Authors: Lia Mills
It was easy to talk in the car, both of us looking out of the window at the road. Vivienne told me she had eight younger brothers and sisters, as well as two older brothers.
âWho'll mind your younger brothers and sisters when you're gone to France?'
She laughed. âMy older brothers have wives now. The farm is theirs, and all that goes with it. It's their turn. This is my chance, and I'm taking it.' She rolled her neck, swivelled her head from side to side.
When we got back to the clearing station, we saw hundreds of people moving slowly through Beresford Place on the far side of the river. They emerged from a dense, reddish fog carrying bundles and bags and babies.
âNot that them poor souls ever had much,' a woman said, âbut what there was is gone up in flames. Them boys in the Post Office have a lot to answer for.'
A heavy rumbling, like a train loose on the road, made us look around. The most peculiar vehicle I'd ever seen approached the bridge. A vast metal cylinder was mounted longways on a lorry driven by a soldier. There were slits, like in a pillar box, cut into its sides. We watched it huff and grumble along. The engine strained under the weight, reminding me of the time Liam mistook a lorry for a shell and thought his time had come. âWhat on earth â' I said.
Vivienne snorted. âIt's like some class of a siege engine, delivering boiling oil.'
When the strange vehicle had passed, we were directed to a place where we could stop the car. We reported our success with the eye man to the doctor in charge, who was less impressed than he might have been and assigned us to take three women and a man to Paddy Dun's. We installed them in the back of the car, with much wincing and adjustment of injured limbs, a wrist here, an elbow there, and set off again. One of the women had a shattered shoulder. Tears poured down her face with every jolt.
When we got to the hospital, one of the women shook my hand, declared that mine was cold and gave me her cardigan,
saying, I'd have more need of it now she was going inside. âAnd nothing, not hell nor high water, will get me out again before daylight.'
We made several more journeys that night. I told Vivienne about Liam, and about Eva. She told me she'd had a sweetheart but he was killed in training for the army. His unit was sent to mend a wall on a local estate and the wall fell on him and crushed him. It was pointless, she said. And that, as much as anything, had decided her on going out with the ambulance corps.
I wanted to say something about Hubie, but I was afraid that if I started to talk about him I wouldn't be able to stop. Instead I told her I might go to London to learn about antiques and fine art, come back to work in a shop.
âWhat's stopping you?'
âGood question.' I was an adult, after all. Thousands of people, millions, made their way through life alone. Why did I need my parents' approval?
Vivienne mistook my silence. âAre you tired? I am. But let's keep going as long as we can.'
I'd stopped noticing corners and low-hanging railway bridges by then. Anyone could have shot at us, at any time, but no one did. Less was said as the night wore on. Less needed to be said. There was a fog in my mind that matched the smoky, acrid air. I lost track of time, but hours must have passed before the engine stuttered and we coasted to a stop on a side street off Great Brunswick Street.
âThat's it,' Vivienne said. âWe've no more petrol.' Some soldiers pushed the car into a yard, said it could take its chances there for the night. They told us to go on up to Holles Street, where there was a waiting room set up for volunteers like us, with blankets on the floor for us to sleep on.
The waning moon took a knife to the sky, spilled a weird
light through the smoky air as we made our way along. Was it my imagination that the walls of the houses we passed were warm, that they breathed sulphur? Ahead of us, at the mouth of a lane, were three soldiers. One of them had a corporal's chevrons on his sleeve. They were looking our way. A fox in a moonlit garden is one thing; in a kitchen seeking eggs it's another. I wished I'd Liam's coat to pull around me.
âWell,' the fat soldier drawled. âWell, well. What have we here?'
Their eyes were hard and flat. I pulled myself up straight and tried to walk past, but he lowered his rifle and stopped me. Vivienne stood a little behind me. She was so small, almost like a child.
âLet us through.' I hated that my voice was uneven.
The fat soldier planted himself in front of me, so close the buttons of his uniform grazed the front of my dress, his face pushed towards mine. I could smell him. Sweat and the rotten breath of teeth unwashed for days, a stink of tobacco.
Cold stirred in a place so deep inside me I couldn't name it. Everything inside me slowed. I'd a sensation of creepy-crawlies tracking across my skin, through the fine hairs on my neck and down my goose-fleshed arms. This was my city. They'd no business here, telling me where I could or couldn't go.
Fatty bumped himself against me. âGive me a fucken reason.' His voice slimed into my ear. âJust one.'
Liam's voice bid me go easy, but words flooded out of me in a low torrent. âMy brother fought and died in your army. If he was here now, he'd soon sort you out. Have you nothing better to do than harass women on the streets?' The strangest thing happened then. I felt Liam leap to surround me, like a cloak, his hand at my mouth.
Say no more
.
The fat soldier bounced his bulk against me again, almost gently. âAnd have your lot nothing better to do than stab us
in the back?' He stood back and lifted his rifle to my breast. âIf this was a bayonet,' he growled, âI'd rip your traitorous, bitching guts out and spread them for the dogs.'
I couldn't speak through Liam's restraining fingers, or the hammer of my heart.
âSteady, Phil.' The Corporal gripped his arm and pulled it back. The other soldier shouldered his rifle and slipped away, eyes averted. The Corporal spoke rapidly into Fatty's ear. âSave your bullets for them that needs 'em.'
Fatty bristled and glared, but he lowered the gun.
âCome on.' The Corporal's voice was clipped. He stamped along beside us, a tense escort, leaving his horrible friend behind. When we reached the back door to the hospital, Vivienne thanked him. I said I'd go on back to Percy Place.
âThere's a curfew,' the Corporal said.
âI have a permit.' I showed him the paper I'd taken from Con's car. While he scanned it, I told Vivienne she could come with me if she liked. I wasn't sorry when she said no, she couldn't walk another step, she'd stay in the waiting room. She said she'd keep me a spot, in case I was turned back.
The Corporal sighed. âConsidering what happened to you earlier,' he said, âI'll walk with you.'
We didn't speak on the way. I moved in a half-dream, as though I flew, towards Hubie.
There was a checkpoint at the bridge. Yesterday's slaughterhouse. No, it was past midnight, that carnage was two days ago. âLet her pass,' the Corporal said.
âYou live here?' the sentry asked. âOne of your neighbours got himself shot this afternoon. Watching. What do you all think this is, sport?'
A chill ran through me. âWho? Which house?'
âGo on before I change my mind,' the Corporal said. âStay off the streets from now on, or you'll get what's coming.'
All the young leaves had been blasted from the trees. A hole in the paving showed where the big gun had been. Every window gaped, empty of glass. I craved water. The canal was a black velvet ribbon beside me, a margin I could slip inside and vanish, nestle on the reedy bottom, where the world was cool and silent.
I put the palm of my hand flat on the paint of Dote's front door. It swung open, as though it had been waiting. I stepped over the threshold, straight into Hubie's arms.
âI was so afraid.' His mouth at my ear. His voice coursed through me, flooded me with a rush of feeling I told myself was relief at being indoors, enclosed again in the incurious sheltering darkness of the house.
A piercing, unearthly shriek made me jump.
âHe missed you.' Hubie moved away, struck a match and held it to a candle. Paschal leaped from the newel post to my shoulder, tugged my hair, butted his head against mine. He grabbed my collar, jabbering away.
âHello, yourself,' I said.
âWhat's this?' Hubie touched the bandage.
âNothing, only broken glass.'
Paschal patted my hair. I shivered a little. âIt's colder in here than on the street.'
âIt's warmer in the kitchen; I've the stove going.'
In the kitchen, two lamps threw amber shadows on the table. I put Paschal down and went to the sink, poured a long cold drink of water, then another.
âYou're pale as a ghost,' Hubie said. âLook, I found a cake of soda-bread, fresh, made by a woman who gave it to me for cigarettes. And these.' He put two smooth eggs into my hands. âWe'll have a feast. Katie? You're shaking.'
He took back the eggs and set them in a bowl. I leaned into him and shut my eyes. He smelled of something like straw in the sun, a smell of summer dust and horses. âI'm so tired,' I said to his solid chest. âI can hardly stand.'
âWhere were you?' He helped me out of the borrowed cardigan and put it aside. Rested his thumb in my palm.
It was too big a question to answer. Instead I said, âA soldier said one of the neighbours was killed. Who was it?'
âMr Hyland.'
âI was afraid it was you.'
He busied himself with a pan on the stove while I eased my sore feet from my shoes and worked the toes, telling him about the fires, which he could smell for himself, and the people streaming into Beresford Place for shelter. âHundreds of them. Thousands, maybe.' I was half hallucinating â was it Lockie I heard, banging that skillet on the stove, rattling plates loose from the dresser? What house was I in â everything smelling of peat and fire. Was I in the countryside, somewhere with a bonfire raging, was it autumn? No, I was in Percy Place. There was Hubie, coming with a knife to cut the bread. Behind him a tap dripped into the Belfast sink. If I looked, I'd see the stained, coppery runnel in the enamel.
âThere's no butter, but the eggs will help.' Hubie pinched salt on to perfect domes of golden yolk. Pierced, they bled sweetly into the floury bread. The most delicious thing I'd ever tasted. When I'd mopped the last trace of egg from my plate with the bread, pushed the last crumb into my grateful mouth, he told me I'd a choice. Black tea, port wine or whiskey?
I said port.
The first sip woke my mouth. The second coated my throat and all the way down to my stomach with a fierce glow. I was ravenous still. I could have eaten three more eggs in quick succession. Just the one was nearly worse than not eating anything at all. âI feel so greedy, I'd eat the whole world if I could.'
âI like you that way.'
He pushed the plates aside, refilled our glasses, lit two
cigarettes and passed me one. âNow,' he said. âWe could go up to the parlour, but the windows have gone. Or we could go to bed.' His face intent on mine. âWe'd be warm up there.'
âWhat about the others?'
âNo one can come 'til morning.'
âI did.'
He lifted the hair from my neck. âYou're different.'
âI need a bath.'
âI think we can manage that.'
He dragged out an old copper hip bath from the scullery, half filled a large pan with water, and the kettle. Asked me to lift them to the stove.
âShouldn't we fill up the pan?'
He waved his hand, no. How stupid I was, with tiredness. I'd have to do the pouring, when the water was hot.
Paschal curled up on a cushion in the corner chair with a contented sigh. I went over to the dresser, the low-burning lamp.
âAre you cold?' Hubie asked. âI could open the door of the stove if you want, but the water will take longer â'
âNo. I couldn't bear it. I don't think I'll ever be able to face a fire again.'
âWait 'til winter, you'll be glad of it then. Come here.'
I squashed into the straw chair beside him, curled my legs up, leaned into his arms. His ribs rose and fell in a steady rhythm that was easy to match. It was calming, to simply sit there and breathe, together. To wait for water to come to a boil.
Steam rose from the water. âThat's hot enough.' I got up and emptied the pot into the tub. âAre we sure they won't be back tonight?'
âNot hardly. It's after midnight.'
Shy, even in the lamplight, I took off my clothes. Tested the water, and sat into it, my knees drawn up to my chest.
The tub was a tight fit. Designed for a child maybe. But I was glad to bend forwards and show him my back. He immersed a flannel in the water and squeezed it, letting the drops fall to my spine.
I drifted in a jewelled boat while he washed my back, then dabbed my face clean, avoiding the dressing. He put his lips to it instead, as light as breath. He soaped my chest and under my arms, ran the soapy cloth down my legs, along my feet and back up to my neck, squeezed water from the cloth to rinse me. Then he leaned in, to kiss me. My wet arms went up around his neck. He wrapped me in a towel and I was standing against him, falling into him, when there was a whoop and a splash, and waves of water sloshed over the sides of the tub. Paschal bobbed up with soapsuds on his head. He rubbed his eyes and chattered, took up the flannel and twisted it, wrung it out, tutting at the sudsy water.
We had to laugh. Hubie made me sit on the chair wrapped in my towel, put Paschal on a ladder-back wrapped in his, and dragged the bath to the back door. It shrieked across the stone flags. He tipped it out, one-handed, on to the grass.
âWhere there's a will,' he said, holding out his good hand. I put mine into it and got up to follow him upstairs, with Paschal, chattering, behind.