The Year It All Ended (24 page)

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Authors: Kirsty Murray

BOOK: The Year It All Ended
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They stood in awkward silence on the platform until the train arrived. Martin handed their baggage onto the train and saw Mrs Alston and Ida to their seats. As he exited the carriage, he brushed past Tiney, who was standing in the breezeway, having dealt with the porter and the ticket inspector.

‘I’m sorry, Tiney. I was too brusque last night. I think it’s truly courageous of you to be making this pilgrimage and honouring your brother. I wish I had better connections in Albert or Tincourt that could help you.’

Tiney softened. ‘You’ve been very helpful already. I never would have been able to work out where the Buire British Cemetery was if you hadn’t sent me your map, and I’m sure I’ll find a driver in Albert at the place you suggested.’

‘Will you write to me? Tell me how you fare?’

He scribbled an address in Paris onto a slip of paper and gave it to her as she stood on the steps of the train. Tiney folded the note and put it carefully into her bag. When she looked up, Martin was already walking away but though she didn’t call his name, he suddenly turned to wave, as if he sensed she was watching him, as if he could read her mind.

As soon as they reached Amiens they checked into the nearest hotel to the railway station and Ida put her mother to bed.

That evening, Ida and Tiney sat at a small table in a cafe while Mrs Alston slept.

‘I’m sorry, Tiney,’ said Ida. ‘We will come with you to find Louis’ grave, just as I promised, but I must give Mummy time to regain her strength. I’ve telephoned friends in Paris. I think we should take Mummy there for a week or two, get her settled in, then you and I can travel to Albert together.’

Tiney was silent for some time. Finally, she found her voice.

‘I can go on alone,’ she said.

‘No, you can’t,’ said Ida. ‘You’re only eighteen years old and we promised your parents we’d chaperone you.’

‘Ettie said there were women younger than me working as VADs during the war.’

‘That was different, Tiney,’ said Ida. ‘I’m sure she wasn’t expecting you to head off on your own. The war may be over but the peace is hardly won.’

‘That’s more or less what Martin said. But he was encouraging. And he has given me very good directions. It’s not as though I’ll be wandering about like a lost lamb. I know exactly where to find Louis’ grave.’

‘That Martin Woolf – he could very well be a wolf in sheep’s clothing for all we know. You should be careful. What do we know about him? Don’t you think it a little too much of a coincidence that he wrote to you, with no return address, and then turned up at Villers-Bretonneux?’

‘If only it was because of me! But he was there to see Ettie
Rout, not me. He didn’t know our visits would coincide. He’s on his way to Paris to work for the League of Nations Union.’

‘Is he Jewish? With a name like Woolf, you can’t help but wonder.’

‘Stop it, Ida. Martin has nothing to do with my wanting to go on alone. When I saw you and your mother at Charlie’s graveside I understood that you both needed time, just the two of you, without me. And that I need to find Louis’ grave on my own.’

Suddenly, Ida began to weep. ‘You won’t feel so bold once you’ve seen it. Oh Tiney, I thought it would make me feel stronger, that being able to see where he lay would heal something in me, but it only made me realise that I’m broken inside. When I saw that sad little grave, when I saw where he is, the place that he fought and died, it was as if it shone a light on a great black chasm, a horrible echo chamber that’s inside my heart, the place where all my love for my Charlie used to be. I feel so empty.’

Tiney wrapped her arms around Ida. She stroked her hair away from her face and kissed her. She didn’t care that the waiters might see. She knew that all across France, women were weeping for their lost brothers, sons and lovers.

‘You go to Paris, Ida,’ she said, softly. ‘I’ll come to you soon. Then we’ll walk along the Seine together and see Paris in the spring. But for now, you have to let me go.’

The next day, Tiney waved Ida and Mrs Alston off from Amiens station as they set out for Paris. Then she crossed to the opposite platform and sat with her small cardboard suitcase waiting for the train to Arras. She would need to travel deep into the Somme to reach the ruined town of Albert. She took Martin’s map from her handbag and smoothed it out on her lap.

Beneath the everlasting sky

A swirl of dust swept into Tiney’s face as she alighted from the train in the late morning. The spring sunshine was bright and warm but, like Villers-Bretonneux, the town of Albert was a landscape of ruins. Tiney remembered Louis sending a postcard from Albert of the ‘Leaning Mary’, a statue of the Virgin which had teetered on the ruined tower of the basilica, but was now lost in the wreckage of the town.

Clutching her suitcase, Tiney made her way along a dusty path through a construction site where a dozen men were clearing away debris. From the other side of the station she could see a jumbled assortment of half-built and half-destroyed buildings. Not far away there was a line of old cars parked outside what looked like a hotel, and further down the street was a newly built red-brick building.

Tiney tramped down to the hotel and negotiated with a burly Frenchman to hire a car to take her to Buire-Courcelles. She drew out Martin’s map and pointed to where the Buire British Cemetery was located, and the Frenchman whistled to a younger man and waved him over to study the map; then they insisted she pay in advance.

The drive to Buire-Courcelles seemed to take forever. Once again, Tiney felt as though the silence of the battlefields had stolen her voice, and she couldn’t find any words to speak to the driver of the car. She sat in the back seat, her suitcase on her lap, staring fiercely out the window at the patchwork of fields and hedgerows. A few small boys waved and shouted as they sped past. The car lurched to avoid a farm-cart and then turned into open green fields, a landscape untouched by mortar fire and trenches. In the villages outside of Albert, there was not a sign of khaki and no flags flew, but a few German prisoners were pulling down some military huts under the supervision of a bored-looking gendarme.

Tiney’s whole body trembled as the car drew closer to the tiny hamlet of Buire-Courcelles. Her heart hammered in her chest and her ribs ached. The old car crossed a bridge and drove past a line of simple brick and stone houses, and then the driver turned right along a narrow laneway and pulled up outside a small cemetery. A few young trees grew along its boundary but beyond were fields of green spring grass.

Tiney climbed out of the car, uncertain whether she should ask the driver to wait. She glanced at the quiet countryside about her. A few starlings flew out of the eaves of a nearby house. It was as if the war hadn’t reached this tiny corner of the Somme. It gave her the confidence to ask the driver if he could return for her late in the afternoon.

At the entrance to the cemetery, Tiney hesitated. She put her suitcase down beside the gate. This was the moment she had dreamt of for more than a year. She could still see herself, sitting on the steps of Larksrest, opening Louis’ last letter. She wanted
to call out his name, as if to let him know she had finally reached him. Then she shut her eyes and tried to imagine each one of her sisters standing beside her along with Mama and Papa – all six of them walking through the gateway together. The gravel crunched beneath her feet as she stepped into the cemetery, her eyes shut tight.

When she opened them again, the cemetery seemed almost disappointingly small, so different to the vast Adelaide Cemetery of Villers-Bretonneux. The same white crosses marked the military graves, but there were civilian graves here as well. A small, weathered stone crypt stood to the right of the entry to the cemetery.

Tiney trod carefully, as if for fear of waking the dead. She stopped before each white cross and read the inscriptions, the names of each of the fallen. And then she found Louis.

He lay in a row of Australian soldiers who had died within days of each other. Tiney stood, very still, very quiet, before his cross and stared. She couldn’t make tears come, though an ocean of longing swelled inside her.

‘Hello, Louis,’ she said, kneeling down at the edge of his grave and resting her hand on the earth that covered her brother.

Once she had spoken his name, it was as if a spell had broken. Words began to flow from her mouth, tales of everything that had happened since that long-ago day in 1914 when Louis last walked down the path of Larksrest, under the lychgate and out into the street for the very last time. She told the story of each of their sisters, as if Louis was sitting right in front of her, resting against the wooden cross, laughing and smoking a cigarette. She imagined him furrowing his brow with concern when she talked
of Papa’s illness, and smiling at the news of the birth of little Ray Junior. She talked until every detail of the past year had been recounted, the long terrible months since his death, right up to her last conversation with Martin Woolf.

When all the stories were told, Tiney opened her handbag and took out three sprigs of wattle. Each of her sisters had picked a spray of wattle to place on Louis’ grave, and though the soft yellow blossom had grown dry and faded in its journey across the world, the small buds of gold looked bright against the base of the white cross. Then carefully, tenderly, she pulled out the weeds that grew in clumps on the grave. With her fingers, she scraped a place for a bouquet of wildflowers that she gathered from around the edge of the cemetery. Over by the stone crypt, sheltered from the wind, was a cluster of early poppies. Tiney picked six of the blood-red flowers, one for each of the Flynns, and laid them in a crisscross pattern on top of Louis’ grave. Then she picked three more poppy flowers and tucked them carefully into the folds of a handkerchief. Finally, satisfied she had done all she could, she dusted her hands and knees and stood at the foot of the grave again.

‘Louis,’ she said. ‘Louis.’

Her eyes began to stream, tears washing down her face. Not wanting to dampen her handkerchief of poppies, she wiped the tears away with the back of her hand but didn’t sob or make any sound. Inside her was a stillness so deep, so profound it was as if she had been hollowed out. She felt like a bell, as if the touch of another human being might set her ringing, a sound so pure and sad that everyone would weep when they heard it.

When Tiney walked through the gate of the cemetery, it was as if she had crossed over from another world. The quiet lane, the dappled afternoon light that shone through the trees, the soft twittering of birds – all were foreign and disorienting. From very far away, she heard an explosion as if from another universe. She wished she’d asked the driver to wait. She sat on her suitcase, feeling dazed, and watched the sun sink behind the trees. But still the car didn’t return.

When the sky had taken on an evening glow, an old woman in a white bonnet came slowly up the laneway. She wore a faded blue skirt and black bodice. She stopped on the verge beside the cemetery, close to Tiney, and then bent over painfully to cut a handful of grass. Tiney guessed she was at least eighty years old and tried to to imagine all the things her eyes had seen in a lifetime. She would have been a young girl in 1848 when Tiney’s great-grandparents fled the uprisings in Europe and sailed to South Australia. Now the old woman had borne witness to ‘the war to end all wars’. Perhaps she had even seen soldiers carrying Louis’ body into the cemetery.

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