Well, that was a mistake. Martin and Linda were almost embarrassed to be seen with us. They kept talking only to each other, the way young people do, whispering and giggling. Honestly, it was so rude of them. It wasn't as if I didn't have enough to cope with, what with George and the crowds and Len getting all sentimental about the day.
There were special trains laid on from Southend. By the time we tried to get on at Benfleet they were all packed and it was impossible to find a compartment to ourselves. I knew we should have gone first class and made a day of it but Len said that any train would get us there, no matter what class we travelled, and we'd be better off spending the money on a good lunch.
I had bought a new coat from Marshall & Snelgrove because I wanted to look decent and I'd backcombed my hair and flicked it out at the end; a task made easier after I asked Len to give me the heated rollers for Christmas. All the other women who went up from Canvey were wearing tweed coats and headscarves to keep warm: so drab. I was glad I stood out, although in all those crowds it was hard to make an impact.
I even brought the half a cigar that Churchill had discarded on the deck of the
Prince of Wales
. George had been serving on the ship and sent it home and I showed it to Martin and Linda on the train. It was what you might call a conversation piece.
âWinston kept dropping them, half-finished, to give the sailors a treat, a bit of a gasp if they wanted a break, but George varnished his and gave it to me as a souvenir. A lot of them ended up doing that.'
âDid you thank him?' Martin asked.
âWhat, Churchill?'
âNo, Uncle George.'
âOf course I did, what do you take me for?'
âI just wanted to know if he knew you'd got it, before he was wounded â¦'
âI hope so, Martin, but I can't ask him now, can I? He doesn't know what it is any more.'
I glanced at George, rocking slowly with his blanket over his knees, looking out the window and humming to himself. I think he was singing âIs My Baby Blue Tonight?' but it was hard to tell because the tune kept wandering.
If only people knew what it had been like for me
, I thought,
then they wouldn't be so sharp
.
After we'd got off the train we joined the crowds at Fenchurch Street, a mass of people huddled against the cold all moving slowly down towards the cathedral. It was such a bitter day, rain and freezing fog, and the cold was the kind that bites right into you so
you find you're perishing before you know anything about it. Some women had gathered newspapers to protect their legs but I couldn't see how that was going to help. Others had got there early and were frying bacon and eggs on portable stoves: lucky beggars. There were people selling hot chestnuts and newspapers containing the whole order of service but Len said we should concentrate on finding a good spot. He wanted to start on Ludgate Hill and then move during the service towards Tower Pier. Then we could all watch the bearer party taking the coffin to the boat that would make its way downriver and out with the tide. Len wanted to be there at the final farewell.
We had to wait so long, stamping our feet, the breath escaping from our mouths. I stood between Len and George, and we had our arms round each other as if it was old times and Lily was alive and we were all friends again with the future to look forward to. I could see Linda and Martin smiling at us, but they didn't know anything really.
Then, at last, out of the sleet and the mist we saw a great sweeping procession of colour: the shining white helmets of the Marines leading the way, the deep blue of the Navy and the bright scarlet from the cloaks of the Household Cavalry. I felt proud all over again to be English, standing there watching the soldiers, sailors and airmen, with the horses and the pipe bands in perfect formation. I knew then that it didn't really matter who you were or where you were standing because we had all earned our right to be there. This was what we had fought for. This was who we were.
âEngland,' Len said. âNo country in the world does a parade like we do. How can anything be better than this?'
Martin smiled, holding Linda to him. âThe nation defines itself.'
The crowd swelled and people began adjusting their positions as others tried to get to the front by the railings. George shied away from a couple of darkies and I think they must have scared him because then he started shaking. âWe should move a bit further away,' I said.
âThere's no need for that,' said Martin.
âCan't you see he's frightened?' I said.
âThey've done nothing wrong.'
âIt's all right, madam,' one of the men said; I think he must have been West Indian. âWe'll find another place.'
âI don't mean to be rude â¦' I said.
âYou just have been,' Linda butted in. She was wearing a white mac and a beret so she looked quite French, hardly patriotic.
âBut it's our day. What have they got to do with it?'
âThey fought too,' said Martin. âI bet they have British passports.'
âHow do you know?' I said.
âThey probably came over on the
Windrush
. They must have done their bit otherwise they wouldn't be here.'
âNot like George, though â¦'
âNo, Auntie Vi. We all know that George did the most.'
âI reckon they should put them on the Isle of Wight,' Len grumbled, âbut then you'd have to change the name.'
âI suppose there'll be black policemen next,' I said to Martin. âYour mother would turn in her grave.'
âAnd what's that supposed to mean?' Martin asked.
âIt's just an expression.'
âBut what does it mean?'
âDon't, Martin,' said Linda. âYou know it upsets you.'
âShe was my sister, young lady, and so I'll say what I like. I mean she'd turn over in her grave so she wouldn't have to see them; that's what I mean. She'd be on her stomach.'
Then Len chipped in with a joke. âI'd have thought it would be dark enough down there as it is. Even if she stayed right side up they'd have to flash their teeth so she could see them â¦'
âThat's enough,' said Linda. âWe don't think like you do.'
âEasy, sweetheart,' said Len, âeasy.'
âWell,' I said, âI'm sorry I spoke.'
Linda didn't have a clue what any of this was about; far too young to know about death and uncertainty and never being able to imagine a future. All she cared about was music, coffee bars and the latest hairstyle.
Then the service began and people listened in on their radios: âHe who would true valour see' and âFight the good fight', the Archbishop of Canterbury blessing us all, and the last post at the end. Afterwards there was such quiet, the silence of memory before the reveille. I don't think anyone wanted it to stop.
By the time the procession left the cathedral we had already made our way down Eastcheap and St Dunstan's Hill so we could get down to Tower Pier. Then we watched as the coffin was put on to the afterdeck of the
Havengore
. Every flag was at half-mast and the cranes above Hay's Wharf lowered their heads in tribute. We stood in silence and listened to the ninety guns firing, one for each year of Sir Winston's life; and then, afterwards and in the distance, I could hear a pipe band playing âThe Flowers of the Forest'. It reminded me of Mother. She always liked a cry over that.
Afterwards the five of us managed to warm ourselves up in a nice little cubbyhole at the Prospect of Whitby and we ordered beef and ale pies and steak and kidney pudding. I think we wanted the food to be as English as possible. People were crowding in, some having to drink by the river looking back to St Paul's, not wanting the ceremony to be over; others spilled out into the street while still trying to catch the warmth from the doorway. Martin and Linda got the drinks in. I think it was their way of snatching a quick kiss at the bar without any of us noticing.
Soon the pub steamed up with a fog of bodies, beer and cigarettes. There was a piano and some singing but it took time to get going because everyone was still thinking about the funeral. No one had the heart for the jollier tunes like âRoll Out the Barrel' but the more romantic numbers upset us even more. The man at the piano had a cigarette in his mouth and a pint by his side, and he looked a bit like Hoagy Carmichael, but I don't think any of us were really ready for âSweet as a Song', âI Got It Bad and That Ain't Good' and âI Heard You Cried Last Night'. I think even then we all knew that we'd lost a part of ourselves; and there was nothing we could do to get it back.
Len and I wept with the emotion of the day, looking at George staring out into nothingness and at Martin and Linda together with the future all before them, and I tried to imagine what life might have been like if it had only been kinder to the two of us.
Vi's sister Lily came back. I was sure of it. It was the day we went out to say our last goodbye to Churchill. She sat next to me in the pub with all that steam and heat and all those bodies and yet she looked so young; as if nothing had touched her. The clothes were different, of course, and her hair was darker, but I could tell it was Lily. The boy was there but I didn't mind, even when he put his arm round her.
She'd changed her name. Called herself something different but I could see right through her. I knew her game.
âYou're Lily,' I said and she smiled at me, sharing the secret. Then she patted me on the knee. âNever mind, George.'
âI'm not minding, Lily, you know me. I'm only minding when you go away.'
We had some drinks and she gave me that smile of hers. It reminded me of old times, dancing in the war when I realised that I was with the wrong sister, and here she was, back again, thin and fragile, like a little porcelain doll. We sat close, right up against each other, and I got excited.
âI ⦠I ⦠I ⦠I ⦠like you very much,' I said, singing a bit of the song, and she gave that little laugh of hers and said: âI like you too, George.'
I wanted to do a bit of ear tickling but she kept brushing my hand away. Perhaps she didn't want anyone else to see. It would be our private moment.
But the closer she sat to me the more I couldn't hold on any longer. I leant forward and whispered that I was a bit itchy and if
she could help me out I'd be ever so grateful. She didn't understand and so I took her hand.
âCome on, Lil,' I said. âYou know what to do.' But she smiled and pulled her hand away.
Perhaps she was playing hard to get. So I asked her in a louder voice to give me a rub and I think the boy heard but I didn't mind that. I only wanted Lily.
But then it was getting bad, like I couldn't control it any more, and so I took out my John Thomas to show her what I meant.
âCome on, darling,' I said, âyou can suck it if you like.'
There was a bit of silence and then she laughed and the other woman screamed and Len told me to stop it and put it away. It was just when I was ready so I didn't know what to do and so I started rubbing it myself. It was the only way but the posh woman kept shouting, telling me to âstop that at once', and said I was revolting. I couldn't understand what she was on about and I just kept rubbing. After all, it was their fault for looking.
They took Lily to the door, and for a moment I lost sight of her through the crowd. The man at the piano was singing âDon't Sweetheart Me'.
âCome back, Lily,' I said, but I couldn't go after her because I was stuck behind the table. I suppose it was all right because I needed time for everything to calm down. I couldn't walk out of the pub with my John Thomas all proud. Only Lily was meant to see that.
âDon't go,' I said. She was at the edge of the bar by the door. Then she was gone.
Her sister took me home. She was angry with me. I don't know why. I get so confused these days.
Funny when you can't recall your courting properly. The woman spoke to me like I was a stranger, or she was a nurse and there was something wrong with me. She kept using words like âshame' and âembarrassment' and said she thought I'd âgot over all that nonsense' but I couldn't follow anything any more.
It was so much easier to remember my childhood, Dad and me playing cricket on the beach, and me catching the ball high above my head â
well done, son
â that was when he was proud of me for the
first time and he had a surprised look on his face, relieved that I might make something of my life.
No one's proud of me now, though. I can tell. That's what the woman keeps saying.
But I'd tried so hard. I fought well. Always at the guns. Only when we were attacked did I go into a funk. I couldn't stand it. And I don't know who could have done. It was that hard. They were always at us. And if they weren't, there was always the imagining. I thought I was going crackers. And then the ship's doctor said to me softly, âNow then, lad.' A kind word. The first I'd heard. That's when I went, I suppose.
I should have died with the others.
I suppose I was glad that Linda could see the funny side but it was a bit bloody ironic that George had got further in one afternoon than I had in weeks. I had to wait for three months, four days, seventeen hours and about thirty-four seconds.
We were going to spend a night fishing on a beach away from the island up the coast on the Maplin Sands, huddling for warmth in a small tent, listening out for the sound of the bells from drowned churches out at sea.
Before it was dark I dug a hole and prepared a bonfire of driftwood, ready to catch sand eels on the low tide. As night fell and the tide receded we could see the eels leap from the beach and we turned on our torches, crouching and running to catch them. Once our bucket was full I lit the bonfire while Linda cut off the heads and gutted the fish so that we could fry them and make sandwiches.