‘Father’s time. They didn’t know any better. My guess is they dumped plastic household bottles – detergent, solvents, that kind of thing. It’s a chemical sump, and the contents have reacted. I’m not a chemist,’ she added, as though Dryden had expected her to be.
He produced a notebook as casually as he was able and slurped his tea. ‘What will you do? The rest…’ he tipped his head west towards the dump. ‘Will they lose their jobs?’
‘Well, I’m not paying them to sit on their arses am I?’ She’d raised her voice and a fifties cabinet full of dusty cut-glass rattled slightly. ‘It’s not over yet. I’ve got lawyers too. The council could fight the fire and keep the tip open on this side.’ Even she didn’t look like she believed such a scenario was feasible.
‘If not, we’ll hunker down for six months – no choice. We’ll get through.’ Dryden wondered who constituted ‘we’ – and guessed the dogs. Boudicca pushed open the door and ambled in, flopping down at Ma’s feet. The greyhound carried its head low, its bony back high. The dog’s mouth flopped open to reveal gums the colour and consistency of slug skin.
The door stayed open and Dryden could see through into the next room. It was dark, the light slatted as through shutters, but he could see what looked like a row of polished cabinets.
Ma caught the glance. ‘Come and see,’ she said, hauling herself up.
She’d covered the cabinet tops with rough hessian but when she pulled the first one back the glass was fingerprintless. Below it there glinted gold, silver and metalwork caught in the light of small halogen bulbs mounted inside the wooden cases. There were three such cabinets, about eight feet long and two foot deep.
‘You’ve got these insured, Ma?’ said Dryden, leaning in.
She laughed, the sound lost somewhere deep inside her body.
‘The dogs,’ she said simply. She probably let the pack loose at night, thought Dryden. ‘Anyway, you couldn’t replace the best stuff,’ she added.
Dryden concentrated on the items set out on the green baize in the first cabinet. He recognized two rein rings like the ones found by Azeglio Valgimigli.
‘A chariot burial?’ he asked.
Ma retrieved some reading glasses from her hair and set a felt-mounted magnifying glass on the cabinet top. ‘Take a closer look.’
The rings were gold, set with opals, and the leather straps of the reins were still attached through eyelets.
‘How much?’ said Dryden.
She shrugged. ‘Treasure trove. I found them with the detector at Manea back in the eighties. Don’t worry, it’s all above board. I’ve got the documents,’ she said, noting Dryden’s surprise.
‘And the rest?’
‘This cabinet is all finds,’ she said, standing back so he could see the items more clearly.
Most of it was the dreaded pottery shards, but there were some gold and silver pins, a dagger blade, and some scraps of leather which Dryden presumed were the remains of shoes and belts.
‘Why didn’t you press on after Oxford – pursue a career? You studied archaeology?’
She nodded, the great head staying down. ‘Business to run,’ she answered, too loudly. ‘Father was on his own by then, and Mum had made him let me go in the first place.’ Dryden noted the subtle difference in parental categorization. ‘She’d missed out too – on an education. Bright as a button. Spent her life in this house.’
A gust of light wind thudded an unlatched gate closed somewhere out on the fen. Outside a gull glided into view in the whiteness, and then was gone.
‘Frustrating, then?’ said Dryden, and he saw the slabs of flesh ride over each other as she tried to disguise something worse than frustration. Ma turned and tore the second hessian sheet back with force; this cabinet, like the first, was largely full of pottery: ‘Anglo-Saxon,’ she said. ‘My period. These are all local.’
‘But you can’t find these with a metal detector.’
‘You walk the fields. The stuff just turns up, ploughing does it, and soil churning – it’s natural.’
‘And this?’ asked Dryden, laying his hand on the final cabinet.
When revealed, the final cabinet glittered under the interior light. ‘Purchases,’ said Ma.
One item caught Dryden’s attention, a tiny bone brooch inlaid with silver, lying beside a bone comb with delicate cochineal-red spiral designs.
‘They’re beautiful,’ said Dryden sincerely, taking the magnifying glass and positioning it over the brooch. ‘How d’you afford this stuff?’
‘The business makes money. This represents thirty years of the profits. I don’t have anything else. Family.’ As she said the word she leaned in, peering at one of the brooches, the tip of a red tongue running along her thin lips.
She stood in silence and Boudicca skittered through to nuzzle her hand.
‘Will you have to sell anything to cover costs if the dump’s closed?’
‘I can stretch to six months. I’ll lay off the men; it’s not a charity.’
Dryden nodded. ‘The smog’s corrosive, isn’t it? I’ve noticed the damage on cars in town – corrosion, like a bubbling.’
She hauled open her eyes so that Dryden could see both clearly, two dark grey pebbles. ‘The site is insured, Dryden. And we’re covered by the council’s insurance as well. So – all enquiries to the town hall, OK?’
She smiled but the visit was over. She carefully replaced the hessian screens. ‘I’d be grateful if you didn’t mention the collection at all. It’s not something I share.’
Dryden sensed she regretted showing him. ‘Sure,’ he said, meaning it.
She took him back through the house. There was a threadbare hall carpet and a ticking grandmother clock. By the door an array of Wellington boots, all the same size, stood beneath a Victorian hatstand.
‘One last question,’ said Dryden, savouring his favourite line. ‘Did anyone ever suspect there was anything under the PoW camp? Ever been on the site yourself?’
Ma already had the door half closed. ‘Most authorities agree the Anglo-Saxon settlement stretched to the west of the city, so there was always interest. I knew the farmer out there, I had a look round with the detector – but that would be the late eighties, perhaps earlier.’
‘Find anything?’
Ma edged the door shut. ‘Junk. From the camp mainly. Billy cans, some coins.’
Dryden had his foot, literally, in the closing door. ‘The detectors are that good, are they? Pick up a coin?’
The gap in the still-open door framed Ma’s face. ‘Sure.’
‘How about a silver candlestick?’ he asked, but the door was closed.
15
A mile south of the dump the Capri burst out of the smog, the cab’s aged blue paintwork suddenly reflecting a perfect autumnal sun. A poplar beside the road cast a shadow half a mile long. Dryden shaded his eyes and ran a hand through his black, close-cropped hair, still damp from the mist. He smelt his fingers: the cloying scent of sulphur made him wince. The wide open sky lifted his mood, which had been depressed by Ma Trunch’s claustrophobic world of ancient artefacts and circling dogs.
They got to Il Giardino just before 12.30pm and waited as a convoy of taxis and cars arrived, dropped their passengers and departed. This was the social event of the month: the meeting of the ex-PoW association, and rule number one seemed to be that nobody drove home. Ten Mile Bank was set to rock. Apart from Dryden’s burgeoning interest in the Italian community he had two other good reasons for attending the event: there was nothing else happening except the AGM of the local St John Ambulance, an occasion which made watching paint dry look like a rodeo, and the association’s proposal to raise £5,000 for a memorial to the founder of both the society and Il Giardino, Marco Roma, who had died twenty years earlier in the winter of 1984. Marco Roma – one of the six gardeners of California.
Dryden left Humph exploring the wonderful world of Polish cabbage and crossed the street, pausing only to listen to the sounds of Ten Mile Bank. A whi
stle blew ending a shift in the beet factory, while a tractor sped by, strips of dry caked mud spraying out from its ten-foot high tyres.
Inside Il Giardino accordion music played. The musician was a human walnut, so imploded by age that he could only just be seen behind his instrument. But the music, however rickety, transformed the place. The blinds had been dropped to cut out the direct, savage sunbeams of the afternoon. Candles burnt on every table, and the sound of corks being pulled from bottles was impressive, a Bacchanalian salute. There was a buzz in the air, and Dryden guessed that this was, for most of the association’s fifty or so members, the only social event of the month. A majority of those present were in their eighties, but most were with younger family, sons and daughters, and one toddler was being handed round for approval.
Dryden entered and noticed with relief that the noise level didn’t drop. A stout, short Italian with hands like a muppet approached with a wine glass.
‘Hi,’ said Dryden. ‘The Crow. We were interested in the fund-raising proposal – for Mr Roma. I phoned.’
This news produced a freshly opened bottle of Chianti which was set before Dryden’s admiring eyes, closely followed by a plate of fresh figs, parma ham and artichoke hearts. Dryden hoped fervently that Humph, who had been planning on opening a brace of pork pies for lunch, could see through the glass.
The formalities were blessedly brief. The stout Italian, apparently the master of ceremonies, stood to introduce the item about the memorial. He outlined, for visitors and younger members, why the association felt this mark of respect was needed. Marco Roma, he told them, had been elected by his fellow prisoners in 1943 to represent them in any matters with the British authorities running California. There were no officers amongst the Italian prisoners – all were conscripts. After the war Marco founded the association, which raised funds to support the increasingly elderly membership, and those in need amongst their families. A co-operative farm workers’ association was formed to lobby, successfully, for better wages and conditions. Trips to Italy were funded on humanitarian grounds, and in 1956 fifty ex-PoWs went ‘home’ for a month, all returning – bar one – to the lives they had made for themselves in the Black Fens. The one refusenik found love in the family and stayed to marry his own niece, complete with the necessary Papal dispensation.
Marco had founded Il Giardino in 1948. He was the head of his community and represented both its success in England and its continuing links with Italy. Now the association wanted to build a memorial to him in the town’s cemetery, on a small hill which had once been the site of a windmill, overlooking the Catholic plots. The vote was unanimous, and marked by a fresh influx of wine. Dryden took a note and chatted to the ex-PoWs at one of the tables. The Italian who appeared to have taken Marco’s place was called Roman Casartelli, and he’d worked for nearly thirty-five years on the railways in the Fens.
Casartelli sipped his wine, expertly holding a toothpick between his lips at the same time.
‘You will write about us?’
Dryden nodded, and they refilled his glass.
‘I write about lots of things. You know about the body found at the old camp?’
That took ten degrees off the conviviality scale. Someone coughed by the door and the accordion music fluctuated violently, then stopped.
Dryden checked his notebook. ‘Serafino Amatista. The only Italian PoW to go missing. It may be him. What was he like?’
A tall man with a bent spine who had said little leant forward, spat on the floor and leant back with a final flourish of crossed arms.
‘Popular?’ said Dryden, and raised a laugh.
Casartelli came to the rescue. ‘Mr Dryden.’ He shrugged. ‘It is a long time ago.’
‘But not forgotten, that’s what all this is about, yes? The association, Marco Roma, the war. It’s important – no?’
Dryden, subconsciously, was using one of the good reporter’s best tricks – mimicking the speech patterns of those from whom information must be gathered.
Casartelli smiled, the wine glasses were refilled, and the accordion began again.
‘Serafino we remember. He was billeted on a farming family when he disappeared.’
‘Where?’ asked Dryden.
‘Buskeybay.’
Dryden batted his eyelids, trying to dispel an instant image of the moonlit theatre. ‘That’s a good memory after sixty years.’
‘I was billeted with him,’ said Casartelli, drinking his wine.
‘You played with Roger,’ said Dryden. ‘My uncle.’
There was a murmur of recognition, and the warmth began to return.
‘Many of us worked there, Mr Dryden – we were rotated regularly so that the authorities could keep check on us – to make sure we did not, as they said, “get our feet under the table”. We were meant to work, and they made us work. But Buskeybay was better than the rest – Roger’s parents were good to us. It was more than forced labour. For this we remember them.’ He raised his glass and the toast embraced everyone. Dryden noticed Pepe, ferrying out plates of antipasti.
‘Our friends,’ proposed another one of the aged PoWs, and down went another round of Chianti.
What a piss up, thought Dryden, drinking too. More bottles appeared, and Casartelli swayed, finding himself a chairback to lean on.
Dryden heard more corks being pulled as the audience drew around him. There was only one conversation now, and it was his to take wherever he wished.
‘Did Serafino say why he was going – or where he might go? Did you know he wasn’t coming back?’
‘We did not know why he left when he did, but later, we guessed – perhaps,’ said Casartelli. ‘The police came – the military police – and the officials from the Italian legation after the end of the war in Italy. They said that Serafino was not who he had said he was.’
‘Serafino Amatista does not exist,’ said Dryden. ‘No records at all of the name exist before his capture in Greece 1943.’
Several heads nodded, and wine slurped.
‘So.’ Casartelli bridged his plump-knuckled fingers. ‘They told us he was a deserter. Worse. He had been in Greece, part of the force sent in to provide civilian occupation. The Germans were the military governors, of course, and they told Serafino to guard a village. He was the resident guard there, and the villagers looked after him well as they always did. The name of the village we forget now, but the villagers will never forget his: Serafino Ricci. He betrayed them.’
‘How?’ said Dryden, ploughing on, sensing they wanted him to know.
‘Serafino left. He faked his death – leaving behind the bloodied rifle the Germans had given him. The assumption was clear – the villagers had murdered their guard – or the partisans in the hills had done it for them. There was a proclamation then, notorious even now. Reprisals were part of the justice system – for Serafino’s life they had to take another.’
Dryden felt his throat go dry. ‘So, they just shot someone? Because Serafino was dead?’
‘Yes. A shameful day – yes?’
Dryden nodded. ‘I don’t understand. How did the British authorities know who Serafino was if he had never given them his name?’
Casartelli brushed the sweat on his forehead away with the back of his hand. ‘The witness who had identified Serafino was a German officer – one of the prisoners who had taken his place in the camp. We do not know how this happened, we learned only later. But we think Serafino knew, before his disappearance, that he had been recognized. Perhaps he was trying to get into the camp, Mr Dryden. Blackmail? Murder? Now we will never know.’
‘And he would have known about the tunnel?’
There was a long silence in which Dryden could hear the distant sound of romantic dogs.
‘Yes. He was one of the gardeners.’ There was laughter, and the clink of glasses.
Dryden recalled the snapshot Pepe had shown him: the five men laughing together, sharing a secret, with their compatriot behind the lens.
‘
There were six?’ he said, and Casartelli nodded. ‘And they dug the tunnel, and dumped the soil in the garden they tilled between the huts. Of course.’ Dryden felt pleased, knowing the silence said he was right.
Everyone smiled. ‘But why did no one escape?’
Casartelli shrugged. ‘We know only one thing. The gardeners are all dead now. The tunnel – we knew of it, of course. But only the gardeners knew where it was, and only they could use it.’
‘But they never did,’ said Dryden.
There was a cough from the counter and Dryden saw Pepe standing in the shadows, and it struck him for the first time that he was childless in this family-dominated world.
‘No. A mystery,’ said Casartelli, standing. ‘We will never know why. It was 1944 by the time they were under the wire. I think. Perhaps they loved the garden more than the idea of escape!’
Everyone laughed again, but Dryden sensed it was manufactured this time, and the accordion music washed away the atmosphere of confession. A rival conversation broke out at another table, then several more. Casartelli was gone, and one of his compatriots pressed coffee on Dryden, and Italian cigarettes.
Then the grappa bottle appeared. Dryden was led by several reeling Italians to see some pictures on the wall. The association’s members on a trip to Rome, a Christmas celebration at Il Giardino crowded with grandchildren.
‘And this?’ asked Dryden, pausing in front of a small mounted glass case. Inside were five mother-of-pearl buttons, each marked with a silver crest – a lion holding a bell.
There was silence until Casartelli spoke. ‘The gardeners,’ he said. ‘Each had one of these. They wore them as badges. They were proud of what they’d done, perhaps too proud.’
‘But where…?’ Dryden was steered away, back to the grappa bottle. He begged two glasses and took one out for Humph. They sat, the cab doors open, and drank in silence under a heart-stopping sky, the blue thin enough to hint that the stars were just beyond.
The Moon Tunnel Page 11