Authors: Robert Swindells
Contents
Three: Six Thousand Million Oranges
Six: Tom Mix and Hopalong Cassidy
Thirteen: Spitfire Parked Outside
Seventeen: A Maid, for Pete's Sake
Twenty-One: All Spuds and No Meat
Twenty-Two: Blithering Nincompoop
Twenty-Four: Professional Performance
Twenty-Eight: A Fish in the Sahara
Twenty-Nine: Sherlock Holmes Himself
Thirty-One: Not Expecting Jerry
Thirty-Seven: Eggless Cake, Watery Smiles
Thirty-Eight: No Guy Fawkes Night
Thirty-Nine: If Wishes Were Horses
Forty-Eight: Linton Barker's Lungs
Forty-Nine: It Wasn't Exactly a Lie
Fifty: Balls of Fragrant Smoke
Fifty-Nine: What Was Left of it
Sixty-Two: What Happened Afterwards
World War Two is raging, bombs rain down on Britain and brave young men fly their fighter planes against enormous odds. Gordon wishes he was one of them â not like his cowardly elder brother Raymond, who has left home and his job to do who knows what.
When Gordon finds a revolver hidden in his parent's house, he decides to track his brother down. But finding Raymond leads to much more than Gordon had bargained for. His brother claims to be a secret governmental agent, and enlists Gordon's help in a mysterious enterprise. Gordon is keen to do his bit for the war effort, but is Raymond luring him into danger . . . ?
A gripping wartime drama from master storyteller and multi award-winner Robert Swindells.
For Jennifer Alice
THE YOUTH IN
the natty suit rose, scooping up his companion's empty tankard. âSame again, is it?' The other boy frowned, shook his head. âIt's my . . . you got that one. I can't let you . . .'
âRelax, chum. I told you, lolly's not a worry. Back in a sec.'
He watched the suit swerve through knots of young men in uniform, heading for the bar. Must be nice, he thought, enough of the readies to stand a total stranger two rounds in a row, and on a Thursday night. His own wage never stretched past Monday.
âThere y'are.' The youth banged two fresh pints on the table. âGet that down the inside of your neck.' He sat down, sketched a toast with his tankard and took a long pull.
His companion sipped, studying his generous acquaintance over the rim of the glass. âSo,' he said, âwhat line are you in, if it's not a rude question?' He smiled in case it was. âIt obviously pays well.'
The youth shrugged. âI manage.' He grinned. âBetter than slaving in some factory at any rate: beats me how you stick it, mate.'
The boy pulled a face. âIt's a reserved occupation for one thing â I won't be called up.' He sighed. âTedious though, day in day out since I was fourteen. I've a good mind to enlist, if only for the chance of a bit of excitement.'
The smart youth shook his head. âNo need for that, chum. If it's excitement you're after, you can find it without getting your head blown off, and have cash in your pocket.'
âHow?'
âEasy. Join me. Us. We can always use another bright lad who thrives on excitement.' He smiled. âHave to leave Mummy and Daddy though, or the Army'll get you.'
The boy smiled. âThat'll be no hardship, I'm cheesed off being treated like a kid. What d'I have to do?'
The youth winked. âNothing you'd need a university education for, chum. Drink up.'
â
IF WE HAD
some bacon,' said Dad, âwe could have bacon and eggs, if we had some eggs.'
Mum smiled at this well-worn wartime joke. âIf we had eggs, Frank, we'd be tucking in to one of those rich cakes I used to bake for Sunday tea before the war, instead of this eggless so-called sponge.'
âIf I was eighteen instead of thirteen,' I put in, hoovering up dry crumbs with a fingertip, âI'd be bringing my Spitfire in to land at this very moment, after bagging two Messerschmitts over Kent.'
âIf you'd the sense you were born with, Gordon,' snapped Mum, âyou'd thank your lucky stars you're
not
eighteen. Many a lad will have died today, and more'll die tomorrow. I hope it's all over before you're old enough to go.'
âHe won't go anyway, Ethel,' said Dad. âMinute he turns fourteen, he starts with me at Beresford's.'
Hang Beresford's
, I thought but didn't say. Beresford's is where Dad works. It's a light engineering factory. In peacetime they make bicycle parts. Now it's shell cases, same as in the Great War. Dad's worked there since he was a boy. He missed the Great War, because engineering was a reserved occupation. It's a reserved occupation this time as well. My brother went there straight from school, but he packed it in a few weeks ago, when he turned twenty-one. You can do what you like when you're twenty-one. He left home at the same time, but he's been seen about so he's not in the Army. Raymond, his name is. I wish he'd taken me with him.
Well, I get picked on, see?
âWhat colour's Price's dad?' yells Dicky Deadman, and his three chums shout, âYellow.'
Their
dads served in the Great War.
The last lot
, as it's called now. Deadman senior was in the Navy. Charlie Williams and Bobby Shawcross's dads survived the trenches, and Victor Platt's old man drove an ambulance. Victor's got a sister in the WAAF as well.
Fellows in reserved occupations are doing their bit, but chumps like Deadman don't see it. If you're not in uniform you must be a coward, that's what they reckon.
Proves something I'm about to learn â that war brings out the best in some people, and the worst in others.
ANYWAY, THAT WAS
Sunday. Eggless sponge and an evening round the wireless, with boards over the windows so enemy planes won't see our lights.
Monday, back to school. On aerodromes up and down the country, chaps were strapping themselves into Spitfires and Hurricanes, the lucky blighters. No double maths for them. As we shuffled into Foundry Street School, they'd ease back their joysticks and lift clear of the dewy grass, heading for the clouds. While old Whitfield called the register and we said, â
Present, sir
',
wishing we weren't, they'd spot twenty-plus Heinkels and dive on them, machine guns chattering. And by the time we'd copied twelve dreary sums off the board and done them, they'd have landed and be laughing and joking in the mess, while airframe mechanics patched up the bullet holes in their kites. It'd be five years before any of us was old enough to join in, and the fun was bound to be over by then.
âYou won't find the answers out there, Price,' snapped Whitfield. I'd been miles away, gazing out of the window.
âNo, sir,' I mumbled. âSorry. I was just . . .'