Lady Clementine

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Lady Clementine Page 19

by Marie Benedict


  Near an underpass, a makeshift shelter has been constructed. As we approach the queue of neighborhood people waiting to enter, I hear a whisper pass through them: “The Churchills are here.” I realize that from this moment forward, every decision we make and action we take will serve as an example for the people who only now acknowledge the truth of the warnings Winston has been issuing for years.

  Ever impatient, Winston is tempted to rush to the front of the queue, as if early entrance means early exit. I place my hand upon his arm, holding him back. “Everyone is watching you. You must model the proper behavior for the people.”

  Chastened, he bides his time until we reach the entryway. Just as we are about to step into the arched space, a peculiar blend of indoor and outdoor, crowded with every manner of London folk—young mothers and children, shopkeepers, grocers, maids, barristers—the man who has been in front of us in the queue hesitates, then walks away. I call out to him as he wanders down a side street, “Sir, you must come inside where it’s safe.”

  “I don’t think the people will want me in there, ma’am.” He has a heavy German accent, and I suddenly understand.

  “Why? Because you’re originally from Germany?”

  “Yes.” He will not meet my eye.

  “But you aren’t part of the German army, are you?”

  He looks horrified. “No, ma’am. Of course not.”

  “And you are a naturalized citizen, are you not?”

  “Of course.”

  “Then come along. All British citizens deserve protection from the threat of the Nazis.”

  * * *

  Hours later, the sun wanes, and the silver automobile idles on Downing Street as Winston meets with Chamberlain. My wristwatch, which I cannot help but constantly check, shows that half an hour has passed. Wrapping my tweed coat around me in the unexpectedly chilly autumn evening, I wish Winston had allowed me to spend these long minutes at Morpeth Mansions where I could distract myself with the stack of letters I must write, but he would have none of it. “This is our war, Clemmie, and this will be our position, one for which we’ve waited nearly a decade. You must be nearby when we are restored.”

  While I appreciate the sentiment—and I do believe my careful ministrations have allowed him to survive these long years with a modicum of success and self-respect—I don’t think that whatever position he secures will be any less mine if I’m down the road instead of outside on the street. I wonder if he sees me as a kind of a talisman, bringing him luck for the meeting with Chamberlain, and yet, how could he? I haven’t brought him good fortune these years away from the hub of power. In fact, there were several points when I contemplated leaving him alone in his unruly forest, as he is well aware.

  Surely Chamberlain, Winston’s nemesis and naysayer of his warnings, wouldn’t have summoned him unless he wanted to restore him to power? Surely the prime minister understands that he must recognize the truth in Winston’s long-held positions.

  Another quarter hour ticks by and still no Winston. I’m tempted to instruct the driver to deliver me back home and then return for my husband when a thump pounds on the window from the cane Winston always carries, the legacy from my long-departed brother. Poor Bill and Kitty, I think. How would they have fared in this war-trodden world? I see Winston’s half grin through the foggy glass.

  He flings open the door before the driver can come around. It’s been an age since I’ve seen him move so quickly. “What happened?” I ask.

  He slides into the car as gracefully as a man of his formidable size can and says to the driver, “Please drive us to Admiralty House.” His half grin becomes a full smile, and he turns to me. Regardless of the jowls, lines of worry, and receding hairline, I see the youthful Winston that I married in his jubilant smile.

  “You are the first lord of the admiralty, again,” I say with a mixture of astonishment and awe. I’d hoped and prayed that Chamberlain would give Winston a worthy position—it was a pragmatic, self-serving choice on the prime minister’s part, after all—but I never believed that he’d be granted this lofty post for the second time in his life. Not that Winston didn’t deserve it. He deserved it and more.

  “Indeed, Clemmie.” He beams at me, the smile of a man finally vindicated. “And we have work to do immediately. Naval yards to inspect, battleships to assess, an entire navy to review. All left to languish for far too long while Hitler has focused on nothing else but amassing his military might. We must shore up our country at sea.”

  “Yes, indeed.” I smile back at him. How can I not? I have not seen my husband this vibrant for nearly a decade, and I am finally about to embark upon the work I’ve been preparing to do nearly my entire life.

  “Are you up to the task, Cat?”

  “I think you know I am, Pug.”

  “Thank God. You know I cannot do this alone.”

  We entwine our fingers. Whatever domestic issues have divided us, whatever familial disagreements have wedged between us, whatever toll the years of shoring up Winston’s dream of Chartwell—his England in miniature—has taken from us, we are linked in this work for our country. Together, we will be serving in the Admiralty again, in another wartime nonetheless. How we have come full circle.

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  May 6 and 10, 1940

  London and Hertfordshire, England

  “Come, Clemmie. We’ve got a vessel to launch,” Winston bellows.

  I am finishing up my instructions to a secretary, so I hold up a finger. A collective gasp, quiet but still audible, emanates from the staff members scurrying around the room, carrying out Winston’s orders. No one but me would dare shush the lord admiral.

  Handing over the list of donors I’m targeting to raise money for minesweepers—civilian boats that have been commandeered and outfitted for military purposes—I look up at Winston. He waits for me near the door to the office outfitted with many desks now, though it had formerly been one vast office just for the lord admiral.

  From the moment war was declared and Winston assumed the lord admiral role, the entire country moved forward alongside us with a sense of urgency and purpose. Within days of Winston’s appointment, we’d moved into Admiralty House with Mary in tow and settled into a routine of working sixteen hours a day, seven days a week, surrounded by government staff used to only working for five to six hours a day under the lassitude of the Chamberlain administration. But how could they reasonably complain? Their new leader kept to this pace, as did I, and it seemed that the Germans would be moving at a rapid-fire clip as well. Since Winston took office, the Nazis bombarded British vessels, and we lost the aircraft carrier HMS Courageous in the North Sea, the ocean liner SS Athenia, and the HMS Royal Oak in the Orkney Islands, along with sixty thousand tons of British shipping loads. And we all understood that this was just the beginning, even when a lull set in after the initial wave of attacks.

  Immediately upon moving from our apartment at Morpeth Mansions to Admiralty House, I knew we’d need a modern-day center of control with a suitable office for a hardworking first lord, not a bastion of old-world entertainment. We converted the expansive stateroom space and many living and entertaining rooms into a naval command center, moving our flat into the upper two floors of the building. What used to be our main apartment was cut into workrooms. Instead of the frivolous naval-themed and nautical-colored decoration with which the prior Lord Admiral Duff’s wife had festooned Admiralty House, we simplified the fabrics and furniture into a somber style, more appropriate for laborious wartime. Chartwell had been boarded up, leaving only Orchard Cottage open for Moppet, Diana, and her two young children, Julian and Edwina, who’d been evacuated from London. Winston and I will be in London for the long haul, no matter how brutal this becomes, and we will have Mary at our side for now, attending school and working in a canteen and for the Red Cross.

  The infectious sense of urgency permeating the n
ation even prompted Randolph to action, although not of the sort for which Winston and I had longed. After quitting his job to join Winston’s old regiment, the Fourth Hussars, he focused his attention on securing a bride and an heir in the event he was killed in the war. He showered proposals all over London to any marginally appropriate girl he encountered—a rumored eight proposals to eight different women in the span of two weeks, much to our embarrassment—and received a resounding round of nos until he met Pamela Digby. The voluptuous auburn-haired eldest daughter of Lord and Lady Digby had grown up in the rather tedious world of the Dorset countryside, and while she professed to adore the equestrian life, I saw from our first encounter that she was thrilled to be at the epicenter of power. Even during the wedding we hastily arranged—along with so many other British families whose sons were about to deploy—at St. John’s Church in Smith Square with a party in one of the Admiralty House staterooms afterward, in which the bride wore a dark-blue dress, beret, and matching dyed fur as there was no time for a gown, I saw that it was becoming a Churchill that intrigued her, not necessarily becoming Mrs. Randolph Churchill. Still, I found the girl endearing, and I resolved to support this new member of the family, which I knew she’d need in a marriage to Randolph. And I had trouble enough with Randolph as it was to not befriend his bride.

  * * *

  “Clemmie, the frigate will not wait,” Winston chides, although softly. I am accompanying him to launch a new airship carrier, which he still insists on calling by the archaic term of frigate.

  “Are you all set then?” I ask the secretary.

  “Yes, ma’am. I’ll reach out to these prospective donors today,” she answers with a nod, and I hope I’m leaving this important project in capable hands.

  When Winston received his appointment, I’d decided that I would no longer wait for him to include me in his work but that I would seek out critical projects of my own. For every battleship I inspect at his side and boat I launch alongside my husband, I undertake projects for which Winston does not have time but that I think merit attention, the running of Fulmer Chase Maternity Hospital for soldiers’ wives, for example. I forge ahead on meritorious tasks, unwilling to be solely ceremonial, joining Winston on those difficult meetings with relatives who’d lost their sons and arranging a special enclosure for bereaved families on the Horse Guards Parade, for example. The long-lasting legacy of the Rosaura means that I will wait for no one to invite me into history.

  This may well be our last chance to serve close to the inner machinations of Britain’s power, I realize, and I do not want to lose this opportunity. As I assume this mantle—again becoming the lord admiral’s wife after almost thirty years—I experience an almost embarrassing sense of exhilaration and calm. Strange how I thrive under the stress of crisis and falter under the weight of normal existence.

  “Clemmie,” Winston says again, his voice more impatient.

  “Coming,” I call back and stride toward my waiting husband.

  * * *

  I dab away Nellie’s tears with my damp white handkerchief. How well my poor sister is bearing up under the burden of her dual loss, I think. Her long-suffering husband, Bertram, who had been enduring the pain of his injuries from the Great War for decades, died only four days ago from cancer, and then, a mere two days later, she received word that her son Giles was captured in Norway by the Nazis. Although Winston hadn’t wanted me to leave his side, my sister deserves my consolation and assistance, so I went to her home in Hertfordshire as soon as possible after Giles’s capture.

  “Has Winston found out more about Giles’s situation?” Nellie asks, her heavy, inky eyebrows casting a shadow under her eyes, making the dark circles there even darker. As soon as I reached Hertfordshire, she’d begged me to have Winston do some digging into Giles’s whereabouts, and the housemaid had just delivered a letter from the morning mail.

  “The note I received this morning contained no new information.” I do not tell Nellie that the missive didn’t even mention Giles, only a series of tasks for me to handle and a query about how best to manage the challenge by Conservative Leo Avery to Chamberlain’s fitness to serve. Should he join in the chorus of members of Parliament calling for Chamberlain to step down, he wondered, or stay uncharacteristically silent. These are the matters most pressing in Winston’s mind; sadly, not Giles.

  It is only a matter of time before Chamberlain is forced out, I’d cautioned a very impatient Winston before I left. The rumblings about the prime minister had turned into a roar, and Winston needed to allow that roar to grow even louder on its own, without his prompting. But forbearance has never been Winston’s strong suit.

  “Giles wasn’t even a soldier. He was just a reporter for the Daily Express, for God’s sake,” Nellie says. I’d heard this lament many times over the past two days.

  “I know, Nellie.” I take her into my arms. “Sadly, I think it was enough for the Nazis that Giles was British. All we know is that Giles is classified as Prominente because of his relationship to Winston. That should get him better treatment and some protection, at the very least.”

  The phone rings, and we jump. “It could be someone about Giles,” Nellie says.

  Nellie’s young housemaid, a pretty girl with bouncy chestnut hair who reminds me a bit of my new daughter-in-law, Pamela, enters the parlor. “Mrs. Churchill, the call is for you. It is the lord admiral.”

  My sister gives me a hopeful glance as I scuttle out of the room, into the hallway where the phone is located. I place the receiver to my ear. “Pug, is that you?”

  “Cat.” Winston is breathing heavily. Why is he so winded? “Thank God, I’ve got you.”

  “Of course. Is everything all right?”

  “The Nazis have initiated an offensive through Holland, Belgium, and France—with the goal of invading the channel. It is only a matter of days or weeks before the Germans could be beating down our door.”

  “Oh God.” I feel sick. From all the secret military information to which I was privy, I knew, of course, that this was possible. But I never fathomed that it could come this soon. “What is to be done?”

  “I’ve just come from Downing Street. Chamberlain summoned me and Halifax.”

  My heart begins to beat quickly, and I find I cannot speak. Winston and Halifax are the two natural contenders for Chamberlain’s position, so I can guess about the reason for the summoning. Is this the moment to which we have been building our whole lives? Has Winston been called to save his country, as he predicted decades ago on our engagement day?

  “Clemmie, are you there?”

  I force myself to speak. “I am, Winston. I’m here.”

  “Chamberlain advised us that he has decided to stand down as prime minister, albeit reluctantly. He asked Halifax and me who we thought should be his rightful successor. My natural instinct was to throw my hat in the ring—point out my long-standing arguments about the Nazi threat and the dangers of appeasement—but I thought of you. All your warnings about letting the rumble turn into a roar and all that. So I stayed quiet.”

  “And what happened?”

  “Halifax acknowledged that the war leader needed to be a member of the Commons, which effectively put him out of the running. Chamberlain’s eyes turned on me. The duty to save the country, it seems, has fallen to me.” His labored breathing is audible. “I feel as if all that I’ve imagined for so long ago is finally coming to fruition.”

  “Oh, Winston, I knew it would. You are the only one who can do the job.”

  “How Mother would have loved to see me assume this role, although I wish it had not come at this cost,” he says with a sigh. “But I can only do it if you’re by my side. The summons to attend the king at the palace—and transfer power—will come soon.”

  “I will get on the next train to London. I should be there by late afternoon.”

  “Hurry, Cat. I’ll want you with me at th
e palace. Your Pug needs you. And so does your country.”

  Chapter Thirty

  June 17–18, 1940

  London, England

  How does one support one’s husband when he stands as the guardian to one country’s freedom? From the moment King George VI invested Winston with the titles of prime minister and minister of defense, I consider this question, one that I first contemplated decades ago when Winston began his climb during the Great War. While I know the guiding hand I provide in his speech-making along with the help preparing him to present those speeches will be more critical now than ever, I understand now—as I did during Winston’s earlier days in power—that my husband’s brilliant ability to see the larger picture and to design both political and military strategy often blinds him to the powerful needs of the individuals serving him as well as the needs of those he serves. I decide that, in order for him to vanquish the Nazis, I must serve as the lens through which he views and treats humankind, almost as his social barometer and conscience. Without the consideration of all these souls, we will not prevail. He cannot, indeed does not, fight alone.

  * * *

  “The prime minister asks that you review his speech within the hour, ma’am.” One of Winston’s typists, a Miss Hall, hands me the papers at my desk in the White Drawing Room at Downing Street. As we had during our brief stay at Admiralty House, we’ve converted the prime minister’s residence and workplace into a hub for the war effort. Despite its modest exterior, Number 10 is a very large building. I’ve maintained the ground floor’s dining room, the Cabinet Room, and the prime minister’s office, as they are absolutely necessary, but the first floor’s drawing room is now overrun with makeshift work spaces for the many staff members, military men, telephone operators, and dispatch riders, among others. I’ve limited the family space to the passage room, where Winston and I dine alone or with Mary, who still mostly resides with us, as well as our children and their families from time to time, and to the bedrooms, with their eggshell-blue walls, bright-red carpets, and sash windows with views of the gardens. The White Drawing Room, which was used as a private reception room for guests, is now an office for my own endeavors, those critical tasks that Winston has not the time to tend. But I’ve decided my first and foremost priority is awakening him to his people.

 

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