by Henry Green
‘That fourth paragraph of Smiths doesn’t seem to make sense, sir,’ Charley broke in, misunderstanding the drift.
‘What’s that got to do with it? I’ve known Rob Jordan all my life, haven’t I? We served our apprenticeship together. He thinks we don’t want this job, that’s all. And I must say, if I was in his shoes, I’d come to the same conclusion. What’s happened here? He’s got his own men chasing castings through the various foundries. And they’re doing it right, they’re going down themselves, not writing letters. One of ’em was shown this wet thing of yours. Rob told me so, I’ve just phoned him. Because it was wet what you wrote, sloppy. You don’t want to encourage people to turn out wasters. You have to threaten ’em, when we’ve the priorities we’ve got at the back of us. What firm’s supplying these castings?’
‘Blundells.’
‘Then they showed one of his snoopers your letter. Look, don’t worry too much,’ Mr Mead said. ‘I fixed it with Rob just now. I gave him a ring. But do something for me, will you? Get back to your own room and write Blundells such a letter that will burn the fingers of whoever takes hold on it. Threaten them with the Minister in person if Smiths don’t receive the balance, and in a month. Then go down, for God’s sake see them. We shan’t be too late yet. And Charley?’
‘Yes sir?’
‘Don’t be in too much of a hurry to take things at face value. You were wrong about Jordan’s letter. He was only covering himself in case he got the blame. There’s just one other point. Keep lively. Don’t think that everything’s a try on because of this single instance.’
Summers collected the files and the letter, and went back to his room.
‘Read this,’ he said to Dot.
She skimmed through.
‘Well, that’s that,’ she said when she had finished.
‘It’s not, then,’ he replied, more violent than she had known him.
‘If S.O.M.F. say so, I should think it was. We came up against them when I was on penicillin.’
‘Nothing but a try on,’ he announced.
‘O.K.,’ she said, pert.
‘Turn me up the cards.’
On these cards were recorded actual deliveries of the parts from Blundells to Henry Smith and Co., together with brief particulars of the letters that had passed. He did not check the detail.
‘I don’t know,’ he muttered.
She stood there.
‘Everything seems to come at once,’ he added, riding his feelings on a loose rein.
She said, brightly, that it never rained but it poured.
‘The lying bastard,’ he cried, once more reading Mr Jordan’s letter, as if it had been a note from Mr Grant.
‘Well we can’t expect the impossible, can we?’ she asked.
‘Look, Miss,’ he said, and he had recently been calling her Dot, ‘this letter’s a try on, doesn’t mean what it says. I saw that the minute I set eyes on it. I’ve had some lately. There was a time I believed everything I had under my bloody nose, like you seem to, but I don’t now. Excuse me, of course.’
‘This has got you upset, hasn’t it?’ she said.
Then, without warning, he surprised himself by coming out with his own story.
‘Well what would you say if a woman you’d known most of your days told you she wasn’t herself? Not sick or ill I mean, but another person all at once.’ Because he had never before discussed anything outside the office, she was intensely curious.
‘What?’ she asked.
‘No one will ever believe that,’ he said.
‘Well I believed this letter, didn’t I, which you saw through at once, or so you said.’
‘Which letter?’ he wanted to know.
‘Why the one from Smiths, of course, to do with those blessed castings. But you’ve had something on your mind, lately. You’ve been different.’
This drew no reply.
‘I’ll say you have,’ she went on. ‘My mum always tells the world, “If there’s anyone to understand a person it’s Dot.” Of course we have rather a wonderful relationship really, mum and me. Not like mother and daughter at all.’ There was a long pause.
‘Back from Germany,’ he started, as though thinking aloud, then stopped, looking very queer, so she thought.
‘Yes then?’ she encouraged.
‘A girl I used to know says she’s not that girl,’ he brought out, with difficulty.
‘The self-same girl?’ Miss Pitter did not know if she mightn’t laugh out loud.
‘Dyed her hair,’ he explained.
‘Well what about her handwriting? Has she changed that when she sends you a line?’ Dot asked him, with what is known as a woman’s intuition.
‘Oh dear,’ he said. He had never considered this. ‘Oh dear,’ he said, in anguish.
Then the telephone went. For a time they were very busy. It brought him back to office life. As soon as there was a lull he carried Smiths letter, and the files, out to Mr Pike.
‘Can you spare a minute?’ he asked this man.
‘Read this, Mr Pike,’ he offered, handing the correspondence over. Mr Pike perused it, without in any way letting on that he had looked into the whole matter only an hour or so ago.
‘There’s two points I don’t like, Summers,’ Mr Pike began, then halted. He was like an owl in daylight.
Charley waited.
‘This mention of parabolam, here, for one,’ Mr Pike started, slow again, ‘and then his quoting your reference.’
‘Yes, Mr Pike.’ A pause.
‘Of course it’s a try on.’
‘That’s so.’ A long pause, while Charley waited.
‘Which stands out a mile,’ the chief draughtsman continued at last. ‘Another thing. This is a secret process, Summers. We don’t want any special metal associated with parabolam.’
‘No, Mr Pike.’
‘And, you know, I don’t care for their quoting your reference. That’s nasty, that is. Right oh,’ he ended. ‘Thanks for showing me.’
But Charley’s feelings got the better of him. ‘You don’t consider someone may have forged it?’ he asked, on impulse.
Mr Pike stayed quite still. Charley blushed.
‘Silly I know,’ he said, ‘but I just wondered. Noticed some strange things lately. One of those handwriting experts could tell.’
‘The old man and Mr Jordan served their apprenticeship together at the same bench,’ Mr Pike said at last, to dismiss Charley. And, when the young fellow was gone, the chief draughtsman could not get down to his work. He was disheartened with the times he lived in. ‘They’re coming back nervous cases, like they did out of the last war,’ he repeated to himself, and thought that, in that case, then everything was hopeless.
As Charley got back to his own room he found Miss Pitter bending to reach an object she had dropped. Seen from behind her short skirts were lifted, while she stretched, to show an inch or so of white flesh above the stockings. He noted that to have come upon this a few weeks back would have meant more than somewhat.
‘It was plain as a pikestaff I’ll be bound?’ Miss Pitter asked.
‘He agreed this is a try on,’ Charley answered.
‘Yet that doesn’t prevent his department holding out on us with the advice notes, so I can’t keep our cards up to date.’
He stayed silent.
‘Oh well I don’t imagine he does it on purpose, or I don’t suppose anyone would, for that matter?’ She had recently come round to thinking Mr Pike rather an old dear.
He glared at nothing in particular.
‘You are taking things to heart, aren’t you?’ Miss Pitter said, to be sympathetic. ‘Was Mr Mead upset, then? I’ll tell you what. You have a good night’s rest and it will seem different in the morning.’
He looked at her as though she were insane. Then his telephone rang. As soon as the conversation was over, and while she was marking on the appropriate card what he had just been told, he said, half to himself,
‘How do I get her to
write?’
‘Don’t you worry,’ she replied. ‘She’s worrying her wits this very instant, I’ll bet, to find an excuse to do just that very thing.’
He gave such a cynical laugh that she turned round to look.
‘Oh well, if you’ve quarrelled, that’s another matter,’ she went on. ‘You can’t expect her to run after you, can you now? A girl’s got to keep her self respect, when all’s said and done,’ she said.
‘Self respect?’ he echoed scornfully. The telephone rang once more. She could have kicked it.
‘And no mention of parabolam from this time forward,’ he said to her, as he put back the receiver. ‘Even if I forget when dictating, don’t take that down. Mr Pike doesn’t like it.’ Charley had almost escaped from his obsession. But she brought him back.
‘I’ll tell you something you don’t care for,’ she replied, relentless. ‘The mention of her name.’ He started up out of his chair at this cruel shock, this searchlight on a naked man, but she went on. ‘Oh I’ve known for ages. It’s Rose, Rose she’s called, isn’t it Rose?’
‘No,’ he lied, and went straight out of the room to the lavatory, in case he should have to vomit.
He used to think that no one could ever take from him his trust in Rose which, when the time came, Rose had snatched away herself in a moment.
As soon as he was in bed of an evening, he would literally writhe while he remembered how they had been together.
He grew more and more sure this whole thing was a plot, like the affair with Blundells.
So he set himself one morning in the roadway, a beggar with his stick, to have a word with Middlewitch while the man was off for lunch.
He was more and more jealous of the relations he felt certain that Middlewitch must have had with Rose, and was probably still having.
Arthur saw Charley from afar. He knew it was a nuisance, but the chap was obviously in dire trouble. What they shared of the war, that is the experiences they’d each had on their own, was a bond between them, if only of aluminium, pulleys, and elastic. He thought there was nothing for it but to take Charley along with him.
So he greeted Summers exuberantly, and Charley, with bad grace, accepted the invitation he had hoped for, finding little to say at first while this man rattled jovial, patronizing tit bits in his direction.
‘Rose, Rose,’ Mr Middlewitch called to the waitress once they were seated.
‘Reminds me,’ Summers said quiet. ‘D’you know Nance Whitmore?’
‘My dear old boy? Why she lives across my landing. Grand girl Nancy.’
‘Used to be Phillips,’ Summers said.
‘What did?’
‘The name. Phillips.’
‘Is that so?’ Mr Middlewitch replied, uninterested. ‘Well it’s a small world. Fancy you coming across young Nance. You’ve kept a bit dark about that, surely? You never told me, I mean.’
And what about your not saying a word, Charley thought. He chewed this over in scornful silence for a while.
Mr Middlewitch considered that Summers was looking very strange.
‘Of course I haven’t known her long,’ he said at last. ‘Only since I was felt hatted, and went to live in digs. Now Rose, darling, don’t say it has to be bunny again. We’ve had a proper dose of that this week.’
‘Oh Mr Middlewitch,’ she said. ‘Oh Rose,’ he gave her back. Both of them laughed.
Charley began to feel sick in spite of the whisky.
After more had been ordered Charley said,
‘Her name was Rose.’
‘Whose name?’
‘Rose Phillips.’
‘You’re telling me a lot about this Rose Phillips, old man,’ Mr Middlewitch complained, ‘but I’ve never had the honour, have I?’ He was continually looking round the luncheon room for acquaintances.
‘It’s Nance Whitmore.’
‘What was her name, then, before she married Phillips?’
‘Nancy Whitmore was Rose Grant.’
‘You’re wrong there, old chap. Nance lost her husband in the war. He wasn’t called Phillips. Then she changed her name back by deed poll. But her hubby was Phil White. Is that what you were thinking of? Phil and Phillips? He got his at Alamein.’
This was more than Charley could stomach.
‘What’s the penalty for bigamy, even when the second husband’s dead?’ he demanded, choking.
‘Bigamy, old boy? Why ask me? Never marry ’em, that’s my motto. Best thing too.’
‘She’s a bigamist,’ Charley insisted, almost draining his second whisky at a gulp. Middlewitch looked at him with disgust.
‘Steady,’ he said, ‘steady, old man. I’ve known the little lady in question ever since I got back.’
‘Old Grant introduce you?’
‘Gerald Grant? Here, what is this? If they know each other it’s the first I’ve heard. And I suspect it’s none of my business.’
‘She’s a bigamist,’ Charley said. All this time he had kept his eyes on the table. Middlewitch took it for a sign that the fellow knew he was lying. ‘Now see here, Summers, you’ll be getting yourself into a peck of trouble one of these fine days.’ Then he began to lose his temper. ‘And in any case,’ he went on, ‘I say damn a man who says what you’ve just done about a lady and doesn’t look you in the eye as he speaks. Even if it is about a girl, and they’re capable of anything. You can’t tell me,’ he ended, appreciating the sally.
But Charley raised his eyes to Middlewitch for the first time, who could only stare at what was opened to him in them.
‘I see,’ Mr Middlewitch said uncomfortably.
‘Well, there you are,’ Mr Middlewitch exclaimed again.
Charley finished the whisky, laughed, and said, ‘Yes, there it is,’ with a sort of satisfaction.
‘But look here, Summers,’ Arthur started, once something, he was not sure what, had begun to sink into him, ‘why she’s straight as a die, you know, straight as a die. I’d stake my life on that. Nancy Whitmore. Good lord yes.’
‘Did you know about her son?’
‘My dear good chap you’re mistaken there, I can assure you. Why, after they’ve been in the straw they’ve a brown line down their little tummies. Well she hasn’t, so what d’you know?’
‘And how did you learn?’ Charley brought out, in such a voice that Middlewitch swallowed, then, when he did reply, began to bluster.
‘Why, I went swimming with her of course,’ he lied. ‘Last summer it was. Took the girl down to Margate.’
‘With mines on the beach?’
But Arthur had recovered himself.
‘In the Palais de Swim, or whatever they call the place, naturally,’ he answered. ‘Look, you’ll excuse my saying this, old man. You may even think I’m a funny sort of host. But let’s change the subject, shall we? I mean the little lady’s quite a pal of mine. It’s strange. You’ve got the wrong side of one another some time, I know. But that’s nothing to do with this chap,’ he said, pointing a finger at himself, ‘if you get me.’
Then, through his rising, nauseating misery, Summers had, as he thought, a brain wave.
‘A written apology is what she should send,’ he announced.
‘O.K. Enough’s enough. Now what’s to follow? Rose,’ Arthur called to the waitress, his patience with the whole subject at an end, ‘Rose.’
‘Sorry,’ Charley said. ‘Suppose I’m a bit upset.’
‘I can see that, old man.’
‘Her name was Rose. That got me started.’
‘All right Summers,’ Middlewitch replied with unction, his position restored now Charley had weakened, ‘all right, but I can’t use any other name for the waitresses, can I? Or call Nance by any other than what I know? See here, old chap. You sit on as you are. Simmer down.’ He laughed. ‘There’s old Ernie Mandrew across the room I must have a word with. And while I’m away I may be able to get hold of Rose to bring us what’s to come. You’ll have another drink of course?’ He got up and left.
/> He managed to stop their waitress. ‘Look, darling, I’ve got to go,’ he said. ‘See to my friend,’ he asked. ‘He’s more than a bit queer, had a bad war,’ he added, ‘was repatriated, after me as a matter of fact. Fetch him another whisky, like a good girl. I shall be in again tomorrow. He’s stuck on a girl called Rose. Bit of a coincidence, isn’t it?’ He went off laughing.
An hour and three whiskies later, Charley paid the bill and left. When someone else was put in Arthur’s place, at their table, he had hardly noticed.
After Middlewitch got home that night from the office, he was still angry with Summers. As soon as he’d had a wash, however, he began to see the whole matter in a rosier light. The chap had had a rotten time. Girls like Nance should appreciate what Charley, and he, had been through. He would have a chat with her. If he went across now, she would not have gone to work yet. So he knocked at her door.
She did not open up, but called out to ask who might it be.
‘Only Art,’ he said.
‘Why Art,’ she said, letting him in. ‘There’ve been some queer customers around lately,’ she explained. ‘I’m in a state of siege now, I promise.’ She was laughing.
‘Customers?’ he enquired archly, as he settled himself in the best chair. ‘But Nance,’ he said, ‘you ought to watch out how you express yourself, or you’ll be misunderstood.’
‘Well then,’ she replied, ‘don’t you misunderstand for a start. You can’t tell what I’ve had to sit here and listen to these last few weeks. And what’s become of you in all that time? It must be months since I’ve seen you, Art.’
‘Oh I’ve been around, here, there, and everywhere, like the scarlet Johnny,’ he said. ‘And by the way, I came across someone who claimed your acquaintance.’
‘Go on? What colour was his hair? Ginger?’
‘You’re joking,’ he objected. ‘No, it was a chap with me, where they fitted us with our limbs. He was repatriated a bit later than me, as a matter of fact. Charley Summers’ the name.’
‘You too,’ was all she said, and seemed disgusted. Arthur considered, perhaps this was more serious than he had thought.