Authors: Margaret Mayhew
âCalling Miss Rowan, calling Miss Rowan. Please come to the office for orders.'
Pip rushed off on her bike and Janet started grumbling again.
âI think it's shocking, don't you . . . the way they expect us to live in these disgusting conditions? Nobody warned us what it would be like, did they? And that woman seems to think we should just put up with it. She keeps saying we'll get used to it.'
Frances said, âYou can always leave, if you want. Nobody can make you stay.'
âOh, I know that. But they should have warned us before â it's not right.'
Pip came racing back, clutching papers. âWe're to leave at once. Limehouse. Steel billets arrived from America. Frances, you help me with the engine. Janet and Prudence, you go ashore and be ready to undo the stern ropes.'
Cetus
's engine thumped into life and smoke puffed out from the chimney. Pip called to them from the tiller.
âYou can untie us now â then you two hop aboard the butty. We'll tow you on cross straps, close up, so there won't be any need for you to steer.'
They moved off, went under a bridge and turned sharp right into another arm of the canal with Pip honking a horn loudly as they went round the corner. Before long it started to rain and Janet went down to shelter in the cabin while Prudence chose to stay at the butty's stern, getting wet. For one thing, Pip and Frances were out in the rain so she felt she ought to be as well, and for another she was glad to be away from Janet and her never-ending moans. It was fascinating to be journeying along the canal, seeing the backs of buildings instead of the fronts and looking into windows. A girl at an office desk lifted her head to watch them go by; Prudence could see her wistful expression through the sooty glass. That was me at the bank, she thought. I was just like that.
They carried on slowly but steadily along the canal under more bridges, through Greenford and then Perivale until they reached Alperton at dusk where they stopped for the night. The boats had to be tied together, side by side â Pip called it breasting-up â which meant running about in the rain and grabbing hold of slippery ropes and trying to remember how to tie them properly. To Prudence's relief Frances and Janet were given the job of walking across the planks to the fore-end.
When, at last, it was all done, Pip cooked the supper on the butty cabin stove â baked beans, spam and potatoes, with tinned rice pudding heated up for afterwards. They ate round the let-down table and finished with cocoa made with evaporated milk and some digestive biscuits. It was very snug with the doors shut against the rain and the dark, the curtain pulled across the little porthole, the brasses gleaming in the electric light. Prudence thought that the supper had been rather nice; Janet, however, hadn't thought so at all. The minute they got back to their own cabin on the motor, she started off again.
âI'm still
starving
. I don't know how they can expect us to do all this work if they don't feed us better. I thought we'd get extra rations.'
âWe get extra tea and sugar.'
âI meant meat and butter and things like that.'
The paper bag rustled. âLucky I've still got one bun left.'
She chewed away ravenously. Prudence wondered if the prospect of extra rations might have been more of a reason for Janet volunteering for canal work than the threat of preying soldiers. The last of the last bun went down in a noisy gulp.
âAnyway, I've made up my mind that I'm not putting up with it. We got soaked to the skin, doing all that tying up. Enough to give us pneumonia. I'm leaving first thing in the morning. Soon as it's light, I'm off. There's an Underground station right by here â I spotted it when we arrived. I'll get the first train and if you've got any sense, you'll come with me.'
âWe haven't given it a proper try yet.' She sounded a lot more confident than she really felt. âAnd I think we ought to.'
Janet was emptying drawers and cupboards and repacking her suitcase. âSuit yourself. But I think you're barmy, if you stay.'
âShouldn't you tell Pip that you're going?'
âNot likely! She'd give me a long lecture. Anyway, I've a perfect right to leave if I choose.'
They made up the two beds, Janet commandeering the larger one that came down from a cupboard across the back of the cabin. Prudence took the bowl off its hook and poured in some
warm water from the kettle. She washed her hands and face and cleaned her teeth and then went to tip the water over the side into the canal. When she came back Janet was already in bed and asleep â a big snoring hump under her eiderdown. She sat down on her narrow side bunk, twisted and turned to get out of her clothes and into her nightie, and then wound her hair up in curlers before switching out the light. As soon as she lay down, she realized that she'd forgotten to kneel and say her prayers, so she said them where she was.
God bless Mother and Father and keep them safe from harm
. She paused, listening to the piggy snores.
And please give me courage. Help me to walk the top planks and do everything else all right, and don't let me give up, like Janet.
Janet was up at dawn, bumping and banging around. She had gone to bed in her clothes so as soon as she'd rolled up her bedding and put on her coat, she was ready to leave. Prudence helped her haul her things out of the cabin and onto the bank. It had stopped raining and there was a clammy mist hanging low over the canal.
Janet gave her a pitying look. âPoor you, staying here. You'll be sorry.'
As she stumped away without a wave or a backward glance, Pip's head popped out of the butty cabin.
âGone, has she? Oh well, I can't say I'm too
sorry. You're not thinking of leaving, too, I hope?'
âNo.'
âThat's good. Come over and have some breakfast as soon as you're dressed. It's all ready.'
Frances was stirring a saucepan of porridge on the butty cabin stove. They ate it in bowls with syrup drizzled over the top and evaporated milk poured round the edge. And they had cups of tea and thick slices of bread and margarine and jam.
âWe needed a decent breakfast,' Pip said, lighting a cigarette. âIt'll be a long day and it's going to be hard work with one short, but we'll manage it. It's rather a useful training stretch between here and Limehouse, actually. A bit of everything for you two to experience â bridges, locks, a tunnel, bends, mud and lots of traffic. We'll go breasted-up all the way, except for the tunnel where we have to single out. You can stay on the butty, Prudence, so you won't have to worry about steering just yet. Frances will be on the motor with me, so she can get some practice at it. After we've loaded up, you'll take a turn with me. But before we leave, I'll have to phone the office to see if they can arrange for a replacement trainee to meet us somewhere.'
She disappeared ashore to make the call while they washed up the breakfast things and put them away.
âGood riddance to Janet,' Frances said. âPip guessed she'd go, sooner or later. She thought you might go with her â that she might talk you into it. I bet she tried to.'
âYes, she did.'
âWell, I'm glad you stayed.'
As soon as Pip came back they untied and went on their way, Prudence alone in the butty which was tied alongside the motor. The canal snaked its way through London, meandering past back streets and houses, under road bridges and railway arches, past parks and pubs and shops and more streets, offices and factories, a school, a hospital, a cemetery. People stopped to watch them from bridges and men whistled at them from windows and workshops. Loaded boats were coming up from the docks: Grand Union Canal narrowboats painted in their red, white and blue, other boats in different company colours and great barges towed by horses, the bargees lolling at their tillers like kings.
The locks were terrifying: the thud and clang of the heavy gates, the slimy walls, the whirling, churning water. There were several close together, and, each time, Pip handed over the tiller to Frances and jumped ashore. The lock-keepers helped with the gates and with the winding and unwinding. What exactly they and Pip were doing was a mystery, but the water rushed out and the
boats sank down, and the lock walls grew deeper and darker and slimier.
Further on, there was the tunnel â even more frightening. The boats had to be singled out to leave room for others coming the other way, and the butty was now towed on a short rope behind the motor so that Pip and Frances were the boat's length ahead of Prudence. The headlights gave hardly any light and icy drops of water kept plopping onto her hair. The noise of the engine was so loud that nobody could have heard her shout if anything had gone wrong.
The further they went towards the docks, the smellier and uglier everything became. Slums and skinny children in dirty clothes with dirty faces playing on the towpath, broken glass, rubbish bobbing in the water â old tyres, tin cans, a drowned cat horribly bloated with legs stuck in the air. Rubbish dumps, scrapheaps, bombed buildings, and, to her horror, more locks, more clanging gates, more swirling filth and slime. Finally, they came down into Limehouse where they tied up alongside other boats and barges, end on to the high wall of the dock. On the other side of the basin, she could see the hulls of seagoing ships and, tethered in the skies above, silver barrage balloons.
Pip went off and came back to say that they wouldn't be loaded until early the next morning.
âWe'll have a cup of tea,' she said. âThen we'll get the boats ready. The stands and the top planks and beams have to come out and the holds left completely empty. We'll start with the motor boat and you can both help me and learn how to do it. Tomorrow, after we've been loaded, we'll have to sheet up. That means covering the cargo completely with waterproof canvas sheets. If it were coal we wouldn't need to bother, but as it's steel we must keep it and the boats dry.'
They clambered down into the holds and Pip showed them how to take out the stands and top planks and how to knock out the beams and unscrew the rigging chains. They collected up stray brooms and mops and tools and put them away. They also collected bruises and splinters. When at last they had finished, Pip announced that, as a reward, she would take them to a Chinese restaurant for supper. They climbed up the vertical iron rungs in the wharf wall and walked out through the dock gateway into a dark street, groping their way by torchlight past shuttered shops and bomb sites and black alleyways.
The restaurant had crimson walls decorated with writhing golden dragons, paper lanterns hanging from the ceiling and a doorway at the back covered by a curtain of coloured beads. The beads moved with a tinkling sound and a tiny Chinaman appeared. He wore embroidered silk robes, a black
hat on his head and slippers on his feet and, as he turned to show them to a table, Prudence saw a thin pigtail hanging down his back like a piece of tarred string. He kept nodding and smiling and speaking to them in a funny sing-song voice but she couldn't understand a word.
Pip said, âMr Lang suggests the noodle soup. And the pork foo yung. And maybe some special fried rice and mixed vegetables and bean curd in black bean sauce. Does that sound all right for both of you? He cooks it all himself and it's usually pretty good.'
The curtain beads tinkled again as Mr Lang left the room. Before long, more customers came in â dock workers and a group of foreign merchant seamen. The three of them were the only women in the place, but Pip knew one of the workers and chatted to him across the room. The sailors were gabbling away in some strange language and one of them kept staring at Prudence.
The food, when it came, was served in different dishes and nothing like Prudence had ever seen or tasted before. The foreign sailor kept on staring; she could feel his pale-blue eyes fixed on her all the time while she was eating the funny food and trying to listen to what Pip was saying about what they had to do the next day. They were to be up before dawn to have breakfast and be ready for loading as soon as it was light. Once loaded, they
would have to put the beams and stands and things back and do the sheeting-up. It sounded like an awful lot of hard work.
Pip said to her, âBefore we leave, I think we ought to try and get something warmer for you to wear, Prudence, otherwise you're going to freeze to death on the cut. There are some seamen's shops in Commercial Road. We'll see if we can find a jersey and maybe some trousers instead of that skirt â they'll be off points and very cheap.'
When they left, the Chinaman bowed low to them with his arms tucked up the sleeves of his robes. As Prudence passed by the foreign sailor at his table, he gave her a look that made her blush.
She slept on the narrow side bed again, though she could have taken down the cross-bed if she'd wanted to. The bed felt damp after all the rain but Pip had lit the stove for her to warm up the cabin and it was nice to lie close to it, seeing its friendly glow in the dark and listening to the water slapping gently against the sides of the boat. She wondered if there would be an air raid. The Germans always went for the docks, didn't they? That was why there were all those barrage balloons floating about. And the docks must be very easy to find because of the river; she'd seen the burned-out buildings and the rubble lying all round the docks. But the siren didn't go and after a while she stopped worrying about German
bombers and thought, instead, about the sailor. No man had ever looked at her in that way before. Mr Simpkins's creepy sidelong glances had made her skin crawl with disgust, but the foreign sailor's stare had made her insides flutter with a quite different feeling.
It was still dark when Frances banged on the cabin door in the morning. The stove had gone out and Prudence dressed as fast as she could, unwound her curlers and brushed her hair. It was easier to do it all sitting down on the bunk. The butty cabin was lovely and warm and, once again, there was hot porridge, thick slices of bread, and tea.