Authors: Catrin Collier
âI called in on Alma and Charlie. They told me you were home.'
âI know Charlie looks dreadful, but he will make it.'
âYou've seen the children?'
âI kept Eddie and Rachel off school for the day. I don't think Phyllis was impressed by the first decision I made as a father. They're fine children, Bethan. You've done a first-class job of bringing them up.'
âI'm glad you think so.'
âI have a bottle of wine I can open.'
âWine? Wherever did you get it?'
âA looting shop called Europe.'
âHave you been to see your parents?'
âNo, I wanted to see you first. Come and sit with me a while.' He went back into the room and carried a second chair close to his. âAre you hungry? Phyllis made some sandwiches.'
âIs she still here?'
âNo. Once Evan came back from work she insisted on going home. She took the Clark girls with her. Your father seems to think we need time on our own. Just the four of us.'
âI should kiss the children goodnight.'
âI read to them until they slept. I have a confession to make. I fell asleep in their bed.'
âI often do that.' She stood awkwardly for a moment not quite sure what to say next.
âWe need to talk.'
âYes. There's so much I need to explain.'
âYou don't need to explain anything.' He looked into her eyes. âYour letters ⦠didn't it ever occur to you that I realised you were skating over all the problems? You didn't even mention your father's accident.'
âI didn't want to worry you.'
âI knew you were holding back. It's not much of an excuse but it's the only one I can offer for believing Mrs Llewellyn-Jones's letter.'
âI'd like to see it.'
âI burned it. Unfortunately it wasn't thick enough to keep us warm for more than a few seconds.'
âAndrew â¦'
âYou're my wife, I trust you.'
âAnd I need to explain what happened.'
âNo, you don't.'
âYes I do, because if I'm going to stay your wife I don't want anything left unsaid between us.'
âAnd I've told you I trust you.' His voice was husky, she couldn't tell whether it was from cold or emotion.
âLet me tell you about Alma first. She met an American major, he lived next door in Frank Clayton's shop. They used to spend hours together, he talking about his wife and son, and Alma talking about Charlie. He was killed in Italy. Alma's written to his wife ever since. It's the poor woman's last link to her husband. And that's what I was to the colonel who stayed here,' she insisted, thinking only of the first few months David Ford had spent in the house. âA link with the family he left behind in America.'
âYou didn't need to tell me that.'
âI want you to
know
that nothing happened between us.
Nothing,'
she asserted vehemently, wishing that she hadn't wanted it to. âYou weren't here, he was. He couldn't be with his own son but he could be with our children and me.'
âThose old cats really got to you didn't they, Beth?' Pulling the cork on the bottle he poured out two glasses of dark, red wine and handed her one. Taking it, she finally sat in the chair.
âSometimes I think I would have gone mad if it hadn't been for your father. All the time, no matter what Mrs Llewellyn-Jones tried to do or say, he always believed in me.'
âHe wrote and told me what things were really like here.' Andrew gazed into her eyes, mysterious dark pools in the half-light. âI would rather it had been you.'
âI didn't want to upset you. You were locked up hundreds of miles away. There was nothing you could do.'
âExcept worry. And didn't it occur to you I was doing that anyway?'
âI've made a mess of it, haven't I?'
âI have no intention of repeating the experience so you can try and do better next time.'
âI know why you didn't come home with the others.'
âCharlie told you?'
âNot just Charlie. The colonel was at Haydn's wedding. He took me to see the films they made of those places.'
âYou saw Belsen?'
âAnd Dachau. Was Charlie in one of those?'
âNordhausen. But the name doesn't matter, they were all the same death factories.'
âIs he really going to live, Andrew?'
âNow he's with Alma, yes.'
âHe looks frail.'
âNot to me, but then I saw tens of thousands of others. A living man looks healthy compared to a corpse.' He touched his glass to hers. âHere's to life, recovery, us and a peaceful future.'
âYou are back for good?'
âMost definitely.'
She looked at his clothes. They were ones he'd left in his wardrobe. They were loose on him. âYou changed out of uniform?'
âAfter I put the children to bed. It feels good to be a civilian again.'
She rested her arm on the table between them and he covered her hand with his own. âYou've had a tough war, Bethan.'
âNo tougher than you.'
âOh, yes. You had choices to make. I had none. They were all made for me, all I had to do was sit and wait to be freed. It wasn't always easy but it taught me something I should have learned a long time ago.' He lifted her hand to his lips and kissed her fingers. âPatience, and to value what I have. I love you, Bethan, and now we're finally together nothing else matters. You don't have to work tomorrow?'
She shook her head. âI have a week off. I could have spent it in London, but after seeing that film it seemed more important to get back to the children.'
âAnd me?'
âI didn't know you'd be here.'
He rose to his feet, placed his glass quite deliberately on the table and stood in front of her. âBut I am. Let's take the wine and go to bed. Do you remember those letters I wrote, about the time we used to spend in the bedroom before going to bed?'
âI've been waiting for this moment for five years and now it's here â¦'
âYou're shy and embarrassed?'
âHow do you know?'
âBecause I feel the same way. Ever since I've been home people have been telling me about my wife the miracle worker. Even my mother.'
âI thought you hadn't seen your parents?'
âThey telephoned. Rumours had reached them of my being here.'
âAnd you didn't go to see them?'
âI said we'd call up later in the week. That I had my hands full with my children, and wanted to wait for my wife to come home.' Helping her to her feet, he held her close. âYour hair is different and you've stopped wearing essence of violets.'
âWe couldn't get it any more.'
âThis is better.'
âIt's French. Ronnie sent it from Italy.'
âTrust him.'
âIt is going to be all right between us isn't it, Andrew?'
âIt is.' He bent his head and kissed her. A long-drawn-out kiss that reminded her how much she had once loved him. âThings won't be the same, Bethan, they can't be. Too much has changed, and too much has been lost, but there's a whole new world out there. I've had enough of war, separation and excitement to last me a lifetime. All I want are those two bundles sleeping upstairs, my new daughters, as quiet a life as a GP's can be in this town that, for all its faults, I've discovered I love more than any other place on earth, and -' he paused and looked down at her â âyou. Please, Bethan, give me a chance to show you how much I love you.'
She wrapped her arms around him and held him close. âI love you too,' she whispered softly, desperately wanting to believe it.
He took her hand. âThen let's lock the doors and go to bed.'
An excerpt from
SPOILS OF WAR
Book Eight in the
Hearts of Gold
series
by
CATRIN COLLIER
Chapter One
âTightening the belt on your trousers only makes them look worse. Just clip on the braces.' Charlie Raschenko glanced up and saw the reflection of his wife, Alma, staring back at him in the dressing-table mirror.
âI look enough of a clown without wearing baggy trousers,' he growled in his guttural Russian accent.
âYou don't look like a clown,' Alma countered, elated by the first non-monosyllabic reply she'd extracted from him in two days. âYou've put on some weight â¦'
âNot enough to stop people staring.'
âYou heard Andrew the same as me. If you rested more â¦'
âI would stop breathing.'
Anxious to avoid an argument that would result in Charlie retreating even further into the private world that she had failed to penetrate since his return from the war, Alma gritted her teeth and lifted his suit jacket from the bed. âNo one will notice how loose your trousers are once you put this on.'
âOnly because they'll be too busy looking at my beautiful wife.'
Knowing the compliment was the closest she would get to an apology for snapping at her, Alma managed a smile as she helped him into the jacket. It was even worse than his trousers, hanging hopelessly loose on his emaciated frame.
âI had my old green velvet evening dress cut down,' she continued, conscious that she was talking too fast and too loud in an attempt to divert his attention from the pre-war suit that looked as though it had been measured for a man twice his size. âYou don't think it's too much for a wedding?'
âIt's not too much,' he echoed dully.
A preoccupied, faraway look stole into his eyes. It was a look Alma had come to know well. Three years in Hitler's forced labour camps had drained Charlie of more than his health. Feeling powerless to help him and suddenly afraid, she shivered involuntarily as she touched his arm.
âYou're cold?' Even his voice was distant.
âNo. I'm fine. Let me look at you.' Brushing imaginary specks from his jacket, she stood back and straightened his loose collar and tie. Anything other than meet his chill, dead expression. âI'm glad Megan and Dino decided to marry on a Saturday. With all the staff in, it's easier to leave the shops and it will be good to have a party and see everyone â¦' she faltered as Charlie gripped her hand.
âAlma â I â¦'
His eyes were no longer cold and lifeless. They were frightened, confused â those of a panic-stricken child who had witnessed unimaginable horrors.
She opened her arms and held him close. But she couldn't bring herself to hug him as fiercely as she would have in the old days before war had disrupted their lives and almost destroyed him. Careful to keep her touch light, gentle, she steeled herself to meet his fragility without flinching. Not even the suit could disguise that his skin stretched tissue-thin over bones that carried wasted muscles and not an ounce of spare flesh. Eight months hadn't been enough to accustom her to the frail being who had returned in place of her healthy, powerful, beloved husband. And moments of intimacy like this only served to highlight the difference between the old and present Charlie. His hair was as thick, even if it had changed from white blond to silver grey; his cologne smelled the same, his voice and features, albeit cracked and prematurely aged, were recognisable â but she was beginning to relinquish all hope that this invalid would ever again be the man she had married.
âMary says if I put my coat on we can go to the park â¦'
Their four-year-old son, Theo, thundered up the stairs and rushed down the passage, only to freeze, wide-eyed and apprehensive outside their bedroom door.
Alma forced yet another reassuring smile as she swallowed her tears. She wasn't the only one having difficulty adjusting to Charlie's return. Charlie's homecoming was the first Theo had seen of his father and since then there had been so many changes for the small boy to adjust to. His banishment from her bedroom to one he shared with Mary, the young girl she had hired to take care of him. The advent of an invalid into their lives who was too tired to do any more than read him the occasional story â a very different being from the long-promised Daddy who would play with him and teach him rough boys' games. The constant commands to keep his voice down
âbecause Daddy is resting'
whereas before he had been allowed to make as much noise as he liked.
âYou know Daddy and I are going out, Theo?' Alma asked.
He nodded, taking courage from her smile. âMary says Auntie Megan and Uncle Dino are getting married.'
Drained by the simple effort of standing, Charlie sank down on to the bed. Seeing Theo looking at him, he stretched out his arm and patted his son's cheek, wishing he could toss him high in the air and tickle him as his own father had done when he'd been Theo's age. But aside from his weakness he sensed a reserve in the boy that he was unsure how to overcome. A reserve that to his dismay occasionally appeared to border on fear.
âCan I get my coat?'
âI'll help you find it.' Alma took Theo's small hand in hers. âKiss Daddy goodbye.' Theo stood his ground.
Sensing the boy's reluctance, Charlie kissed his finger and planted it on Theo's forehead.
Clearly relieved, Theo ran out ahead of Alma. âBye. Can Mary buy me an ice cream in the café, Mam?'
âIt's freezing out there.'
âBut it's not freezing in my tummy,' Theo countered with unarguable logic. âMary says â¦'
Light-headed, Charlie slumped forward, listening to Theo's prattling. Alma and Theo were his family â all he had in the world â and he loved them with every fibre of his being, but somehow that wasn't enough. He didn't know how to touch them and make them understand why he was the way he was and how deep his feelings for them ran â¦
âCharlie? Are you all right?'
Alma was beside him, an anxious frown creasing her forehead.
âFine.' He rose slowly to his feet.
âI wish you wouldn't lie to me.'
âI'm fine,' he reiterated testily.
âYour shoelaces are undone, let me â¦'
âNo.'
Alma stood back; forced to watch, while he struggled to fulfil a simple task she could have completed in seconds. His face was almost blue, as heaving for breath, he finally sat back on the bed.
âI'll get the present from the living room.'
She'd placed the silver coffee pot she'd found in a Cardiff jeweller's in layers of tissue paper in a brown cardboard box. She would have preferred to have bought Megan and Dino something more practical, but lack of coupons, rationing and empty shops had put paid to that idea. As she picked up the box, Charlie appeared in the doorway.
âYour buttonhole is slipping.'
Charlie took the box from her as she adjusted the pin behind the flower she'd fastened to his lapel. The parcel was heavy but for once Alma didn't argue. At Megan's insistence only five people had been invited to witness her second marriage, her daughter and daughter-in-law, Diana Ronconi and Tina Powell, both of whom were waiting for their husbands to be demobbed, her brother, Huw, and his wife, Myrtle, and Dino's old colonel and fellow American, David Ford. The reception â to which they'd invited practically everyone they knew â was being held across the road in Ronconi's restaurant, and Alma had spotted her closest friend, Bethan John, the ex-district nurse, walking in with her husband, Andrew, the local doctor. If Charlie should collapse under the weight of the silver at least he'd be assured of prompt medical attention.
âIt seems odd to go to a wedding reception without attending the ceremony,' Andrew commented as he held the restaurant door open for his wife.
âI can understand why Megan didn't want a lot of people there. Ever since I can remember she's always insisted that one husband was quite enough for her, even though they were together for only three years. And, as my father reminded me this morning, his brother did marry Megan in the same chapel.'
âShe must have cared for him a great deal to have remained a widow for twenty-eight years.' He took two glasses of sherry from the tray the waitress offered them as they reached the top of the stairs and handed Bethan one.
âThe Great War messed up a lot of lives.'
âThis war hasn't done too badly either.'
Taking Andrew's comment as a reference to the problems they'd been having since he'd come home, Bethan turned her back on him, pushed the door open and stepped into the second-floor dining room. âGood grief!'
âââGood grief!” indeed!' Tina Powell, née Ronconi, who managed the restaurant echoed. âI'm not going to tell you how much Dino paid the florist to decorate this room or how much food and drink he smuggled in here in boxes marked “PROPERTY OF US ARMY” because he's paying us about the same amount to keep our mouths shut.'
âBig brother Ronnie might be mopping up after the war in Italy but I see you're working hard to keep the Ronconi business spirit alive and flourishing,' Andrew observed wryly.
âHe'd sack the lot of us when he gets back if we didn't.' Tina offered them a plate of canapés. âTry one. It's real tinned salmon, not dyed snook.'
âHow did the wedding go?' Bethan asked.
âWonderful, Megan looked regal, Dino proud, Diana, Myrtle and I cried, Huw sniffed as he gave the bride away and David Ford dropped the ring, fortunately it didn't roll too far.'
âAny sign of Will being demobbed?' Bethan asked. Her cousin William Powell had married Tina during the war but since then he had managed only two leaves, the last over three years before.
âNot that I've heard. I haven't had a letter in weeks and Diana hasn't heard a word from Ronnie either. If those two are living it up in Italy, drinking wine, chasing women and generally carrying on the way we think they are, Diana and I are agreed, we'll make them pay for it when they do finally get around to coming home.'
âWill and Ronnie have never been the best of correspondents.'
âThey have been fighting a war, Bethan,' Andrew interposed, feeling he ought to say something in defence of the absent men.
âYou sent enough letters to Bethan. I saw them. They filled a whole drawer.'
âPrisoners of war have nothing to do except write letters.' He noted the number of tables laid out with the Ronconis' best white linen and silverware. âHas Dino invited the entire remaining American contingent?'
âHe asked us to cater for sixty but there's not that many Americans coming. Since Dino's the bridegroom, demobbed and settling here, I don't think you can count him as American any more. There's the colonel, of course â Beth, have you heard? He's given Dino a job â well arranged for the army to give him one. The colonel's been ordered to pick up where the major left off, in trying to track down the tons of American supplies that disappeared in Wales and Dino's helping him on a civilian basis. Not that either of them stand a snowball in hell's chance of finding a thing. I told Dino yesterday: it's all gone. The edible into people's mouths, the rest, hidden away until the last Yank sails home.'
âI look forward to meeting Colonel Ford after hearing so much about him.' Andrew's voice was casual but Bethan could sense his resentment. David Ford and four other American officers had been billeted in her house for almost a year before D-Day. She knew Andrew had heard rumours of a liaison between them even before his homecoming eight months before but what she didn't know was how much â if any â of the gossip he believed.
âI think there are a couple of other American servicemen coming but Dino wasn't sure how many. According to him they're shipping the bachelors home as fast as they can in the hope of saving a few for American girls.'
âBeth!' Abandoning her sherry on the nearest table, Alma embraced her as soon as she walked in.
Andrew studied Charlie with a professional eye as he shook his hand. âWhy don't we find a table?'
âYou and Charlie find one. I need to comb my hair.'
âYou've only walked across the road, Alma,' Andrew protested.
âIt needs combing. The hairdresser made a mess of cutting the back.'
âI'll go with you.' Bethan followed Alma downstairs to the Ladies' Room behind the ground-floor restaurant.
âCharlie still the same?' she asked as soon as they were alone.
âAs you see.' Alma opened her handbag and rummaged for cigarettes. Finding her case, she opened it, offering them to Bethan before taking one herself. âAnd please don't tell me he'll be fine given time.' She bent her head to the flame as Bethan flicked her lighter. âIf I had a pound for every platitude that I've heard along those lines since he's been home, I'd be a millionaire.' Drawing the smoke deep into her lungs she leaned against the sink and looked Bethan in the eye. âTell me the truth, will he ever recover?'
âPhysically, Andrew's promised you he will, but that's not what you're asking, is it?'
âWhen he first came home I thought we'd be all right. But then he used to touch me, even kiss me occasionally when no one else was around. I don't know what happened or when, but some time after those first few weeks he changed. You know Charlie, he never did say much, now he hardly says a word. Half the time, I feel as though I'm living with a stranger, and the other half that even the stranger isn't really there. That all I have is an empty husk. If the soul and personality can be poured out of a person, that's what's happened to Charlie, Beth. There's no spark, no feeling â nothing â and it's driving me mad. I want him back but I'm beginning to wonder if he even exists to get back.'
âAs Andrew told you, no one's ever experienced what the survivors of Hitler's death camps have before. There's no medical precedents, no textbooks to guide the doctors. You saw the films.'
âYes, and I've tried to talk to Charlie about them but every time I mention the word “camp” he walks away. I can understand him not wanting to relive what he went through but I can't just stand back and watch him disintegrate without lifting a finger either. So, I end up trying to imagine what it must have been like for him and I've no idea whether I'm close to the truth, or if it was even worse than I picture it. Whatever happened, Beth, it's eating him alive and I can't do a thing to stop it.'