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Authors: Margaret Leroy

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CHAPTER 54

G
unther brings me bread from his ration. ‘But are you sure you can spare it?’ I say. ‘I am happy to,’ he tells me. I’m so grateful. I take it from him, trace my fingers across the cords of his wrists, pull him to me. ‘Thank you.’ We’ll eat it with the chicken soup that I’ve made.

The next day, when Millie is playing with Simon, I go to my larder, offering up a quick prayer—that all will be as it should be. I pull open the door of the larder, lift the lid of the bread-bin. No. Half the loaf is gone. It’s been cut—not torn, but cut ineptly, by someone who hasn’t yet learnt to use a bread knife properly.

When Millie comes home, I look around for the satchel she takes when she plays. She’s dropped it in the passageway. I unfasten it, feeling the butterfly beat of panic in my stomach: as if I know already before I look inside. A scent of apple hangs about it. I up-end it, and all the treasures she has collected fall out: twigs, little blue stones, a pigeon’s feather. Breadcrumbs.

I have a sick feeling—unhappy questions crowding into my mind. Where have I gone wrong? Why isn’t my daughter
truthful? Is it something I’ve done? Is it all the stories we’ve read? Whatever the reason, I’ve failed in the most important duty of a parent: I have let her live in a fantasy world, and she can’t tell right from wrong.

I hear the xylophone ripple of her laughter from the living room. I go in. She’s playing with the pram that I used when the girls were babies, trying to persuade Alphonse to lie down in it under a sheet.

‘Millie. Some bread has been taken. Did you take the bread?’

Her laughter is torn off.

‘No, Mummy?’ she says. Her voice has an upward intonation. As though she’s trying out the answer to see how it will sound.

The cat slithers out of the pram. She scoops him up: he struggles against her.

‘Millie. Put the cat down. You have to listen to me.’

She lets the cat slip away from her; he has left a scratch like a thread of red silk on her wrist, but she doesn’t seem to notice. She’s a little frightened. I’m not often severe like this.

‘You mustn’t steal food,’ I tell her. ‘That’s very, very naughty. It’s not fair to everyone else.’

‘No, it isn’t fair.’ Her voice is colourless.

‘You know how short we are. Food has to be shared out equally.’ I’m stern, my voice fierce and high. ‘I always give you an apple when you’re playing out with Simon. That’s all we can spare,’ I tell her.

But her expression is opaque. Somehow I’m not getting through.

‘I didn’t do it,’ she tells me. ‘I didn’t eat the bread.’ Speaking defiantly now, as though she has worked out what she should say.

‘Millie. I found the crumbs in your satchel.’ ‘No, you didn’t, Mummy,’ she says. I fetch the satchel, show her the breadcrumbs. ‘I didn’t do it,’ she says.

I’m appalled that she just goes on lying like this.

‘Millie. You know you have to tell the truth.’ I feel I should be angry, should shout at her and smack her. But I see all the misery in her face, and I can’t quite do it. ‘Lying is wrong,’ I tell her.

‘Why?’ she says.

I try out the answer in my mind.
Because honesty is important. Because we have to trust one another—
Yet my life—my whole happiness—is based on a secret and a lie.

‘Some things are just wrong,’ I tell her, my voice hollow as the belly of a cave, all the conviction gone from me. ‘You must promise me you will never do that again.’

‘But I didn’t do it,’ she says again. ‘I didn’t eat the bread.’

CHAPTER 55

‘V
ivienne. Something is worrying you.’

‘Yes’.

‘Are you going to tell me?’

I prop myself on one elbow, look down at his face on my pillow. Even in the gentling light of the candles in my bedroom, I can see how much he has aged in the time that I have known him—his hair paler and receding, the mesh of lines on his brow. And seeing this, I wonder how I must look in his eyes, how different from that moment when he first saw me in the lane, the scented wind blowing around us: for I know these months and years of war have worn me down, as well.

I clear my throat.

‘It’s Millie. She’s been stealing food. I tell her off, but whatever I say, it doesn’t seem to penetrate. I suppose she doesn’t understand how serious it is—when we all have so little.’

‘It is very hard—for the young to be hungry,’ he says.

‘And there’s more. She makes up stories. She keeps on saying she’s seen a ghost in a place where she plays. That the barn where she plays is haunted. It’s some complicated make-believe. But she seems to really believe it …’

‘Which barn is this?’ he asks me.

‘It’s on Peter Mahy’s land. In the field beyond the Blancs Bois. She plays there with Simon, her friend. They have a fantasy game they play there …’

‘Many children do that, of course, playing such fantasy games,’ he tells me, soothingly.

‘But the fantasy seems to be taking over, so it’s almost as real to her as the everyday world … I mean, obviously it’s an unnatural situation they’re in—growing up with a war on. But I’ve tried to keep their lives as normal as possible.’

‘Yes,’ he says. ‘I know you have.’

‘Maybe it’s all my fault. Maybe I’ve read her too many stories.’

He smiles—that smile that I love, that fills his eyes with light.

‘A child cannot be read too many stories,’ he says. ‘That is impossible.’

‘And it worries me too that she’s telling lies. She took some of that bread you brought us and claimed she didn’t eat it. But I found the crumbs in her satchel …’

‘I think you shouldn’t worry,’ he says. ‘Millie is still very small. And many children are like her—living at once in this world and in a world of their own.’

‘Do you think so? Other children—do you think they believe that their fantasy world is
real
?’

He blows out smoke, the blue soft spirals blurring his face.

‘When I was a child,’ he says, ‘I had an imaginary friend.’

‘Oh.’ I’m charmed by this.

‘This was when I was very small, like Millie. This was before my mother married again,’ he says, his face darkening.

‘Yes.’ I think of what he told me about his cruel stepfather. I reach out to him and move my hand over his head, loving the naked, vulnerable feel of his close-cropped skin against me. ‘So—tell me all about your imaginary friend …’

He flushes slightly. He is a little embarrassed.

‘My mother used to have to put a plate for him at the dinner table,’ he says.

I’m enchanted.

‘Did he have a name, your friend?’ I say. A slight, self-deprecating smile. ‘His name was William,’ he tells me.
‘William?’

‘Like your writer William Shakespeare. William was the only English name I knew. I thought it was very sophisticated,’ he says.

This makes me smile; but it touches me too. I love to think of him as a little boy. I want to reach back through the years and put my arms around him.

I blow out my candles. I lie with my head on his chest: the smell of his skin is around me, and I can hear the drowsy beat of his heart. I sleep deeply.

I wake when he leaves in the cold of the morning, as the first rook speaks and the first grey light of dawn seeps into the sky. And lying there once he has left me, I feel a vague unease—just a dark moth-flutter in the corners of my mind—and I don’t know why I feel this.

CHAPTER 56

S
eptember. The autumn term begins, and Millie starts back at school. I’m relieved. With all the brisk everydayness of class—with times-tables, reading books, lists of spellings to learn—she won’t be able to spend so much time in the fantasy world she shares with Simon. I cut her hair and let down the hems of both her school frocks: she’s grown a lot in the holiday.

On Sunday Blanche will be reading the Lesson in church.

‘Mum, I wish you’d come to church sometimes. I wish you could come and hear me,’ she says. Her eyes are on me, blue as summer, requiring something of me.

‘I’d love to, sweetheart,’ I say. ‘But I worry about leaving Grandma.’

‘It’s not just that, though, is it?’ she says. ‘I know you don’t really believe in the Bible any more, with the war and everything. But I wish you would. God has a plan for the world, Mum. It must all be part of his plan.’

‘I don’t know, sweetheart … And then, turning to easier things: ‘But it’s true that I don’t like to leave your grandma alone. Except when I really have to.’

‘You have to on Sunday,’ she says. ‘Grandma will be all right on her own for a couple of hours.
Please,
Mum.’

So Millie and I put on our best clothes, and we go to Matins with Blanche.

Though I’m not sure what I think about God, I still enjoy the service, finding a kind of consolation in the familiar words of the prayers.
Oh God, make speed to save us. Oh, Lord, make haste to help us …
And I love the glimmery candles on the altar, and the gilded sunlight falling through the window and laying its jewel colours all over the chancel steps. Most of the service is as it was before the Occupation—though prayers for our country aren’t permitted; but we can still pray for our King. We recite the Confession, the muttering of the congregation dragging behind the Rector, the low words rumbling around the echoey nave.
Almighty and most merciful Father, we have erred and strayed from Thy ways like lost sheep. We have followed too much the devices and desires of our own hearts …
Repeating those words, I feel remote from the rest of the congregation, thinking how they might judge my actions—how sinful they’d think my love for Gunther to be.

Blanche goes to the lectern to read the Lesson. She starts off rather shyly, with that slight stutter she sometimes has, then her voice growing stronger, more certain. Seeing her there, apart from me, I’m aware how she is changing—becoming a woman, her body softening, her face more clearly defined. I know she still regrets that we didn’t go to London, believing her hope of happiness to lie a long way away—far off in the future, or over the Channel, anywhere but here. My eyes fill up as I watch her—sensing that yearning in her, for all the things she can’t
have because she is growing up in wartime. I wonder if she’ll ever find what she is looking for.

She comes back to join us in our pew, bright colour staining her cheeks, at once pleased and embarrassed. We settle down for the sermon, which is all about Heaven and Hell. They’re not real places, the Rector says—at least, not in the sense that St Peter Port is a place: Heaven and Hell are states of being. In Heaven, we are for ever in God’s presence, and worse than the myriad torments of Hell is the terrible absence of God.

After the service, I chat with Susan Gallienne, who compliments me on Blanche’s reading. Susan is elegant as ever, in a dress of coral linen; though there’s something about her smile, sweet as icing, that sets my teeth slightly on edge. While Susan and I are talking, the girls walk on ahead of me.

I say goodbye as soon as I decently can, and catch up with Millie and Blanche. They’re deep in conversation, heads close together in the gold dappling light of the lane, a cool lacework of branches above them. They’re talking about the sermon: I’m surprised they were paying attention.

‘I know about Hell,’ Millie is saying. ‘That’s where my ghost comes from.’ Very matter-of-fact.

‘And how do you know that exactly?’ says Blanche.

‘Because he told us, stupid. That’s where he lives. He lives in Hell,’ she says.

Blanche turns to face her. I think she’s going to tell her sister off for calling her stupid. But she’s suddenly earnest—made serious by the service and her role in it, and rather troubled by what Millie said.

‘Millie. You shouldn’t go making up stories like that, about Hell.’

‘I’m
not
making up stories,’ says Millie: robust, emphatic.

‘I mean it, Millie. It’s not a thing to joke about. People go to Hell if they’re wicked and don’t believe in Jesus.’

Blanche is intent and solemn, concerned for her sister’s soul.

‘My ghost is a good ghost,’ says Millie. ‘No, Millie. He must be bad if he lives in Hell,’ says Blanche. ‘He must have been bad in his earthly life.’ ‘He isn’t bad,’ says Millie.

Blanche purses her lips. She has that look of exasperation that always comes in her face, when Millie talks like this.

‘Anyway—Hell’s not a place you can just dip in and out of,’ she says. ‘People never come back from Hell. If you go to Hell, you’re stuck there. That’s what the Bible says. You ought to know that.’

‘They do. They do come back.
Sometimes
they do,’ says Millie, uncertainty creeping into her voice. I see that her lip is trembling.

I join them, reach to take her hand—but she pulls away from my touch. She breaks off a stick from the hedgebank. As we walk along, she swishes the stick, hitting the plants that we pass, turned away from me and her sister. Her eyes are shiny with tears, and she doesn’t want us to see.

CHAPTER 57

G
unther is going on leave for a fortnight. The night before he is due to go, he follows me up to my room. I close the door, turn to him, but he doesn’t immediately hold me or touch me. He sits down heavily on my bed. He has a serious look. I wonder what is coming.

‘There is something I need to tell you,’ he says. ‘Something that I have just heard. There are plans to deport people who are not native islanders—people who were not born here.’ ‘People like me. I wasn’t born here,’ I say. ‘Yes. People like you,’ he tells me.

I’m struggling to make sense of this. There’s a shrill, febrile voice in my head that seeks to make everything all right, to make it all go away. They surely wouldn’t do this to people who don’t make any trouble—especially mothers with young children. They couldn’t do that—it wouldn’t make any sense, they have to be reasonable, children need their mothers, everybody knows that … And if they
did
send people away, they’d certainly just be sent to France: maybe just for a month or two. Islanders have gone there to prison: they say it isn’t too terrible; mostly they come home again …

‘Deported to where?’ I ask him.

‘To internment camps in Germany,’ he tells me. ‘Until the war is over.’

The ground splits open in front of my feet.

‘No,’ I say.
‘No.’
I can’t believe that he is so calm, so untroubled, telling me this. Fear floods me. ‘But what will happen to my children?’

There’s a sob in my voice. I see it rushing towards me, the thing I have always most feared—that they will be torn away from me. I remember the sickroom, my mother’s altered face, the sore-throat smell of disinfectant: the wrenching sadness of parting—that I didn’t feel in that moment, when I was only three; that I have felt for the rest of my life. The sadness I would do anything to protect my children from.

‘Vivienne.’

He puts his hand on my arm. I feel all the comfort in his touch. The world steadies. And at once I understand why he is so untroubled by this.

‘You can do something? You can help us?’ I say.

He nods.

‘I will do what I can,’ he tells me. ‘Perhaps some names will not appear on the lists.’

‘Could you do that? Could you really?’

‘I think so. I think there will be some concessions. But you must be very secret about this. Don’t talk about it to anyone,’ he tells me.

‘No. Of course not.’

That is easy for me. I am used to secrecy.

When he leaves me in the early morning, when I take him to the door, the poignancy of parting suddenly overwhelms me. I can’t let go: I cling to him.

He peels my fingers from his arms, he kisses my hands. ‘It is only two weeks, and then I will be back with you,’ he tells me.

‘Two weeks is a long time in wartime. Anything could happen.’

‘Vivienne. I will come back to you. I promise.’

I watch him as he crosses my yard in the grey pale light of sunrise. The sky is high and remote, and softly gleaming, like a pearl.

I go back to my bedroom, but my bed feels so empty without him. I’m missing him already—as though a part of me has gone.

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