by Leah Fleming
‘What is epilepsy? There has to be a cure for this complaint, surely? We must find one of the best doctors—’ Hester started but Angus interrupted.
‘You’ve got to let them find me a job for the war effort. Anywhere…I can’t not be part of the show!’
The doctor sat down, trying to make sense of the distress in the room.
‘Calm down, young man. I don’t suppose you told them anything before, did you, at the first medical, about those school fits?’
‘What do you take me for? Of course not. I’ve been a year in training and no bother. Then this, out of the blue! The headaches come and go and I have been struggling to concentrate. Sometimes I go a bit blank for a few seconds but I can cover it up. I was doing perfectly fine but now I’m a freak! They say I’m an epileptic. What sort of condition is that?’
Mackenzie hesitated. ‘It’s a serious condition. There are those who suggest you might be better off in a special hospital…It can get worse…or there’s always the hope that it settles down and you never have another one.’
‘No one’s putting me into some loony bin. If I can’t do my job at the moment I’ll rest up here until I can be cured,’ Angus pleaded, pacing the floor in agitation.
Mackenzie shook his head and glanced at Hester. ‘You have to understand, laddie, there’s no permanent cure for your condition, but some pills might calm it down.’
‘Give them to me,’ Angus said. ‘Then I can carry on.’
‘I’m sorry, but the medical officers are right. You are a risk to your men, with this condition. You might collapse under battle strain. Better to stop now before you do damage.’
Hester watched him dismiss her son’s career with a wave of his hand. Angus was distraught at his honest assessment.
‘How can I live after this? I’ll have to go away. I don’t want the world knowing I’m a nutcase.’
‘We’ll do no such thing,’said Hester. ‘You have the certificates to prove your discharge. We’ll find you something to do here. What’s needed now is peace and quiet to settle whatever this is and we’ll get a second opinion from Harley Street. Isn’t that right, Doctor?’ She turned to Mackenzie with a sigh.
He nodded in agreement. ‘There are other things you can do for the war effort,’ he offered, more in hope than certainty.
‘Like what?’
‘We’ll think of something. Hiding away here is pointless. You can rest and be useful in the community. Young men are in short supply. It’s not what you wanted, but the alternative is unthinkable.’ The doctor leaned across to offer a supportive pat on the arm.
Angus made for the door. ‘I’d rather stay indoors and out of sight. I’m tired. I don’t want any supper. I’m not hungry.’
It was like dealing with a truculent child, but his distress was real enough.‘Have you told your brother?’Hester asked, sensing Angus would hate to be seen as the lesser of the two, unable to be alongside him when he went abroad.
‘No, nor Father yet. I can’t bear to think of Guy going and not me. I don’t want them to see me like this in civvies again. What am I going to do? It feels I’ve been given a life sentence. I’m not like other men, am I?’
‘Enough! You’ll change your clothes, wash your face and we’ll dine as usual. Life goes on without us and this isn’t the end of the world for you.’
Mackenzie stood up to leave. ‘Think on, young man, you’re alive when others have gone west. We’ll find you something useful to do. No one will berate you for being ill.’
‘But I’m not sick! You’re not listening. There’s nothing wrong with me but these stupid fainting fits. Oh, why me?’
Hester paused to answer his pain as best she could. She wanted to enfold him in her arms but he would only push her away. ‘Your child is your child all your life, Doctor,’ she sighed. ‘When they hurt, you hurt too.’
He nodded in sympathy. ‘Never a truer word, Lady Hester.’ He turned to Angus. ‘You must play this ball where it’s landed. This epilepsy is your battlefield now and you mustn’t let it take over your life. We must deal with it as best we can, but now is not the time to argue. You’re home and it’s time to rest and regroup and think out a strategy like your Father does. There must be a way forward, given time. Nil desperandum—don’t despair. There are other ways to serve than rattling a sabre.’
Angus ignored his departure. Hester saw the doctor to the door, leaving her son to compose himself. Suddenly her ordered world was turned upside down by his return. Her selfish prayer had been answered, but this wish fulfilled gave no satisfaction at all.
Essie didn’t like the sound of Newton’s war. His letters came in muddy-fingered clumps—when they came at all. His soldiering was hard, from her reading of his comments. He was busy fettling up gunmetal and horse tackle and delivering wire to the front-line troops. It had been a harsh winter and now his section was supporting the French troops at a place close to Verdun, if the papers were to be believed. He sounded cheerful enough but little phrases kept spearing her mind.
‘It’s a bit hellish here, and you have to watch your head from sausage bombs and shrapnel. The other chaps are grand,’ he said. He’d palled up with a lad from Bingley called Archie Spensley. The villages in France were all in ruins and his food rations sounded boring, tins of Maconochie stew and hard biscuits. The French soldiers had hot meals and were treated much better, he complained: ‘You wouldn’t feed the dog on what we get.’ But she wasn’t worried.
It was Frank who was causing her anxiety; he had got in bother for upsetting some officer with cheek. This captain wasn’t treating his horse right and Frank had showed his disapproval, which got him on a charge. Frank had always been for his horses. He wouldn’t stand any cruelty but he was young and brash, none too keen to hold his tongue.
She had joined this new Women’s Institute as a distraction as well as to do her bit. They sang the National Anthem, they had talks on cookery and other women’s matters, and sometimes held little competitions for baking and flower arranging, which was fun. It made a change from chapel and the usual chores. But she was worried about Asa struggling to cope on his own. She did what she could in the forge but the heat inside made her wheeze and cough so she couldn’t stay in long.
Selma was looking after the veg plot and exercising the horses, still writing to the young Cantrell boy, whose brother was back home now on health grounds. Betty Plimmer said he looked perfectly fit to her when he rode out on his mother’s horse. Lady Hester was busy trying to get him fitted up at Sharland School as an instructor for the officer cadets or something. It was all very mysterious. Ethel at the post office hinted he might have got a girl into trouble somewhere. Trust the village gossips to make two and two into five.
Essie tried to keep herself away from tittle-tattle. If they talked about others, they’d talk about you behind your back, she’d worked that out long ago. Better to keep private stuff in the family, and if it made her seem standoffish then so be it.
She was walking up the street when she saw Coleford approaching Prospect Row. Her heart began to thud as he moved closer to their houses. Who was it this time? Jack Plimmer from the Hart’s Head?
She scurried home, trying not to look where Coleford was going as she overtook him. He parked his bicycle by the stone wall and bent over to tie his shoe lace and smiled. Phew! Another false alarm. Praise the Lord!
She made for the snicket at the side of the cottage to let herself in the back door, leaving the gate open, and then she turned to see the old man hovering behind her holding an official brown envelope in his hand. The look on his face said it all. She cranked up a grimace of a smile as if he might perhaps move on to another door. Perhaps he didn’t have the right address. But she knew, deep in her gut she knew the envelope was for them.
‘Mrs Bartley,’ he whispered.
‘Aye, it’s our turn then,’ was all she could manage as she turned her back on him and made for the safety of her kitchen. Her hands were shaking and wouldn’t open the
door properly. The envelope lay burning a hole in the table for hours until Asa came in. She nodded in its direction, unable to speak. He wiped his hands and tore the envelope, read the page, looked up at her shaking his head as if all the sorrows of the world were contained in those sad eyes.
‘He’s gone missing. Our Newton’s missing, presumed killed.’ He sat down, his head in his hands. ‘I don’t understand. We had a letter only the other day. My son…’
Asa walked back to his workshop, his shoulders bowed. Essie walked down the path to the open gate and out onto the lane and stared up at the green hills. How could her son be lost and her not know it? How could her lovely lad be so far away from her and she not sense he’d gone from her? While she was sitting, chattering away, he was lying somewhere, unseeing. They got things wrong sometimes, she thought. She would not close the front room curtains yet a while…not until the others knew. How on earth was she going to tell Selma?
Selma couldn’t believe she’d never see her brother again. He was only missing in action, Mam said. There was hope, however small. So at first she refused to go into black clothes. Frank was not even allowed home from France on compassionate leave. Perhaps he knew more than he was letting on, but he was in the north somewhere far away from Newt’s regiment. She managed to go to school in a dream, trying not to show her true feelings. Children didn’t want to see suffering faces. Her brother, said the pastor, was in a better place now. Dad nodded but said nothing as neighbours called with their little gifts of kindness: buns, pastries and vegetables. As if any of them wanted to eat at such a time. Everything stuck like pebbles in her throat. Mam just stared at Newton’s portrait and insisted the gate be kept open at the back just in case.‘You never know…he might be trying to find his way home,’ she kept whispering.
But it was Archie Spensley’s letter a week later that shattered all their illusions.
Dear family,
I am sad to have to write to you that your son and my dear friend, Newton, is no more. We chummed up straight away in Halifax and he was highly regarded as a conscientious worker and a good Christian. I shall miss his cheery company. We are greatly troubled by enemy fire in this district, which damaged our guns with shells and fragments. Your son was going forward to do a repair. There was another bombardment and I never saw him again. Be assured he would not have suffered and would want you to know you were ever in his thoughts.
May God bless all of you in your darkest hour, may He show you every mercy.
Yours sincerely,
Private Archibald Spensley
Suddenly, Selma’s parents looked old, weary and bent with sorrow. If only there was something she could do to lighten their load. Without the boys’ help Dad was sinking under a pile of unfinished orders. If only Frank could be made to come home like Angus Cantrell, who was hanging about the Hart’s Head like a knotless thread. She knew Guy was anxious to hear if she’d seen him but she was no tale-teller and said nothing to worry him.
Angus looked able-bodied enough to give a helping hand if he had a mind to it but such an impertinent request was out of the question. Lady Hester would never condone such lowly employment.
They held a simple memorial service and sang Newton’s favourite hymn, ‘Who would true valour see, Let him come hither’. She tried to sing but the words collapsed in her throat. She didn’t hear the pastor’s oration. She was living in a sort of dream. It wasn’t real because they had no body to bury, just a flag draped around the portrait he’d had taken in his uniform when he first volunteered. There were only old men and Angus Cantrell and his mother. He looked so like his brother and her heart ached at the sight of his tall frame and broad shoulders. Those who had already lost sons shielded her parents with loving concern. They had been admitted to a club whose entrance fee was young blood; a club no one wanted to join.
How hard it was for women to sit on the sidelines watching their loved ones fall down like skittles. Then, in the stillness of the chapel, an idea came into Selma’s head—an arrow-sharp idea.
If men were absent then the women must do their work—not just the easy stuff, but the hard stuff too, the heavy jobs, the dangerous skills. It was the least they could do. Why hadn’t she thought of it before?
‘Don’t be silly, you can’t be a blacksmith! It’s heavy work,’ said her father on hearing her bright idea the next day.
‘Why not? I can help, hold things steady, I can learn. I’ve watched enough times,’ Selma argued as she and her parents sat hugging the fire.
‘But what about your schooling? We signed for you to be a teaching assistant…’
‘This is wartime. I’m needed at home. Dad needs someone by his side to run errands. We might find a young boy to train up until Frank comes back, but in the meantime it’s what Newt would want me to do,’ Selma added.
Asa stared into the fire, scratching his head. ‘Who’s put this idea in your head? Not you, Essie?’
‘Nowt to do with me. She’s thought this one up herself. It’s not women’s work but someone has to do it, I suppose.’
‘Neither is ploughing or making shells or driving steam engines, but there are girls out there doing that. I’ll give it a go…I’m strong,’ Selma said, sensing their opposition weakening.
‘I don’t know, love. What’ll folk say of me, letting you hammer out their metalwork?’
‘They’ll not bother as long as their stuff is repaired. You can’t do everything yourself. It’s worth a try. I haven’t settled to sitting in school all day. It’s not right. Not now.’
‘But your hands…there’s splashes and it’s dangerous.’
‘I know you’ll show me the right way to go about things. I can wear leather gloves and an apron.’
‘It’s a big step and a sacrifice,’ Mam sighed.
‘But it’s nothing to the sacrifice Newton’s had to make,’ Selma replied.
They fell silent. There was no answering that.
7
Guy hung over the side of the troopship watching Southampton fading into the distance Their embarkation procedure had taken ages. The big push was rumoured to be beginning. There were rumours of a sea battle too but he’d taken comfort from seeing the destroyer forging through the waves ahead of them, leading them southwards towards the French coast.
It was hard not to feel excited to be going abroad at long last, though guilty that he was leaving his family behind in the throes of despair. Angus had not written a word to him about his mysterious discharge but he had had a long explanation from Mother about how the doctor in Harley Street had prescribed heavy sedation, and how Angus must be monitored. She was fussing over her son and Angus was no doubt hating every minute of it, but at least he had a part-time job in the school.
Guy could sense, in the lack of letters, his brother’s resentment and fury that he was thwarted by these fits while Guy was now free to pursue his career unhindered. But he promised himself that he would write to Angus as much detail as he could so he could share this experience, even if second-hand, every step of the way.
Selma’s sad letter also disturbed him with news of Newton’s death and her decision to go into the forge—as an apprentice, of all things. In truth, he was a little shocked at such drastic action. How could a slip of a girl do such heavy work? Surely it was no place for a woman, but she seemed determined to settle down and make the best of it. What a wonderful girl she was: brave, determined; admirable in every way.
Nearly two years of war and still no end in sight. If the rumour mill was to be believed, things were going to hot up soon to shake the stalemate in the northern trenches and his troops were going to be part of some great push forward so he couldn’t wait to be in the thick of it. The Yorkshires had trained for just such a battle and he felt proud to be leading his men. The sooner they shunted the Hun eastwards, the sooner he could get back and sort out things with Angus. Selma’s other brother would relieve her and they would all get on with their normal lives.
The funny thing was that l
ife in the regiment now seemed his normal life and it was just like school in so many ways, with its traditions and its rules; a world within another world, running on its own tramlines…
Now all their training was going to be tested in the heat of battle. He only hoped his courage wouldn’t fail when push came to shove.
‘Lieutenant Cantrell, sir.’ His reverie was interrupted by a saluting NCO. ‘Trouble in the hold, sir. Young Bostock’s gone berserk, sir. He’s in a right state…says he’ll never see his kiddies again and that we’re all going to go west.’
The last thing they needed was someone putting the wind up the troops, Guy thought.
‘Bring him up into the fresh air and I’ll have a word.’ Private Bostock was an orderly, a useful chap, not usually a worry guts, and it was not like him to be in a panic.
Minutes later, the private was marched before him, saluting and looking flustered.
‘What’s going on? Didn’t expect you to get the wind up!’ Guy tried to look stern though the man’s distress was obvious.
‘I hate water, sir. I can’t stand the rocking and rolling. I’m a dalesman. The sea puts the fear of God in me, sir…get a bad feeling inside. Makes me legs go funny, dizzy, like, and I see things,’ said the private, trying not to shake.
‘What things?’ Guy demanded.
‘I looked round at my mates, sir. I got a bad feeling…None of us’ll make it back. They were in the ground in pieces…it was like Hell. None of us will make it back home in one piece…’
‘Enough of this! We can’t have you mouthing this sort of funk. It’s bad for morale. Nerves are a funny thing. If you’ve time to get so worked up about nothing then you can do a job for me on deck. I want all this list checked over, every item ticked and when you’ve done it once you can do it again. See to it right away!’
‘Yes, thank you, sir.’
‘Dismissed.’ Guy hoped he’d done the right thing. Separating a doom-and-gloom merchant from the others was essential. Morale was everything, and his own job was to instil confidence and trust, even if Bostock’s words had chilled his own blood. Was he right? Would any of them ever see Southampton dock again?