schoolmaster. Every time I get
to sleep I wake up with a jerk, and then I can't sleep again until I've had a
drink. Going to the hospital to tell the little Irish nurse. I think she'll be
consolable.
Going out alone before dawn and
sneaking across the lines hedgehopping in
the first light. Found a Jerry aerodrome with a Rumpler taking off and took it
head-on at about five hundred feet, put a burst in its belly and went
underneath. Saw it crash in flames. Eleven. Ground fire very bad all round the
aerodrome and lucky to get back for breakfast. Drinks in the mess. A general
came in a blue uniform to give us a pep-talk about our fine offensive spirit,
and to say we'd got to get us new blue uniforms like his because we're Royal
Air Force now. Called himself some kind of marshal.
Trying to write to Judy, but my
hand was shaking so I gave it up and anyway I couldn't think of anything to
say. Sandy McPhail got shot up and crash-landed just behind our lines. In
hospital, but they say that he'll recover. Took off one leg.
Getting five Fokkers in one day,
and losing the Major and Tom Foreman. Five must be pretty near a record.
They're sending us Cy Hampton from 74 to be our new CO. Of all nineteen of us
who flew to
Lying awake from
The ground fire, much worse than
before. Machine guns everywhere, all spitting flame at me. God, this is bad.
Must, must keep low. They hit then, several times, but not me. Over those trees
and down low to the fields. Gunners ahead of me, so let them have a burst.
They're everywhere. Hit again then, and now smoke coming from the engine.
That'll be an oil pipe, heading west now from this shambles towards our lines.
Full bore, but the motor dying - only seven hundred revs. Hit again in the
tail, several times, can hardly keep her in the air. Wham - my leg. Motor
stopped, prop stationary, this is it.
Switches off, petrol off, down into
this field. The firing has stopped. Too short and all shell-holes. Pancake
down, undercarriage collapses, skidding along, the cracking of the timbers. Tip
on the nose and crack my head upon the guns, then she falls back right side up.
Blood streaming down my face, blood in my flying boot and down my leg. The
grey-clad, running soldiers in the grey dawn.
The man speaking broken English
that I could not understand, the stretcher bearers helping me out, the
first-aid station in a farm stable, the bandaging. The three German pilots
giving me cigarettes and asking questions that I mustn't answer. Telling me
that I was over GHQ and asking what I hoped to gain by strafing it alone,
asking if there were bombs in the machine. Not answering. If they can learn
anything that's any good to them by looking at a Clerget Camel they're welcome.
The ambulance, the hospital at
The Red Cross visitor, the messages
through
The long journey to the prison camp
at Burgwedel near
The prison camp.
The weary months.
The weary months.
The letter from Judy in October
that had taken three months to reach me, telling me the baby would be born in
February.
The cold, the weary days, the snow,
the prison camp.
The Armistice, the cheering and
rejoicing, the sullen German officers, the train to the Dutch frontier town,
the English and American voices. The sea-crossing to Harwich, the room at the
Piccadilly Hotel, the trunk that I had left with Cox and King's with a new
uniform in it, the Tube journey to Golders Green, the bus to the small house
where Judy was living with her mother.
Judy.
Judy, changed and pale and
irritable and out of work. Her mother hard and hostile, pointing out that I was
out of work, too. Judy refusing to come up to Town or to be seen anywhere until
the baby arrived, because of her career.
Judy refusing to come back to
Judy refusing to come away with me
for a short holiday.
Judy crying and in a temper.
Judy.
The Piccadilly Hotel, and Donkin,
Major Donkin now. Hearing from Donk about Jerry and Bose, and going down with
him to Roehampton to see
Judy.
The crossing on the overcrowded
ship to Halifax, four in one cabin, the poker and the drinks. The visit to the
Air Force Headquarters in
Judy.
The great weariness of home, with
nothing there to do. The visits to the aerodrome, the desolating sense of being
out of place.
The plain clothes instead of
uniform, so commonplace, so strange.
The suggestions that I should go
back to college, back to school again, a married man.
The snow, the thoughtless,
untouched people. The boredom of it all.
The ship back to
The journey down to
Judy.
The desperate search for a job,
with all the other ex-officers. The high ideas to start with, seven hundred a
year, the demands for qualifications, for experience of business, the drop to
four hundred, to four pounds a week. The visits to the aerodrome at Hounslow
and at Croydon, the putting one's name down - 'We'll let you know.' The job in
Judy in the nursing home, better
tempered, thankful it was over. Judy preparing to park the baby with her mother
till she could afford a nurse for it, the baby red and wrinkled, unattractive.
Judy full of plans for a new show. The sense of being out of things,
completely.
Judy in the showroom at
Judy with a leading part in Lucky
Lady, musical, seventy pounds a week. Judy taking on a nurse and moving
with her mother to a flat in Hampstead. Judy with her name in lights in
Judy.
The air-minded Jew clothier at
Streatham, prepared to buy an Avro to do seaside joyriding if I would fly it
for him. Three pounds a week and twenty per cent of the takings after expenses
were paid. The joy of the chance to get flying again. The trouble with Judy.
Judy offering me seven pounds a
week as her publicity manager.
The quarrel with Judy.
The success of Lucky Lady.
Judy.
The Avro with its blipping,
Monosoupape engine, purchased for scrap price, seventy pounds. The one ground
engineer and the one boy. The tent beside it, on the beaches, in the fields.
The aged Commer truck, the Primus stove, the frying-pan meals. The placards
with my picture on them, the dare-devil ace, the eleven victories, the Military
Cross. The warm-hearted little Jew from Streatham, delighted with the success
of his first venture into show business. The one visit from Judy, half an hour,
her lip curled a little.
Judy Lester, in Lucky Lady.
Judy.
The crowds, the blipping engine,
the smell of castor oil, the ceaseless take-offs and landings over hedges in
small fields, the seven-minute flights, the gaping crowds, the endless
photographs in front of the machine.
Judy with a
Judy.
Judy leaving for
The warm-hearted little clothier at
Streatham. 'You forget her, see? She got no use for you. She come to a bad end,
boy. You just wait.'
Judy.
The second Avro, and the second
pilot, the third engineer.
The film of Lucky Lady.
The letter from the lawyer at
Judy.
I woke in the darkness in the
little windswept house beside the aerodrome in
CHAPTER FOUR
In the ordinary way I never have
bad dreams or any dreams at all; I had not cried since I was a boy. I was
ashamed of myself, and I was struck by the grim idea that this was a new
manifestation of fatigue. All pilots must grow old like other men; when the
fatigues of flying start to bear too heavily upon them it shows at the next
medical examination. I was not an ")ld man and I had kept myself pretty
fit, but bad dreams and crying were probably a warning.
I got out of bed and went into the
other room. It was about
They told me that the call would be
through in a few minutes, so I put down the receiver, went back to the bedroom,
and put on Johnnie Pascoe's dressing-gown. He seemed to use it a good deal, for
there was a packet of cigarettes in the pocket, open, with a few still left in
it, and a box of matches in the pocket on the other side. I lit one of his
cigarettes and went and stood before the fire, waiting for the call. I glanced
at the photographs of Judy. Since I had slept she had become very real to me,
far more than a monochrome image on a fading bit of sensitized paper. I knew
the way she turned her head, the feel of her against me. I could have picked
out her voice amongst a hundred others on a gramophone record. My imagination
had been running wild in my dreams, and that was not a very good thing. When a
pilot gets to a certain age, I thought, he should begin to live a very regular
sort of life —
get up at the same time, go to bed at the same time, work at the same time each
day. If you did that you could go on flying for a long, long time, as Johnnie
Pascoe had. If you didn't, you would fail a medical at forty-five, and that
would be the end. I had departed from my regularity in the last day or two, and
I had received the warning. Still, nobody knew of it but me.
The telephone rang, and there was
Sheila. 'Evening, dear,' I said. 'I just rang to say it's okay over here. How
are things with you?'
'We're fine here,' she said. 'How
are things with you, Ronnie?'
'I made two trips down there this
morning with the doctor, in an Auster,' I said. 'It's a shocking little strip,
and I couldn't land him either time. The second time it clamped right down.'
'It said on the wireless that the
RAAF had sent a
'I believe they have,' I replied.
'They may be able to get in for a drop tomorrow, but I wouldn't bank on it.
They'll have to have clear weather for the drop. There are some pretty high
mountains round about, up to about four thousand feet.'
'They could jump above the clouds,
couldn't they?' she asked. 'I mean, if it was clear for a few hundred feet
underneath?'
'I don't believe they'd do that,' I
said. 'It's too close to the sea. And the country's quite uninhabited you know,
and very wild. I don't think that would be a reasonable risk. No, if it was
like that I think we could do better in the Auster. Gone in low over the sea
and nip in underneath the clouds.'
'How is he now?' she asked.
'Johnnie Pascoe?'
'I haven't heard for the last few
hours,' I told her. 'I've been asleep since five. I'm going to ring the police
station in a minute and find out what the form is. He's got a fractured skull,
and that's not quite so good.'
She said, 'Oh, the poor man ...'
And then she asked, 'How is the child? The one that's got appendicitis?'
'She seems to be recovering. The
urgent case is Johnnie Pascoe now.'
'I know.' There was a pause, and
then she said, 'Don't go and take too many risks, Ronnie.'
I laughed. 'I won't do that.' We
had been married for twelve years, and I knew what she was thinking. One day
Ronnie Clarke might be in the same boat, and want help from another pilot. 'I'm
going to have another stab at it at dawn if the conditions are at all possible.
One or other of us should be able to get in to him tomorrow, one way or
another.'
'When do you think you'll be able
to ring me again?'
I thought for a moment. 'I'm hoping
to be home tomorrow night. If I can't make it, I'll ring you tomorrow evening.'
'All right, dear,' she said. 'Good
luck.'
'My love to the kids,' I said. 'And
you. Goodbye for now.'
I rang off, and lit another of
Johnnie Pascoe's cigarettes while the line was clearing. Then I picked up the receiver
again and rang the police station. The sergeant answered. 'Captain Clarke
here,' I said. 'Speaking from Captain Pascoe's house. I've been asleep. Tell
me, what's the latest on the weather?'
The sergeant said, 'Well, the
wind's dropping, so they say. I've not noticed it here - blowing as hard as
ever. They don't think there'll be any more rain for the time being.'
'What about the cloud?'
'Continuing low cloud all day
tomorrow. They think there might be a break tomorrow evening, and a fine
night.'
'What about Captain Pascoe?'
'He's still alive, but he's worse.
Deteriorating, you might say.'
'Where's Dr Parkinson?'
'He's at the hotel, with his pilot.
If I may say so, Dr Turn-bull is the one you want.'
'Why? Dr Parkinson flew up here
specially to do this job.'
'I know. But now he's here, he
don't seem so keen on it, somehow. Dr Turnbull, he's roaring to go.'
I laughed shortly. ‘I thought I'd
have given him a sickener of flying.'
'I don't know about that,' the
sergeant said. 'He was telling them what you'd been doing in the hotel. It's Dr
Turnbull wants to go with you again. He's got a nurse, too.'
'A nurse?' I thought very quickly.
A nurse was what the doctor had wanted with him for a head operation. If he had
found one now .., well, the Auster would seat three people, though she would be
more heavily loaded, less easy to handle in extreme conditions. Still, if there
was a nurse it was clearly up to me to take her in with the doctor. 'Where did
he get a nurse from?'
'She arrived about
'Just a moment,' I said. This isn't
a woman called Mrs Forbes, is it? A middle-aged woman, from
'No,' he replied. 'Mrs Forbes, she
came this morning. She's staying at the hotel. This is a younger woman, a
Sister Dawson. Under thirty, I'd say.'
I thought for a minute. 'Look,
Sergeant,' I said at last. 'I'm going to get a good night's sleep, but I want
to go down to the Lewis River again at dawn if the weather's anything like fit,
taking the doctor with me, and this nurse. If I can't land them, I'll come back
and wait an hour or two, and try again. It's the only way — we've got to keep on trying. The
doctor's on the telephone, isn't he?'
'That's right,' he said. 'He lives
at the vicarage. The number is two six, Mr Haynes. You'd get him there now,
unless he's out upon a case.'
'How can I get hold of the nurse?'
'I think she's with the doctor. Mrs
Haynes was going to give her supper.'
'I'll ring them in a minute. How
can I get hold of Mr Monkhouse, the ground engineer?'
'He isn't on the telephone. I could
send a message over, ask him to come down to see you.'
'I don't think that's necessary.
I'm just going back to bed ...' I thought for a moment. 'Look, it starts to get
light about seven. Tell him I want the Auster refuelled and ready to take off
at
The sergeant said, 'You want
everything ready to fly at
'Thanks a lot, Sergeant. If you're
speaking to
'Will you be speaking to Dr
Parkinson, sir?'
I hesitated. 'I suppose I ought to.
But you say he doesn't want to do this job?'
The sergeant hesitated in turn.
"Well, I don't know anything officially.'
'Tell me what you know
unofficially,' I said. 'Is it that he doesn't want to fly with me?'
The sergeant laughed awkwardly.
'Well, that's about the strength of it, I'm afraid. I was off duty after
dinner, after you came back, and I went into the hotel to meet these gentlemen
and have a beer. While I was with them, Dr Turnbull, he came in and told them
about the first flight you made when he couldn't get out of the door, and about
the second time when you was messing about in the rain in among the cliffs and
running out of petrol. Dr Parkinson and his pilot, they got quite upset at what
he told them. Of course,' he added hurriedly, 'Dr Turnbull, he wouldn't know
what was safe and what wasn't.'
'What did Dr Turnbull think about
it all?' I asked.
'He come out on your side,' the
sergeant said. 'Dr Parkinson, he said as he'd prefer to fly with Mr Barnes,
that flew him up from
I thought about it for a minute.
'We'll have to take turns with this Auster,' I said at last. 'I shan't speak to
Dr Parkinson tonight. If that's the way he feels about it, he certainly won't
want to take off in bad weather in a single-engined aircraft in the dark to fly
down the coast without any navigation aids, and no alternative strips to land
on. If you should see him again tonight tell him what we're doing, and that
we'll be back by breakfast time if we can't make it. Phil Barnes can have the
Auster then and have another stab at it with Dr Parkinson in daylight, while
we're resting. That way we'll have another doctor and another pilot trying to
get through. We'll take it in turns all day tomorrow.'
'That's a good idea,' the sergeant
said. 'Real tactful, I would say. If I don't see you before you go, sir, the
very best of luck.'
I rang off, and stood thoughtful
for a minute while the line cleared. His first experience of flying seemed to
have done Dr Turnbull a bit of good.
I rang two six, and Mrs Haynes
answered the phone. I waited while she fetched the doctor from upstairs, and
then I told him what I wanted to do. 'It's going to be a bit early in the
morning, and it's going to be a bit dicey in a single-engined aircraft in the
dark over that sort of country,' I told him. 'But as I understand it, it's
getting really urgent now.'
'I think it is,' he said. 'It
sounds like sepsis to me.'
'Could you do anything for that?' I
asked.
'Oh, if I could get down there I
could lift some of the damaged bone and do something about it,' he said.
'That's quite a normal procedure. Whether he'd recover ultimately — well, that's another matter.'
'Would you mind flying down so
early as that?' I asked. ‘We'd have to fly without the cabin door again.'
'No, I don't mind,' he replied. 'I
think we ought to. There's just one thing, though. I've got a nurse here now, a
proper nurse experienced in surgery. Could we take her with us?'
'I know,' I said. The sergeant told
me about her. There's room for her in the aircraft, in the seat behind. The
only thing is, she'll have to get out in the same way that you do. If there's a
strong wind I'll try and hold the aircraft stationary on the ground for a short
time like we did this morning, so that you can get out. Then I'd probably have
to take off again and cruise around while she changes into your seat, and then
come in and put her out in the same way. Do you think she could do that?'
'I think she could.'
'What sort of a woman is she?' I
asked. 'Is she active and athletic?'
'She's here with me now,' he
replied. 'We've been talking about this already. She's quite ready to try it. I
think she'll be all right.'
'She'd better not wear skirts,' I
said. 'Can you fit her out with a pair of trousers? Trousers without turn-ups
at the bottom?'
'I can borrow a pair of ski-ing
trousers for her.'
'That's just the thing. Get her
some ski boots, too - something to support the ankle. No high-heeled shoes.'
'I'll look after that.'
'Fine. Tell me, how did you get
hold of her?'
'She just turned up to see if she
could help. She knows Captain Pascoe. She worked for a year as an air hostess
for AusCan, flying between Sydney and Vancouver. She met him then. Then she
went back to the hospital.'
'Well, she couldn't have turned up
at a better time.'
'One thing,' he said. 'I'm having a
bit of trouble finding somewhere for her to sleep tonight. The hotel's full,
and we're full up here. Have you got a spare bed in Captain Pascoe's house if I
bring her down?'
'There is a bed,' I said,
'and it's got a mattress on it, but no bedclothes and no pillows, and it's all
a bit dirty. She's welcome to that, but you'll have to rustle up some
bedclothes for her.'
He thought for a moment. 'I've got
a sleeping bag,' he said. 'I think she'd better use that. You don't mind if she
sleeps in the house with you?'
'Not if she doesn't.'
'It'll make it a bit more
convenient for getting out early in the morning if she's there with you,' he
said. 'She's just going to have supper. Be all right if I bring her down in
about an hour?'
I hesitated. 'That'll be all
right,' I said at last. 'I'm sleeping in Johnnie Pascoe's room, and I'm going
back to bed now. That's the room on the left as you go into the passage from
the living-room. She'll be sleeping in the room on the right - I'll leave the
door open. The thing is - it's rather important that I should be on the top
line tomorrow morning and I want to get a really good night's sleep. I'm going
to take a Nembutal. When you come in, try not to make a noise.'
'I understand,' he said. 'You've
got a Nembutal, have you? I can let you have one if you haven't.'
'No, I've got all I want,' I said.
'Just try not to wake me up when you come in. I'm setting an alarm clock for
five and I'd like to sleep through till then.'
I rang off, and stood for a moment
looking round the room. I was wakeful and thirsty, and the thought of another
whisky crossed my mind. Alcohol, however, is a stimulant and might not be a
very good thing to take if one wanted the hypnotic drug to work. A glass of
milk would be better, and I went through to the kitchen and found milk in the
refrigerator, and came back to the living-room with a glass of ice-cold milk
and a couple of biscuits.
Cold milk. Cold milk at a party.
Ice-cold milk with Crème
de Menthe. What bell did that ring in the distant past? Something to do with
flying, certainly - but what? Ice-cold milk and Crème de Menthe? What pilot had
that been?
And then it all came flooding back
into my memory, the inquest that the Coroner, my father, had held on Brenda
Marshall after she died in the hangar of the club. Me sitting in the body of
the court and Johnnie Pascoe on the witness stand, and Dad asking him questions
about the accident, and writing down his answers all in longhand so that the
inquiry stretched out, painful and apparently interminable. 'Have you any
reason to suppose that the deceased had taken any alcoholic liquor before she
went up on this flight?' And Johnnie Pascoe answering, 'No, sir. As a general
rule, she never drank anything but cold milk in the clubhouse. Sometimes in the
evening at a party she would drink Crème de Menthe, but I never saw her do that before flying. I shouldn't
think that alcohol had anything to do with it.' Johnnie Pascoe on the witness
stand, the pilot-instructor, bronzed and athletic, very grave and serious.
Brenda Marshall.
I crossed the room and stood
looking at the photograph again, immersed in memories. It must have been taken
in 1930 or 1931, about the time I learned to fly. I remembered the Moth behind
her in the photograph so well. She had it painted white, and because the
registration letters were G-EMLF she called it Morgan le Fay. Over her shoulder
in the photograph I could see the beginning of the word Morgan, painted below
the engine.
Johnnie Pascoe had taught her to
fly in 1930, the year before he taught me. Brenda Marshall, with her short,
curly hair, her shy and friendly smile, her white flying suit, her Moth. Brenda
Marshall, who was kind to everyone, who made a home for her sister's baby when
her sister had to go to
I blew a long cloud of smoke as I
stood looking at the photograph twenty-eight years later. At that time and for
some years afterwards it seemed to me that Dad had never been so stupid. He
could be very dense sometimes. Before the inquest I had tried to make him
understand something about aeroplanes, with the superior knowledge of about
five hours' solo to my credit. I had said to him that the accident needed a
good deal of sifting and investigation; she had got into a spin at six or seven
hundred feet right over the middle of the aerodrome, and that sort of thing
just didn't happen to an experienced pilot like Brenda Marshall. But Dad had
been pig-headed and legal that day, and had refused to listen to me. He just
said that aeroplanes were very dangerous things for women pilots, that she must
have fainted, and that anyway I couldn't possibly know what had happened in the
machine. He had taken that line at the inquest, too. He had asked the standard,
rather stupid, questions about the airworthiness certificate of her Moth and
about the validity of Brenda's licence and about her general state of health,
and he had written all that down in longhand. He had examined Dr Haughton who
had given him an account of her multiple injuries, two broken legs, fractured
pelvis, three fractured ribs, fractured right forearm, fractured jaw, and
fractured left clavicle, and had told us that the cause of death was shock, and
Dad had written all that down. He had examined the police sergeant who turned
up on a bicycle just before she died and had a long account to give that told
us nothing, and he had written all that down in longhand, too.
By that time the inquest had lasted
for an hour and a half, and I suppose Dad felt that he had done his stuff. He
shuffled his papers together and announced that after a full investigation of
this very sad affair he found that the deceased had met her death by accidental
causes in a flying accident. He expressed the sympathy of the court with the
dead woman's mother and with her husband who was shortly to come out of
hospital. With that he closed the court, and at home he refused to discuss the
case with me at all. As he had been so stupid about it all, I didn't pursue the
matter. Soon after that Johnnie Pascoe left Duffington to take a job with
Imperial Airways in
It was years before it gradually
occurred to me that possibly Dad hadn't been so stupid after all. But he was
dead by that time, and I never had a chance to verify my hunch.
The cold milk was beginning to
work, and I was feeling more relaxed. I stubbed out my cigarette and went into
the bedroom, glass in hand, and found the little bottle of hypnotic pills in my
haversack, and swallowed one down with a mouthful of milk. The unmade bed was
beginning to look inviting, but I went back to the sitting-room for a few minutes to stand by the fire and
finish my glass of milk. The time was
Johnnie Pascoe, I thought, must
know much more about Brenda Marshall than I did, because I had seen him kissing
her in the half-light late one evening in the hangar, behind the Blackburn
Bluebird. I remember that evening particularly because it was the evening she
came back to Duffington from
I stood there wondering, as I had
wondered for the last two years since chatting with him in the pilots' room at
Presently I finished my glass of
his milk, went back sleepily into his bedroom, threw off his dressing-gown, and
got back into his bed. The Nembutal was beginning to work, and I was drowsy
now. The time was about twenty minutes to ten. His travelling alarm clock was
on his bedside table by my side; I reached out for it and set it for
Twenty-eight years later, for
Johnnie Pascoe the wheel had come round the full circle, for he was now a
pilot-instructor at a little flying club again teaching young men and women how
to fly an Auster or a Tiger Moth. Successive waves of sleep were passing over
me and sinking me down into forgetful ness of present things, and as I went I
wondered if he had ever had another pupil such as Brenda Marshall. I knew how
it had happened ; it was all as clear as if it had been yesterday. She lived
with her mother in the big house at the entrance to the village, and she drove
an Alvis sports saloon. In a way she owned the aerodrome because it had been
requisitioned in the war from one of her husband's farms, and the Air Ministry
were still leasing it. For a year after I arrived in Duffington I saw nothing
of her. I lived at the hotel, the Seven Swans, and I was busy working up the
club, and I was getting most of the enterprising young men and women of
Leacaster as members. I knew the
She came towards me. 'It's Captain
Pascoe, isn't it?' she asked.
I smiled. "That's right.'
She said, 'I'm Mrs Marshall.'
'I know,' I replied. 'I'm very glad
to meet you.'
She said, 'I ought to have met you
a long time ago, but we don't go out a great deal.' She hesitated, and then
said, 'I felt I must come down here and see what's going on. After all, we're
such near neighbours.'
'I'd like to show you everything
there is to see,' I said. The January wind whistled around us from the north.
'Would you like to come into the office? There's a coke stove in there. We've
got a fireplace in the club room, but we don't light the fires unless we know that
there are people coming out. Only the weekends. Things go a bit flat in the
winter in a flying club, you know - although the hours are keeping up quite
well. We did a hundred and five hours in December.'
'That's splendid,' she said
vaguely. I showed her to the office, and the hot air and the stink from the
coke stove hit us like a blast. She threw back her fur coat. She was
bareheaded, and the short reddish-brown curls were massed all over her head,
boyish. She was rather pale, and I thought she did not look well.
'Have you got a lot of members
here?' she asked.
Two hundred and ten flying
members,' I told her, 'and about three hundred associate members. Would you
like a cup of tea?'
'Oh, please don't bother.'
'We usually have one about this
time.' I went out and spoke to the ground engineer, and asked him to slip over
to the clubhouse for another cup, with a saucer, unusual in the hangar. Then I
went back to my visitor and found her standing in the office door looking at
the aircraft. 'They're so much bigger when you see them close up,' she
observed.
'These two are Moths,' I told her.
'That's a Bluebird.'
She walked over and looked into the
cockpit of the nearest Moth. 'All these clocks mean something, I suppose ...'
'That's the most important one,' I
said. 'Tells you how fast you're going. Have you ever flown?'
'Just for ten minutes, about two
years ago,' she said. 'A man was here giving joyrides.'
'Would you like to go up again?' I
asked. 'I can take you up any time. We charge two pounds ten an hour.'
She brightened. 'Could you do
that?'
'That's what we're here for. We
could go up this morning, if you like, but you might enjoy it more when it's
sunny. I'd like to take you, any time you say.'
She looked out of the hangar door;
it had begun to rain a little. 'I'd love to go up again, but it's a bit piggy
now. I'd like to go when you can see something.'
I laughed. 'Quite frankly, Mrs
Marshall, so would I. Creeping along in the rain just above the tree tops,
trying to find one's way back here by recognizing the cows, isn't really my
idea of fun. There's a change forecast for this evening, though. We might get a
fine day tomorrow.'
We went back into the office for
our tea. 'Esmé
Haugh’ ton's a member of this club, isn't she?' she asked.
'The doctor's daughter? She's been
doing quite a bit of dual. She'll be going solo in a week or two.'
'She was telling me about it last
night. She said that every-1 body has such fun down here__'
'We get quite a crowd here at the
weekends,' I said. 'It gets to be a bit of a riot sometimes, I'm afraid, but we
do our best to keep things under control. Everybody's fairly young, you see.
Still, I got the Lord Mayor as a member last week and the Chief Constable the
week before, so they can't think too badly of us.'
'Esmé told me Colonel Chance had joined. She
says he's learning to fly.'
I nodded. 'He's had two lessons.
He's going to be all right.' The Chief Constable had two sons in the Royal Air Force,
and he wanted to learn the craft that was important in their lives.'
'He's awfully old to learn to fly,
isn't he?'
'I think he's about fifty-eight.
It's not difficult, you know, so long as you've got good eyesight.'
'Can a person really learn to fly
when he's as old as that?’ she asked. 'I always thought you had to be
frightfully young.'
I smiled. 'Not to fly this sort of
aeroplane. Of course if you want to fly the latest Air Force fighter, then you
do have to be young. The Avro Avenger and the Hawker Fury — they do two hundred miles an hour and
they land at over sixty. But anyone can fly this sort of aeroplane.'
'Women also?' she asked. 'Could you
teach me to fly?'
'Of course, Mrs Marshall. Would you
like to learn?'
Her eyes sparkled. 'It would be
marvellous! But I thought I'd be too old.'
I smiled. 'You must be under
thirty, surely.’
She nodded. 'That wouldn't be too
old?'
'Of course not. Your eyesight's all
right, isn't it?'
'I think it is. I don't have to
wear glasses.'
"Your heart's all right?
There's nothing the matter with you? It doesn't look as if there is.'
She laughed, and blushed a little.’
I think I’m quite all right.'
'Of course you can learn to fly,' I
told her. 'You'll probably get a lot of fun out of it.'
'I believe I should. I used to sail
a boat. It's like that, isn't it?'
'A bit,' I said. 'You're keen on
sailing?'
She nodded, and put down her cup.
'Would you like to come outside and sit in the machine?' I suggested. And as we
walked over to the Moth I said, 'If you're going to learn to fly you'll have to
join the club. That'll cost you three guineas.'
She laughed. 'That's really what I
came here to do. I didn't mean to learn to fly at all.'
'I know,' I said. 'One thing leads
to another."
I showed her the footholds on the
fuselage and helped her into the back cockpit. When she was settled down and
comfortable I started in to show her the controls, using the
Presently she got out of the
machine, made an appointment for a lesson the next day, and drove off in the
Alvis.
It was sunny and cold next morning,
with a touch of frost in the air and not much wind. I fitted her up with a
helmet and headphones, lent her my leather coat and goggles, put her into the
back cockpit, strapped her in, and saw that she was comfortable. Then I got
into the front seat and the GE swung the prop for me, and I sat explaining to her
over the phones what I was doing in the pre-flight checks. Then we taxied out
to the far hedge, and got into the air.
She wanted to see her home,
Duffington Manor, from the air, so we did a circuit over that, and then went up
to a thousand feet for her to learn to fly straight and level, while I gave her
the patter. She got on all right, and at the end of half an hour I took over
the control and told her we were going to land. She was to rest her hands and
feet lightly on the controls and just watch what I did.
She said, 'Before we land, do you
think we could loop the loop?'
I was surprised. 'Would you like me
to loop it?'
"Not if it's any bother. But I
would like to loop the loop one day.'
'We can loop it now,' I said.
'We'll get a little bit more height, first.' As we climbed I made her check her
safety belt. Then with her hands and feet resting loose on the controls I dived
the thing a bit and sailed it over in a loop, telling her what I was doing all
the time, cutting the engine when the ground came down from the ceiling. When
we were flying level again I twisted round to look at her, and she was flushed
and laughing. 'That was marvellous!' she said.
I turned back to the voice pipe.
'Did you have your hands and feet on the controls?'
"Yes. I felt everything you
did.'
'Okay. I didn't feel you.' I
learned then that she had a very gentle touch, very sensitive hands. 'Keep them
there while we land.'
I brought the Moth on to the
circuit and in on final to the hedge with a bit of sideslip, talking my patter
all the time. I put it on the ground and taxied into the hangar, and stopped
the engine. I got out and helped her out of the machine, and when she was on
the ground she said, 'I don't know when I enjoyed anything so much. How long
were we up for?'
'Half an hour,' I said. 'That's
enough for-one lesson.' She was flushed and bright-eyed, looking ten times
better than she had the day before.
'It seemed like five minutes. Can I
have another one tomorrow?'
'Sure,' I said. 'If you're going to
learn to fly, it's quite a good thing to go on and do it every day, if you can
manage to. You don't forget things in between.'
'How long would it take me before I
could go solo?'
I smiled, and thought for a moment
as we walked towards the office. Women usually take longer than men, but she
had very good hands and some knowledge of motor-cars. Still, I'd have to be
very sure of her before I let her go. Navigation would probably be a weakness;
she might lose sight of the aerodrome and get lost. 'Most people take ten or
twelve hours' dual,' I said. 'Twenty or twenty-five lessons.'
'Three weeks,' she said. 'Then one
day you just get out of the
front seat and tell me I can go alone?'
I laughed. 'That's right. Would you
like a cup of tea?'
'I'd love a cup of tea.'
We went into the office and I sent
the boy for tea, and she took off my coat and helmet and ran a comb through her
short, curly hair. She was full of questions about the machine and her
instruction, really interested and very much alive. I took twenty-five bob off
her for the lesson and three guineas for her membership, and seven and six for
a book of flying instruction that I thought would do her good. Then the tea
came, and she took a cigarette off me.
As she was smoking it, she asked,
'Tell me, Captain Pascoe - are you English? I'm afraid that's a frightfully
rude question.'
I laughed. 'It's a very natural
one. I'm Canadian. Have I still got an accent?'
'Not an accent,' she said
thoughtfully. 'It's more of a rhythm. I thought at first you were American, and
then I didn't think you were. Forgive me for asking.’
'I come from
You'd rather be here than in
I nodded. 'I've grown into things
here. I'd probably feel like a fish out of water back at home now, after all
these years.'
'I've never been out of
I was very much surprised, for she
was evidently well off, to live in a house like Duffington Manor. I would have
expected her to know the South of France, and
She shook her head. 'I've never
been anywhere. I suppose you've been to France a lot of times.'
'As a matter of fact, I haven't.
Only in the war, and that doesn't count.'
'Esmé said that you were flying fighters in
the war.'
'That's right.'
'Were they very difficult to fly?'
A shaft of the January sunlight came in weakly through the office window and
made a golden aureole around her in the blue haze of the coke stove.
'They were much more difficult than
a Moth, although they only had about the same performance. They had rotary
engines without any proper throttle control, most of them. It was much more
difficult to learn to fly in those days than it is now.'
'What you taught me today wasn't
very difficult."
‘You seemed to get hold of it all right.'
'Will it be more difficult when I
get further on?'
'I don't think so,' I said. 'It's
like everything else - don't try and learn too much all at once. Don't bother
about that loop, for example — put that out of your mind for the present. I'll teach you that later.
Just concentrate on what you've done, and then next time we'll do a little bit
more, and so on. You won't have any trouble.'
She finished her tea, and made an
appointment for another lesson next morning, at the same time; she asked me to
ring her up if the weather should be too bad. As she was leaving, she said,
'I'm not sure that I'm dressed right, Captain Pascoe. A skirt isn't very
convenient. Would it be better if I wore a pair of trousers?'
That was a very daring suggestion,
and I was surprised. 'Well - yes, it would,' I said. 'It might make you a bit
conspicuous, though.'
'I could change here, couldn't I?'
she asked. 'In the ladies' room ?'
'It would be better,' I said. The
Lady of the Manor had a position to keep up in Duffington. 'Have you got a pair
of trousers?'
She shook her head. 'I know a shop
in
'If you're going to do that,' I
said, 'I think I'd go the whole hog and wear an overall, a boiler suit. There's
always liable to be a bit of oil about an aeroplane. We try and keep them
clean, but they aren't like a car. If you wore a boiler suit over everything,
it might save your clothes.'
She nodded. 'I believe you can get
white ones in
'That's right,' I said. 'You can
get white ones, and they look very nice. You could come in your own clothes
and change over at the clubhouse.'
She got into the Alvis and drove
off, still bright and excited, and looking very pretty. That afternoon it was
sunny, and Colonel Chance came out for a lesson, the Chief Constable. He had
had four or five before, and he was doing turns. I had him up for half an hour,
and when he landed we stood smoking outside the hangar for a few minutes.
'I got a new member yesterday,' I
told him. 'Mrs Marshall joined. She had her first lesson this morning.'
'Mrs Derek Marshall?' he asked.
'From the Manor?'
'That's right.'
He smiled. 'How did she do?'
'All right. She might make a good
pilot.'
He stood thoughtful behind bushy
grey eyebrows, the short, clipped grey moustache. 'I should think she might.
She drives that car too fast, but she drives quite well. Pity about her
husband.'
'He's in some kind of hospital,
isn't he?'
He said shortly, 'He's in The
Haven.'
'I'm sorry,' I said. 'I didn't
know.' The Haven was a very expensive private home exclusively for mental
cases, on the outskirts of Leacaster.
'He got shell-shock in the war,' he
said. 'When they were married everybody thought he was cured, but then he got a
relapse. He's been in and out of The Haven ever since.' He paused, and then
said, 'Of course, it wasn't the shell-shock. There was a weakness there before.
The
'Is he in there permanently?' I
asked.
'I think so. He's certified now,
anyway. They keep on trying every new thing, of course.' He drew on his
cigarette, and then he said, 'She's had a time with him.'
I was grateful to him for telling
me. It's better to know the scandal about members, and then one can avoid
saying the wrong thing. I think that was in his mind, too, and that was why he
told me.
'They must be pretty well off,' I
said.
'Wool spinners,' he replied.
'Marshall and Collins. They've got a big mill in
I wrinkled my brows; now was the
time to find out everything I ought to know. 'Who's the old lady - Mrs Duelos,
that lives at the Manor?'
'That's her mother,' he told me.
'She came to live there after
'Are there any children?'
He shot a glance at me. 'Children?
Oh, no. I suppose they had more sense.'
He went away, and I went back to
writing up the log books and digested my new information. Next day my pupil
came again for another lesson, and told me she was going down to
I smiled. 'You got it?'
'I got three of them,' she said,
'and a white flying helmet. Look, are they all right?' She undid her parcel on
the bonnet of the car and spread her purchases out, child-like, for my
approval.
I turned the flying helmet over in
my hands. 'That's all right,' I said. 'I've got a spare pair of headphones we
can put in this.'
'I asked about that,' she said.
'They told me these ear flaps were designed to take the standard RAF phones.'
'That's right. It should look very
nice when you're wearing it.'
'I got a pair of goggles, too, like
yours,' she said. She showed them to me. 'And I got this leather waistcoat to
go underneath.'
I turned the garments over,
smiling. "You've got everything. You must have spent a lot of money.'
She said simply, 'I had a lot of
fun. Shall I go over to the club and put them on?'
I nodded. 'I'll get the machine
pushed out while you're changing, and fit a pair of headphones in the helmet
for you.'
When she came across the tarmac to
the machine in the weak, frosty sun she was dazzling in white, boyish with her
short, curly hair. She put on her new white helmet and I adjusted the
headphones for her; with the strap done up beneath her chin the white fabric framed
her face giving her, queerly, the appearance of a nun. I stood back and looked
at her, and then went round behind her and did up the strap of the boiler suit
behind her back. 'That's better.' And then I said casually, 'You look like a
million dollars.'
She laughed self-consciously. 'It
feels very businesslike.'
'Well, let's get to business. We'll
try a turn or two today.'
'How do you do a turn?'
'I'll tell you when you're in the
air. Can you remember how to do your belt up?'
‘I think so.'
"Well, get in and do your belt
up while I get my coat, and then I'll come and see if you've done it right.'
When we were in the air I told her
about climbing and gave her the machine to hold on a straight climb. When we
got up to a thousand feet and she was flying straight and level I found that
she was doing it quite well; over the gasworks and the railway station the air
was a bit bumpy, but her corrections were quick and accurate. I turned the
machine and set her to fly back through the bumpy bit for practice, and then I
started in to show her Rate One turns. By the time that her half-hour was up
she was doing those quite nicely, and I was reflecting that I'd have a job to
spin out her instruction for twelve hours, the time I always like to give a
woman pupil as a minimum.
When we landed and got out of the
machine I told her, That was very good, Mrs Marshall. You were doing those
turns quite nicely. You were slipping outwards just a bit on one or two of
them. Holding off a little too much bank. Try and think of your behind when
you're in a turn. Get the feel of it so that you don't feel you're slipping
either way upon the cushion.'
'Isn't that what the little bubble
is supposed to tell you?'
"Don't think about the bubble.
Think of your behind. I'll tell you about the bubble later. The only instrument
you want to use at present is the airspeed indicator.'
She nodded. 'I do like flying in
this boiler suit. It seems to make it so much easier.'
'Does it?'
She nodded. 'My skirt was always
blowing up before.'
I wondered if a boiler suit would
help Esmé Haughton, whose
progress had been slow. 'None of my other women pupils fly in boiler suits,' I
said. 'I wish you'd show it to them.'
'I never see them,' she said.
'Nobody's ever here when I come.'
'That's because you've always been
here on a weekday,' I told her. 'There's a crowd here all the time on Saturday
and Sunday — all three aircraft
going hard. If you want a lesson tomorrow or on Sunday I'd better
put you down for a time now. We're liable to get booked up.'
She hesitated. 'Do none of the
other women wear boiler suits like this?'
'They don't yet,' I said. 'When
they've seen you, they'll all be getting them.'
'You don't think it looks a bit
conspicuous?' 'It looks swell,' I told her. 'It is conspicuous, but it's
so very practical. I think you'll set a fashion here when they see that.' I was
surprised when she came to the club next day to find how few members knew her.
Leacaster is a fair-sized city and she lived in one of the biggest houses in
the neighbourhood, but she came shyly, as a stranger. She came with Esmé Haughton and they both had a lesson, the
doctor's daughter wearing one of Mrs Marshall's spare boiler suits. It didn't
make a lot of difference to her flying, but the owner of the suit was getting
on quite well. I was too busy that afternoon to be able to give them much
attention after their lessons, but I introduced my new member to young Peter
Woodhouse, the honorary secretary. When darkness came and I landed for the last
time that day with the last pupil, I went into the bar for a can of beer and
found Peter there. He told me that they had both changed back into their
ordinary clothes directly they had finished flying, and he had given them
afternoon tea in the club room. Then they had watched the flying for a little
and had gone away. Mrs Marshall had put her name down for a lesson next
afternoon.
'I thought she was rather nice,' he
said. 'She thaws out after a bit. At first I thought that she was snooty, but
I'm not sure that she isn't just shy.'
I nodded. 'She doesn't know many of
the members.'
'I'd never met her before,' he
remarked. 'I've seen the car, sometimes. It's a wizard car. If I had that I
wouldn't wash it. I'd lick the dirt off it.'
'She seems to live a very retired
sort of a life,' I told him. 'Nobody knows much about her in the village. Her
mother does most of the shopping. The vicar says she was a concert pianist
before she married, and she plays beautifully.'
He took a drink of beer. 'I suppose
it's natural,' he said. 'For any woman who's a bit sensitive, after that hoo-ha
with her husband.'
'Hoo-ha?'
He nodded. 'It must be three years
ago now, but it caused quite a rumpus at the time, and made a lot of talk. They
had him in court for it.'
'What for?'
'Little girls,' he said. 'After
that they put him in the bughouse.'
I was grateful for the information,
but I changed the subject and ordered him another can of beer. 'She's going to
make a very good pilot if she goes on with it. I don't know when I've had a
woman that got hold of it so quickly.'
He grinned. 'Looks all right, too.'
'See if you can introduce her to a
few people,' I suggested. 'When there's an opportunity. I don't like to see a
couple of women coming here and knowing nobody, and having tea alone.'
He was a good secretary, Peter
Woodhouse, and he took up my suggestion. He didn't introduce her to the
motor-racing crowd, not just at first. I dashed into the clubhouse for a quick
cup of tea next afternoon between lessons while the Moth was being refuelled,
and I saw her having tea with Ronnie Clarke. Ronnie was mad on flying. He was
only just seventeen and still at school, in the fifth form of St Peter's
College. He spent all his spare time out at the aerodrome watching the flying
and going up as a passenger whenever he got the chance, but his father wouldn't
let him learn to fly till he was eighteen and had passed his matriculation. I
thought then that Peter had made a good choice, because she wouldn't be shy
with Ronnie and he was a pleasant sort of boy, and he was always there at the
weekends. Later, she could get to know the tougher guys.
We got a spell of bad weather after
that, with westerly gales and rain, but she still made an appointment for a
lesson each day, though frequently I had to ring up in the morning and cancel
it. Once when I did that she said, 'The clouds are quite high, aren't they?'
'They're all right,' I said, 'but
there's a wind of about thirty miles an hour, and very gusty. You wouldn't be
able to learn anything on a day like this - it's much too rough.'
'Could you fly in this?' she asked.
'Safely, I mean?'
'Oh yes,' I replied. 'Have to have
someone on the wing tips, taxi-ing. It's just that it's too rough for
instruction.'
'If I came out, could you take me
up?' she asked. 'Just so that I can feel what you do in rough weather, resting
my hands and feet on the controls?'
'We could do that, if you like,' I
said. So I took her up and flew her round a bit, battling with the Moth and
using full aileron now and then. At the end of twenty minutes I asked her if
she would like to try it straight and level by herself, and she did, and did it
fairly well. After that she never let me cancel a lesson unless I could assure
her that I wouldn't fly myself. We flew in mist and rain, groping our way
around the countryside at a few hundred feet. I was glad in a way because it
gave me an excuse to prolong her instruction to my twelve hours minimum for
women ; otherwise she'd have been fit to go solo at seven or eight.
She went solo early in March. She
had been ready for a week or two, but I kept her doing landings and little
crosscountry trips around Leacaster till we got the perfect day. Then one
morning it was bright and sunny, cold with a northerly wind and a rising
barometer. We did two landings together, and then I undid my belt and turned to
look at her. 'Like to try it alone?'
She nodded.
I got out on to the wing, and
closed the door of the front cockpit, making sure my safety belt was secured
across the seat. I got down on to the ground and stood beside her in the
slipstream of the slowly running engine. 'Take your time,' I said. 'Do a
circuit or two at a thousand feet till you feel comfortable, and then bring her
in to land. If your gliding turns don't come out just the way you want them,
put on engine and go round again. You're flying very nicely this morning. If
you feel quite comfortable after the first landing, do another one. If you're
not quite happy, bring her in and we'll do a bit more together. Okay?'
She nodded, and smiled at me.
"Don't get heart failure...'
I grinned at her. 'I shan't do
that.' I turned and walked across the grass towards the hangar, not looking
back because it fusses a pupil when he sees the instructor looking at him. It
was not until I heard the engine open up that I turned to watch her rather
wobbly take-off.
She climbed away straight from the
aerodrome till she was at about seven hundred feet, then levelled off and did a
wide turn to the left. She flew back over the aerodrome and did a couple of
steeper turns, and by that time I knew that she was gaining confidence. Then
she went over downwind and commenced the gliding turns that would bring her
close up to the hedge. She came in rather high but carried on and touched down
about the middle of the aerodrome, bounced two or three times, and came to
rest. I saw her looking towards me as I stood upon the tarmac, and I signalled
to her to go on and do another.
When she taxied the machine into
the hangar she was flushed and excited. I walked up to the cockpit as she came
to rest. 'That was all right,' I said. 'Were you quite comfortable?'
She pulled her helmet off. 'It was
marvellous,' she said. 'The first one was a rotten landing, I'm afraid.'
'It wasn't too bad,' I told her.
'The second one was better. You came in a bit high on the first one. Did that
upset you?'
"Yes, it did,' she said. 'I
wasn't sure if I ought to put on engine and go round again, and I dithered a
bit over that, and then I decided there was plenty of room. I think it put me
off."
'That'll all come right with a bit
of practice,' I said.
She nodded, and got out of the
machine. And then she turned to me and said quite seriously, 'I don't know how
to say what I'm feeling, Captain Pascoe. But I do want to thank you for all
you've done in teaching me. I felt so safe.'
I laughed. 'I'm glad of that, Mrs
Marshall. It's what I'm here for, after all.'
'I know,' she said. 'But there are
ways and ways of doing things.' And then she said, 'If I come out again this
afternoon, could I have another go?'
'Of course,' I said. 'It would be a
very good thing. I'll do one circuit with you first, and then if everything's
okay you can take it by yourself again.'
She came for her appointment at
'I won't be a minute,' I said as I
passed her.
She smiled. 'Don't hurry. I'm quite
happy.'
I came out five minutes later and
got into the machine, and sat there while she took it off and did a circuit of
the aerodrome and landed it again. Then I turned and nodded to her, and got out
of the machine, and stood beside her. 'She's all yours,' I said. 'Don't stay up
longer than half an hour -1 don't want you to get tired. Do four or five
landings. Don't get out of sight of the aerodrome, but if you should lose sight
of it just come down low and look around the horizon till you see the
gasometer. All okay?'
She nodded and smiled at me, and I
turned and walked away across the grass.
I watched her from the office
window as I had a cup of tea. Some of her landings were better than others, but
none of them were really bad. Stan Hudson, the ground engineer, came in and
watched one or two of them. 'Doing all right,' he remarked. 'Pleased as a dog
with two tails, she is.'
I nodded. 'Going to make a good
pilot.'
When she came in at the end of her
half-hour I strolled out to meet her at the entrance to the hangar. 'That was
all right,' I said. 'Feeling happy with her now?'
She nodded. 'I feel that I could
take her anywhere.'
'Well, you can't. We'll have to do
some navigation if you're going to go places. But you're flying it all right.'
She said, 'I feel we ought to celebrate,
or something,' she said. 'It's been such a wonderful day.'
I laughed. 'There's nobody else
coming out this afternoon for a lesson. I'll open up the bar and we can have a
drink to mark the occasion.'
She said, 'Oh, do let's do that !
I'll go over and change.'
When she joined me I had opened the
roller shutter and stood behind the bar. 'What are you going to have?' I asked.
This one is on the club.'
She said, 'I'd like a gin and
French. But I'll pay for it What will you have Captain Pascoe?'
'I'd like a beer,' I replied. 'But
you get one free drink upon the club for going solo. Only one.' I served her
drink, and pulled the barman's stool up, and we sat down with the bar between
us.
She sipped her drink, and I lit a
cigarette for her. 'I tried to tell you this morning what all this has meant to
me,' she said presently. 'I put it very badly. It's been like stepping out into
another world. A terribly exciting world, a much wider world. A world where one
could hurt oneself in lots of ways, or even kill oneself. What I was trying to
say this morning is that you've made it all so safe. I'd never have
dreamed three months ago that I should ever fly an aeroplane. If I'd thought
about it at all I'd have thought I'd never have the nerve, that I'd be too old,
and too frightened. You've made it all seem so safe and easy, and showed me how
to step out into the wider world. That's why I'm so terribly grateful to you,
and I always shall be.'
'There's nothing to be grateful
for,' I said. 'I've just been doing my job. The thing is, that you didn't know
the job existed.'
'I suppose so. Captain Pascoe, if
we did some navigation and cross-country flights together, I could really go
places, couldn't I? I mean, I could fly to
'Amy Johnson's just flown to
'It's all right to fly across the
Channel, is it?'
'Oh, yes. You go to Lympne and
refuel there, and from there it's only about twenty-five miles over to
‘I couldn't do that in a club
machine, though, could I?'
I shook my head. ‘You wouldn't want
to do it in the winter, and in the summer the machines are all in use. Most
people who go over to the Continent have their own machines.'
'Is it difficult to own an
aeroplane yourself?'
'Not more than a car, or not much
more,' I told her. "You could have a Moth of your own and keep it here.
We'd maintain it for you.'
'How much would a Moth cost?'
'A new one costs about seven
hundred and fifty —
depending on the equipment, you know. You could get a good second-hand one for
about five hundred. Most private owners find it costs about three hundred a
year to run.'
'If I wanted to buy one, could you
help me buy it?'
'Of course I would.'
She stared into her empty glass. 'I
must be going crazy ... Not on one gin and French, either. Intoxicated with
going solo. To talk of buying my own aeroplane ...'
I took her glass and filled it up
again. 'If you've got the money, I should say it's not a bad thing to do. Get
you out into that wider world that you were talking about.'
'I've got the money,' she said. 'As
for the wider world, I'm not sure I'm not in it now. Up till the time I joined
this club I'd done nothing that I want to remember, except music. Now, I just
want to remember every minute of every day, as long as I live.'
I smiled. 'You'd better start and
keep a diary.'
'I don't need to.' The second gin
must have given her confidence, because then she asked, 'Have you got great
bits of your life you never want to think about again? Somebody once told me
that everybody has.'
It was a new idea to me, and I
thought before replying. "Yes, I think I have.'
"Very long bits - years and
years?'
Two years,' I said. 'The last year
of the war and the year after that.'
‘Did you have a very bad time?' she asked softly.
I nodded.
'Was that when you were shot down
and taken prisoner?'
I suppose the beer had loosened up
my inhibitions, too. 'It wasn't that,' I said. 'I got married, and it wasn't a
success.'
'I'm sorry,' she said. 'It's rotten
when that happens.'
'It's a long time ago now.'
She asked, 'Are you still married?'
I laughed shortly. 'To tell you the
truth, I don't really know. She divorced me for desertion, in
'Why did you desert her?'
'I don't think I did. I think it
was the other way about, but it would take a lawyer to find out. You see,' I
explained, 'she was much better off than I was, in her job.' I hesitated, and
then asked, 'Did you ever see Judy Lester?'
'The actress? Judy Lester? Of
course I did. Was she your wife?'
'For just a bit,' I said.
'She was in Picardy Princess, in
the war. And then she was in Lucky Lady. She was awfully good.'
'Too good for me,' I said a little
bitterly, 'She was earning two hundred pounds a week when I was earning three,
after the war.'
'Is that what broke it up?'
That, and other things. She got a
job in
'I'm very sorry,' she said quietly.
"Women can be terribly silly in these things, sometimes.'
'Not only women,' I said, laughing.
'So can men.'
She laughed with me. 'I suppose so.
All fools, all the lot of us.' She finished her drink, and got up from her
stool.
'Will you have another?' I asked.
It was a long, long time since I had been able to talk to anyone like that.
'Not me. I should be tiddly, and
then I'd crash the Alvis.' We walked towards the door. 'May I come out and have
another go on the Moth tomorrow?'
'Sure.
'That'll be fine.' We walked to her
car and I opened the door for her. 'I'm going to think about that Moth - a
private one,' she said. 'It's rather a revolutionary idea.'
This place is a bit of a snare, I'm
afraid,' I said. 'One thing leads to another.'
She laughed. "Don't I know
it!'
When she came again I let her do a
little more solo, and then started in to teach her something about aerobatics.
She wasn't much interested in loops and spins after the first excitement, and
she said that flick rolls made her feel sick. I kept her at it, however,
because they would accustom her to getting her machine out of any attitude it
might get bumped into; she saw the force of that, but seldom did them
afterwards upon her own.
Then I started in to teach her
navigation. She wasn't greatly interested in that at first; to her it was a lot
of tedious sums that seemed unnecessary when you had roads and railway lines to
follow. So one day I told her to fly me up to
'You tell me,' I said. 'I'm just
the passenger.'
'It looks like
'I can't help that,1 I
said. 'I want my lunch. You've got about two hours' fuel left.'
She flew on to the city, and there
were docks and trawlers and ocean-going ships and an indication of the sea over
to the east. Presently she said in a small voice, 'Captain Pascoe.'
“Yes?'
'I think we've come to the wrong
place. I've been looking at the map, and I think this must be
"You take me to
She turned and began to fly
north-west. Presently she said, 'It's thirty-five miles to Sherburn, so that'll
take us twenty-six minutes, but I can't remember about the variation. Do I take
it off or add it on?'
'Add it on to get the magnetic
course,' I said. 'What are you doing about wind?'
'I'm not doing anything. I can see
the smoke from a train and it's just about straight ahead of us.'
'Sure we're going to get there in
twenty-six minutes, then?'
'Oh ...'
"You've got about an hour and
a half's fuel left.'
She found the aerodrome in the end
and made quite a smooth landing. We taxied in and met the pilot-instructor. She
said to him, 'We came rather a long way round, but we got here in the end.' And
then she turned to me and said, 'I'm terribly sorry for being so stupid.'
"You weren't stupid,' I said.
'Everybody's got to start.'
'I got so muddled,' she explained.
'The noise of the engine, and the wind, and nothing to write on. I didn't seem
to be able to think properly.'
'That's the big difficulty,' I told
her. You want to work it all out before you start and put a nice thick line
upon the map.'
'I put the nice thick line,' she
said. 'But the ground wasn't the same as on the map.'
'Come into the clubhouse, and bring
the map and your ruler. I'll show you what you did wrong.'
In the club I offered her a soft
drink. She said, 'Do you think they'd have any milk?' I went and asked in the
kitchen, and got her a glass of very cold milk, and over that we held the
post-mortem. Then she worked out the course to take us home again, and got it
right this time.
Over lunch she said, 'I'll have to
do a lot more of this. Could we do another one tomorrow?'
'Saturday,' I said. 'I'll have
lessons all day. We'll have to get back quick, because I've got two this
afternoon.'
'Oh dear, Sunday ... Monday's the day off. Could we do
one on Tuesday?'
‘I'll have to look at the book,1 I said. "Now that the
weather's getting better we're getting a bit booked up. We should be able to
fit one in on Tuesday or Wednesday.'
'That's nearly a week.'
'It's a bit difficult taking the
club machines away in the summer,' I said. 'They get booked up.'
'I know. I've been thinking a lot
about having a machine of my own.'
'Airwork usually have a few
second-hand Moths, if you're really thinking about it.'
'A second-hand one would be better,
to start on, wouldn't it? I mean, I'm not very experienced.'
'It might be. Would you like me to
ring up Parkes and find out what's available?'
Her eyes fairly danced. 'Could we
do that when we get back, this afternoon?'
'Of course.'
'Come on. Let's go now.'
I laughed. 'I haven't finished my
cheese.'
You don't want your cheese. It'll
make you fat. Let's go, and ring up Airwork.'
She dragged me away from my lunch,
and we got into the aeroplane and flew back to Leacaster, straight as a die
down her pencilled line upon the map. When we landed and got out of the Moth,
she said, 'Was that better?'
'Perfect,' I said. 'That's because
you wanted to get back here. No wandering away to
'Let's ring up Airwork.'
When I got through Parkes told me
that they had two Moths, one with a Genet motor and one with a Cirrus Mark II.
The Cirrus one was what would suit her best ; it was in the shop for its C and
A inspection and would be finished in about a week. By my elbow she said
urgently, 'Ask him if I can have it painted any colour I like.'
'What colour do you want?'
'White,' she said. 'White, with red
registration letters and a red leather seat.'
I9O 'Take
a lot of keeping clean.'
'Never mind. Ask him.'
I did so. 'He says that's all
right, but he wants to know pretty soon. It'll cost you a bit more.'
'I don't mind that. When could we
go down and see it?'
I thought for a moment. 'Monday?'
'But that's your day off!'
'I'm not doing anything particular.
We could fly down on Monday, if you like. Give you a bit more cross-country
practice.'
'That would be marvellous,' she
breathed.
We flew down to Heston on the
Monday morning, about a two-hour flight. The Moth was all dismantled in the
workshops, of course, and it looked a bit of a shambles to her, but I welcomed
it because it gave me a chance to have a good look at the condition of the structure.
It was quite all right; it had been kept under cover all its life and not
parked out in the rain. I told her it was a good buy, and the salesman showed
her one that they had just reconditioned, all new-looking and shiny, and she
was as pleased as Punch. The salesman took me aside and told me that he had
reserved two and a half per cent commission for me for the introduction, and I
told him that I didn't want it, that he was to take it off the price that he
had quoted her. I don't know why I did that because it was fair business, but
it seemed like making money out of her great pleasure.
We went into the office and dealt
with the questions of the extras, her red leather seat and the turn and bank
indicator that I made her have, and she wrote a cheque and paid it over there
and then. We went over to the restaurant for lunch.
Colin Hicks was there, the chief
pilot. I introduced her to him and he offered us a drink; as we were flying
back I had a ginger ale and she had her glass of milk. I told him that she had
just bought a Moth from the firm, and he asked the registration. When I told
him, he said, 'Major Struther's old Moth. That's a good machine. He sold it
because he was posted out to
She asked, 'In France?'
He nodded. 'On the
'I'll have to think it over,' she
said. 'I'm not very experienced yet.'
We went to our table for lunch.
Between courses she sat staring out over the aerodrome, immersed in her
thoughts. Presently I asked, 'Happy?'
She turned to me. 'Terribly,' she
said. 'So happy, it just can't be true.'
'It's fun having something new,' I
said. 'A new car's just the same.'
She nodded. 'It's not only that.
It'll be terribly exciting having the Moth, but it's - it's going to places.
You see,' she said, 'I've never been anywhere, hardly. And now, to go to
'You know some French?' I asked.
'I did French at school,' she said,
'fifteen years ago. I've forgotten most of it, and anyway they never taught us
what to say to French ground engineers upon an aerodrome.'
I smiled. 'You'll have to start
looking for a passenger who knows the ropes. Lots of the club members would
jump at the chance of going to La Baule.'
'Maybe.' She sat thoughtful for a
time, and then she said, 'What were the registration letters, again?'
I told her. 'G-EMLF.'
'MLF,' she said. 'Morgan le Fay.
That's what I'm going to call her.'
'Who was Morgan le Fay?'
'An enchantress - King Arthur's
sister. She's enchanted me already.'
'Morgan le Fay,' I repeated. 'It's
not a bad name for an aeroplane. Would you like to have it painted on the nose,
just underneath the engine? Quite small red letters, on the white paint?'
Her eyes danced. 'That would be
lovely. Could we have that done?'
'Of course. We'll go back to the
office and add it to the order, before we take off.'
We did that after lunch, and then
we got back into the club Moth and she flew me back to Duffington. She was
getting much better at cross-country work by that time, because as we passed
‘Yes?'
'I put on five degrees drift for
wind two hundred and eighty, but that train down there seems to show the wind
from the east. Ought I to change the drift?'
I glanced down. 'That's right. It's
not very strong. I'd put on about two degrees to your basic course. You're over
to the west a bit, and that's another sign.'
'It's horrid of the wind to change
like that.'
When we landed back at Duffington
in the later afternoon there was nobody there, of course, because the club was
closed on Mondays. She taxied up to the closed hangar door, and we got out and
unlocked the hangar, and pushed the big doors open, and pushed the Moth inside.
When that was done she turned to me. 'I'm so grateful to you for giving up your
day off for me,' she said. 'It's been a lovely day for me, but I'm afraid it's
been at your expense.'
'That's all right,' I said. 'I
wasn't doing anything particular - only a bit of shopping. I can do that any
time.'
'I lad you got anything fixed up
for this evening?'
'No.'
She said a little diffidently,
'Would you care to come and have dinner at the Manor? It's not very exciting,
I'm afraid - it'll be just Mother and me.'
I said, 'That's very kind of you.
I'd love to come. What time?'
'
I nodded. 'That's fine. I'll write
up the log books and go back and change, and I'll be with you about seven.'
I walked up to the Manor that
evening newly shaved and in my best grey suit. I had never been to the house
before, though I had seen it every day from the air. It was an old house, part
of it Elizabethan. On the ground that night the drive seemed longer, more
impressive, the house larger. A maid in a white starched apron opened the door
to me and showed me into the drawing-room. Mrs Marshall and her mother got up
to welcome me and I was introduced to the mother, Mrs Duelos.
I knew her by sight, though we had
never spoken. I found her to be a somewhat formidable old woman, very direct
and straight-spoken. They offered me a drink and I chose sherry, and while my
pupil was getting sherry and glasses for us all the old lady engaged me in
conversation.
'Brenda tells me that she bought an
aeroplane,' she said.
I smiled. 'She did.' And then I
asked, 'Do you approve?'
She gave a sort of snort. 'It
wouldn't make much odds if I approved or not. But - yes, I approve. So long as
she doesn't go and kill herself in it. You won't let her do that?'
'Not if I can help it.'
'Well, stand back and let me take a
look at you.'
I stood back for inspection, and I
suppose I passed, because the next thing she said was, 'She tells me that you
shot down eleven Germans in the war.'
'Yes,' I said. 'I'm afraid I did.'
'What have you got to be afraid
of?'
'Nothing,' I said. 'Only it doesn't
seem now quite such a good thing to have done as it did then.'
'You're turning pacifist, are you?
What's your name, anyway? I can't keep calling you Captain Pascoe.'
I laughed. 'My name's John. My
friends call me Johnnie. I don't think I'm pacifist. I suppose I'd do it again
if there was another war. One sort of goes nuts.'
'Everybody goes a bit mental in a
war,' she said. 'But we don't talk of things like that in this house, Johnnie.'
I nodded. '1 understand that.'
My pupil came back with the drinks,
and we talked about the new aeroplane, and the club members, and the Chief
Constable; who had just gone solo. Presently we went in to dinner, very well
served with silver gleaming on a polished oak table, the maid who had opened
the door waiting on us. After dinner we went back to the drawing-room for
coffee, and presently I said, 'They tell me you're a fine pianist, Mrs
Marshall. Would you play something for me?'
She laughed a little awkwardly.
'I'm not as good as that.'
'I'd like it if you would.'
'Would you?'
I nodded.
Mrs Duelos got up from her chair.
'If Brenda's going to play I'm going to write some letters.' I got up. 'If I
don't see you again, Johnnie, I'll say goodnight. Come again and cheer us up.
It's not very exciting here, two women living alone.'
'I'd like to do that,' I said.
I opened the door for her, and
Brenda crossed over to the piano and opened it. 'Make yourself comfortable by
the fire,' she said. 'What sort of music do you like?'
'Not too classical,' I said, 'and
not too lowbrow. Something about ten per cent better than tea-room music.' She
laughed. 'But you play what you want to.'
She sat down at the piano and began
to play a cheerful little melody that she told me was a Hungarian dance by
Brahms, and she went on to bits of Chopin and Tchaikowsky. She played
beautifully, and she was catholic in her selection, mixing in things like
'Tiptoe Through the Tulips' with old English airs like 'Greensleeves'. I sat
smoking by the fire, enjoying every minute of it. In the life I led, flying all
day and living at the village inn, I very seldom had the chance to sit and
listen to music; I could have sat and listened to her all night.
She went on for over an hour, and
finished with a spirited and brilliant rendering of 'Sur le pont d'Avignon'.
Then she got up from the piano and came over to the fire.
'That was perfectly delightful,' I
said. 'That's made my day.'
'Has it? I'm so glad, because
you've made mine. Let me get you a drink.'
'Are you having one?'
'If you are. Whisky?'
'I'd like a whisky. Let me get it.'
'No, you stay there.' She went out
and presently came back with the decanter and the siphon and the glasses on a
silver tray. She poured me out a drink and gave it to me, and then gave herself
one. She sat down with me by the fire.
Presently she said, 'I want to tell
you about my husband.'
'Don't if it's upsetting,' I
replied. 'I know a certain amount already.'
She nodded. 'I suppose you must. I
suppose everybody in the village knows all about it. He's in The Haven, you
know.'
'I know. I'm very sorry.'
She nodded. 'It's an illness, just
like any other illness, really. Only he has to stay in hospital, whether he's
well or ill. I go and see him twice a week. That's why I go on living here.'
'They tell me it's a very good
place.'
'The best in the country for this
sort of thing. Dr Baddeley - he's awfully good. People come to him from all
over the world.'
'He's been there for some time,
hasn't he?'
She nodded. 'He's been certified
for nearly three years now.'
'Bad luck,' I said.
"Yes. But it's the sort of
thing that happens, and you've just got to make the best of it.'
I asked, 'Is he happy?'
'I think so,' she said. 'He's
perfectly all right for weeks on end, you know, and while he's like that he
knows it's better for him to be there. He loves his golf, and they've got a
nine-hole golf course in the grounds. Then he gets another fit, and then it's -
well, it's difficult. But when he's well, I think he's quite happy, though it's
a very restricted life. He plays a good deal of bridge.'
'Is there any chance of a cure?'
She took up the poker and scraped a
little ash from the surround of the glowing fire. 'I don't know. None of the
ordinary things seem to be much good. There's an American doctor in
'He's quite cooperative, is he?'
'Derek? Oh yes — when he's well. At other times - it's
difficult.' She paused. 'It's not very easy to be optimistic,' she said. 'We've
had so many disappointments. Before he was certified we'd try something new and
it would seem marvellous, and he'd be wonderfully well for months, but the
relapse always came. Dr Baddeley says now that he'd want to keep him certified
and in The Haven for two years after any new treatment, to make sure. You see,
when he was out before there was - well, trouble.'
'I know,' I said.
'I know you do,' she replied. 'All
these months while I've been learning to fly you've never said a word to make
me feel awkward. I knew that you must know a good deal about Derek, and so I
wanted you to know the whole thing.'
I nodded. 'How do you feel about it
all, yourself?' I asked. 'Could you get a divorce, if you wanted to?'
She shook her head. 'There's no
grounds for a divorce. A Member of Parliament is working on a new divorce bill,
A. P. Herbert, who writes in Punch. He wants to make incurable insanity
grounds for divorce, but that won't come for years and years - if ever.' She
was silent for a moment, and then she said, 'Even if that was possible, I don't
know that I'd ever want to do it. When you marry somebody you marry them for
good, for better or worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health,
till death do us part. I'd hate myself if I ran out on Derek while he's sick.
That's the time a wife ought to stand by and help him all she can. And after
all, I've had the "richer" part.' She glanced around the room. 'This
is all his money - the piano, and my new Moth -everything.'
"Does he know you bought a
Moth?' I asked.
'I told him I was going to, the day
before yesterday, when I went to see him. I tell him everything. I think it
helps, because then he doesn't get fussed that things are going on behind his
back.'
'How does he like the thought of
you flying?'
'Oh, he's all for it. He's very
well just now. He gets worried that I'm having a dull life, you see. He thought
it was a great idea that I should join the club and learn to fly.' She added
softly, 'He's very sweet - when he's well.'
We sat in silence for a time. At
last I said, 'It's a bad-luck story, all right. I suppose it's going on for
ever?'
She nodded. 'I think so. One gets
accustomed to things, though. People can adjust themselves, you know. Take up new
interests. Like flying.'
I nodded. 'If J may say so, you're
looking a lot better than you were in January.'
'Everybody says that,' she replied.
'I am a lot better — sleeping better, eating better, feeling younger. I think flying must
be good for people.'
I laughed. 'It's terribly good for
you to get scared stiff now and then. Stimulates the flow of adrenalin, or
something.'
She laughed with me. 'Let me give
you another whisky.'
'Just a small one,' I said. 'Then I
must be going. Flying tomorrow.'
She refilled my glass, and I got up
and took it from her. "What are you going to do about collecting your Moth
from Heston?' I asked. 'Are you going to fly it up yourself?'
'Do you think I'm fit?'
'I think so,' I said slowly, 'if
it's a nice fine day. I wouldn't like to see you try it in bad weather, not
just yet. The only thing is - it's just out of the shops. You might get a
forced landing for some silly little thing. Why don't you get them to deliver
it up here for you?'
'Would they do that? Fly it up here
for me?'
'Oh, yes. It might cost you a
tenner. It wouldn't be more than that. I think that might be best, and then you
can get to know it flying round the aerodrome before you take it across
country.'
‘You're a very safe person,' she said quietly. 'The safest person that
I've ever met. You think of everything to make things easy for me. Yes let's
ask them if they can deliver it up here.'
I nodded. 'I'll give them a ring in
the morning.'
I finished my whisky and put down
my glass, because it was time for me to go back to the inn. She was too
attractive, and I was too lonely. 'I must go,' I said. 'Thank you for a
perfectly delightful evening.'
'Thank you for a perfectly
delightful day,' she said. 'I shan't sleep tonight, for thinking of my Moth.'
She came with me to the door, and I
walked down the drive and out on to the moonlit road that led a few hundred
yards into the village. I didn't sleep that night, for thinking about her.
She flew most days that week upon
the club machines, and then came the great day when her Moth arrived. I got a
telephone call to say that it had taken off from Heston and I rang her at the
Manor, and she came hurrying to the aerodrome in the Alvis. It was a bright,
sunny day and she was excited, looking about eighteen years old and terribly
attractive. She was an hour early, and we stood on the tarmac looking at the
sky towards the south, scanning the clouds. Then we saw it as a little speck
coming towards us, and presently we heard the engine. It grew larger, dropping
off height as it approached, and presently it flew over the aerodrome. The
pilot saw us on the tarmac and showed the machine off to us, doing a few right
and left hand turns at a couple of hundred feet. It was a very pretty little
aeroplane^ white and crimson, gleaming in the sun.
'Take a good look at it,' I said to
her. 'It's probably the last time you'll be able to.'
She stared at me. 'The last time?'
"You'll always be in it,' I
remarked. 'Unless you lend it to somebody you'll never see it flying again.'
'Oh ...' She stood with her eyes
glued upon it. "Doesn't it look lovely?'
The pilot landed it and brought it
to us on the tarmac, stopped the engine and got out. They had made a very good job
of it, and it looked like a new aircraft. She signed a delivery note, and then
drove him to the station in the Alvis; while she was away I had Morgan le Fay
refuelled and made a bit of an inspection myself with the ground engineer. When
she came back in haste from Leacaster it was all ready for her to fly.
She hurried to change into her clean
white overall, and when she came to the machine she asked me to go with her on
her first flight. 'Not much,' I said. 'It hasn't got any dual in the front
cockpit. When you pile it up I'd perish miserably. No, you take your own
machine alone for the first time. It's just the same as the club Moths.'
She laughed. 'I'm not going to pile
it up.'
'Of course you're not. I was just
joking.'
'Don't joke about serious
subjects,' she said. 'If I pile it up I'm going to cut my throat.'
'Try it on a gliding turn or two
before you come in to land,' I said. 'They're all just a little bit different
on the glide, according to the rigging.'
She smiled at me, and got into the
cockpit. When she was comfortable I swung the prop for her and she ran it up,
waved the chocks away, and taxied out. I went into the office and stood
watching from the window as she took off, a little depressed. This was the end
of two months that had meant a lot to me; from now onwards she would be flying
as a pilot in her own machine. She had no need of further dual from me.
She flew it for some time, came in
for a quick lunch of a sandwich and a cup of tea in the club, and flew it
again. Then in the late afternoon she taxied in and we pushed it into the
hangar and put it away for the night. She brought the three log books into the
office and I showed her how to write them up.
She turned the pages of the journey
log book. 'She's been everywhere,' she said. 'Just look at this.'
We bent together over the book, her
head close to mine. '
She raised her head, and I moved
back a little. 'I'll have to go to some of these places this summer,' she said.
'I mean, it would be letting her down if I just stuck in
I smiled. 'I should start in now
and put in time on her for the next month. How many hours' solo have you done?'
'Fourteen,' she said.
'La Baule in June would be an easy
first trip on the Continent,' I said. 'That gives you two months from now. You
could go to the Pageants at Sherburn and at Cramlington in May, get a bit of
experience. We shall be sending club machines to those.'
'Will you be going to La Baule?'
she asked. 'Not unless the club decide to make a thing of it and send all three
machines,' I told her. They did that last year for
She said, 'Do try and work it. Then
we could go together.'
I nodded. 'Have a Flight of the
three club machines and yours. It might be possible. I'll have to talk to
the-Committee.'
She came every day to the aerodrome
in April, and flew her Moth whenever the weather was fit to fly. She got into
the habit of coming to the office for a cup of tea with me if I wasn't up after
she had done her flying for the day, and twice she asked me up to dinner at the
Manor on my day off. We talked no more about her husband; apparently she was
satisfied with having told me what the position was. Once she brought her
mother down to the aerodrome, and we put the old lady in the front seat of
Morgan le Fay and her daughter took her up for a short flight. Ronnie Clarke,
of course, would fly with anyone and she took him up two or three times.
Towards the end of the month she was doing cross-country flights upon her own.
Late one afternoon, when it was
raining cats and dogs and she had flown to
'Horrible,' I told her. 'Looks as
if it's set in for the evening. I wouldn't try to fly back here tonight. I
should get into a hotel and stay where you are till tomorrow. Would you like me
to ring Mrs Duelos?'
'I ought to get back,' she said.
'I'm seeing Derek in the morning. I think I'll have to try and hire a car.'
'Would you like me to drive down
and fetch you in the Alvis?' I asked.
'It's eighty miles,' she said.
'I don't mind,' I told her.
'There'll be nothing more doing here today.'
'Of course, I'd love that. But it
would be terribly tiring for you.'
'That's all right,' I said. 'I'll
start right away, and be with you about
'I don't think so. She'll have to
stay out in the open.'
'I'll bring down some screw pickets
and your engine and Cockpit covers,' I said.
'Oh, thank you. And Johnnie, would
you bring my raincoat and my skirt? They're hanging in the ladies' room. Then
we can have dinner somewhere before driving home.'
I started off at once, after
ringing her mother to tell her what was happening, got on to the Great North
Road, and drove down southwards in the pouring rain. It was dark by the time I
got to
'Let's go somewhere where we can
have a drink,' she said. 'I'm miserably cold.'
'What about the Dog and Duck at
Thorganby?' I suggested. 'We can get a meal there, and it's seven miles on the
way home.'
'Anywhere,' she said, 'so long as
it's somewhere warm.'
We pulled into the yard of the Dog
and Duck ten minutes later and ran in through the rain. Thorganby is quite a
little village and the Dog and Duck is a very old house; on that wet evening
there was a bright fire in the saloon bar with chairs in front of it, and
nobody there but us. I knew the landlord slightly and while she was tidying
herself up I ordered a meal.
'Ham and eggs and cold blackberry
pie,' I said when she appeared. 'That all right? They're going to let us have
it on a table here, in front of the fire.'
‘Oh, lovely!'
'I said we'd like to have it in
about half an hour. What would you like to drink?'
'I'm cold,' she said, shivering.
'Would you like a hot rum toddy,
with some lemon in it?'
'Oh, Johnnie!'
Behind the bar the landlord nodded,
and went out and fetched a very big, black kettle and put it on the fire, where
it began to sing. We had a toddy and felt better, so we had another one, and
then because the kettle was there boiling, we had a third. Then it seemed time
for some blotting paper and we had our ham and eggs and blackberry pie in front
of the fire. And finally we had another hot rum toddy for the road.
It was fine and very dark when we
went out into the yard to find the car, and much colder than the saloon bar. We
had had too many rum toddies, of course, because the sudden change of
temperature made my head swim a little. She was affected, too, because in the
darkness she stumbled on the uneven paving, and I caught her arm, and then she
was in my arms and I was kissing her, and she was kissing me in return. We
stayed like that for a minute, and then she said quietly, 'This is very bad.'
'Too many rum toddies,' I said
thickly. 'I'm sorry.'
'Too many rum toddies,' she
repeated. 'I'm not.' And then she said, 'We'll have to think about this,
Johnnie.'
'Yes,' I said. 'We'll have to think
about it.' She released herself gently from my arms, and we found the car. 'Which of us is going
to drive?' I asked. 'We're both about as bad as each other.'
She said seriously, 'Yes, we're both about as bad as
each other.' Then she laughed a little, and said, 'You drive, and let me think.
You're less likely to crash it than me, anyway.' So I drove the Alvis out of
the yard of the Dog and Duck and out on to the
We drove on in silence through the night, through
occasional showers of rain, running easily at about forty-five. The Alvis was a
sports saloon and her seat was very close, her shoulder rubbing against mine.
We were both busy with our own thoughts. I hadn't wanted it to happen because
it was bound to make trouble for us both, two lonely people, neither of whom
was in a position to marry. Now that it had happened, I was glad, and so, I
think, was she.
When we had passed through Blackford and we were about
ten miles from Duffington she spoke for the first time. "Let's park a
minute by the side, Johnnie,' she said.
I drew up off the road a little under some trees and
turned off the headlights; the rain dripping off the branches made little
patterings upon the roof. She said, 'I want to talk.'
I smiled. 'I think we'd better.'
In the dim light she nodded. 'I want to ask you a
horrid question, Johnnie.'
'Go ahead,' I said.
She asked, 'Do you do much of this? Do you have many
girls?'
'No,' I said. "You're the first girl I've kissed
since Judy.'
'Honestly?'
'Honestly.'
She sighed a little. 'That's what I wanted to know. I
thought it was like that, but in a way it makes things worse.'
'We can try and forget about it, if you like,' I
suggested.
'We shan't be able to,' she said. 'I don't think
that's the answer.'
She sounded so unhappy that I reached out and took her
hand, and she let me have it. 'Don't worry,' I said gently.
'It's been coming on for a long
time, this has. It was bound to happen, one way or another.'
She turned to me. 'I know. If
things were different this would be the sweetest day of my life. But I'm a
married woman, and you're a married man. I'm not the sort of woman who does
this sort of thing. And I don't think you're the sort of man to do it, either.'
'We're neither of us so much
married as all that,' I said.
You may not be, but I am,' she
replied.
I sat stroking her hand. 'I didn't
mean this to happen, but I'm glad it has,' I said at last. 'Too many rum
toddies, and a damn good thing.' She smiled a little. 'I know we're running
straight into a packet of trouble. But nothing that's worth having can be got
without a lot of trouble in this world.'
I paused. 'I want to tell you
something,' I said. 'Since we met I've been to a solicitor. I can divorce my
wife, he tells me, and we're putting in a petition.'
"Divorce Judy?'
I nodded. 'She's been living with
another chap for the last eight years, as his wife. In
She sat silent for a minute. Then
she said, 'What would you do if I untied the other half?'
I turned to her. 'I should want you
to marry me.'
She nodded slowly. 'Now that you've
said it, I don't want you to say it again, Johnnie. Not ever. Suppose I were to
get divorced from Derek, and I don't think I could, it would still be years and
years before you could say that to me. And people change. We've been thrown
together a good deal in the last few months, and you've been terribly kind to
me, kinder than any man has ever been in all my life. I've looked forward every
day to meeting you again, counting the hours.' I pressed her hand. 'I've been
very silly and rather cruel in return,' she said. 'If I wasn't prepared to go
on with you, I ought not to have let things come to this. You've been very kind
to me, and in return I've got to be unkind to you, and hurt you. I want you to
try and forgive me.'
There's nothing to forgive,' I
said. 'I wouldn't have missed a minute of it.'
She said, 'Nor would I.'
We sat again in silence, and
presently I said, "We've started something, and I don't know how it's
going to finish. Whatever happens, we shall neither of us forget this. But if
you'd rather that we didn't see so much of each other for a bit, we could try
that. I could get another job now, fairly easily. Imperial Airways want
pilots.'
‘You mean, you'd go away?' she said dully.
'I'd do that, if you want me to,' I
said.
"Would you have to do that?'
she asked.
'If I don't,' I said, 'this'll
probably happen again.'
'I know,' she replied.
Presently she said, 'I'm tired,
Johnnie — too tired to think
properly. I can't imagine what we're going to do — I'll have to sleep on it.
But when all's said and done, there's only one person that really matters in
this thing.'
I turned to her. 'Who's that?'
‘Derek,' she replied.
I was silent. She said gently,
"You and I are well. We're fit, and healthy. If sad, unpleasant things
have to be done, we can do them and battle through. But Derek's not like that.
He's ill, and he's my husband. He's the one we've got to think about. Not
ourselves.'
I was silent, not wanting to hurt
her, thinking of the man who had assaulted little girls and got had up in court
for it. She was quite right, of course, but I couldn't find anything to say. If
she abandoned him, that might not be too good.
At last she said, 'Take me home,
Johnnie. I'll make up my mind and I'll do something in the next day or two. And
then I'll tell you.'
I nodded. 'There's no violent
hurry, Brenda. I shan't change. I'm going on with my divorce, and get that
moving.’ I pressed her hand. 'Don't take things too hard.'
She said softly, 'Dear Johnnie__'
I pressed the starter, and got the
car out on the rain-swept road again in the black night. We went to the
deserted aerodrome for me to get my own car, and 1 got out there. 'I'll see you
in the morning,' she said, and drove off. I stood and watched her tail-light
disappear, and she was very dear to me.
The next day was a fine one; she
rang me early in the morning and went down by train to
I nodded. 'I flew over Huddlestone
Woods a day or two ago,' I said. 'The bluebells must be a sight. You can see
the whole ground blue from the air, in the glades. Would you like to take a
picnic lunch?'
She brightened. 'Oh, that would be
lovely! I'll get the lunch for both of us.' So we arranged to meet in the village
square at
We did that, and we parked her car
and drove into the woods in mine. It was a bright day and the woods were
marvellous, carpeted in bluebells, and the air like wine. We left the car and
walked on through the woods until we found a fallen tree to sit on for our
lunch, and she unpacked the basket I had carried from the car.
Presently she said, 'I had a talk
to Dr Baddeley last week.'
'What about?'
'Derek,' she said, 'and us. I
didn't say you. I just told him there was someone else.'
She had been quite frank with her
husband's doctor. She had told him that whatever she decided to do would be
dictated by her husband's interest; that if he felt that a dissolution of the
marriage would give him a great setback, then the marriage would go on. They
had, however, talked of this once or twice when Derek had been completely in
possession of his senses, and he had said that the marriage ought to be
dissolved. It would never be safe for them to have a family, and while she was
a young woman she should be free to marry again if she wanted to. He had been
emphatic about it. What did Dr Baddeley think?
The doctor told her that her
husband had talked of this to him, and had expressed the same views. He had
pointed out to him that the marriage could not be ended just like that; there
would have to be a divorce, and grounds for a divorce. Until one of them
misconducted themselves the marriage would have to go on, and since he was in
The Haven and couldn't very well commit adultery, the initiative lay with her.
The doctor said his patient had
been very much distressed by that aspect of the matter, and had said that it
ought to be possible to end the marriage in her interest. From that time the
doctor had avoided the subject, but his patient had referred to it several
times. It was evidently worrying him. He thought, on the whole, it would ease
his patient's mind if the marriage could be brought to an end, though if that
were to happen he would like her to continue her visits.
'He was awfully nice about it,' she
said.
'What prospect is there that Derek
will get well?' I asked.
She shook her head. 'Very little. I
asked him again about that. There's been no change. He Said he'd have to keep
him certified for at least two years after the last attack.'
I nodded. 'What's the next thing?'
I asked.
'I want to have a talk to Derek,'
she said. 'I'll have to pick my time a little bit. It might take a week or two.
Would you mind if I tell him who you are?'
'Not a bit,' I said. 'We'd better
have this all out in the open.'
'I think so, too,' she said
seriously. 'I'm sure it's better like that.'
We had our lunch sitting together
on the log. She told me about her childhood in
When we were ready she stood up,
slender in the afternoon sun against
the bluebells, and she said, 'There's just one thing, Johnnie.'
'What's that?' I asked.
'If this goes on,' she said, 'and
Derek agrees to divorce me, I shall have to give him grounds for divorce.'
I had been thinking the same thing.
I reached out and took her hand. 'With me?'
'I don't know who else,' she said
seriously.
I smiled. 'Would that be very
terrible?' I took her other hand.
'No,' she said. 'Not with you. But
it's a bit smutty, and I wouldn't have wanted to start off on anything in that
way.'
'It can be play-acting,' I told
her.
'Play-acting?'
I nodded. 'It's a bit of a smutty
play, but it's play-acting all the same. There are hotels in
Her eyes danced. 'Dominoes,' she
laughed. 'I love dominoes.'
'All right, dominoes. Then at
'Would you do it that way,
Johnnie?' she asked. 'Without any strings?'
'I know you'd rather,' I said, 'and
I think I would, although it means waiting a long time. When we've both got our
divorces and we're both free people, then I'll ask you to marry me and we'll
start off clean.'
She came into my arms and we
kissed, standing in the sunlight on the carpet of the bluebells, in the dappled
shadows of the trees. Presently she sighed and said, 'We oughtn't to be doing
this. We're not free people yet.'
I released her. 'No,' I said.
'We'll have to watch our step.
It's going to be the thick end of
two years before we're free. But it'll pass.'
Next week she told Derek the whole
thing. He took it very well and said that he was sure that a divorce was the
right course. He could not go himself to brief a solicitor and he asked her to
see his solicitor in Leacaster and ask him to come and see him, and get the
whole thing going with somebody to act for her. I had offered to go to see him
if he wished but he didn't want that; he told her very sensibly that matters of
this sort were always easier if they were kept as impersonal as possible. She
saw his doctor later and he congratulated her upon the way that she had handled
it; he said his patient seemed much easier in his mind.
It was up to us then to provide the
evidence. I scouted round and got the name of a hotel in
'I expect it'll work,' she said.
'If it doesn't, we'll have to try again. I feel as if I was playing the leading
part in a dramatized version of a rude story.'
I laughed. 'That's exactly what you
are doing.'
She nodded, laughing. 'I'll try
everything once. Let's go and register at that hotel.'
We took a taxi to the hotel and
registered as Mr and Mrs Pascoe. She had taken some pains over her luggage and
had got herself a new suitcase with the initials B.P, on it, and she had marked
some of her clothes, Brenda Pascoe. In the bleak, utilitarian bedroom
with the double bed and the gas stove she showed me these with pride. 'It's
getting ahead of the game a bit,' she said. 'But I can leave them lying about,
and somebody might look.'
We went down and had lunch in the
hotel dining-room, and then we went out. She wanted to go and see some
herbaceous plants in
I touched her arm. 'We'll have a
garden of our own, somewhere. Not so big as the Manor garden, though.'
'I don't want another one like
that,' she said. 'I'd like to have a little garden in a suburb, that we could
do all ourselves. It'd be much more fun.'
We went back and had dinner at the
hotel. I had booked a couple of stalls for Lilac Time ; she had never
seen it and she liked Schubert, and this was a sort of compromise to please us
both. It did, and when we went back to the hotel for the serious business of
our visit to
In the bedroom we settled down to
dominoes. There was only one tub chair and one upright one; we pulled the
suitcase stand out as a table and put a suitcase on it and played dominoes on
that. By two in the morning we were both dropping asleep, and I didn't care if
I never saw another domino again in all my life. 'Go to bed,' I said. 'The bed
ought to be slept in, anyway. I'll sleep in the chair.'
"You wouldn't mind if I did
that? It's a bit hard on you.'
I laughed. 'Go on and go to bed. I
won't look.'
She did, and went to sleep at once.
I sat on dozing intermittently in the chair till dawn came grey over the
'Not too bad,' I told her. 'This is
the last act, now.'
I undressed and put on my pyjamas
and got into bed with her. She bubbled into laughter. 'Johnnie,' she said,
'what marvellous pyjamas!'
I know,' I said. 'I chose them very
carefully. There was a pair with naked women all over them, and I nearly bought
those.'
'It wouldn't have been in the
part,' she said. 'We're supposed to be a respectably married couple, aren't we?
I wasn't quite sure if we were or not. I wondered if I ought to have a flannel
nightie buttoned up to the neck, and then I thought that it would be a waste of
money, because I'd never use it again.'
'I'm not quite sure what we're
supposed to be,' I said. 'I ought to have asked the solicitor. Anyway, you're
all right as you are.'
She leaned towards me. "You're
looking much too tidy. Let me rumple your hair.'
'Not much,' I said. 'I'll rumple it
myself. One thing leads to another.'
She laughed. 'Would you like me to
get out and get the dominoes?'
We sat in bed together for half an
hour, laughing and talking happily till we heard the rattle of teacups in the
passage. I pressed the bell. 'Now for a cup of tea.'
She laughed. 'I'd love a cup of
tea.'
A maid about forty years old came
in, a horse-faced woman with a slightly humorous expression. I ordered tea, and
then I winked at her, as I had been told to do. She smiled, and crossed the
room to close the window, taking a good look round the room as she did so. When
she brought the tea she took a good look at us both in bed.
As the door shut behind her, Brenda
asked, 'Is that all, Johnnie?'
'That's all,' I said. 'I'll go out
in a minute and get her name.'
'It seems too easy.'
In the corridor on my way to the
bath I found the chambermaid hanging around. 'Thank you for looking after us so
well,' I said. 'In case I don't see you again, here's something to remember us
by.' I put two five-pound notes into her hand.
She smiled, and said, 'Thank you,
sir. My name's Doris Swanson. If you should want to get in touch with me at any
time, I live at
'I'll remember that.'
'I'm sure I hope that you and the
lady will be very happy.'
Thank you,' I said, and went on to
my bath.
When I got back to the bedroom she
was dressed and packing her suitcase. I dressed and we went down to breakfast
together. We had decided we had better not go back to Leacaster by the same
train ; we left the hotel in a taxi and put her suitcase in the cloakroom at St
Paneras Station. She would do some shopping and go home in the afternoon.
In the bustle of the station she
turned to me. 'Thank you for everything,' she said. 'I was rather dreading
this, but it's been lovely, all the time.'
I grinned at her. 'Like to do it
again, one day?'
She laughed. 'Not just like this.
But I should never be afraid again.'
April came to an end, with Brenda
coming out to fly her Moth practically every day. We started on a mass of legal
work. There were three solicitors engaged in our divorce proceedings, one for
Derek in The Haven, one for Brenda, and one for me ; mine was also
working on my own divorce. All three had their offices in Leacaster and all
lunched together at the Conservative Club; I suppose each of them suspected
that the divorce was a put-up affair, but we all went through the motions.
Whenever I wasn't flying at that time I seemed to be in a solicitor's office.
The Pageant at Sherburn-in-Elmet,
the aerodrome for
Derek's solicitor got in touch with
Doris Swanson and she came to Leacaster one Sunday to identify Brenda. Derek
signed the papers petitioning for his divorce, and the case went down for
hearing in the autumn. At the Committee meeting of the Leacaster Aero Club I
told them that more members than we had seats for in the machines wanted to go
to the rally with the Aero Club de Paris at their own expense, and suggested
that we should close down the club for that week and take all three machines;
Mrs Marshall also wanted to go. The Chairman said that he thought it was a good
thing to show the flag in this way once a year, but questioned whether Mrs
Marshall had enough experience to fly abroad. I said we couldn't stop her
flying anywhere she wanted to in her own aircraft, but suggested that I should
fly with her in the front seat of her machine and lead the club Flight from
that. In that way we could look after her and see she didn't get into trouble.
They thought that was a very good idea, and told me to lay it all on.
The rally at La Baule was held on
the first weekend in June that year, the machines being timed to arrive between
two and three in the afternoon. This was all right for the Aero Club de Paris
who had about a hundred and fifty miles to fly and could do it comfortably in
the morning, but not so good for us with over five hundred miles to fly at an
average ground speed of about seventy, with two refuelling stops. I decided
that we would leave Leacaster at
With the long hours of daylight at
midsummer this was a good flight plan, because it gave us plenty of daylight on
the ground. The Moth of those days wasn't as reliable as it became later, and
the engines in our club machines had all done a good many hours. I wasn't
worried about the Bluebird or about Brenda's Moth, but the other two machines
had a habit of shedding their exhaust valve seatings from the cylinder head,
which wasn't quite so good. I made sure that the pilots of those two machines
were good, experienced chaps who were accustomed to forced landings, and I took
a selection of cylinder heads, engine parts, and tools distributed between the
machines, in case of trouble.
Brenda was thrilled at the prospect
of this small excursion into
We started off from Duffington on
the Friday morning, all four machines fairly heavily loaded. The weather was
good when we started, but the forecast was a bit doubtful, with a low coming up
from the
Everything went fine as far as
Lympne, where we landed and refuelled the machines, and had a quick sandwich
lunch in the club. Then we took off over the sea for Cape Gris Nez, as I had
taken off with the Camel Squadron twelve years ‘before, and passed over the spot where
Calvert went down in the sea. I sat for a few minutes with sad
memories of those days revived in me. Then I turned and glanced back at the
rear cockpit at Brenda, bright-eyed and excited pointing at the coast of
We turned when we were over land
and flew on down the coast at about fifteen hundred feet, passing
I signalled to the other two
machines to keep on circling around, and spoke to Brenda down the voice pipe.
She throttled back and went down after Knox-Turner, keeping well out of his
way. He picked a good big field and put down into it and made what seemed to be
quite a smooth landing. We circled round at about two hundred feet and saw them
get out; Knox-Turner pointing at the motor. We waved to them and started to
climb back towards the other two machines ; as we went I pin-pointed the
position on my map. It was near a place called Unverre, a small village about
ten miles from
I signalled to the other two
machines when we got up to them to fly on, and I led them on to Dinard. We
landed there and taxied in to clear the Customs, and I told the Douane officers
about the machine that had forced-landed near Unverre, which would make a
complication. They were very nice about it, but refused a lift back there in
one of the machines with me; they didn't seem to care for flying. So I hired a
car to take one of them to Unverre, and saw him start off.
Brenda offered to fly me back in
her machine, so we told the other four club members to fix themselves up in the
hotel for the night and we would rejoin forces either late that night if we
could get Knox-Turner's Moth repaired in time to fly that evening, or else
early in the morning. I collected all the engine parts and tools from their
machines and put them into
Brenda's, and we took off to fly back to Unverre. As it was to be a forced
landing in a field she suggested I should fly it from the back cockpit, and so
we went like that.
When we got back to the other
machine I found that they had picked quite a good field, and I had no
difficulty in landing beside them. They had got the cowling off the engine and
had diagnosed the trouble, a valve seating, as I had suspected. The weather was
fine and we had everything we needed for the job, and so I got to work. We
borrowed a couple of chairs from a cottage about half a mile away to stand on,
and with an increasing audience of French countrymen and children I started in
upon the engine, while Brenda practised her French upon them down below.
Presently the officer of the Douane from Dinard arrived, and we had to
take time off for him.
The engine was a simple one, but we
had to change the head and the gasket and remove the cylinder to make a very
close inspection of the piston. It was about four hours before we got it all
together again, and the sun was setting. We did a ground run then, using the
branch of a tree for chocks, and the engine seemed all right, but it was
getting too dark by then to do the test flight that I ought to do before club
members flew it. We should all have to spend the night at Unverre, and fly on
to Dinard in the morning.
We were very tired by that time,
and we had had nothing to eat since lunch. Knox-Turner had gone into the
village and had ordered a meal for us at the one inn, which Michelin didn't
seem to think much of but which turned on a good meal for us. He had discovered
that it had only one bedroom, with two double beds in it. That seemed a bit
matey for us all, so he had got the landlord to ring up the next village, a place
called Coudray three miles away, which had a much bigger hotel with three
bedrooms. He had booked two of these rooms for Brenda and myself.
We picketed the two Moths down and
went into Unverre in the local taxi to wash and eat. The whole thing was a
delight to Brenda, who had never before seen a French village or a French meal.
She had changed into a skirt in the taxi while we were dealing with the
aeroplane and she was enjoying every minute, and so was I.
We had a very good meal of thick,
country soup, and roast duck, salad, and cheese, washing it down with a couple
of bottles of Burgundy. Then the landlord suggested that they went to bed early
at Coudray, indicating that they did so also at Unverre, and so Brenda and I
took our bags and got into the taxi and drove off to La Belle Moisson hotel at
Coudray.
When we got there, it became
apparent that there had been some confusion, probably due to Knox-Turner's
knowledge of the French language. There was only one bedroom vacant, though it
had two double beds in it.
I said, 'We can go into
She said, 'It's so late, Johnnie.
We might not get in there. Don't you think we'd better take this?' She smiled.
'After all, it's not as if we'd never done it before.'
'It's as you think,' I said.
She turned to Madame at the door. 'C'est
bien' she said.
The old lady smiled at us. 'Bonne
nuit, monsieur et madame, et bon repos.' She closed the door on us.
'If we keep on doing this,' I
remarked, 'something's going to happen, one of these days.'
She came into my arms. 'We'll be
free people before long, and, after all, we're getting our divorce for this.
Does it really matter if it does?'
CHAPTER
The trouble when you take a
Nembutal, or any of the barbiturates, is that you must go on sleeping for the
allotted time. However great the distress that dreams impose upon you, you
cannot jerk yourself awake, fully awake, that is, till the effect of the drug
has eased. I think I may have been partially successful in my struggle to awake
because I can remember the whistle of the wind around the exposed little house,
and the rain beating on the window. Or perhaps it was some noise that Dr
Turnbull made that roused me partially, when he brought in the nurse. Whatever
it was, I had to go on sleeping with a dream that turned to nightmare.
I lived in the Seven Swans, the inn
at Duffington, and I went down to the saloon bar for a beer before my meal. I
was a little weary, because we had taken off that morning at
She stood unbuckling her helmet. I
smiled at her. 'We're going to have a lot more like it.'
'Right away from everything ...'
she said. You don't know what it means. I've been so happy__'
'I've been happy, too,' I said. And
then we had to cut it out, because the others were getting out of their
machines and coming up to talk about the flight.
When I went into the saloon bar Sam
Collins, the landlord, was behind the bar, and Sergeant Entwhistle of the
police was there, and Tom Dixon from the garage. As he gave me my beer Sam
asked about the trip, and I told them all about it, the forced landing and the
valve trouble. 'Mrs Marshall did very well,' I said. 'She won another cup - a
great big silver one. For the Ladies Race. Two other Moths were in for it,
flown by French girls - one of them with over five hundred hours up. Mrs
Marshall won by a short head. She flew a very good race.'
They were pleased and interested,
but presently there was a pause, and Sam Collins said, 'Did you know Dr
Baddeley, at The Haven?'
I had to be cautious here. 'I've
met him once or twice,’ I said.
'You heard about him?'
'No?'
'Sorry to say he got murdered,' the
landlord told me. ‘Chap jumped out at him as he was going home from the
hospital after
'Good God!' I exclaimed. 'When did
that happen?'
'Friday night,' he said. That was
the night that we had spent at Coudray. They all stood looking at me with
sympathy, and I wondered how much they knew.
They told me all about it. It
seemed that he lived in a suburban house two streets from The Haven. Normally
he would have occupied the Medical Superintendent's house inside the grounds,
but he had three young children and disliked the thought of bringing them up in
the surroundings of a mental home. He put his deputy, Dr Somers, into the
Superintendent's house and lived outside himself, but near at hand. Because he
was not on the spot he was meticulous in turning out at night to visit any
patient who required attention, though a less conscientious man would have left
the night work to his deputy. He was walking home through the deserted streets
soon after
'He'll be for Broadmoor,' the
police sergeant said. 'Should have been there years ago.'
Little more was said about the
doctor, and presently I went and had my supper, wrote a letter or two in the
commercial room, and went to bed. I knew that Brenda would have heard the news
from her mother. It was difficult for me to telephone to her from the Seven
Swans or from the office in the hangar on the aerodrome, because both
telephones were public and conversations were liable to be overheard. I had a
sense of impending disaster all that night, but there was nothing I could do
about it.
She came to the aerodrome next day,
and we walked together on the grass up the boundary hedge towards the north-east
windsock. 'It's terrible,' she said, and all the brightness of the last few
months seemed to have gone out of her. 'Poor Dr Baddeley ...'
Presently I asked her, 'Do you
think it will make any difference to us?'
She asked in turn, 'Have you met Dr
Somers?'
'No,' I said. 'I only met Baddeley
once.'
'He's so terribly righteous,' she
muttered. 'I'm pretty sure he doesn't approve of this divorce.'
'What makes you think that?'
"I don't know. Something Dr
Baddeley said once, I think. He's a very different sort of man.'
'In what way, Brenda?'
'More up to date. More modern. More
- rigid, sticking by the rules.' She turned to me. 'Like a young schoolmistress
in a very modern school, who's learned it all up out of a book.' She paused,
and then she said, 'Dr Baddeley was so kind. That's what made him so
good.'
I asked, 'Do you think this chap
Somers will get the job? Or will they put in somebody over his head?'
She said, 'He's got an awful lot of
letters after his name. He's studied in
We were a long way from the hangar
now. I stopped and took her hand. There's nothing to worry over,' I said. 'It's
all in train now. We're just waiting our turn for the case to come up in
court.'
'I know,' she said. 'But when I
went there to see Derek this morning, it was - difficult.'
'With Dr Somers?'
'No - Derek. Sort of bad-tempered.'
She paused. 'He'd taken everything so well before we went away.'
There was nothing I could do to
make things easier for her, except to give her the assurance of my love. And presently
we walked back to the hangar and got out her aeroplane, Morgan le Fay, and
started it up, and she took off and went up to the sunlit cumulus above the
aerodrome, and I saw her playing in and out of the clouds for nearly an hour, never
out of my sight for more than a few minutes at a time. When she landed and
taxied in, her eye was bright and there was colour in her cheeks. 'It was
simply glorious up there,' she said. 'Like something out of this world.'
'Not worried any more?' I asked.
She shook her head. 'Not worried
any more.'
In the next few weeks her visits to
The Haven were never easy for her. She told me very little about Derek, and I
did not press her, but I gathered that he had turned sullen and uncommunicative
with her, and she had difficulty in keeping up a conversation with him for the
forty minutes that was the duration of her usual visit. 'I'm sure it will be
easier when this divorce goes through,' she told me once. 'I'm sure that he'll
be happier when that's over.' Whenever it was fine after her visit to The
Haven, and it was fine most of that summer, she used to come out to the
aerodrome and fly her aeroplane, always among the clouds if there were any
there. It seemed to ease her mind, and drive away the tensions and anxieties of
the morning.
There came a morning in late July
when she rang me at the aerodrome. She said, 'Johnnie, I want to meet you for a
talk. Not here. Could we go somewhere this afternoon?'
I thought quickly. 'I've got a
lesson at three and another one at four. I could meet you anywhere after that.'
She said, 'Could we meet at
Huddlestone, like we did before?'
'Fine,' I said. 'I could be there
by
'A bit,' she said. 'I'll tell you
when we meet.'
When I drove into the village
street at
She turned to face me. 'Three
troubles,' she said. 'The first is, Derek's withdrawn his petition for a
divorce.'
That's a bad one,' I said quietly.
She had had a letter from her solicitor, who wrote with evident sympathy, but
quite definitely. She showed it to me, and I read it carefully. There could be
no ambiguity.
'What's behind this?51
asked.
'Dr Somers,' she said.
T>r Somers?'
She nodded. 'I went to see him this
morning. That's the second trouble. I asked him if he knew anything about this
change of Derek's mind, and he said that he thought a doctor shouldn't try to
influence his patient's mind in matrimonial affairs one way or the other. He
said that perhaps he took a different view from his predecessor — he meant Dr Baddeley. He said he thought
that Derek was quite well enough to make his own mind up on matters of that
sort without any assistance. And then he went on to talk about Derek. He said
that in the nine months that he had had him under observation he had not,
himself, detected any symptoms that he would describe in court as mental
illness. He said that there had been fits of bad temper, sometimes associated
with violence. He said that these could occur with any strong-willed person
kept under indefinite restraint.'
I stared at her. 'Does he mean to
say there's nothing wrong with him?'
'That's more or less what he said.'
'But what about the case - the case
he was in court for?'
She nodded. 'I know. I asked him
about that. What he said was that there were two sorts of people who would do a
thing like that, criminals and criminal lunatics. He said that nothing that he
had observed confirmed the supposition that Derek was a criminal lunatic. He
said that he intended to keep him under observation for a further period, but
that he was beginning to feel that the certification was due for a review.'
I pressed her hand. 'Does this mean
that he's going to let him out?'
She nodded. 'That's what he was
hinting at. I think he's been putting the same idea into Derek's head, and
that's why he isn't going on with the divorce.'
I thought quickly. It was bad, very
bad, whichever way you looked at it. The worst of it was, I could see it from Dr
Somers's point of view, because since I had known Brenda I had kept my ears
open for gossip about Derek. I knew the efforts that his family had made to
keep him out of prison ; I even knew the amount of the fee marked on the brief
of the eminent King's Counsel who defended him. If Dr Somers now said that he
wasn't going to have his mental home cluttered up with ordinary criminals who
ought to be in prison just because they had the money for a first-class
defence, one couldn't help feeling a little sympathy for him in his attitude.
I asked her, 'What's the third
trouble?' I knew the answer to that one, of course.
She faced me. 'I'm in the family
way.'
I grinned at her. 'That's not a
trouble,' I said. That's a damn good thing. I was hoping for that.'
She stared at me, bewildered, and
then she smiled, and then she burst into tears. I had never seen her in tears
before; I took her in my arms and let her cry. And when her sobs had eased, I
said, 'Maybe we shouldn't have done it, but I'm glad we did. We've wanted to
have a family, and now we're going to have one. It's going to make things just
a little bit more complicated at the start, but we'll get over that.' I wiped
her eyes with my handkerchief.
'Just a little bit more
complicated,' she sobbed. That's an understatement.'
There's two of us now to work
things out together,' I said. Two of us, because I'm in this now up to the
neck. I can take some of the dirty work off you now, because I've got a legal
standing in this thing.' I paused for a moment in thought. 'First of all, I
think I ought to go and have a talk with your mother.'
She dabbed with my handkerchief.
'She doesn't know anything about this yet.'
'Does she know what Dr Somers says
about Derek?'
She nodded. 'She knows about that,
and about the divorce.'
'Will you let me tell her about us,
and about the baby?'
She stared at me. 'Do you want to?'
I’ll be scared stiff,' I admitted.
'But I think I ought to. After all, I'm responsible.'
Tm not so sure of that. It was more
my fault than yours.'
'It wasn't anybody's fault,' I
said. 'It was a damn good thing. But I think your mother might think better of
me if I told her about it.'
Presently we went back to our cars
and drove home independently.
When I got back to Duffington I
went to the aerodrome. The secretary and ground engineers had gone home so the
telephone was private; I let myself into the deserted office and rang up Mrs
Duelos at the Manor. She said that Brenda wasn't home yet, and that I knew,
because we had arranged it so. I told her that I wanted to have a private talk
with her about the divorce, and she told me to come along at
When I went to the Manor I was
shown into the drawing-room. Mrs Duelos was there alone; she got up to meet me.
'Brenda came in, but she went to bed,' she remarked. 'Said she was tired.'
I nodded. 'I know,' I said. 'I
arranged that with her.' She drew herself up a little. 'I wanted to have a talk
with you privately about this divorce.'
She said a little testily, 'Well, /
can't do anything about that.
I nodded. 'I know.' And then I
said, 'There's something new now, that you'll have to know about. Brenda's in
the family way, and I'm responsible.'
She stared at me, erect, angry, and
formidable. 'You've got a nerve, young man, to come and tell me that!'
'Well, I wouldn't be telling you if
I hadn't,' I remarked.
We stood staring at each other for
a moment. 'When did this happen?' she asked.
'When we flew to
"You ought to be ashamed of
yourself!'
'I suppose so,' I said wearily.
'But I'm not. We both wanted this to happen some time, but it's a pity it had
to be so soon.'
'Sit down,' she said.
We sat before the fire in silence
for a time. When she spoke again she sounded much older. 'I won't pretend to
you that this is a surprise,' she said. 'I may have hoped you'd have more
sense, but I don't know that I really thought you would. What are you going to
do now?'
'Do you think Derek would go on
with the divorce, in view of this?' I asked.
She shook her head. 'Not unless he
sees some advantage to himself.'
'It's like that, is it?'
She nodded. 'I think so.'
'He wouldn't give any consideration
to Brenda's position?'
'He might, but I don't think he
would. If Dr Baddeley had been alive, he might have talked him round.'
There was a short pause. 'Brenda
tells me that Dr Somers is talking of letting him out.'
'So she told me.'
"We'll have to try and get
Derek to go on with the divorce,' I said. We talked about it for a few minutes.
'Which of the three of us would be the best person to go and see him? I'm quite
ready to.'
She shook her head. 'Not you. I'll
go and see him myself.'
'Would you do that? I'd be quite
ready to go, but I don't think it ought to be Brenda.'
She shook her head. 'Not Brenda.
I'll go and see him. Perhaps I'll have a talk with his eldest brother George
first, up in
Presently I said, 'Suppose that
doesn't come off. Suppose he won't have a divorce. Suppose Dr Somers lets him
out. We've got to think of what would happen then.'
'Yes,' she said dryly. 'We may as
well start thinking about that.'
I nodded. 'I've been thinking about
it. There's only one thing we could do, that would solve everything. I'd have
to get a job abroad, and Brenda would have to come with me as my wife.' She
made a gesture of dissent, but I went on, ‘We could do that. Imperial Airways
want pilots for their Far Eastern service. It means living in
She shook her head. 'It wouldn't
do.'
'Why not?'
'Brenda wouldn't go,' she replied.
'She's Derek's wife.’
I was silent.
"You don't know her very
well,' she said. 'A divorce when a continuation of her marriage was hopeless -
yes. She accepted that. I think she would go on with the divorce now, for the
sake of her child, and for you, even if Derek were to get out of The Haven.'
She stared into the fire, at the sparks that we call 'gypsies' wandering in the
soot at the back of the grate. 'But to leave her husband and go away with you,
unmarried - Brenda would never do that.'
That one had never entered my head.
'I think I shall go up to
There was really nothing more to
discuss, but I stayed ten minutes longer before getting up to take my leave. As
I said goodbye to her, I said, 'I'm very sorry about all this.'
'No good being sorry now,' she
observed, a little curtly. And then she said, 'Do you read poetry?'
I was startled at the change of
subject. 'I'm afraid I don't."
'Arthur Hugh Clough,' she said. 'I
used to read a lot of poetry when I was a girl, and it keeps coming back. He
wrote a poem about the Ten Commandments.' And then she said,
'Do not adultery commit, Advantage
rarely comes of it.'
'He was dead right,' I remarked,
and went back to the Seven Swans.
I had a long talk with Brenda next
day, out at the aerodrome. She had heard from her mother that she was going up
to see George in
There was so little I could do to
help.
George Marshall came down next
weekend. It was the Bank Holiday weekend, and every machine we had was flying
about eight hours a day. I had ten or twelve lessons every day, and six hours
of instruction day after day makes quite a strain. He went to The Haven on the
Saturday morning, and on the Saturday afternoon Brenda brought him out to the
aerodrome.
He was a big, heavy man about fifty
years old, considerably older than Derek. He was very
She flew him round for half an hour
or so, I think, and then they sat in deckchairs on the lawn of the clubhouse. I
went and had a word with them once between lessons, but they were quite
prepared to wait until the rush was over. I landed for the last time at about
"Ye've got a champion little
club, Mr Pascoe,' he remarked. 'D'ye get many accidents with all this flying
that goes on?'
'We haven't had one since I've been
here,' I replied. 'I don't believe in them.'
'It's an active little business,'
he said. 'Do ye make it pay?'
'It makes a profit every year,' I
told him. "Not a very large one, because we keep the cost of flying as low
as we can for the members. When we look like making money, the Committee drops
the rates.'
'Aye,' he said. 'That one way of
doing it.' And then he said, 'Ye'll be wondering how I got on this morning.
Well, I've no good news for you. Derek will have nowt to do with any divorce.'
I glanced at him. ‘You told him
about Brenda?'
'Aye, I told him about that. Couple
of scallywags, the pair of you, that's what I say. Still, what's done can't be
undone, and the only thing is, make the best of it. That's what I told Derek
this morning. But he'd have nowt to do with it.'
'Did he say why?'
'I dunno. He can be obstinate, can
Derek. I wouldn't say that anything he said was very sensible. Said he'd be
getting out of The Haven before long, and then he'd make his mind up what was
best to do.'
'Is he
going to get out soon?'
'If that Dr Somers has anything to
do with it, he will. Proper ninny that one is, alongside Dr Baddeley. But
there's two needed to sign the certificate, and two needed to unsign it. It's
not unsigned yet.'
'You think he should stay in?'
'Aye,' he said heavily, 'I do.
Always queer, was Derek, ever since he was a little lad. Always doing things he
shouldn't do, we had to cover up.'
'How soon would he be likely to get
out?'
'Well now, it wouldn't be very
soon. There's nothing started yet, and these things take a while. I wouldn't
think that it would be before October, at the earliest.'
Brenda was there, but this man
talked good sense ; he had influence in this affair, and I might not
have another chance to talk to him. I said, 'October's a bad time for a
miscarriage.'
Brenda flushed and looked annoyed,
but George Marshall stopped and slapped me on the shoulder. 'Eh! lad,' he
laughed, 'I like a man that calls a spade a spade.' He turned to Brenda. 'Don't
look so put out, lass. He's got the rights of it, and he said nowt but what has
to be said some day, by somebody. It wouldn't do for you to be in Duffington
when Derek gets out of The Haven, not the way things are. Ye'll have to go away
for the sake of the baby, and live quiet until this is all over. When's it to
be?'
'March,' she said.
'Well now, what about
She was silent. This loud-spoken,
positive man meant very well indeed, but he was driving her along more quickly
than he should. He didn't know her well enough. There wasn't a chance that she
would agree to go to
I might have known that that would
be her choice. She had been to
George Marshall frowned. 'Dunno
about the French doctors, lass. Scruffy lot, from what I hear.'
She smiled. 'Don't be absurd.
Babies get born in
'Aye,' he said reluctantly. 'I'd
sooner ye were having it in Leeds Infirmary. But that's not to be.'
We talked about
George Marshall repeated his offer
to finance her if Derek cut off her allowance. She was grateful, but I walked
in silence while this was going on, not too well pleased. When they were
leaving, I got him on one side to talk to him alone. 'It's very good of you to
offer to find the money she'll need, Mr Marshall/ I said. 'But I can look after
that. I've got a bit saved up.'
'How much have ye got?' he asked
directly.
'Nearly five hundred pounds.' I was
including the value of my car.
'And ye'll need every penny of it
if you're going to set up as a married man,' he said. 'I tell ye straight, Mr
Pascoe, I'm right sorry for the lass, and so is my wife. She's had a rough spin
from the
I could only thank him.
He went away with Brenda in the
Alvis, and we went on much as we had before. The first time Brenda went to
visit Derek in The Haven there was a violent scene, so that she had to leave
after ten minutes. She went once more, and there was another one. After that Dr
Somers asked her to suspend her visits for a time till Derek had got used to
the present state of affairs, till he expressed a wish to see her. After that
she didn't go to the hospital again, and the lack of occupation was a distress
to her. She said once that she felt that she was living in the Manor under
false pretences.
In the weeks that followed I dined
with her at the Manor many times. We were still careful about being seen about
together, but on Mondays when the aerodrome was closed we used to go off
separately in our cars, park one of them in some village ten miles away, and go
on in the other up on to the heather-covered moors, happy to be together,
walking or sitting talking in the sunshine, forgetting our troubles for a few
hours.
Towards the end of August one
Monday, up on the backbone of
'When?'
'Now, in Morgan le Fay.' She turned
to me. 'I'd like to go there and spy out the land, find a nice quiet hotel
where we could stay all winter, and find out about nursing homes and doctors. I
thought perhaps I could fly down to
‘You'd go solo?'
"You couldn't come, could
you?'
I shook my head. 'Not at this time
of year.' There was really no reason why she shouldn't go, because she was
getting quite good at cross-country. 'You wouldn't take anyone with you?'
She shook her head. 'I'd rather go
alone, and do it all by myself.' She paused, and then she said, 'I've been
thinking, this may be the last chance I'll have to do a proper long flight, on
my own. Later on, the weather will get bad, and anyway I wouldn't want to fly
much when the baby gets well on the way. And after he's born - well, everything
may be different. I might be anywhere. Perhaps I won't be able to fly at all
then. I would like to have one really good, long flight behind me to look back
upon and think about.'
'You could do that,' I said. ‘You
wouldn't have any difficulty, provided that you aren't in a hurry. I wouldn't
fly in bad weather, if I were you. If it's raining, or if the Met say that it's
going to, wait till next day and have a look at the town.' I got down to it
with the maps with her that evening, planning her flight to Cannes in easy
stages of not much more than a hundred miles each that she could take as she
wished. From Duffington to Heston, from Heston to Lympne, to Le Touquet for
Customs, to Le Bourget for
'I'll get a couple of sets of new ones
for you to take, and some other things,' I said. 'Then all you've got to do is,
ask them to changer les bougies.'
'Changer
les bougies' she repeated. 'I must get a little book
and start writing all these things down.'
The excitement of this journey was
very good for her; she was brighter and more cheerful than she had been for
weeks. In the next few days I marked all her maps with a thick blue line from
place to place, with the distance against it in red pencil, with the magnetic
course to steer going out in blue and the magnetic course to steer coming back
in green. I got her a course-and-distance calculator and showed her how to use
it to check drift, and got her a fuel carnet and an aircraft carnet. Then,
with her passport, she was ready to go. I put her bag of spares and tools in
the front cockpit with her suitcase and strapped them down, her log books and
clean overalls in the rear locker. She got in and I swung the prop for her; she
ran it up, waved the chocks away, and taxied out, as pretty and excited as she
had been on her first solo. I stood watching as she took off, got on course,
and vanished to the south.
It was lonely at Duffington without
her, and I knew that it was going to be lonely all the winter. She sent me
telegrams from every place where she night-stopped, and a letter every couple
of days. I wrote to her every day, and because it took her eight days to get to
She unfastened her helmet and got
out of the machine, her overall smeared a little with dirt and oil. 'It was
simply glorious,' she said. 'Like something out of this world. Nothing went
wrong, I never got lost - I never touched the spares. And I could make them
understand me, Johnnie.'
She was very happy, and looking
very well. She had taken a cheap little folding Kodak with her and had taken a
lot of photographs, and had had them developed and printed in
When I got there she was waiting
for me in the drawing-room with her mother. The radiant happiness had all
disappeared, and she was looking white and drawn. 'Things have been happening
in the last few days, Johnnie,' she said. "Derek.'
'Important things?' I asked.
Mrs Duelos said, 'He's applied for
his certificate to be annulled. Dr Somers rang me up about it on Monday. As
Brenda was coming home so soon I thought I wouldn't spoil her holiday.'
'How soon shall we know?' I asked.
'The Commissioners in Lunacy are
coming down to examine him,' she told me. 'Dr Somers didn't know when, but he
said he'd let me know.'
It seemed that Derek had made a
formal application to the visiting committee for a review of his case. He had
put it to them personally on one of their periodic visits, acting in a very
restrained and sensible manner. Dr Somers, apparently, had backed the
application, which had gone to the Commissioners in Lunacy. The procedure now
was that two of the Commissioners, one of whom had to be a doctor and one a
barrister, were to come down and examine him. If their report was favourable,
the certificate would be annulled and Derek would be free.
Brenda said listlessly, 'Dr
Ford-Johnson will probably be one of them. He's a specialist, in
The photographs, the flight, her
happiness, were all forgotten, and we were back in the same dreary mess. We
talked about it all evening. Mrs Duelos had rung George Marshall and had told
him the news, and she thought that he was doing something in
When we had been over and over the
miserable business, I said, 'I think you both ought to go to
‘When?' she asked thoughtfully.
'Now. Before the Commissioners
arrive.'
"You mean, in the next week?'
I nodded. 'As soon as you can.' I
paused. "You won't be able to go so well when Derek is just due to come
home. Better go now, at once.'
Brenda sat in thought, her chin
cupped in her hand. 'Of course, for myself I'd love to go. It's such a lovely
place. But what would Derek have here to come home to? I mean, there'd just be
the servants.'
Mrs Duelos said, 'I think that's a
matter for the
Brenda said, 'Not
Her mother said, 'He's right, dear.
I think you ought to get away from here.'
Brenda said, 'It's like running
away.'
She knew that she would have to go,
but she fought for a long time against a decision. In the end, at about
Brenda said, 'It's going to be a
miserable way of travelling, after Morgan le Fay.'
I smiled. 'It's going to be
quicker.'
'I know. But the other was such
fun.' She turned to me. "You'll look after Morgan for me, Johnnie?'
'I'll look after her,' I said. 'If
you stay away all winter she'll have to have her certificate of airworthiness
renewed. I'll be in touch with you about that. We'd better get that done while
you're away, and then she'll be all ready for you to fly next summer.'
She said wistfully, 'I'd like to
fly to
'Next summer,' I promised her.
'I'll get leave, and we'll go together.'
She came out to the aerodrome and
flew her Moth once more. Then we put it at the back of the hangar and folded
the wings. She brought down a lot of dust sheets and we spent an afternoon
covering most of it up with these. 'You'll be sure they turn the engine every
week?' she asked me anxiously. 'It says you have to do that, in the book.'
I pressed her arm. 'Don't worry.
I'll look after her myself.'
A couple of days later I saw them
off at the station. It was terribly, terribly lonely when they'd gone.
Some time after that George
Marshall rang me up from the Manor, and asked if I would run up there to see
him. I had no idea that he was in the district. I went up there at once, and
had a talk with him. It seemed that Mrs Duelos had been in touch with him in
'That's as may be,' he said
gruffly. 'I've changed my mind since Mrs Duelos went to
I glanced at him. 'What about
Derek? Isn't he coming out?'
'The Commissioners are coming down
here on the sixteenth of October,' he said. That was a fortnight hence. 'We
shan't know till they've examined him and made their report. But - no, I'd be
surprised if they should let him out.'
'I thought it was a certainty,' I
said.
'It never was that...' He stood and
thought for a minute, and then he said, 'Ye've a right to know how things are,
Mr Pascoe. When Derek was in trouble and was certified three years ago, the
court and the Commissioners didn't know the half of it. We didn't see the sense
in making a bad matter worse by raking up old troubles when he was a boy,
things we'd been able to cover up and no scandal, and all forgotten about. But
now, it's different. He's happy in The Haven and well looked after. We wouldn't
want to see him given the responsibility of living his own life again.'
He paused, and then said heavily,
'I went and saw Mr Justin Forbes, in his chambers, and told him everything that
had happened, ever since Derek was a little lad. He's one of the Commissioners,
the barrister. We don't want any more trouble, and he's happy where he is.'
'He took it seriously?'
'Aye, he did that. Got his clerk in
for a shorthand note, and had it typed out as a formal statement. I went back
and swore to it that afternoon.'
We stood in silence for a time. I
was sorry for this man, sorry for all of them. It was obvious to me that George
Marshall was afraid of another crime if Derek was released. If that should
happen, he might go to prison for it. They were paying very high fees for him
in The Haven, and it was better that he should stay there.
'You spoke pretty frankly to him?'
I asked.
'I did that. Want to leave well
alone, that's what I said.'
I thought about it for a moment.
'If the Commissioners decide to keep him in, then, Brenda and Mrs Duelos could
come back here if they want to?'
'Aye,' he said, 'they could do
that. But she'll be four months gone by then, and better she should stay quiet
where they are, and save the scandal. I was thinking, when all this has blown
over, say around Christmas time, I'd come down and see Derek again and see if
he'd go on with the divorce. Maybe Mr Forbes would help in that. But all that's
in the future.'
'Does Brenda know you've seen the
Commissioner?'
He shook his head. 'I'd as soon you
didn't tell her, either. Just leave it be, and tell her what the Commissioners
decide.
You can tell her after, if ye think
it necessary. But least said, soonest mended.'
Things seemed to be improving again
so far as Brenda was concerned, and I went back and wrote to her cheerfully.
Thereafter life went in a normal, routine sort of way. I wrote to her every
other day and she wrote to me; I know that I lived for her letters, and I think
she did for mine. Presently the Commissioners arrived, examined Derek,
deliberated, and decided that he had better stay where he was. My solicitor
heard about it first, and rang me with the news, saying that Dr Somers was
rather upset. I telegraphed it to Brenda.
The Leacaster Flying Club was
fairly generous with leave; they gave their pilot-instructor three weeks every
year provided that he took it in the winter months. I had taken no leave at all
the previous year, my first with the club, and I had little difficulty in
getting the Committee to agree that I should take two spells of a fortnight
each, one in January and one in March. We had several members with over five
hundred hours of wartime flying in the distant past, and two with current B
licences for commercial flying, who could act as assistant instructors while I
was away. I spent all the early months of winter arranging that the work should
go on steadily while I was on leave, and early in January I left for
That fortnight was a delightful
time. Brenda was very well, and more composed than I had expected to find her.
She had had no contact with her husband in The Haven since she had left
Duffington, and though she was growing tired of the hotel life with her mother
she was well adjusted to it. She could not have a piano but she went to every
concert that took place in
She had acquired a little car, a
Renault, through the generosity of George Marshall and we made two or three long
drives in this, to
She was going to call him Johnnie.
Once she said, 'I suppose we'll
have to go back to Duffington, shan't we? After the baby's born?'
'Nobody has to do anything,' I told
her. 'I could give up my job there. But if I was going to do that, I ought to
tell them now, so that they could get another pilot in the saddle before the
summer rush comes on.'
She asked, 'Could you get another
job with some other club, in some other part of
'I don't think I could,' I said
slowly. 'It would get around why I had left Duffington. The wives of members
aren't so keen on a pilot who's a co-respondent.'
She bent her head over her sewing.
'The Wives' Trades Union,' she murmured. 'I see that.'
'The only thing that I could do
would be to get into air transport,' I told her. 'I'll have to do that one day,
anyway.
But that means
'We'd never see each other then,'
she said. 'I don't think I could face this all alone.'
I took her hand. 'I know. I think I
ought to go on at Duffington for the time being, anyway. But that doesn't mean
you'd have to come back there.'
She sat motionless for a few
moments, her sewing on her lap. 'It hasn't been a very happy place,' she said
quietly. 'The club, and flying, and you, and everything we've done together -
that's been just a dream. But not the rest of it.'
'I know,' I said. 'Would you like a
little house somewhere not too far away, but not in Duffington? In
'I don't know,' she, said slowly.
'If I didn't go back to Duffington it would be like running away because I was
afraid.' I was silent. 'Let me think about it, Johnnie,' she said. 'We don't
have to decide anything for the next couple of months.'
'It might look a bit odd if you
went back there with a baby,' I remarked. I was very disinclined for her to go
back there, even then.
'That doesn't matter,' she replied.
'People gave up calling, after Derek's case. Nobody ever comes to the house
anyway. A baby more or less won't matter.' She paused. 'I thought perhaps that
I might say he was my sister's baby.'
'Have you got a sister?' I asked.
She smiled. 'No. But one has to say
something, even though you know that people won't believe it.'
She had her own way of looking at
things, and her reputation didn't seem to worry her a bit. I left her at the
end of the fortnight reasonably happy in my mind about her. In this very difficult
time she was quiet and composed, enjoying her little life of waiting, with her
concerts and her painting and her country drives. I went back to Duffington
refreshed with the short holiday, and there I found a letter waiting for me
from George Marshall.
He told me, very briefly, that he
had failed again to make Derek consider a divorce. Derek seemed to consider
that George was responsible for his failure to get out of The Haven, which
indeed was true, and he was actively hostile to any proposal that his brother
put up. It seemed very probable to me that Dr Somers had been talking.
I was barely two months back at
Duffington, and then I was off again to
I saw her for a few minutes that
evening, weak and exhausted. She was terribly disappointed. She had convinced
herself that it was going to be a boy and that he would be a pilot, like his
father. I tried to cheer her up. 'Girls are fun,' I said. 'I'd rather have a
girl.'
A tear trickled down her cheek. 'I
did so want a boy.'
I wiped it away gently. 'Girls can
be pilots, too,' I said. She smiled faintly, and squeezed my hand. Then the
French sister came and made me go away.
She recovered her strength quickly,
but the sense of disappointment persisted. During the last week of my leave I
raised the question of the baby's name once or twice; she had decided to wait
to have her baptized till they returned to
My leave was up, and I had to go
back to Duffington before she left the hospital. At that time English
nursemaids were not uncommon in
I went back to my job, and on my
first Monday I flew her Moth down to Heston for the renewal of the certificate
of airworthiness. In the year that she had owned it it had only flown about a
hundred hours, but under the regulations of those days it had to be pretty well
pulled to pieces for inspection every year, and that meant quite a lot of work.
I left it there for this work to be done, and wrote to her in
She flew in one afternoon at about
teatime. I knew that she was coming, for her mother and the baby and the nurse
had arrived by train the day before; she should have come on the same day but
something had happened at Heston to delay the delivery of her Moth. I got a
telephone call from Heston in the middle of the afternoon to say that she had
taken off for Duffington ; it was a fine, sunny afternoon with all the promise
of spring, so I knew that she would be all right. Young Ronnie Clarke was
learning to fly at that time, having taken his matriculation with an effort,
and he was coming out for a lesson at
She met us, radiant, upon the
tarmac, and it was just like the old days of the previous summer. Ronnie
switched off the engine and we sat unbuckling our helmets, and she came up to
the machine beside us. 'Johnnie, it's simply glorious to be back,' she said.
'How's Ronnie getting on?'
'Getting on all right,' I said. 'He
could make anybody sick now. He'd have made me sick if you hadn't come along.
Have a good flight up?'
'Beautiful,' she said. 'Morgan's
flying a bit left wing low, I think.'
I nodded. 'I'll take her up and
check her over for you. She may want a bit of fine adjustment on the rigging.
Landing all right?'
She nodded. 'Not too bad. I did two
or three at Heston before leaving. It's so lovely to be back ...'
'Lovely for us,' I said quietly.
Ronnie was there, of course, and the young don't miss much. We got out on the
tarmac and pushed the machines into the hangar, and we all went into the office
for a cup of tea. Brenda was radiantly happy, with colour in her cheeks and
brightness in her eyes, looking younger than ever. I had a look at her aircraft
log book for the rigging check, and then I took her out to look at the machine,
leaving Ronnie in the office. Behind the Bluebird we were out of sight, and I
took her in my arms and kissed her.
'We oughtn't to be doing this,' she
murmured. 'Not in the hangar. You'll lose your job.'
'Wives' Trades Union,' I laughed.
She laughed with me. "We won't do it again. But this is a special
occasion.'
I had had her Alvis checked over at
the garage and made clean for her, and I had brought it to the hangar the day
before when she was to have come home. She got into it, and it was just like
the old days as I stood chatting with her at the window. 'I'll be out tomorrow
morning,' she said, 'or I'll give you a ring. I'll have to see what's happening
in the domestic situation, but if it's all under control will you come up for
dinner tomorrow night?'
'I'd love to,' I said. 'We'll have
to fix up something now about the christening.'
She nodded. 'I'll see the vicar
about that. I think he'll do it privately for us, up at the Manor.' I nodded.
'I registered the birth, of course. In
'What name did you give her?'
She smiled. 'Brenda. Brenda
Margaret. I thought she ought to have two.'
I went up to the Manor for dinner
next evening. Already the spontaneous gaiety of her arrival had been dissipated
by the constraints of Duffington. The vicar had proved difficult over the
christening; apparently he disapproved of the whole thing. He said that her
baby should have been christened in
She had rung up Dr Somers and had
asked if her husband would like her to visit him. He had been reasonably
cordial, but had warned her that the subject was a delicate one and he would
have to approach it tactfully. He would ring her as soon as he had done so,
probably before the end of the week.
I went back to the Seven Swans that
night deeply troubled in my mind. It seemed to me that we had made a vast
mistake in bringing her back to Duffington with her baby and that nothing but
trouble lay ahead of us. It seemed to me that I should have insisted on a
little house at Oxford or some place like that where no one knew her, even if
it meant that I could only see her once a week for a time. If we had done that,
this christening trouble would not have arisen, for one thing. In Duffington
Manor she was now living with my child in an entirely false position from a
twisted sense of loyalty to her husband, and the worst of it was that I could
see no way to put things right.
I had adjusted the rigging of her
Moth and had test-flown it for her, and she came out and flew it for a time
next day. It seemed to put her mind at rest, and she came down far more
composed and cheerful than she had been when she had taken off. On the
following day she came out and flew it again, but she had heard nothing from
the vicar and nothing from Dr Somers. And that evening she rang me up just as I
was leaving the aerodrome.
She said, 'Johnnie, can you come up
here at once? I've got to talk to you.'
‘Of course,' I said. 'What is it?'
She said dully, 'Derek's escaped.
He got out of The Haven.'
'My God!' I said. 'Where is he
now?'
'They don't know. They're out
looking for him.'
'All right, darling. I'll be with
you straight away.'
When I got to the Manor I heard the
whole story, so far as she knew it. It seemed that there was a gate to the
high-walled grounds of The Haven, an iron grille affair which was kept locked.
That afternoon the gardener had unlocked it to push a barrow through; at the
same time one of the nursing sisters of the women's side of the place was
fiddling unskilfully with the motor of her car in the garage about fifty yards
from the grille. She moved a chafed lead, and the horn began to sound and went
on sounding - loud, raucous, and continuous. The staff of The Haven knew from
past experience that sudden noises such as that can excite a proportion of
mental patients and make them almost unmanageable, and the gardener dropped
everything, left the grille open, and went to help the sister stop it. It was
over an hour before they discovered that Derek Marshall was no longer there.
Later that evening they discovered
that he had pawned his silver cigarette-case in the city for twenty-five
shillings, and had vanished in the rush-hour crowds.
It was bad, any way you looked at
it. My first concern, of course, was for the safety of Brenda and her baby, not
to mention her mother and the nurse and cook. 'I'll sleep here tonight,' I
said. 'You'd better have somebody around.'
She shook her head. 'There's no
need to do that. He won't come home.'
'How do you know that?'
'It's the first place they'd look
for him. I saw a policeman in the garden just before you came in, down by the
summerhouse. Didn't you see him?'
I shook my head.
'He'll keep right away from us,'
she said. 'He's only got to stay free for a fortnight.'
'I've heard something about that,'
I replied. 'After a fortnight he's regarded as sane, isn't he?'
'That's right,' she said. 'If he
stays free for a fortnight, then he's got to be re-certified.' She paused, and
then she added, 'I don't think Dr Somers would certify him - not unless he does
something bad.'
'Do you think he will?'
She sighed wearily. 'I don't know,
Johnnie. Not in the next fortnight, anyway.'
I asked, 'Have you got any idea
where he'd be?'
She shook her head. 'Anywhere. He
may have some old Army friends who'd hide him for a fortnight. Even a relation.
I don't know.'
I took her hand. 'Look, dear,' I
said, 'this puts the lid on it. You can't stay here. This is his house, after
all, and he'll come back here in a fortnight when he's free to do so. I'll slip
down to
'It won't do, Johnnie,' she said
sadly. 'It just won't do.’
'Why not?' I asked. 'It's the only
thing we can do.'
'I'm his wife,' she said. 'That's
why.'
'He agreed to divorce you. You
wouldn't have been his wife by this time; you'd have been married to me. But
he's not right in the head, and he went back on it. We can't go along on those
lines, dear. They're crazy lines.'
'I know they are,' she said. 'Some
day perhaps we'll get them straightened out. But in the meantime, I'm his wife,
and this is where I'll have to stay till he comes home.' I was silent, and
presently she said, 'Perhaps when I see him I'll be able to talk him round.'
I could not move her from that,
however hard I tried, and presently I left her and went back to the village. As
I drove down the drive of the Manor a dark figure came forward out of the
bushes to stop the car, and I pulled up. It was Sergeant Entwhistle, of the
police.
'Good evening, sir,' he said. 'Are
there any other guests in the house?'
'No,' I said. 'I was the only one.'
'I'll just go in, then, and make
sure the windows on the ground floor are all fastened, and the doors,' he
remarked. 'We don't want any trouble in the night.'
'Are you expecting him?' I asked.
He shook his head. 'Not unless he's
a lot crazier than what they say he is,' he replied. 'He'd be too cunning to
come here. But there's no harm in making sure.'
That was the twenty-eighth of
April, and the fortnight would be up on 12 May. On 13 May Derek might be
expected to show up if they hadn't caught him before, an appropriately unlucky
date, it seemed to me. There was absolutely nothing I could do about it,
though. I tried once more to make Brenda go away with her mother and the baby,
but I only succeeded in annoying her. The nurse, not liking the atmosphere,
gave in her notice and left.
She came out to the aerodrome every
morning to fly her Moth, and that was good for her, and seemed to ease her
mind. She chose the mornings rather than the afternoons because there were
seldom any people at the aerodrome on weekday mornings, and there had been a
story in the newspapers about Derek's escape from The Haven, with a photograph
of him. Apart from these visits to the aerodrome I don't think she left the
grounds of the Manor at all. She didn't come on Saturday or Sunday because of
the people, but I got her Moth out for her on Monday morning when the club was
normally closed. There was so little I could do for her.
Throughout that fortnight the
tension grew, till it became nearly unbearable. I know that she was taking
sleeping tablets of some sort. I didn't do that myself because drugs and flying
don't mix very well, and I used to lie awake most nights till two or three in
the morning. On top of the anxiety and the suspense over Derek, I had a
terrible feeling that Brenda was growing away from me. Our aims were different. I wanted her to leave her husband
and become my wife in fact, if not in law. She wanted to stay with him, not
because she loved him but because she had an ethereal sense of duty, almost
like a nun. I knew that she was terrified of his return, but she was moving
away from me to face it upon planes that I could not reach.
She came out to the aerodrome on
the morning of the nth. She seemed completely normal, went to the clubhouse to
change into her boiler suit, and came back to the machine. I had it out upon
the tarmac and I was in the cockpit running up the engine for her; I was doing
everything I possibly could for her at that time, myself. She went into the
office for a moment and came out again to the machine. I throttled back and got
out, and she got into it without speaking. She fastened her belt, smiled at me,
and taxied out to take off.
I watched till she was in the air,
and then went back into the office. There was a note there on my desk. It read:
Dear Johnnie —
Thank you for everything. Brenda.
I dashed out on to the tarmac, with
a ghastly feeling of disaster in my throat. She was coming over the aerodrome
now at seven or eight hundred feet, flying straight and level. Then, as I
watched, she throttled back the engine, pulled the nose of the machine right
up, and kicked on full rudder. The Moth hesitated for a moment, and then fell
over in a spin.
I breathed, 'Oh God .., please ..,
no!'
I stood watching her in horror. At
three hundred feet she was still spinning, and I shouted to the men to get the
crash wagon. The elevators were still hard up, the rudder hard over. Then she
centred the controls and the machine stopped spinning and went into a straight
dive, gathering speed quickly. She never made the slightest effort to pull out.
She hit the ground near the far hedge with a dull thud and a splintering noise
of wood, and as I ran I heard the crash wagon start up behind me.
For the second time that night I
woke from a bad dream. I was sweating and trembling, and for a time I didn't
know where I was. I thought that I was in the small hotel that I had lived in
in
I stirred, and reached out for the
letter from Mrs Duelos to read it for the hundredth time, though I knew every
word by heart. It wasn't there, and my torch wasn't there, either. There was
something vertical and unfamiliar. As consciousness came back to me I realized
my hand was on the standard of a table lamp. In my misery I fumbled about with
a trembling hand until I found the switch and got it lit. I lay blinking in the
flood of light. I was in Johnnie Pascoe's room, and everything was quite all
right. I hadn't just seen the girl I loved dive in. I wasn't in
I lay there with the light on,
gradually calming down. I was Ronnie Clarke, and Sheila was waiting for me back
at Essendon, and Peter, and Diana. It was all right. Presently I stirred and
looked at the wristwatch on the table by my side. It was only
Presently I got out of bed, put on
Johnnie Pascoe's dressing-gown and bedroom slippers, and pulled the bedclothes up
to the pillow to keep the bed warm. I felt in the pockets of the dressing-gown
and found his packet of cigarettes and his box of matches. I put a cigarette
into my mouth and took the matchbox from the other pocket. There was only one
match left in it. I struck that with fingers that were still clumsy and
trembling, and the head broke off short.
There was another box on the
mantelpiece in the sitting-room, that I had used to light the fire. I went
through, and stood rooted in the doorway, sick with horror. The fire had been
made up and was glowing red, but all the lights were out. And there, in the
firelight, in the white boiler suit that she had worn the day she died, curled
up in the armchair and asleep, was Brenda Marshall.
CHAPTER SIX
I suppose I made some exclamation,
made some noise, because the girl in the armchair stirred and sat up. The white
boiler suit melted away and resolved itself into a white starched dress, a sister's
dress. The short, curly, reddish brown hair that I had expected wasn't there
when she sat up into the firelight; this girl had darkish, wavy hair, shingled
at the back. The face was different, too; vaguely familiar, but quite
different. It wasn't Brenda Marshall at all, and I had been a fool.
She brushed the hair back from her
face, and stood up. 'I'm sorry,' she said. 'I must have dropped asleep. Are you
Captain Clarke?'
I nodded. And then I hesitated
while I gathered my wits together and composed myself. 'You must be the nurse.'
'I'm Sister Dawson,' she replied.
T)r Turnbull brought me down here and said it would be all right if I slept
here. I hope we didn't wake you when we came in?'
I shook my head. 'I never heard
you. I thought you were going to sleep in the other room.'
She nodded. 'We brought down his
sleeping bag.' She indicated it, draped over a chair. 'It's a bit messy in
there, though, and very cold. I thought I'd get a better night if I slept in
the chair here, by the fire. I hope you don't mind.'
'/ don't mind,' I said. 'I'm only
sorry if I woke you up. I didn't know you were here. I just came in for a
match.' I reached out and took the box from the mantelpiece and lit my
cigarette. It helped to calm my nerves. And then I recalled my manners and
offered her the packet from the pocket of the dressing-gown. 'I'm so sorry.
Will you have a cigarette?'
'Thanks.' She took one, and I lit
it for her. She glanced at her wristwatch. 'Half past twelve,' she said. 'I
thought you were sleeping through.'
'I know,' I said. 'I woke up.'
She frowned, evidently puzzled.
'What time are we taking off?'
'If the weather's at all possible
I'd like to get into the air soon after six, and be down at the
She thought for a moment. 'No - it
wasn't raining then. It had been raining very hard before.'
'Was there a moon?'
She shook her head. 'It was quite
dark.'
'Well, it's definitely better now.
It's nothing like the forecast, of course, but they don't get any actuals down
here from the south-west.' This woman had been an air hostess, so I hadn't got
to explain things to her. 'If it stays like this we shall be taking off soon
after six. Did Dr Turnbull explain about the trip to you?'
"Yes, sir. He told me that
there'd be no cabin door, and we'd have to try and jump out on the strip while
you held her against the wind.'
'Is that all right with you?'
'Yes, sir.'
I glanced at her. "You can't
wear those clothes.'
'He gave me a ski suit and ski
boots.' She indicated them in a corner. 'I'll change into those for the flight.
But I can't help him at an operation in those. I'll take this dress with me in
a bundle. I've got a theatre gown with me.'
They seemed to have got their side
of it all buttoned up. 'Okay,' I said. 'You'd better try and get a bit more
sleep. I'm sorry I woke you up.'
She hesitated, and then said, 'I
thought you were sleeping through, sir, and I'd have to wake you.'
'I thought I would,' I said. 'But I
woke up.'
She frowned, evidently puzzled. 'Dr
Turnbull told me that you were very tired, and you'd taken a Nembutal.'
'I did,' I told her. 'But it didn't
work.'
'How much did you take?' she asked.
'Just one,' I said.
'A grain and a half, or
three-quarters?'
'A grain and a half.'
She frowned again. 'Do you take it
very often?'
I shook my head. 'I don't suppose I
take more than three or four a year. But they're useful to have with you at a
time like this.'
'I can't understand it,' she said.
'With a grain and a half of Nembutal you should be sleeping like a log.'
'I had a bad dream,' I told her.
She nodded. 'Would you go to sleep
if you went back to bed again?'
‘I’ll be all right,' I said.
She stood in thought. 'I'd better
get you something. I saw some milk in the kitchen. Would you take a cup of hot
cocoa if I can find anything like that?'
'Don't bother.' She disregarded
that, and went down the short corridor into the kitchen, very much the nurse. I
heard cupboard doors opening and shutting. 'There's Ovaltine here,' she said.
'You'd better have a cup of that. I'll warm up some of this milk.'
It seemed that I was to have little
say in the matter. A hot drink might not be a bad thing, anyway, if it brought
me a few hours' more sleep, for I was still all on edge and the coming flight
would be a difficult one. The Auster was a very little aeroplane to fly at
night with a full load in bad weather, especially when practically all one side
of the cabin was removed. I would have to fly it manually on instruments, of
course, over bad country with no lights or navigation aids. I didn't want to
start off all tensed up as I was then. Her cup of hot Ovaltine might quite well
be the shot.
I threw some more wood on the fire
and sat down before it. Presently she came back with a tray of two cups of the
hot drink and a few biscuits on a plate. I took one cup and she took the other,
and we sat together before the fire waiting for the drink to cool a bit.
T)r Turnbull said that you'd been a
hostess,' I remarked. ‘With Captain Pascoe.'
She nodded. 'I was in his crew for
about ten months, in AusCan. You know him too, don't you?'
'He taught me to fly,' I told her,
'back in the dark ages, in
'Is that why you came over here?'
I nodded. 'How did you come to be
in AusCan?'
'I was trained at the
I smiled. 'Get fed up with it?
'Well - yes. You get it out of your
system after a time —
just serving meals and drinks. I'm back at the Queen Alexandra now.'
You heard about this, and came
over?'
'It was on the wireless,' she said.
'I thought I'd come over to see him in hospital. I
never dreamed there'd be this difficulty
in getting him out. I only heard about it when I got to Launceston.'
"You're Australian, I
suppose?' I asked.
She nodded. 'I was brought up in
'I suppose so,' I said. 'I
emigrated out here when I got married, in 1946.1 don't suppose I'll ever live
anywhere else, now. One gets dug in.'
We sat sipping our hot drinks.
Presently she said, 'There was a woman in the hotel called Mrs Forbes. Did you
meet her?'
'She came here for a few minutes
just before I went to bed,' I replied. 'She seemed rather a queer type.'
'I think she's mental,' the nurse
remarked.
I laughed. 'Why do you say that?'
'She was telling everybody that she
was his daughter,' she said, a little hotly. 'Well, that's just not true. On
top of that she was telling everybody not to risk their lives by flying in to
help Captain Pascoe.'
'She came to tell me that,' I said.
'But she's his daughter all right. At least, I think she is.'
She stared at me. 'How can that
be?' And then she said, 'At least...' She stopped.
'He was married a long time ago,' I
said. 'In the last year of the First War. His wife was an actress and she left
him and went over to
'That's right,' she said slowly.
'There was.'
'There's a photograph here,' I
remarked. I put my cup down and got up, and showed her the photograph of
Johnnie and Judy in front of the rotary-engined fighter. 'I think that was his
wife.'
She glanced over her shoulder at
it, but she did not get up; she had evidently seen it before. 'That's right,'
she said. 'It didn't last for long.' There was a pause, and then she said, 'He
was so terribly young.'
I went back to my chair. 'I don't
suppose he was much more than twenty-one.'
She nodded. 'Anyway,' she remarked
with some satisfaction, 'Dr Turnbull tore her off a strip all right, in front
of everyone.'
I glanced at her. 'The police
sergeant told me something about that, over the telephone. Were you there?'
She nodded, smiling. 'I'd only just
arrived; I landed straight into it. I couldn't quite make out what it was all
about, at first. Dr Turnbull seemed to be in the minority, so I went in with
him.'
'The others were all saying that it
was too dangerous?'
'That's right. The woman didn't
know what she was talking about. She seemed to be just spiteful.'
I took a drink from my cup. 'I'm
changing my opinion of Dr Turnbull,' I said presently. 'I didn't think a lot of
him at first. But I'll say this for him. He's got any amount of guts.'
'I think he's very good,' she said
slowly. 'We were talking about the operation, what he's got to do. I've never
seen him operate, of course, but I think he'd be very steady ...' She glanced
up at me. 'I've seen so many young house surgeons,' she said. 'And of course,
we talk about them in the sisters' home. They seem to get into their stride
after they've done a few major operations successfully - if they're the right
sort.'
'Is he the right sort?' I asked.
'I should think he is. I'd rather
see him operate on Captain Pascoe than that Dr Parkinson.'
I finished my drink, and put the
cup down. 'Well, I'm glad to hear you say that,' I said. 'All we've got to do
now is to keep our fingers crossed and hope that I can put you out upon the
airstrip.' I crossed to the window and looked at the weather again. 'It's
getting finer all the time. Thank God for that.' I turned back from the window.
'I think I'll go back to bed now, and see if I can get a bit more sleep.'
'Sit down there for a minute while
I make your bed,' she said.
'Oh - that'll be all right,' I
objected.
She went to the door. 'Sit down
there. You'll sleep better if I make it.' She was very much the nurse, and I
had no option but to obey her. I sat down again in the warm glow of the fire;
in the next room I heard her slamming the pillows about, and the rustle of
sheets and bedclothes. Once she appeared in the doorway with a rubber hot water
bag in her hand. 'This was hanging behind the door,' she said. 'Shall I fill it
for you?'
'No, thanks,' I said. 'I never use
one.'
'Are your feet warm?'
I smiled. 'Quite.'
She nodded. 'All right. I shan't be
a minute now.' She went back into the bedroom. She was an effective girl, I
thought, and probably efficient at her job. She was evidently well impressed
with the young doctor, as he was with her, and it occurred to me how very
fortunate we were that she had happened to turn up at the right moment. Without
a good surgical nurse at his side Dr Turnbull might well have been fumbling and
immature, but with this girl beside him as he operated Johnnie Pascoe's chances
were a great deal better. A first-class nurse in the theatre, I thought, could
almost certainly improve a surgeon's skill by taking all irrelevant
responsibilities off his mind. I felt that the surgical side of this thing now
was probably as good as we could hope to get it. It only remained for me to get
them to the
The girl came back into the room.
'All ready for you, sir,' she said.
I got up and went into the bedroom,
and she followed me. The bed was very white and clean and neat, just like a
hospital bed, no wrinkle on the folded sheets or on the pillows. It was, in
fact, just like being in a hospital because the nurse was waiting there to tuck
me up. She took Johnnie Pascoe's dressing-gown as I slipped out of it and hung
it up behind the door, folded his bedclothes over me and tucked them in
professionally as I lay in his bed. Then she stood back. 'All right now?' she
asked.
'Quite all right,' I said meekly.
'Thank you very much.'
She picked up his alarm clock.
'I'll take this with me into the next room. Don't bother about waking up — just let yourself sleep through. I'll
come and call you when it's time to get up.'
She turned out the light and went
out of his room, closing the door softly behind her.
I lay in the darkness, warm and
very comfortable, thanks to this efficient girl. The hot drink was still warm
inside me and my mind was at ease. The weather was improving and conditions for
flying when I woke again would probably be a great deal better than I had
anticipated. The wind about the house was less than it had been, and now there
was a gleam or two of moonlight in the room through chinks in the curtains.
There was a break coming in the weather, and it might well be sunny at dawn for
a few hours. We had a good young surgeon and a first-class nurse, and
everything was going to be all right.
I lay drifting into sleep, thinking
about Johnnie Pascoe whose pyjamas I was wearing and about this nurse who had
worked in the same aircrew for ten months in AusCan. The old Canadian senior
pilot of the line, due for retirement before long, and the Australian nursing
sister who had joined his crew as senior air hostess. Ten months together in a
DC6b, flying the Pacific route —
She came to me in the
Superintendent's office at
She came in while I was talking to
Dick Scott, my new flight engineer. He had been on the southern route before
for a time, and as his parents had a property near Cootamundra in
'Miss Dawson, isn't it?' I said.
"Yes, sir. Peggy Dawson.'
I shook hands with her. There was
something vaguely familiar about her, and I decided that I must have seen her
at
«Yes, sir.'
'Why do you want to get on to the
southern route?'
'It's nearer to my home,' she said.
'I live in
That was reasonable ; once in two
months a reserve hostess came on and every hostess got a week's leave in
‘Yes, sir.'
"You aren't afraid of being
based at Nandi? There's nothing much to do there.'
'I don't mind
'I don't want anyone who's going to
get fed up with it after a month or two,' I told her. 'If you come upon the
southern route you'd have to be prepared to stick it for a year.'
'I know that,' she said.
'And you're quite happy about it?'
‘Yes, sir.'
She knew the conditions as well as
I did, and she seemed to be a responsible person. 'I understand you're a
qualified nursing sister,' I said.
She nodded. 'I was trained at the
'Have you worked anywhere else?'
She shook her head. 'I left there
to come to AusCan.'
I had a good report of her from the
chief hostess, Mrs Deakin, or I wouldn't have been interviewing her.
"You've been a junior hostess with Captain Forrest, haven't you?'
‘Yes.'
'How long?'
'Four months. Ever since I joined
the company.’
I nodded. 'Well, if you come with
me you'll get up-graded and get a bit more money. I'll be taking you as senior
hostess. Think you can manage it?'
'I'm sure I can, sir.'
'All right, you're in. This is Mr
Scott.'
He raised his head. She smiled. 'Mr
Scott and I know each Other already.'
She knew Pat Petersen, who was to
be my first officer, too, because he had been in Forrest's crew with her. It
looked as if I was getting a well-knit crew together, all of whom were anxious
to come on to the southern route with me. I talked to Miss Dawson a little
longer and asked if she had any suggestions for a junior hostess. She mentioned
an Australian girl from Ballarat, a Mollie Hamilton, who had two years' hostess
experience with Australian Continental Airways, had been with us for about a
month, and wanted to get on to the southern route. I saw her that afternoon and
took her on, and I took Sam Prescott as my navigator. I had no special views
about the wireless operator, and took a lad from
I had flown the southern route when
AusCan opened it some years before; we had been flying early versions of the
DC6b in those days and had had to land at
Everything seemed normal in the
cabin. The passengers were finishing the light meal that we serve after an
evening take-off; the girls had taken most of the trays away and were starting
to hand out the pillows and the rugs. It was a busy period for them, and I
wanted to see how they handled it We had tourist passengers in the front part
of the cabin, some of them Indians going to Fiji, and first class at the rear.
I went slowly down the aisle, stopping to chat with a Sikh family, and with a
nervous mother with a baby. In the galley everything was reasonably clean
considering the dirty tray that were still coming in. In the first-class cabin
we had a couple of Australian statesmen, a chap from the World Bank, and a
Swedish pianist. I walked to the rear of the cabin stopping now and then to
talk to somebody, looked into the toilets and the washrooms, and went back to
the galley. I said to my senior hostess, 'Everything all right here?'
'I think so, sir. We've got four
sleeping berths to pull down. I'll do those in a minute.'
'Would you like Mr Scott to give
you a hand with those?' They were high up, and a heavy job for a girl.
She shook her head. 'We can manage
them.'
'All right.' I wondered where I had
seen her before. 'Get the lights out when you've got them all settled down, and
call the flight deck when they're out. After that, don't switch them on again
without permission from the flight deck."
‘Very good, sir.'
'I like one of you to be awake at
night. Take it in turns to sleep.'
I went back to my seat at the
controls on the flight deck. Everything was normal, and I sent Pat Petersen off
to get some sleep, telling him that I would hand over to him at two in the
morning,
I stayed on watch till
'Service!' I laughed. 'I've never
had that done for me before.'
She said seriously, "Would you
like a cup of coffee now before you go to sleep?'
'I don't think so.'
'What time will you be getting up?'
"We'll be coming up to
She nodded. 'I'll bring you a cup
of coffee and a biscuit.' I saw her go forward and speak to Sam Prescott.
I took off my jacket, loosened my
collar and tie, and lay down with my head on the clean pillow that she had
provided for me, with a rug pulled over my body. As I lay composing myself for
sleep, I wondered if this girl was going to be a nuisance. In thirty years of
airline flying the hostess who does everything for an unmarried captain and
nothing for the passengers was no novelty to me, though in recent years Mrs
Deakin had weeded most of them out and it was some time since I had been
plagued by one of those. I smiled as I lay before sleep; I was probably
flattering myself, for I was fifty-nine and due to retire next year.
I slept a little, and then lay
resting in the darkness till Sam Prescott came to tell me
In the faint blue night-lights everything
was quiet and normal. One or two passengers were reading with their shaded
lights, but most were sleeping. I walked quietly down the aisle to the galley,
where light showed behind the curtain. The senior hostess was there with a cup.
'I was just going to bring you a cup of coffee, sir,' she said.
'Thanks. I'll have it here.' I
stood cup in hand. 'Everything all right?'
'The baby in No 7 started crying
about an hour ago,' she said. 'We warmed up some milk food and gave it a
bottle. It's quiet now.'
'Many people wake up?'
'Four or five, immediately around,'
she said. 'It didn't cry for long.'
I nodded. 'Miss Hamilton asleep?'
'I was letting her sleep through
till we get busy in the morning,' she said.
"You don't want a spell
yourself?'
She shook her head. 'I'm accustomed
to night duty.'
I stood drinking my coffee,
nibbling a biscuit. 'We've got about another five hours to go,' I said. '
'I gave out the health and
immigration cards before they went to sleep,' she said. ‘I’ll start collecting
them as soon as they wake up.'
'Customs declaration?'
‘Yes, they've got that, too.'
"Let Mr Prescott have them an
hour before landing.'
'Just the
'No — just the
I put down my cup, glanced into the
first class, and went back to the flight deck. So far, the cabin work was going
pretty smoothly, anyway.
We landed in from the sea upon the
long runway amongst the fields of sugar cane in the warm morning light, and
came to rest before the airport buildings. The gangway was wheeled up, the port
officials came on board and cleared us, and the ground hostess took charge of
the passengers and took them up to the hotel for breakfast. We left the machine
refuelling in the sun and walked to the AusCan office where Jim Hanson was
waiting with his crew to take over from us, and commenced the handing over.
Half an hour later we were walking up towards the AusCan hostel with a Fijian
boy wheeling our luggage behind us on a hand truck.
The AusCan hostel at
Here we settled down to spend our
lives for the next year or so. The schedule that we had to fly was quite a
simple one, though liable to be disturbed from time to time when aircraft were
delayed. In the normal way we relieved the crew of the machine coming in from
Not a lot of work for people on our
scale of salary, perhaps, but quite enough if we were to keep on the top line.
One of our duties on the ground was to take plenty of exercise; hard tennis
courts were provided and considerable pressure was exerted on the crews to use them,
largely through the captains. In a hot and humid place like
The crews play a lot of water polo,
but I had not played myself while I was on that northern route, and it was
nearly five years since I had had a game. I was still very fit, but age does
tell and I didn't take that up against the younger men. I was still a good
diver, however, and won a diving competition at the pool in the second week we
were at Nandi, and I began to have a lot of fun around the reefs with an
aqualung outfit that I had bought in the
The trouble that I had anticipated
with my senior hostess didn't develop. The cabin work went smoothly and well,
and though I still got a clean pillow in the bunk when I lay down and still had
my desire for a cup of coffee anticipated, I found that I was getting no more
attention than the tourist passengers, which is as I wanted it to be. She did
her work and kept her place, and on the ground I didn't see a lot of her. It
was not till we had been operating for about three weeks that I had any real
conversation with her.
It was by the pool at the airport
club at Nandi. I had been in the pool, and had come out and dried myself
standing in the sun. Most of the brightly coloured metal tables and chairs
beneath the beach umbrellas were occupied, but she was sitting alone at one,
reading a novel. I took my lighter and my pack of cigarettes, and towel in hand
I walked over to her. 'Mind if I join you?'
She laid down her book. 'Not a bit.
I've been admiring your bathing shorts,' she said.
I laughed. 'They are a bit
gaudy. I like them.'
She laughed with me. 'I think
they're wonderful. Wherever did you get them?'
"You can buy them at
'I wouldn't dare,' she said. 'I'm
not sure that I know where
'The main street is
'I don't know
I offered her a cigarette, and lit
it for her. 'Is this your first time away from
She shook her head. 'I went to
'Like it?'
She nodded. 'It was marvellous. I'd
have liked to have stayed there and worked, but it wasn't possible.'
'Why not?'
'My grandmother was getting very
old,' she said. 'It wouldn't have been fair.'
'Is she your only relation?'
'She was,' she replied. 'She died
about two years ago, soon after I got back from
'Too bad,' I said. T)id that mean a
lot to you?'
She shook her head. 'I don't
remember them at all.'
"You live in
She nodded. 'In
'That's a good idea,' I said
slowly. You've always got somewhere to go back to, with your own things and
people who know you.'
She glanced at me curiously. 'Where
do you live?'
I laughed. 'Where I work. Here.'
'Haven't you got a flat anywhere?'
I shook my head. 'I seem to move
around too much. I've got stuff stuck away in stores in
You just live in clubs and airport
hostels?'
'That's right. I'll be retiring in
about a year, and then I'm going to have a house. A real house, for the first
time in my life.'
She smiled. 'Where's that going to
be?'
'In
'Are you a Tasmanian?'
'No,' I said. 'I was born a
Canadian, in
'You wouldn't want to go back there
to live?'
I shook my head. 'I haven't lived
there since I left home for the First World War. I wouldn't want to go back
there. It's either going to be somewhere near
She wrinkled her brows in thought.
'In the north-west somewhere, isn't it?'
'That's right.'
'It's a very little place,
isn't it?'
I laughed. 'I like little places.
I've had my fill of seeing the great world.'
There was a pause then, while we
sat watching the people in the pool. I asked her if she would like a drink and
she elected for a Coke, so I went and fetched a couple from the bar. When we
were settled down again, she asked me, 'Did you ever work in
I nodded. 'I was in
'Did you love it?'
'It was all right,' I said. 'Better
than
'Airline flying?'
'Transport Command, mostly.
Ferrying Liberators over the
"You've been everywhere,' she
said.
I smiled. 'I've never been to
We sat in silence for a time. 'I
did love
'Too many people,' I remarked.
T know. But it's -
She was very Australian in her
outlook ; at any moment I expected to hear her speak of going Home to the Old
Country. 'There's a good bit of
'I want to go to
'There's not much to see there,' I
observed. 'It's not a very big place. It's worth seeing, though.'
"You go there in the little
aeroplanes, don't you?
I nodded. "You can drive along
the coast, if you like. It takes all day. Some of the buses are quite good. But
Fiji Airways might give you a free pass if they've not got a full load. They
gave me one, once.'
She smiled. 'You're a captain.'
I laughed. 'AH the same, they made
me pay coming back.'
Presently she said, 'I'm very
ignorant. Is
I glanced at her. 'It's a British
colony. Most of the Government officials here are English. A few New
Zealanders, but mostly English. It's a very English place.'
'I'd like to see more of it,' she
said. 'It's silly to be in a country and see nothing but the aerodrome.'
'Well,' I said, 'you've got plenty
of time.'
'I haven't,' she retorted. 'You make
us play tennis all the time.'
I laughed. 'I'll accept a
certificate from the Governor that you played four sets a day in
A few days later Charlie Lemaitre
was a passenger with us from
When we got to Nandi I took time
off to attend to Mr and Mrs Lemaitre myself for a few minutes; they were going
on to
I thought quickly. This was in the
nature of a Royal Command, and AusCan would probably want me to be there to
show the flag. I could charge up the expenses. I didn't know how Bill Myers
would feel about expenses for the hostess, but it was not an unreasonable
invitation from the Minister's wife, and one which it would be awkward to
refuse. The hostess wasn't present so I couldn't bring her into it; I would
have to decide this for her, and she would do what she was told. 'That's really
very kind of you,' I said. 'I should like to be there very much. You'd like me
to bring Miss Dawson ?'
'Oh yes,' she said. 'She told me
that she'd never been to
I hoped that Bill Myers would
consider this an adequate reason for charging up their expenses. 'I'm sure
she'd like to come,' I said. 'It's very kind of you to think of her.'
'Oh no,' she said. 'It will be so
nice to have you there, all among these stuffy English people. Charlie had to
give a party at
This was another reason that I
could put up to Bill Myers, but it didn't seem much better than the first. I
thanked them both and saw them off upon the little aeroplane for Suva, and then
walked up to my room in the hostel and lay down and slept till lunch, as I
usually did on Friday morning after the night flight.
After lunch I went down to our
office in the airport buildings and rang up our manager, Stanley McEwen, who
was in our office at
'I see ...' There was a pause. 'Did
she ask for her by name?'
'That's right, Miss Dawson. She
asked the two of us.'
There was another pause. 'Was
Charlie Lemaitre in on this?' he asked.
'Yes. He was with her at the time.'
'All right,' he said. 'You'd better
bring her down.'
'Be all right to charge up her
expenses?'
'I suppose so,' he said
reluctantly. 'Keep them down as much as possible, or I'll have Billy Myers in a
screaming fit. You'd better both come and spend the night with me.'
'Two nights,' I suggested. 'Give us
time to do some shopping.'
'All right,' he said. 'I'll expect
you both on Sunday.'
I had laid on tennis that afternoon
at
She stared at me. 'Wants me to go?'
'That's right. She asked me to go
down and bring you, too. I rang Mr McEwen and we'll be staying in his house.
We'll be going down on Sunday.'
She asked, 'What sort of a party is
it? It wouldn't be long dress?'
I hadn't really thought about it.
'I suppose it will,' I said. 'The Governor will probably be there.'
'But I've got nothing to wear!'
I smiled. 'That's your problem,' I
said equably. 'All I've contracted to do is to deliver you to the party. The
company are paying your expenses.'
'Are the company paying for a dress
for me?'
'I don't suppose so for a moment,'
I replied. 'You'd better try that one on
That was on Friday night, and she
went into an earnest huddle with the other hostesses that night. Lautoka, the
second city of
It was April, and most of the hot
humidity of the monsoon season was behind us. When the sun shone it was really
hot, of course, but there was much cloud to keep it cool, and an occasional
brief shower of rain. I had been in
It was many years since I had been
anywhere with a girl, and I was awkward and constrained. I had put away all
thoughts of marriage when I went to
'Looks to me as if he's got something,'
I remarked, and felt an awful stiff. I should have been able to enter into her
mood.
The system of land tenure in
I was getting an old man, of
course, and she was young. I don't think I had ever realized till then just how
old I was. It never intruded itself into my normal life, for I could still do
practically all the things that most young men can do, and do some of them a
good deal better. I had never thought of myself as an old man when I was
dealing with young men; I was just more experienced than they were, less likely
to get into a flap in an emergency. My reaction times were still practically as
good as theirs. Water polo was the only thing that I had given up, and I
glossed that over in my mind, pretending I had never been much interested in
it. It needed a day out with a young woman to drive home the inescapable fact
that I was getting an old man.
I said something of the sort to her
when we stopped for lunch at the small hotel in the little town of
She smiled. 'Much more interested
in that than in little boys with a grin on their faces and hook-worms in their
tummies.'
I nodded. 'Getting an old man.'
She shook her head. 'I won't have
that.'
'I'm fifty-nine,' I said. 'I've got
to come off airline work next year.'
'Fifty-nine isn't old,' she said.
'Not in these days, for a man like you. I've never met anyone who played a
harder game of tennis. You wear us all out.'
‘You can keep the physical side in
order if you're careful,' I remarked. 'I'm not so sure about the mental side.
One gets to think like an old man, and there doesn't seem to be a great deal
you can do about it. One's interests change.' I glanced at her, smiling. ‘You
should have made this trip with someone like Sam Wolfe.'
She laughed. 'When I want a bit of
slap and tickle I'll arrange it for myself, thank you. I'm having a marvellous
time just like we are.'
'Well, have another drink. The mind
of an old man moves on a higher plane. An alcoholic one.'
'If I have another I'll probably go
to sleep this afternoon.'
'That's fine,' I said. "You
won't see me.'
We lunched and drove on in the hot
afternoon, and I think I may perhaps have dozed in the car as perhaps she did,
because we passed the big beach hotel at Korolevu without seeing it. When I
came back to earth we had passed from the sugar cane country into the coconut
country where the higher rainfall brings the lusher type of tropical scene. We
passed by coral beaches white on the border of a brilliantly blue sea where the
surf thunders on the reef some way out. There were dazzling little bays between
the promontories where the coconut trees hang slanting forward over the water
so that the nuts drop into the sea. She said once, 'It's simply marvellous!'
I nodded. '
'Fancy having a beach party at a
place like that, and swimming in the lagoon!'
'Sharks,' I said.
'Pat Petersen says the sharks don't
come inside the reef.'
I laughed. 'Famous last words.' As
a matter of fact, I had good reason to say that, because I had met one a few
days previously when I had been spear-fishing with Jim Hanson. I had been fifteen
or twenty feet down beside the coral gardens of the reef, and it had come at me
from curiosity, I think; a great shadowy thing seven or eight feet long in the
pale green water. I poked it on the nose with the spear gun and it went away,
and I got out on to the reef damn quick. Jim Hanson was still down and I was
terrified for him, not knowing what to do, and I didn't recover until we were
in the boat. Jim never saw it at all.
I told her about this incident as
we drove on down the coast, and she was very much concerned. 'You oughtn't to
go taking risks like that,' she said. 'It's not worth it.'
I smiled. 'Keeps you young.'
'It doesn't if you get taken by a
shark.'
'I don't intend to be,' I said.
'But you might be. Or Captain
Hanson might have been. It's frightfully dangerous.'
'It's a lot of fun.'
'If you won't think of yourself,
you might think of your relations.'
'I haven't got any,' I said. 'I've
got a sister in
'Don't you write to her?'
I shook my head. 'I send her a
Christmas card, or a short letter then. I've got some cousins, but I never
write to them.'
'Well, Captain Hanson's got a wife
and family.'
I laughed. 'That's a matter that's
strictly personal between him and the shark.'
We stopped at the hotel at Ndeumba
for a cup of tea, and walked down through the garden to the beach. The reef
there is a long way out, and the matter of the sharks was still upon her mind,
because she asked if there were any there. 'I wouldn't know,' I said. 'It's
like the Australian coast, I think. It's not a very good thing to go swimming
out to sea.'
She nodded. 'One never does at
home, of course. Only in the Bay.'
We drove on to
The talk that night, of course, was
all of AusCan and the running of the line, and I think we got a lot of useful
work done. It's liable to be that way when one can get out of the surroundings
of the immediate job; one can take a more detached view of the problems. I said
something of the sort to
He grinned. 'Put that to Billy
Myers when he comes out next, and see if he'll stand the expenses. I know what
the answer will be.'
'It's a good idea, all the same.
Anyway, put it to him about leaving
He nodded. 'I heard about that
woman. It's a good idea...'
His house is nearly a thousand feet
up, and much cooler than the AusCan hostel at Nandi. We slept very well indeed,
and I got up thinking of
I got a taxi in the middle of the
morning and drove the hostess down to the market in the town. Monday is a slack
day and half the stalls were vacant, and perhaps it was a better day for her to
see it than in the great bustle of a more busy time. She bought a couple of
shell necklaces and bracelets from a Fijian woman, whose husband offered us a
drink of kava from a coconut shell dipped in a tin basin. We took it for
politeness and moved on, looking at the vegetables and the fish. 'Tastes like
toothpaste,' she said.
'That's paying it a compliment.'
"We found our way slowly
through the little town to the Grand Pacific Hotel, and had lunch there.
Sitting over coffee after lunch I asked her, 'What would you like to do this
afternoon?'
'I've got to iron my frock some
time,' she said. 'Have you got anything else you want to do down here?'
I shook my head. 'You've not seen
much of
'Is there much more to sec?'
I thought for a minute. 'There's
the Botanical Gardens, and the Museum.'
She laughed. 'I'm not going to wear
myself out before this evening. I think we'd be more comfortable back in Mr
McEwen's house, sitting in a long chair looking at the view.'
"You can't do that all
afternoon.'
'I can. If you say I've got to play
tennis, I'll hit you with something.'
I smiled. 'He hasn't got a court.
You can play six sets tomorrow to make up for it.'
'I know what you can do this
afternoon,' she said.
«What's that?'
'Write a letter to your sister in
I stared at her. 'Why on earth
should I do that?'
Tell her what you were telling me
this morning about Buxton.' She lit another cigarette. 'I think you're going to
find it lonely when you retire to a little place like that,' she said. 'After
all this. It wouldn't be a bad thing to keep in touch with what people you've
got.'
I got up. 'Wait there,' I said.
'I'll just see the porter and see if he can whistle up a taxi.' I moved away
from the lobby because I didn't want to carry on that conversation. I had been
in airline flying of one sort or another for twenty-seven years. For
twenty-seven years I had moved about the world, living in hotels and airport hostels
and in clubs. For twenty-seven years I had had men of my own sort to talk to
and to do things with in all my working and my leisure hours. I was tired of it
now, and wanting a house of my own, a settled base where I could hang up all my
photographs and souvenirs, have all my toys out of the boxes in the stores of
London and of Montreal and of Vancouver, and arrange them all around me. I had
wanted that almost more than anything, but deep in my subconscious I had known
it would be lonely. I had refused to admit that to myself, refused to face the
stark fact that lonely it was going to be, hellishly lonely, utterly divorced
from what had been my working life. And now this girl had put her finger
straight on to the weak point of my plan. I wasn't very pleased with her for
doing it.
I turned the conversation as we got
into the car and we talked about the Indians in
It was only just a momentary flash,
a movement of the hand or of the head that put the idea into my mind, and then
it was gone. She was nothing like Brenda Marshall really. She was quite
different, in hair, face, figure - everything. She was Peggy Dawson, senior
hostess in my aircrew. It must have been the wine, and I was tired, too;
worried about Buxton, possibly, and loneliness. Loneliness, and the wine; that
added up to Brenda Marshall, and it always had done so, for twenty-seven years.
I sat there in a morbid reverie, far away from
From time to time, when my
companion was going well and I had my next remark all ready to bring out as
soon as she had finished speaking, I stole a glance at Peggy Dawson. I saw no
resemblance again to Brenda Marshall. The hostess was what she was, a pleasant,
competent Australian girl with quite a marked sense of duty and responsibility.
She dressed tidily enough but she wasn't particularly glamorous; even in these
surroundings I felt that I could sense the nursing sister in an evening dress.
She was different from the English wives of the colonial officials at the table
; she was trying hard, but she had no common background with the other women,
none of the social experience that was their stock-in-trade. She was from a
different world, but Brenda Marshall could have held her place in this colonial
society with no effort at all.
The dinner party came to an end at
about ten-thirty, for we had started early and there had only been one short
speech by Charlie Lemaitre and a shorter reply by the Governor. We got up from
the table and strolled about in little groups upon the moonlit lawn until the
Governor and Lady Norman said goodbye, and then we all started to go, too. The
McEwens drove us back up to their house upon the high ridge above the town and
we had a whisky as a nightcap looking out over their view, and then we went to
bed. We were to go back to Nandi on the first plane of Fiji Airways in the
morning, to take the Tuesday night machine to
I stood at my bedroom window for a
time before undressing, looking out over the mountains. I was still a little
upset at the reminder of Brenda Marshall that this girl had given me, and that
was unreasonable because they were so different. I was unduly sensitive, of
course. Many women between the age of twenty-five and thirty must have similar
mannerisms; with all the women in the world it would be queer if they had not.
At certain ages they would move their hands or turn their heads a certain way ;
ten years later those attitudes would be forgotten and they would be doing
something different, stemming perhaps from an older style in hairdo or in
dress.
That was all right, but now that
the resemblance was in my mind it would not be put aside. Tenuous and
unsubstantial, there was a definite resemblance to Brenda Marshall. It was
nothing physical, nothing to be photographed and set down as a specimen and
studied. Since my marriage in the First World War I had led rather a solitary
life till Brenda had burst on me for a brief year of glory. In that year for
the first time I had known what it was to have somebody really care about me,
really care whether I lived or died. After it was over I had lived a very
withdrawn life, avoiding contact with women so far as is possible for a man in
my position, something of a recluse. Now, the resemblance that had arisen was a
resemblance of caring for my welfare, a resemblance of caring whether I lived
or died. It was nothing really that I could put my finger on, but after
twenty-seven years it came as a bit of a shock. Quite unsought, without any
conscious effort on my part, it looked as though that fortune was being given
to me again.
I stood looking out over
The odd thing about it all was that
I couldn't feel that this girl, Peggy Dawson, was 'setting her cap at me', as
my grandmother used to say. It didn't seem to be like that, somehow. I have had
that one before, of course, in twenty-seven years of airline flying, and I have
seen it happen many, many times with other officers. They spend time on their
hair and face and eyelashes before coming to the flight deck, and then they
come with bright and tinkling vivacity until I slam them down. They dress, off
duty, rather better than their pay would normally permit; frequently they start
to use scent, and to drink a little more, and to stimulate gay parties. One
cannot blame them if they do what every human being does at one time or
another; one has to grin and bear it and see that their work is done correctly.
I couldn't feel, however, that this was one of those. There were none of the
usual symptoms, and it didn't feel like that.
The truth of it was that she was
just a very decent girl and a good senior hostess, who took it to be one of her
duties to see that her captain was made comfortable as well as her passengers.
I turned from the window, smiling a little; by God, I thought, she'd make a
wife for somebody, some day! I hoped that didn't happen before my time was up
with AusCan. I didn't want the jungly girl doing my room again, putting the wet
soap in my handkerchief drawer and my clean shoes on the floor of the shower to
get filled with water.
We went back to Nandi next morning,
played a little tennis, and took the machine on to
A fortnight later I was standing on
the corner of Beach Walk and Kalakaua in
'I was going back to the hotel,'
she said. 'But now—'
She paused. 'Could you let me have some dollars?'
'Why, certainly,' I said. 'How many
do you want?' In AusCan on the Pacific route everyone was paid on the same
scale, but the Canadians were paid in dollars and the Australians were paid in
pounds, and so had difficulty in buying anything in
'Could you let me have thirty?' she
asked. 'I'll give you the pounds back at the hotel. I want to get a dress.'
I pulled out my wallet and gave her
the money .'Nice dress?'
She took it, smiling. 'It's a
beaut. Would you like to see it before I buy it?'
I smiled with her. 'I was only just
going across to the drug store.' So we turned and walked along the sidewalk
together in the warm sun, till we got to the shop and saw her dress upon the
dummy in the window. She showed it to me. 'That's the one. It's only twenty-two
fifty.'
It was a sort of mottled pastel
blue colour, with trimmings of a rather darker blue. It was too old for her, I
thought; it seemed to me to be a dress for a woman of fifty. She was so pleased
with it that I didn't say so. 'It's very quiet and restrained,' I remarked. 'I
think you'd look very nice in it.'
She nodded. 'I think it's lovely. I
don't like things too bright.' We went together into the shop and she set about
buying it. It would need small alterations which could be done in the back room
by the Japanese girls in a couple of hours, but first a fitting would be
necessary. 'I tell you what,' I said. 'I'll go and get my cigars while you try
it on. Then we'll go and have lunch somewhere and you can pick it up.'
She smiled. 'I'd like that. But I
pay for my own lunch.'
'Toss you for that one,' I said,
and went off for my White Owls. When I came back from the drug store she was
waiting for me. 'Where are we going to lunch?' she asked.
The Edgewater's as good as
anywhere,' I said. It was in our price bracket, too; we were well paid by any
standard except that of the largest
As we sat there smoking she asked
me, 'How did you get on at Buxton?'
'All right,' I told her. 'I think I
shall go there.'
'Will there be enough for you to do
there, though?'
'I think so,' I said slowly. 'I
shan't get fat on it, but there'll be something to do every day even from the
start. And these things snowball, you know. Once you start up in a place like
that, business that you never thought of comes along.'
I started in to tell her all about
it, and she listened attentively. 'Anyway,' she said once, 'it's not as if you
had to work at all, is it? I mean, you'll have your pension.'
I nodded. 'I could get by on that.
But I've got something saved up, of course. Enough for two or three small
aircraft. Enough for a house too, I think. I don't want anything big.'
'What about furniture?' she asked.
'I'll have to get that. But I
shan't need much.'
'Who's going to do for you? Cook
your meals, and all that sort of thing?'
I laughed. 'I haven't got as far as
that yet. I haven't even made up my mind if I'm going there at all. I'm not
afraid of that one, though. I've managed on my own before now, sometimes for
months on end.'
She nodded. 'You'll have to have
somebody. I should think you'd find somebody to come in daily.'
'I should think so.'
We moved to a table on the dining
portion of the terrace and ordered lunch. 'When have you got to make your mind
up about Buxton?' she asked.
'I told them I'd make up my mind
about leasing the hangar by October,' I said. 'They've got to get the farmer
out before I can go into it, and he's got it on a monthly tenancy. And then
there's quite a bit of work to be done before I could put aeroplanes in it. The
roof leaks pretty badly, but they'd do that for me. And then, I suppose I'd
have to do something about a house. The hotel's simply terrible.'
She laughed. 'They usually are.
When would you think of going there?'
'I'll be sixty in February,' I told
her. 'I've got to be out of this by then.'
The waitress brought our lunch.
When she had gone, the hostess remarked, 'I suppose that means there'll be a
switch around of aircrew when you leave us.'
I hadn't thought about it before,
immersed in my own affairs. 'I suppose there will,' I said. 'I know Pat
Petersen would rather be upon the northern route.'
'It's his wife,' she said. 'She
gets prickly heat.'
'I know. When's Mollie Hamilton
getting married?' She had got herself engaged on her last leave to a chap who
worked for Mobilgas at Kingsford Smith.
'They haven't got a date. She'll
stay the year out.'
'Wolfe's got a girl in
She nodded. 'I don't believe I'll
stay on when that happens.'
I glanced at her. 'Getting tired of
it?'
'Not exactly,' she said
thoughtfully. 'It's a lovely life in many ways. I'll never be sorry to have
seen all this, and worked for AusCan. But one sometimes feels it isn't really
important - not like nursing.'
'Would you go back to the
hospital?'
She nodded. 'I think so. Either the
Alexandra or some other hospital.' There was a pause while we ate. 'I think I'd
like to try it in an orthopaedic hospital,' she said. 'Polio children.'
The blue, brilliant swimming pool
lay before us, with the superbly healthy young Americans in and out of it in
the bright sunshine. 'Kind of an antidote to this,' I said.
She smiled. 'Well - yes. I wouldn't
want this to be any other way. But after all, it's work like that that makes
this possible —
getting crooked kids straight.'
'I know what you mean,' I said. I
had never felt it personally, of course, because of the responsibilities. Every
hour that I spent in the air was spent with the emergency routines upon the
threshold of my consciousness. Every change in engine note was a minor shock
that jerked me into maximum alertness to check with instruments and cathode ray
plug indicator exactly what was happening. So many things can happen to a big
four-engined aeroplane, most of which could end up fatally if I fell down upon
the job, that I had never felt the need to shoulder any more responsibilities.
With the hostesses who came to us from hospital work the case was very
different. None of them stayed longer than a year or two; because they were
hand-picked for their qualities of character the hospitals drew them back.
I glanced at her smiling. 'Marriage
doesn't come into your programme?'
She laughed. 'Not yet, anyway.'
"You don't want to leave it
too long,' I remarked. 'Everybody ought to be married.'
'You're a fine one to be talking
like that,' she retorted.
I glanced at her. 'I was married
once.'
'I'm sorry,' she said. 'I didn't
know.'
'Nothing for you to be sorry
about,' I replied. 'I was married in the First World War, very nearly forty
years ago.'
'What happened?' she asked.
'She divorced me,' I told her. 'In
She shook her head.
'Oh well, she was a bit before your
time. But she was quite well known. I had rather a dud job in
'Why did she do that? Or is it a
rude question?'
'Not a bit,' I said. 'She wanted to
marry a band leader in
She wrinkled her brows. 'I don't
understand. Who deserted who?'
I smiled. 'I deserted her, because
I wouldn't go to Holly-wood.'
'But could she get a divorce for
that?'
'She could then, in
"Did you have any children?'
I nodded. 'There was a daughter,
but I never had anything to do with her. We never lived together after she was
born. Her mother took her with her to
'You didn't keep in touch?'
I shook my head. 'I was a bit sore
about the whole thing, and anyway I hadn't any money to go to
She nodded, slowly. 'The girl must
have been grown-up.'
'That's right. It's better to leave
it be when it's like that.'
It was many, many years since I had
talked to anyone about my marriage. In fact, I can only remember telling two
people about it in my life before this girl, Arthur Stuart and Brenda Marshall.
Arthur was killed a year later in Ferry Command taking off in a Liberator from
That lunch set a pattern of many
others. We fell into a habit of strolling out together on our morning in
I came to look forward to these
weekly outings very much indeed; I think she did, too. I never made love to
her; perhaps I was too old. Perhaps I told myself that, like the water polo, I
just didn't want to do it. Instead of that, a very close companionship grew up
between us. I never told her anything about Brenda Marshall; that lay too deep
to talk about, but within a couple of months she must have learned practically
everything else about me; she was easy to talk to. In return, I learned a good
deal about her. Her life had been [ a simple melody of Melbourne and her
grandmother, a melody of school, of visits to the seaside at Portsea and Barwon Heads, of
cheerful comradeship within the hospital, of the great adventure of her trip to
Although we didn't see much of each other at Nandi
apart from the work and the tennis court, which after all was just another sort
of work, she was never much out of my mind. As soon as we had landed and rested
on the Friday morning, I usually found myself planning things that we could do
together the following week in
I tried to take a grip upon myself but it wasn't very
easy. One morning at
October came, and towards the end of the month I went
on a week's leave again. I went to Buxton and put up at the hotel. Nothing had
changed since I was there before, either at the aerodrome or in my own affairs;
my deadline for getting out of AusCan was now January the 31st. It was time
that I made up my mind, with only three months left to go. I made it up. It was
spring in northern
There were houses on the other side
of the town available, but I wanted one upon the road that led to the
aerodrome. I bought the last lot of a row of building sites, the one nearest to
the hangar, and started my negotiations with the local builder. I wanted to buy
three aeroplanes, and tools, and spares, and a reasonable second-hand car; that
meant that there wouldn't be a great deal of money left for a house. It would
have to be a fairly small house of nine or ten squares, but I didn't want a big
one anyway. He had a book of designs of small weatherboard houses, and we went
into a huddle together over that. I picked a house that was within my price
bracket, and started to consider it in detail.
It had a large lounge, a kitchen,
and two bedrooms, one very small and the other not a great deal bigger. Without
admitting to myself why I was making the alterations I decided on meals in the
kitchen as a regular thing, cut the lounge down till it was quite a small room,
and doubled the size of the main bedroom. That made a reasonable house for an elderly
bachelor, I thought, and the builder agreed with me. A weatherboard house goes
up very quickly, and he was confident that he could get it finished in the
time. I had a small camera with me and took a photograph of the amended plan so
that I could think it over back at Nandi, and fixed with him that I would come
on leave again about the end of December, by which time the house would be
nearing completion and we could settle details of the fixtures and the
decoration. Then we got on to the money side, and he told me who to see about a
loan at the State Savings Bank in
I had the afternoon to spare before
the bus left for
I got to
I flew to
Next morning I flew to
She came back at once with an
invitation to me to go up forward. Ronnie made his second pilot get out of his
seat, and I settled down by my old pupil, and the hostess brought me a cup of
coffee. I was glad to see Ronnie again. He had been a commercial pilot
practically all the time since I taught him to fly, first with John Sword and
then with British Airways. In the war he had been in the RAF for a time,
anyway, because I remember flying him home from
'That's right,' I replied shortly.
I hoped it wasn't going to be like going back to Duffington again.
We both had about three hours to
kill at Sydney before he left to take the lunchtime flight back to Melbourne,
before I got on to the AusCan flight to Nandi. He asked me to come up to the pilots'
room at Kingsford Smith and I said I would, and went back to my seat in the
cabin as he started to lose height.
When we landed I went and made my
number with AusCan on the overseas side, and then went back to have another
chat with Ronnie Clarke. I always liked Ronnie, and now he was one of the
oldest friends I had ; moreover, he lived in a
I had a cup of coffee and a plate
of sandwiches with him in the pilots' room, because I had missed my breakfast
on the Viscount through sitting up front talking to him. As we sat together we
glanced over the morning papers. There was a case going on in
'Looks like they'll pin it on her,'
Ronnie said. 'But she'll get a reprieve.'
'I hope she doesn't,' I said
bitterly. 'I hope she bloody well hangs.' It ought to have been me, of course,
and I should have hung, too, for I had gone to
'That seems a bit severe,' he said
mildly.
I threw down the paper, for it had
upset me. When you do a thing like that it's done for ever, and you can't undo
it. You've got to live with your guilt for the rest of your life, even if no
one ever knows. 'People who do that sort of thing to their illegitimate kids
ought to hang,' I said vehemently. 'The kids have a hard enough row to hoe
anyway, without being neglected. Without being just chucked away in the gutter because
their parents don't want them. I hope they throw the whole book at that bloody
girl.' As, of course, they should have thrown the book at me.
He didn't answer that outburst, but
turned the page. I sat gradually collecting myself, recovering from my temper
and my shame. I lit a cigarette and sat staring at the runways outside the
window, at a Skymaster taking off and a Dakota coming in. If Ronnie Clarke knew
about Brenda and myself I had probably told him a bit more, but I didn't really
care. He was a very old friend now, and there are some things that a friend
ought to know.
I left him presently, and went back
to the AusCan office over the road. We landed back at Nandi about
I showed them to her next week,
sitting on the terrace of the Edgewater Hotel with our soft drinks. She was
very interested, as I thought she would be, and examined each of them quite
closely. I showed her the alterations I had made to the design of the house upon
the enlargement of the photographed plan. 'The kitchen's quite a decent size,'
she remarked. 'Twelve feet by fourteen feet - from here to that chair ...' She
measured with her eye. 'That ought to be big enough. The lounge doesn't look to
be much bigger than that, though.'
'Fourteen feet square,' I said.
'It's easy to keep a room that size warm.'
'It's not very big. And then you've
got a great big bedroom.'
'I like a big bedroom,' I said.
'And you haven't got to keep that warm.'
'I suppose not. And one tiny little
spare room.'
'I'm not expecting visitors,' I
said. 'Something had to be cut down, so I cut that.'
She turned to the other
photographs. 'It's a pretty little place, I should think. What do they do
there?'
'They farm,' I told her. 'Mostly
sheep and beef cattle. It's a bit far from a town for dairying. Some of them do
that, but not very many. They used to have a market there at one time, but now
everybody sells at Devonport.'
'What happens if you get ill?' she
asked. 'Is there a doctor there?'
'There isn't yet,' I told her, 'but
they say that there's one coming. A young chap just qualified. He's going to
put up his plate after the New Year. But anyway, I don't intend to get ill.'
She laughed. 'Nobody ever does.'
I offered her a cigarette and lit
it for her. "You've got it all worked out,' she said presently.
"You're going to get the sort of a retirement that will suit you best, I
think. You'd never be really happy now away from flying, would you?'
'I don't think I should,' I
replied. 'I've been at it so long.'
'I know. I wish you weren't
starting in quite such a new place. It's going to be lonely for you, just at
first.'
It was the second time that she had
said that. 'I make friends fairly easily,' I said. 'As a matter of fact, I know
some people in
She glanced at me, surprised. 'Who
do you know in
'A chap called Ronnie Clarke,' I
said. I went on to tell her about Ronnie, how I had taught him to fly back in
England in the dark ages, how I had bumped up against him in the small world of
aviation throughout my life, how I had travelled in the cockpit of his Viscount
with him from Essen-don to Sydney. 'It was good meeting Ronnie again,' I said.
'I always liked him. He's a trout fisherman, too.'
She smiled. 'It must be funny,
flying with somebody you taught to fly yourself.'
'He was born to be a pilot,' I told
her. 'Never wanted to be anything else, right from the start.'
She went on leave soon after I got
back, and when she was away I had time to think things over. She was right in
saying that I should be lonely when I went to Buxton, but not the way she
meant. I wasn't a bit afraid of being lonely for the company of men. I had
lived for so long with men alone that making friends came naturally to me. In
the saloon bar or the golf club I got on all right with people ; I suppose I
was good company, for I was never without friends. I should be lonely all
right, because when I left AusCan a close friendship that I had grown to depend
on would be interrupted, probably for good. I should be lonely, very lonely
indeed, but my loneliness would be for her.
In that week I faced up to what
would happen if I asked her to marry me, with all its implications. I knew it
was a silly thing to do at my age, and I knew that she would probably laugh it
off, and there would be an end of the companionship that meant so much to me.
For that reason I must put it off till I was nearly out of AusCan, in fairness
to both of us. Yet if I didn't do it, this companionship must come to an end
anyway when I retired, and I should be left kicking myself for a fool that I
hadn't reached out to take the love she might have offered me.
It would have been an easy decision
to make for I didn't stand to lose much either way, but for one thing. I didn't
particularly want her as a woman, and I had never made love to her. That was
very serious indeed. It was my age, I thought; I was still fit and virile but I
was just on sixty years old and my interests were probably beginning to wane.
Yet if I married her, a woman in her middle twenties, she had a right to have a
family, and I must marry her with that intention or else leave her alone. The
thought of bringing up an adolescent family when I was nearing the age of eighty
and probably hard-up rocked me a bit, but that was what I had to face if I went
on with this. On the other hand, I was one of the fittest men of sixty in the
world ; they could not fault me at the medical examination I took every three
months. At sixty I still had the physique of an average man of forty. If I went
on like this, at eighty I might still have this physique of a man of sixty,
able to enjoy the vagaries of adolescent children. It would be a new experience
for me and one that I looked forward to in a way; new experiences keep one
young.
By the end of the week I had come
to the conclusion that I must try my luck. If she accepted me, it would be an
unusual marriage, but there was no earthly reason why it shouldn't turn out
very happily for both of us. If she didn't, well that would be too bad, but not
so bad as failing without ever trying. I would do it about Christmas time, I
thought. That would leave a month before I retired from AusCan and left Nandi
for good, and my crew broke up. She might well want time to think about so
unusual a proposal, and that month would give her all the time she needed to
make up her mind before we had to separate. If she refused me, as she probably
would, a month of awkwardness would lie before us, but only a month ; there was
an end to it.
She came back from her leave and we
went on doing things together in
The weather in
Saweni is a very lovely little
land-locked bay halfway between the airport and Lautoka. It used to be a
seaplane station in the Second War but it has been out of use since then; only
a concrete slipway shows now where the Catalinas were pulled up. It has a long,
gently shelving coral beach that runs down into clear, calm water; coconut
trees shade the shore and grow right down on to the beach, so that they lean
out over the sea. There are shelters for men and for women to change in ; at
the weekend it tends to be crowded, but on weekdays there is seldom anybody
there except the aircrews like ourselves.
I used to take them down there in
one of the AusCan station wagons for their disciplinary swim, or else Pat
Petersen would drive them. I had a half-share in a little
We landed in from
It was like a Turkish bath out on
the tarmac. We were all tired but not unreasonably so, because that's what the
tennis is for. The girls had had the worst of it, and they were looking white
and strained. When we had cleared and handed over to the fresh crew in the
office I told them we'd all go down to the beach at
I walked up to the hostel with my
senior hostess. It was hot and steamy, but the frangipani was fragrant in the
rain. 'Nice to be out in the fresh air, anyway,' she said once. 'I'm tired of
vomit.'
'Get a bit of sleep and then a
swim,' I replied. And then I said, 'I tell you what. Would you like to stay
down on the beach this evening if it's fine, and have a supper picnic?'
'Not everyone? Just us?'
'That's right,' I said. 'I'll get
the cook to make us up a supper. Something cold and light. Crayfish salad and
ice cream, and a bottle of hock.'
She smiled. 'That'd be marvellous.
But it'll probably rain.'
'I don't think it will,' I told
her. 'The Met say this one's passing, and we're going to get a spell.'
It was very lovely on the beach
that evening. The clouds had cleared away but for a storm down on the horizon,
and the sun set in a clear sky. The crew went back to Nandi in the station
wagon and we stayed on upon the beach, alone but for another party of four
about a couple of hundred yards away. We sat on the white, coarse sand in our
bathing things luxuriating in the coolness and the beauty of it all, enjoying
the little whispers of warm wind about our bodies after the strain and effort
of the night. I undid our supper and the bottle of chilled hock wrapped in a
wet cloth, and we ate together in the fading light. A coconut fell once with a
plump on to the sand only a few yards away from us, and a little Fijian girl
appeared out of the shadows of the bush, and smiled at us, and carried it away.
Presently I started in to say my
piece. It would have been easier if I had ever held her in my arms, ever kissed
her, but I had never done that. 'I'll be retiring in about a month from now,' I
said. 'There's something that I wanted to say to you before then, but I don't
know if you'll want to hear it.'
'What's that, Johnnie?' she asked
quietly.
‘It was just a crazy idea I had,' I told her. 'We get on so well
together that I'm going to miss you terribly when we have to break it up. I was
wondering if you could ever bring yourself to think of marrying me.'
She was silent.
I reached out and took her hand.
'It's a May and December sort of a proposal, this,' I said. 'People will laugh
at you if you accept it, because I'm an old man. But I do love you very truly,
Peggy, and I think I could give you a very happy life.' I paused. 'I suppose
I'm doing this very badly. I don't do it every tick of the clock. But I would
like you to think it over, if you would.'
She sat silent, motionless. At last
she said, 'How often do you do this, Johnnie? How often have you done it?'
You mean, in my whole life?'
She nodded.
'Twice,' I said. 'Only twice.'
She turned to me. 'Was one of them
Brenda Marshall?’
I stared at her, amazed. 'Who told
you about her?'
"Was it?' she asked gently.
Somebody must have told her, but I
couldn't think who it could be. 'Yes,' I replied. 'Brenda was the last one. But
that was a long time ago.'
'I know,' she said. We sat silent
together on the warm sand in the fading light. At last she said, 'I've been
playing a trick on you, Johnnie, and I'm feeling very badly about it. I want
you to try and forgive me.' She hesitated, and then said, 'It's been wonderful
to hear you say this. How wonderful, you just don't know. But I couldn't marry
you.'
'That's all right,' I said a little
thickly. 'It was just a silly idea I had.'
She turned to me. 'It's not that,
Johnnie. It's not that at all.' She paused, and then she said, 'You see, if
everybody had their rights, I should be Brenda Pascoe.'
CHAPTER SEVEN
I stared at her. 'I'm sorry, but I
don't get that,' I said. ‘Is your name Brenda?'
'My names are Brenda Margaret,' she
said quietly. 'That's how my birth was registered, at
I turned to her. 'Let me get this
straight. Are you trying to tell me that you're Brenda Marshall's daughter?'
She faced me. 'That's right,
Johnnie. I'm Brenda Marsh’ all's daughter, and yours.'
'What was your grandmother's name?'
'Duelos,' she said. 'She was
married twice. Her first husband was my grandfather, Henry Dawson.'
'But Brenda's baby died!'
She smiled gently. 'She didn't,
Johnnie. She grew up a very ordinary child, and finished up as an air hostess
in her father's crew.'
I sat back and stared out over the
dark sea. I had made the most colossal fool of myself, and I needed a little
time to recover from what this girl had done to me before I spoke again.
Presently she said in a low tone,
'Don't be angry.'
'I'm not angry,' I replied. 'But
Mrs Duelos wrote to me from
She nodded. 'I know. She did what
she thought was the right thing.'
'Why did she tell me that?' I asked
resentfully.
'I'm not sure that I know the whole
story,' she said. 'Probably you know the bits I don't. My mother committed suicide,
didn't she?'
T think she did,' I said painfully.
'She spun her Moth into the deck at Duffington.'
‘Why did she do that, Johnnie?'
I was silent. Even with this girl
it was difficult to talk of that bad time. 'Her husband got out of The Haven,'
I said at last. 'He'd have been coming home to live with her in a few days. He
was a mental case, you know. And she was in love with me.'
She nodded slowly. 'Is that why
Grannie took me back to
'That's right,' I said. 'She left
directly the funeral was over, before Derek Marshall came home. She was afraid
that if he saw you he might do you an injury.'
'That's what she told me.' We were
getting on better now. ‘Why
did she go back to
'She'd just come from there,' I
said. 'She knew the hotel and they knew her. It was the easiest thing for her
to do.'
'Well, when did you go to
'Almost at once,' I said. 'I had to
get away from Duffington, and Imperial Airways wanted pilots for the East. I
stopped in
'Me,' she said.
'I suppose so.' I paused. 'There
wasn't anything that I could do. Your grandmother had plenty of money and
everything was under control. I couldn't have interfered if I'd wanted to,
legally. But everything was going on all right.'
She said slowly, 'You mean, I
wasn't legally your child?'
I nodded. 'Legally, you hadn't got
a father.'
She smiled gently. 'And now I've
found one, he doesn't care about me much.'
'That's not true,' I said. 'I
always cared about you. You were Brenda's child.'
We sat together in silence on the
beach. A moon was coming up in the palm trees behind us, and the point of land
a mile away was bathed in light. We sat in the half-light each busy with our
own thoughts. It was quite true what I said; away in the heat and dust of
Presently she asked, 'How did you
get on with Grannie?'
‘Not very well,' I told her slowly.
'We never quarrelled, but she never liked me much. You see, it was because of
me that it all happened. It was really because of me that Brenda died.'
'Oh, I see,' she breathed. That
does explain a lot.'
'What does it explain?'
She turned to me. 'When she
invented this story that I died. It seemed a bit hard on you, if you had minded.
I asked her that once, and she said it would have been a relief to you. She
said it was the best thing, if you married somebody - not to have an
illegitimate child round your neck.'
'I never wanted to marry anybody
after Brenda,' I remarked. 'Anyway, not till now.'
'Oh dear."
'All right,' I laughed. 'I'm a bit
old for marrying, anyway.'
We laughed together about that, and
eased the tension. 'Why did she do it?' I asked presently. 'When did you first
know that you'd got a father living?'
'When I was twenty-one,' she said.
'She told me then. Before that, all I knew was that my father and mother were
killed together in a car accident in
'There wasn't anything nasty about
it,' I said. "You can forget about that.' I thought about it for a minute,
and then said,’ I still don't understand why she told me you were dead.'
'It wasn't only you,' she replied.
'She told everybody.' She paused, and then she said, 'It was all such a mess,
you see. She was afraid of Derek Marshall, for one thing. She was afraid he'd
come to
That would have been a bad one,' I
said quietly.
She nodded. 'She was afraid of all
sorts of things. She thought that you'd marry somebody, and if you had to look
after me I wouldn't get a square deal. She was afraid of me knowing when I was
too young that my mother committed suicide, and that I was illegitimate.' She
paused. 'Tell me one thing, Johnnie. Did you ever know my mother's maiden name
was
I shook my head. 'It never occurred
to me to question that it was Duelos.'
'That's what Grannie said. She said
you never knew my mother was her child by her first marriage. But you see, when
my mother registered my birth at
I glanced at her. 'I never saw the
entry. You were registered as Brenda Margaret Dawson?'
She nodded. 'That's my name.'
'Well, when did you go to
'Grannie took me straight there
from
'Had she?'
She nodded. 'My grandfather's
brother Ernest - Grannie's brother-in-law - he married a girl at Colac with
five thousand acres. The family's there still, Coniston Station.' She paused.
'I'm pretty sure we went there right away, because I can remember living there
when I was little. Then when I was five or six and had to go to school, Grannie
took a house in
'I see,' I said slowly. 'She made a
clean break, and started you of! somewhere fresh.'
'She thought it was the best thing
to do,' she said.
I sat looking out over the moonlit
sea. 'Probably it was.' I turned to her. 'How did you come to be here?'
'I was curious,' she said simply.
'About me?'
She nodded. You see, Grannie told
me everything she knew when I was twenty-one. I was training at the Alexandra
then, so it wasn't quite the shock it might have been. And anyway, I'd guessed
that it was something like that. She hadn't kept in touch with you, but she
thought you might be still alive somewhere.'
'She vanished into the blue,' I
remarked. 'I tried to find her when I was on leave, but I never got a line on
her at all. She never even kept in touch with old George Marshall up at
'I know. She thought it was the
best thing to do. She was afraid of Derek Marshall.'
'Well, what happened then?'
She said, 'As soon as I was qualified,
I went to
'To look for me?'
'Partly,' she said. 'Only partly.'
She turned to me. 'Try and understand, Johnnie. I wanted to know how I'd been
born, what really happened.' She stared out over the sea. 'What Grannie told me
was such a confused sort of a story, so unlikely in some ways. It could have
been wonderfully good, or it could have been - just smutty. I didn't mind much,
about being illegitimate, but I wanted to know how it all happened.'
'It was wonderfully good,' I said.
'Good enough to keep me single all these years, anyway. Do you want me to tell
you about it?'
'If you will.'
'Finish your story first. What did
you find out in
'Very little,' she said. 'I went to
see the
'I heard that,' I said.
'I was just one of a whole lot of
unsavoury scandals that the
'I'm very sorry,' I said, and I
was.
She smiled quietly. 'I hadn't expected
much else. So then I went to Duffington.'
'You went there?'
She nodded. 'That was no good
either. There's no flying club there now.'
'The aerodrome's a big place, isn't
it?'
'That's right,' she said. 'It's got
runways about two miles long, and the American Air Force are there. And
Duffington Manor's been turned into a girls' school.'
I sat thinking back about those
distant days upon the far side of the world. 'Peter Woodhouse could have told
you something,' I remarked. 'He should be in the district still. You didn't
talk to him?'
She shook her head.
'Well, what did you do then?'
'I went back to
Up the beach at the old Catalina
slipway three Fijians had launched a boat. They came paddling slowly down the
shore in the darkness with a brilliant acetylene lamp hanging on a pole over
the bows, spearing fish as they came to the light. We watched them in silence
as they crept along.
'That's how you came to know I was
in AusCan,' I said thoughtfully.
She nodded, watching the boat. 'I
went to the AusCan office in Piccadilly and got a timetable,' she said. 'I
asked the girl who gave it me if Captain Pascoe was still flying for them, and
she knew all about you. She said you were in
I grinned. 'She told you a damn
sight too much. Bloody gossip.'
The boat before us paused, and
there was a lot of excited chatter from it, because one of the men had speared
a fish. It was quite a big one, but I couldn't tell her what sort of fish it
was. We sat looking at the spectacle, talking about it; then as the boat moved
on we came back to our conversation.
'Is that when you decided to become
a hostess?' I asked.
'Not quite,' she said. 'I went down
to London Airport a couple of days later and stood in the public enclosure to
see the AusCan machine come in from Vancouver. Before it landed, I asked at the
AusCan office who the captain was, and they told me it was you. When the
machine came in and all the passengers got off, you came off with the other
officers - an awful lot of them. There must have been eight or nine. You passed
quite close to me.'
I sat there in my bathing trunks in
the warm night, trying to put myself in this girl's place when first she saw
her father. ‘What
did you think?' I asked.
She said seriously, 'I thought you
looked rather nice. Very strict, but rather nice.'
I didn't like the very strict part
much, but it was probably justified. 'I may have been tired,' I said. 'It's a
long flight from
She nodded. 'I went to bed much
happier that night.'
I was glad of that, but I didn't
know how to say it. 'Then did you go back to
She smiled. 'I flew back with you.'
'Flew back with me?' I was
dumbfounded. 'As a passenger?'
'I was so terribly curious,' she
said. 'I wasn't at all sure if I wanted to know you, or to let you know who I
was. There wasn't any reason why I should, after all. I wanted to know all
about you first - what sort of a person you were.' She paused. 'What sort of a
person I am,' she said thoughtfully.
'I understand that,' I replied.
She stared after the boat, now
moving away from us and coming out of the shadow of the palm trees into the
moonlight. 'I couldn't really afford to fly back to
I sat trying to recollect that
evening, one of so many similar flights. I couldn't place it. 'When I took you
on in Billy Myers's office in
'I saw you several times at
'That might have been it. How did
you come to be in AusCan, then?'
'I flew on back to
'I remember Mary Barrett,' I said.
'She got married.'
She nodded. 'When I told her about
my nursing experience, she said that I could get to be a hostess on this line
quite easily. She told me what to do, and all about it. By the time I got to
We sat together in silence on the
beach in the warm night. I was thinking how much I had missed, in all these
years. And yet, I couldn't have done much more for her if I had been around
during her adolescence. Mrs Duelos had done a good job of bringing her up, and
though I never got on well with the old lady, I was grateful to her. For better
or worse, I had an adult daughter ready-made. I should never, perhaps, be very
close to her for I had seen nothing of her childhood. Perhaps I should never
really understand her, as perhaps I had never really understood her mother.
I sat for a long time thinking of
these things. Presently she said gently, 'Will you tell me about my mother?'
'I'll do what I can to tell you,' I
said heavily. 'I only know it from my side, of course. She came to learn to fly
at Duffington, and we fell in love. But there was more to it than that on her
side, much, much more. I never got to understand her side of it, not properly.'
I turned to her. 'We wanted to get married. But we never had more than a day or
so together. She did things that I never really understood, because I never had
the chance to get to understand her.' I paused. 'We were just in love.'
'Tell me what actually happened,'
she said quietly. 'Perhaps I'll understand better than you.'
"You mean, from the
beginning?'
She nodded. 'Tell me everything
that happened, right from the beginning.'
I sat for a few moments in silence,
thinking back over the years. 'I was the pilot-instructor at the flying dub,' I
said at last. 'The aerodrome was on her husband's land, and he was in The
Haven. The land had been requisitioned in the war, and had never been
de-requisitioned. We paid rent to the Air Ministry, and they paid rent to Derek
Marshall. So your mother was our landlord in a kind of way, and one day she
came along to see the club.'
She asked, 'Did she come to fly?'
I shook my head. 'Not at first. She
just came to see what was going on. She never bothered about it till the
doctor's daughter joined the club.'
I went on talking to her in the
night on that calm
'Did she say anything?'
I shook my head. 'She wasn't
conscious. She died in the hangar about ten minutes later, before the doctor
came.'
You were with her, Johnnie?'
'AH the time.' I paused, and stared
out over the sea. 'We'd only got blankets and a first-aid box — nothing for shock. We didn't know so
much about the treatment of shock as we do now. I sometimes think we might have
saved her if we'd had the modern one-shot dopes. I don't know.'
'It was deliberate, though, wasn't
it? She wanted to die?'
'She never even hinted that to me,'
I said. 'I wouldn't have let her fly. But - yes, I think she did.'
'She chose to die rather than go
away and live with you, unmarried? Even with me?'
'I think she did,' I said. 'She
left a note about you for her mother, but I never saw it.'
'I've seen it,' she said. 'Grannie
gave it to me. I've got it at home, now.'
I glanced at her. 'Is there
anything about me in it?'
‘Nothing,' she said gently. 'I'll show it you one day.'
We sat in silence for a long time
on the beach. It had grown cooler and we had pulled shirts over our bare
shoulders while I had been talking of those far-off, painful days in
'I know.' She sat thoughtful, not
moving. 'There's one more thing I want to say before we go.'
'What's that?' I asked.
'When we started doing things
together, in
I smiled. 'That's all right,' 1
said. 'But you might have given me a hint before I went so far.'
'I know ...' She sat staring at the
distant, moonlit point, not looking at me. 'I wanted to be friends with you
before I told you who I was,' she said. 'I wanted you to know everything about
me, too, before I told you. I thought that it would make it kind of easier to
tell you ...' She paused. 'Then, when I realized what was happening, I did not
know what to do.' She sat silent, and then turned to me. 'Tell me. Am I like my
mother?'
'Just once or twice, when I've been
tired and had a bit to drink, I've thought that you were her,' I said
slowly. 'You're not very like her in the normal way. Not in appearance, I mean.
But in character - I think you're very like her.' I glanced at her. 'I think
that's been the trouble.'
'I wouldn't call it trouble,' she
said softly. She turned to me. 'Did you know I looked like you?'
I laughed. 'No, I didn't. Do you?'
'Mollie
I stirred. 'Better not let me hear
them at it. It's probably a good thing I'm retiring.'
'They'll all be very sorry to see
you go,' she said. 'It's been nice gossip.'
'Make any trouble for you?'
She shook her head. 'No. If they've
been saying I'm your daughter, I've been proud of it.'
She turned to me. 'I shouldn't have
let you go on and ask me to marry you,' she said. 'I should have turned it off,
somehow. I could have done. I want you to forgive me for letting you go on.'
'That's all right,' I said again.
'It seemed so incredible,' she
said. 'I knew by that time that there'd been no one in your life since my
mother died.
And I knew that there must be a
good deal of my mother in me ...' She paused. 'If you were falling in love with
me, it could only be that you were falling in love again with what was in me of
my mother. I couldn't resist letting it happen Johnnie. Because you see, it was
the final, absolute proof that everything was quite all right when I was born -
but for bad luck.'
'Bad luck or bad management,' I
said slowly.
'What do you mean by that?'
I sat silent for a time. 'I've had
a long time to think this over, and now I'm an old man,' I said at last. 'And
what I think is this. When you get to wanting something that doesn't belong to
you so badly that you've just got to have it, and you take it - well, that's
stealing. You don't let yourself get into that state of mind with other things
- with money or motor-cars or gold cigarette-cases. And you mustn't do it with
love. That's stealing, just the same. But that's what we didn't understand.' I
paused. 'I think your mother understood it a bit better than I did. We kidded
ourselves that love was something different, because it says so on the pop
tunes.'
She laughed. 'If you hadn't kidded
yourselves, I shouldn't be here.'
'That's true. Are you glad or
sorry?'
'Glad,' she said. 'Very, very
glad.'
I got to my feet, stiff after
sitting for so long. Time we were going back,' I said. 'If we stay much longer
I'll have to write a confidential note about you to Mrs Deakin - staying out
too late upon the beach with men.'
She stretched out her hand and I
pulled her up beside me. We gathered our things up from the beach to take them
to the car. 'When you're at Buxton and I'm back at the Alexandra again, we
shan't be very far away from each other,' she said. 'May I come over and see
you when I get a holiday?'
'Sure,' I said. 'Come and start a
bit of gossip for me there.' We laughed together.
She turned to me. 'I've been so
happy tonight. Everything's quite all right now, isn't it?'
‘Yes,' I said quietly. 'Everything's come good at last. It's quite all right, now.'
We walked slowly from the moonlit
coral beach into the deep shadows of the palm tree groves. Our feet made no
sound on the ground; we were gliding along as if suspended in the air, floating
along. Everything had come good at last, after so many years. I had reached the
happy ending of the story, and I was quietly, serenely happy. In the soft,
velvety darkness I lay utterly at peace for I had finished with all heartaches,
with all pains and worries; nothing could touch me now. I had finished the book
but I could take it up and read it over and over again, and I would do so,
secure in the knowledge of the happiness in the last chapter. There would be no
more misery ahead of me, for everything had come good. Everything was all right
now.
There was light all around me, and
she was by my side. She was dressed in a blue combination suit of smooth denim
cloth over a heavy white polo-necked sweater, stifling in
She glanced at me curiously. 'It's
I rubbed my hand over my eyes. I
had been dreaming. This was Johnnie Pascoe's room and I was in his bed, in his
pyjamas. I was Ronnie Clark, and I had work to do for him. I rose upon one
elbow. 'What's the weather like?'
She crossed to the window and
pulled up the blind. It was quite dark outside. 'The sky is clear,' she said.
'It's all starry. The wind has dropped a lot.'
I was still happy, and this
confirmed my happiness, for everything
was going to be all right this time. 'Has the doctor turned up yet?'
She shook her head. 'He said he'd
be here by ten to six. How did you sleep?'
"Never better,' I said. I was
Ronnie Clarke, and she had made me a hot drink in the middle of the night.
'That's thanks to your Ovaltine.'
She smiled. 'How many eggs? I'll do
them while you're getting up.'
She was the nurse, and she had been
a hostess with AusCan; I was awake now. 'Not bacon and eggs,' I said. 'It's too
heavy so early in the morning.' She nodded. 'I'd like a couple of boiled eggs,
lightly boiled, and some toast.'
'I'll have it ready in the kitchen
by the time you're dressed,' she said, and went out of the room.
I got up in the chilly, spartan
bedroom, so much larger than it need have been, and put on Johnnie Pascoe's
dressing-gown, and thrust my feet into his slippers. I went to the window and
looked out. The night was as she said. There was not a scrap of cloud in sight,
and very little wind. In
CHAPTER EIGHT
The doctor came while I was having
breakfast with the nurse at the kitchen table. We heard his car outside, and I
got up with my mouth full and went to let him in. He was in ski-ing clothes as
he had been before. 'The weather's looking better, isn't it?' he asked.
I nodded. 'It's going to be
perishing cold for you, without the cabin door,' I said. 'But if it's like this
when we get there I think we might be able to put down and land it properly.'
He smiled. 'Is Sister Dawson up
yet?'
'She's in the kitchen. She didn't
go to bed. She slept in the chair before the fire.'
'She told me she was going to do
that. It looked a great deal more comfortable than the bedroom.'
He came with me to the kitchen and
had a cup of tea while I was finishing my breakfast. As I got up from the table
we heard the engine of the Auster start up from the direction of the hangar;
Billy Monkhouse was there and on the job, running her up for me. Everything was
under control now and coming good. Everything was going to be all right this
time.
We went the few hundred yards to
the hangar in the doctor's car. It was cold and frosty in the night with the
extra bit of chill that always seems to come before the dawn. We parked the car
and got out by the hangar, the nurse carrying a little bundle of clothes tied
around with string. There was a Proctor in the hangar, dimly visible in the
half-light. Outside, Billy Monkhouse was sitting in the Auster still running it
up; four equal blue flames streamed from the exhausts beneath the engine
cowling. The two boys were at the tailplane, their clothes blown and buffeted
by the slipstream.
I led the doctor and the nurse
round behind the hangar, a little out of the noise, so that we could talk. 'Now
look,' I said. 'This wind's not very strong. If it's like this when we get down
to the
The doctor nodded. T understand
that. But I could pretty well fall out, since there's no door.'
'That's what I want you to do,' I
said. 'I hope we shan't have to perform like that. But if we should, I want you
to fall flat on the ground, so that the tailplane will pass over you. I don't
want that to hit you, for my sake as well as yours.'
'I understand,' he said again.
'I've got to go down flat upon the ground as soon as I'm out of the machine.'
That's the shot. Think you can do
it? I'm afraid it's a bit acrobatic'
'I can do-that all right,' he said.
"You think we may be going forward fifteen miles an hour?'
'It could be twenty,' I said. 'I
hope it won't be so fast as that. It could be like getting off a tram going a
good bat, and falling down.'
'Fall limp, and try to guard one's
head,' he said thoughtfully. 'Look, Captain Clarke, I'll do my best with it. If
I think there's not a hope that I'd get up without broken bones, then I won't
do it. There's no sense in loading up the woman with another patient.'
'Fair enough,' I said. 'I hope it
won't be like that. But if it is, I shan't think any the worse of you if you
don't jump.'
I turned to the nurse. 'Sister
Dawson, I'll have you in the back seat, and the doctor beside me. If he
succeeds in making it, then we'll go up again a few hundred feet, and you get
out of the back seat and sit beside me, where he was sitting. Then we come in
again when you're quite ready. Before we take off, now, I want you to sit in
that seat and just practise getting out.'
She nodded. 'I'd like to do that.'
I thought for a moment. 'If it
looks too difficult, or if the doctor has a very rough landing, I won't ask you
to jump,' I said. 'We'll try again later in the day, when there's a bit more
wind.'
She said, 'If the doctor jumps, I
jump.'
There was a sudden resemblance to
Johnnie Pascoe in the set of her chin, the line of her jaw, the wrinkling of
her eyes. 'All right/ I said. 'I'll tell you the right moment when I'm going as
slowly as I can, and then you decide for yourself, like the doctor.'
The roar of the engine slowed to a
tick-over as I was speaking, and then stopped as the engineer switched off.
'That'll be best,' she said. 'I'd like to practise getting out a few times,
before we start.'
We walked round the hangar to the
machine. Billy Monk-house was getting out of the cabin. 'Morning,' he said in
the darkness. 'She's all ready for you.'
'Flares?' I asked.
'I got them laid down on the
aerodrome. They're upwind from the thorn tree in the far hedge. I'll nip out in the car and put a match to them when
you're ready.'
I nodded. 'Thanks. How much petrol
did you use for running up?'
'Gallon. Maybe a gallon and a
half.'
'Get a can and top her up,' I said.
He went off for a can, and I put
the nurse in the back seat, and got into the left-hand seat in front of her
myself. I made her practise climbing over into the front seat, and then
practise getting out of the machine. The doctor helped her. 'Right foot out
upon the step. Swing round. Hold the door frame - there, and the seat - there.
Change feet. Now, left foot on the step, swing round, and face forward.
That's right. Now, jump out and let yourself fall limp on your right side.
That's fine.'
I watched this going on in deep
concern. It looked horrible, but they knew what they were in for and they were
both quite prepared to do it. The final decision lay with me, however; if it
seemed to me too dangerous I could veto it by not going near the ground. Only
if I put the aircraft on the little runway could they do this thing. Mine was
the responsibility, and mine alone. The feeling was still strong in me, however,
that everything was right now. Everything was going to be all right this time.
The girl practised it half a dozen
times, the doctor once or twice. The extra petrol was put in, and we were ready
to start. It was still dark, but a paler tinge was showing in the black sky
over to the east. 'Okay/ I said. 'Let's go.'
They got into their seats, and I
got into mine, shutting my door beside me. Billy Monkhouse swung the little
propeller and the engine caught; I sat there studying the instruments in the
dashboard lights while he drove out to light the flares. When the first flare
flamed up I waved the chocks away and turned, and taxied out to the far hedge.
The wind was light now, no more
than a gentle breeze. I took the full length of the aerodrome, for the little
aeroplane was heavily loaded and it was pitch-dark beyond the line of the
flares; I could not even see the hedge I had to take off over. I lined up
beside the line of flares, checked everything once again, and satisfied myself
that both my passengers were strapped in and comfortable. Then I opened up the
throttle steadily, and we moved off.
I got the tail up as soon as I
could and trimmed her so, and then I sat and let her fly herself off the
ground. She took quite a long run but we came unstuck at the fourth flare and
we were a few feet up at the fifth. The hedge flashed by twenty feet below. I
trimmed her for seventy and got on course, for it was all clear ahead of us for
fifteen miles or so, and presently I throttled back to cruising revs.
It was pretty dark still, for the
moon had set, but as we gained altitude the grey light to the east increased
and I could see the line of mountains stretching out ahead of me in a clear
sky. I could go over everything this time, and there would be no creeping round
the coast in the grey muck. The Gipsy engine only had to keep on turning and I
had no fear of that, and we should be okay. Everything was going to be all
right, this time.
I kept her on a steady climb up to
about five thousand feet. It was terribly cold at that height without the door
on the starboard side. It must have been way down below freezing, and the wind
beat and whistled around us in the cabin. There was no icing on the aircraft
for there were no clouds, but ice formed from my breath upon the muffler round
my throat and on my eyebrows. I became seriously concerned about this jumping
out of the machine if my passengers were frozen stiff with cold ; as soon as
possible I must get down to a lower altitude and give them a chance to thaw out
before they had to do their stuff. Yet we must take the most direct course that
we could, lest we should be in trouble over petrol again before getting back to
Buxton.
I compromised, and deviated
slightly to the west and began to let down before we got to
Presently I saw the
When we were a mile from the house
I saw the woman come out of the door and look towards us; she heard our motor.
She went back, and came out again carrying a bundle that must be the windsock,
and I was grateful for her intelligence. She hurried with it up the hill to
that desperate little airstrip that looked more like a very short length of
cart track than ever, and as I turned upon a circuit she was busy with it at
the flagstaff. She hoisted it, and it hung limp and vertical along the spar.
There was no wind at all.
I stared at it for half a minute,
incredulous, watching for the gust to blow it out. No gust came; the sock hung
motionless. I turned to my passengers, elated. 'Money for jam,' I said. 'I'll
make one dummy run, and if it looks all right I'll land upon the strip. Keep
your belts done up.'
The sun was coming up over the
mountains to the east as I turned on to final. There was no wind at all to
hinder us in landing. The only problem now before me lay in coming in slow
enough to put the wheels down within a few feet of the near end of that short
strip, and so to stop her before running off the far end of it. But Austers had
landed there before in good conditions like we had, and I was feeling fine. I
had had a good sleep and I was right on the top line. Everything was going to
be all right, this time.
I lined up on the strip to come in
for my dummy run, throttled back a bit, and put my hand up to pull down half
flap. I brought her in upon the throttle, watching it ahead of me. There was a
little stunted tree with a bush beside it about seventy yards from the end of
the strip; if I pulled down full flap there when I was about six feet up, ready
to catch her with a burst of throttle, I should just about make it. I shot a
quick glance at the flagstaff and the sock to make sure there was no sudden
gust of wind.
There was something funny there. I
took my attention from the runway and looked at the sock properly. It was
hanging vertical, but it was only halfway up the mast. Then the woman caught my
attention. She was standing by the mast and waving both arms horizontally.
I turned back to my flying, and
moved the throttle forward. We passed over the strip twenty feet up as I gently
raised the flaps. I turned to the doctor by my side. 'See that?' I asked.
'You mean, the sock? It was at half
mast, wasn't it?'
I nodded.
'Was she trying to tell us not to
land?'
'I think so. She seemed to be
waving us off.'
I put the machine on a climbing
turn and turned to the nurse in the scat behind the doctor. 'It doesn't look so
good,’ I said. 'I'm very sorry.'
She had gone rather white. 'That's
all right,' she muttered.
We circled round. 'What would you
like to do?' I asked the doctor. 'I can land there normally, but I don't
suppose that I can stay there very long. This calm won't last longer than an
hour, at most.'
'I think I ought to have a look at
him, perhaps,' he said. 'It wouldn't take very long.'
The girl leaned forward at my shoulder.
'I want to land, please, Captain Clarke.'
I nodded. 'Okay. I'll do another
dummy run, and then run in.'
I turned on final again and brought
her in. It was still calm; I used half flap, touched my wheels a few feet from
the near end of the strip, and took off again. There was plenty of room to pull
her up if I did it like that again. I brought her round, lined up again on
final, put full flap down at the little tree, and plumped her well and truly
down in the right spot. We came to rest about thirty yards from the far end. I
glanced at the windsock; there was still no wind. The woman was running towards
us.
I turned to the doctor and the
nurse. 'Be as quick as you can,' I said. 'I'll stay with the machine.'
I left the engine ticking over, and
we all got out. The woman, Mrs Hoskins, came panting up. 'I tried to stop you
landing,' she said breathlessly. 'I suppose you didn't see.'
The doctor asked, 'He's dead, is
he?'
'I'm sorry to say so. You took off
before the radio schedule, or I'd have let you know. I told them, so they're
not sending the
‘What time did he die?'
'A little after four, it must have
been,' she said. 'A quarter past, perhaps. It's hard to say exactly when he
went, you know.'
'I'll just come down with you and
have a look at him,' he said.
Beside me, Sister Dawson stirred.
'Have you got any news of the ground party?'
'They're a little way this side of
The girl asked, 'Is there a burial
ground here?'
The woman hesitated, and then said,
'Well, there's a nice little place where we put Grandpa, looking out over the
sea. It's not consecrated, of course, but he could lie there, by Grandpa, if
you think that'd do. Or they could take him out ... But it's a long way.'
The girl said, 'We'll bury him
here.' She had taken charge completely of the situation. She turned to the
doctor. 'I'd like to go down now. Then you can get away with Captain Clarke,
and I'll stay here and do what's necessary.'
They all went down to the house and
I was left alone with the Auster, its engine still ticking over, on the little
airstrip on the ridge above the sea. The sun had come up and it was very
beautiful there between the mountains and the Southern Ocean in the blue dawn.
I walked a little way back along the strip and stood looking down upon the
wreckage of the other Auster at the foot of the little cliff; then I climbed
down to it. The engine was worth salvaging, but there was nothing else worth
bothering about in that locality. I stood sadly for a few minutes, thinking
back. He had been a great influence upon me in my youth; he had been part of my
whole life. I would have said I knew him pretty well, if I had thought about it
at all, but now it seemed to me I knew him much, much better.
I climbed back to the little gravel
runway. The strip was too narrow for me to turn the Auster in the normal way,
so I carried the tail round and taxied down to the lee end. I turned her in the
same way there and carried the tail back till the main wheels were at the
extreme end of the strip, gave the motor a burst to clear the plugs, and shut
down to wait.
The doctor came up from the house
presently, just as I was beginning to get worried about a little rising air
that moved the limp windsock. He was carrying the battered suitcase that we had
dropped on the scrub the day before. I took it from him. 'Did anything get
broken?'
'One bottle,' he said. 'It doesn't
matter now, of course.'
'Is Sister Dawson coming back with
us?' I asked.
'No. We're taking the child back to
hospital, for observation. There's not much wrong with her now. The mother's
just dressing her up in warm clothes.'
'She'll have to hurry up,' I said.
'I can't stay here much longer.'
'She knows that. She'll be here in
a minute.' And as he spoke I saw the woman leave the house carrying the child,
and come hurrying up the hill.
'How is Sister Dawson going to get
out?' I asked.
'She'll come out with the ground
party, or else by sea. Probably the ground party. She wants to stay here for
the burial.' He hesitated, and then asked, Ts she a relation, do you know?'
I faced him. 'She's his
illegitimate daughter,' I said. 'Don't go telling everyone.'
'Are you quite sure of that?' he
exclaimed.
'Quite sure,' I said.
'However did you find that out? You
only met her this morning!'
'I knew her mother,' I said. 'She
was a fine woman. I remember when this girl was born. They had pretty bad
luck.' I paused. 'I've known Johnnie Pascoe a great many years. We were old
friends. There are some things a friend ought to know.' And then I wondered why
I had said that, and where I had heard it before.
I turned to the aircraft. 'Here she
comes. Let's get in now, and get going before the wind gets up again.'
I started the motor, and we got
into the machine. The woman came up and handed the child to the doctor, who
took her on his lap, wrapped in about three blankets. I ran the engine up,
checked everything, and took off down that appalling little strip. We made it
all right with a bit to spare; I turned over the house and set a course for
Buxton. We flew back up the coast without incident though the weather was
closing in and the wind getting up again, and landed back upon the aerodrome
under a grey sky at about
I taxied to the hangar and stopped
the motor. Billy Monk-house, the ground engineer, came up to the machine as I
was undoing my belt. "You heard the news?' I asked.
He nodded. 'They got it from the
I nodded, and got out of the
machine, and looked around. Something was missing. I asked, 'What's happened to
the Proctor?'
'They took off about an hour ago
for
"Damn good job,' I said.
"You left the nurse there?' he
asked.
I nodded. One of the boys was near us,
and I took the old ground engineer to one side. 'Look, Mr Monkhouse,' I said.
'I don't know what's going to happen here now. I mean, about these two
aircraft, and the house, and all the rest of this stuff. I don't know if he
made a will, or if so, where it is.'
'Mr Dobson would have it, if there
is one,' he remarked. 'He's the solicitor.'
"You'd better go and ask him
if he's got one. If there is, I wouldn't be surprised to hear that he's left
everything to Sister Dawson.'
He stared at me. "You mean -
this nurse — here?'
I nodded. 'She's visited him
before, hasn't she?'
'Yes. She's been here two or three
times.' He hesitated. "Looks a bit like him.'
'Well, there you are,' I said.
'That's none of my business, and none of yours. But she'll probably be telling
you what she wants done here.'
He asked, 'What's the other machine
like - the one he piled up in, at
'The airframe's a write-off,' I
said. 'It wouldn't be worth trying to bring that out. The engine didn't look
too bad. It would be worth going in for that some time, and bring it out by
sea.'
We talked about that for a minute
or two. Then he said, 'What will you be doing now, sir?'
'I'll get some breakfast somewhere
and pick up my haversack,' I said. 'Then I'll get back to
'Mrs Lawrence is over in the house,
waiting to cook you breakfast,' he said. 'I got that fixed for you.'
"You've told her about Captain
Pascoe?'
'Aye, I went over and told her.
It'll be better if you have your breakfast in the house. They're a noisy kind
of party, up at that hotel.'
The doctor joined us, and I told
him what I was going to do. 'I think there's a plane from Devonport today about
the middle of the morning.' The old ground engineer nodded, and said, '
'That's very kind of you.' I paused
and then I said, 'I understand that there's some breakfast going in Johnnie's
house. Would you like to join me?' So we went together to the little house by
the aerodrome that I had left so full of quiet hope before the dawn, only a few
hours before.
Mrs Lawrence was in the kitchen,
looking as if she had been crying. I told her we'd be glad of breakfast for
two, and she started in to get it. The doctor and I threw off our coats and
went to wash and clean up, and presently we were sitting down to breakfast at
the kitchen table.
Mrs Lawrence had gone over to her
own house next door taking the child with her, after telling us to leave
everything as it was. She would come in later to wash up the breakfast and
clean up the house. We said little while we ate, but after we had finished and
were smoking at the table over a final cup of coffee, the doctor brought the
subject up that was on both our minds.
'I've been thinking over what you
told me about Sister Dawson,' he said. 'After I've taken you to Devonport, I
think I'll go on home. I'll leave Betty in
It seemed to me that that meant
leaving his practice to look after itself for three or four days, but that was
his affair, not mine. 'That would certainly be a help to her,' I remarked. 'I
think she'll want to come back here.'
'She'll have to,' he said. 'She
left a suitcase at the vicarage.' He thought for a moment. 'Of course, I could
take that down with me in the car.'
'I should do that,' I observed. 'By
the time you meet her she won't have had a change of clothes for three or four
days, and she'll have walked about forty miles through the bush.'
'Of course. I'll take it with me.'
'I think she'll want to come back
here, in any case,' I said. There's probably a will, and Johnnie probably left
everything to her. She'll have to come and settle up what's to be done.'
He nodded slowly. 'I hadn't thought
of that...'
I glanced at him. 'You'll be seeing
a good deal of her?'
He met my eyes. 'Probably.'
'Well - look,' I said. 'She won't
have a lot of money to throw around. She'll want to sell the two aircraft that
are here. She doesn't have to pay a pilot to fly them away. I can get over here
for nothing, any time, and I'd be very glad to fly them to Moorabbin to be
sold. I shan't be seeing her again, but will you tell her that? I'd like to do
that for her.1
'That's really very kind of you,'
he said. 'That's a very generous offer.'
I flushed a little. 'Her father was
a very old friend,' I said. 'It was he who taught me to fly, back in the dark
ages. And the girl's a good type, too.'
He said quietly, 'I think she's a
very wonderful person.'
'She's going to be a very lonely
one now,' I said practically. 'I don't think she's got a single relation left
in the world. Except, perhaps, some second cousins up at Colac' I grinned at
him. 'Good luck.'
He smiled, a little
self-consciously. 'Thank you.'
I got up from the table. 'I'll give
you a ring in a few days' time when you've got back here, and you can tell me
what the form is.'
He drove me to Devonport and put me
down at the aerodrome. Then he went on southwards, while I waited for the
There was nobody at home when I got
back to my house in Essendon. Sheila sometimes did the shopping in the
afternoon before fetching the children home from school, and I guessed that
that was where she was now. She must be walking, because I had had the car
locked up in the car park, and I was sorry about that. I put down my haversack
and leather coat and wandered round the house, fingering the children's toys,
Sheila's fur stole that I had saved up for for so long, the small tools in my
workshop. Johnnie Pascoe had been a better man than I, but he had never had the
little benisons of life that I had got. I hoped his daughter would be luckier.
She would be, I thought, if the doctor had anything to do with it.
I got the cutter, the half-moon
thing with the long handle, and began to trim the edges of the lawn.
Sheila came home with the children
before I got it finished. They were surprised and glad to see me, and came
running to hug me. When the children were sent into the house to take their
coats off, Sheila said, 'He died, didn't he? They said so on the wireless.'
I nodded. 'We couldn't get in to
him yesterday. It clamped right down. I got a doctor and a nurse in there at
dawn today, but they were just too late.'
'I'm so sorry,' she said softly.
Peter came running from the house towards us. 'Tell me about it after they're
in bed.'
We went into the house together
because it was a bit cold in the garden for the children, and I lit the fire in
the sitting-room, and we had tea. Then Diana showed me her latest paintings and
Peter showed me the arrows he was making for the bow that he had made, and I
helped him a bit with that. Bedtime was coming near and it was time for me to
read to them, and I took Diana on my knee and read to her from Doctor
Dolittle as we always did on Fridays, my day off, till it was time for her
to go with Mummy to her bath, and after that I read Coot Club to Peter.
When he was off to bed I laid the supper table and got a glass of sherry for us
both, and sat on the edge of the kitchen table talking to Sheila while she
grilled the steak. Somehow, I felt that evening that I had never appreciated my
home so much.
We ate our steak and apple pie, and
washed the dishes up. Then in the sitting-room, smoking by the fire, I told her
everything factual that had happened in
When I had told her everything, and
we had discussed it all, I said, 'I'll probably have to go over there again,
and fly the aircraft to Moorabbin to be sold. I offered to do that. I'd like to
do that for him.'
She nodded. Then she said, 'You'd
known him a long time, hadn't you?'
'Nearly thirty years,' I said. 'I never knew till now that we were such close friends.'