The Polish Connection 9

By jeand
- 1443 reads
August 1915
I thought long and hard about John's comments about how I should make Beth's stay with us more official, but I also knew that any legal proceedings would mean Peter would have to admit he was in this country illegally. Without mentioning John at all, I did start to bring up the subject of what would happen to her if I died or became incapacitated, but Peter just laughed it off and said I worried too much.
As the summer progressed, we saw much less of Peter during the day, but then he said, “Why can’t Beth and Rebecca make a trip down to the cellar in the weekends? Surely nobody would think of that as an odd thing to do. So we tried it, and mostly I sat out on the back lawn, and they would run up and downstairs from the cellar as if they were playing a game there which of course they were. Peter was very good at playing games and thought of all sorts of ingenious ways to keep his daughter and mine happy.
The biggest risk we ever took was when we decided to go, separately of course, by train to Edale, and then have a meal at the pub there and go for a walk along the Pennine Way. John is a great walker so we have detailed maps of all that area. We as a family had gone that route several times, so it seemed quite a normal thing for us to be doing. The unusual part of this trip was that when we reached New Mills, Peter got on the train, having travelled there earlier, and we had a day out together. It was absolute bliss, a beautiful day, and such wonderful scenery. The war seemed light years away. I hadn’t laughed so much in ages, and I don’t think any of the others had either. I did feel rather guilty having such a good time when our men, including my dear husband, were having such a wretched time. Although from his last letter, John seemed to be coping okay. He won't have had my last letter before he wrote this one, I expect.
Darling Barbara, Rebecca and Beth,
For the last week we have been working from seven am to eight pm most days, with a short break in the middle to go down to the beach. A whole brigade was dumped down and they told us to give them telephones. Having now done that they now want more. Another of our troubles is that some Greek or Turk unknown keeps cutting the lines. I sit around for hours in the top of a tree with a sten gun and a search light but I haven’t caught him yet. I will one day though.
Watching the Grenadier Guards on security patrols in Limassol is a sight well worthy of Punch. They march up and down in groups of three as if they were outside Buckingham Palace – head up, arms swinging, looking straight ahead. The civil population just laugh at them. If anyone threw a bomb they would never know about it. I got the shock of my life the other day from them. In fact I nearly got shot. I drive in and out of the Guards camp about three times a day without much worry as they have got used to me by now. However the other day I drove in about four pm and a bayonet was thrust in my face and a nervous looking guardsman demanded my identity card. I just told him to mind his own business and that I was in a hurry and the next time he saw an English officer he should salute and be a bit more polite. I then drove on leaving the bloke standing strictly to attention by the gate. I half expected a bullet to follow me up the road but I don’t suppose he could have hit anything anyway.
Love to you all
John
But now back to our trip to Edale. As we were parting in New Mills for our separate journeys the rest of the way, I had a shock when I saw our near neighbours the Grants just getting on the train. I didn’t know if they had seen Peter leaving it, and how we had said goodbye as more than casual strangers would, but Mrs. Grant gave me a very peculiar look. I wondered if our lovely day would end in discovery.
However, nothing was said, and the next weeks went on much as before. Peter left early, walking to his job, via the back of the house and the fields. He came back late, and we saw very little of him except on weekends when we contrived to do something special.
His relationship with me was necessarily on hold. I had told myself sternly that I could not allow any more intimacy to take place, and I knew I had to be firm with myself to make sure it didn’t happen. My heart was more than willing, but my head said that it would not do.
Beth by now was fairly fluent in English, and had no accent at all that one would notice. Her vocabulary was quite astonishing, but of course she spent most of her time with adults and a twelve year old (Rebecca had her birthday last week) who herself was far advanced from those her age. Beth won’t be starting school until next September, so I still have one year with her at home. But now that she is less shy and unlikely to give away the situation, I even have friends around for tea who have children of a similar age.
September came, and the nights started drawing in again. I was happy as I knew it was much easier for us to keep our secret when the nights were long and dark. Rebecca had gone back to her school in Mellor, very pleased to be advanced a year and with the older children grouping. Her teacher is Mrs. Marsland, the Headmistress, and she likes her very much. She said that shortly after school restarted, all the children were allowed out into the playground to see a flight of four biplanes slowly pass over. They were the first planes anyone had even seen. Rebecca also said that they have a new boy in her class called Emil Cloots and he is a Belgian refugee. He stays with his family at a cottage on Cheetham Hill, but several of the refugees are being housed at the Cathedral Home in top Mellor. Most of the Belgian children, being Catholic, go to St. Mary’s School.
Rebecca says that Mrs. Marland does sometimes use a bamboo cane on the naughtier children, but she usually wraps knuckles with a ruler. For instance, it is an offence to take off one’s shoes to put one’s feet on the pipes which run around the skirting board.
This will be Rebecca’s last full year of school because next year, when she is thirteen, she will be expected to work at Rammy Mill, where Peter also works, from 8.30-12.30, where she will earn three shilling and four pence a week, and then spend the afternoons at school. Then by the age of fourteen, she will have left school.
Because she is very clever and very much wants to go to University, we will let her sit the exam for Manchester High School for Girls, and if she passes and gets a scholarship, she can continue her education there rather than going off to waste her time working at the mill. Manchester High has a very good reputation and offers classes in science, Russian, French, German, Latin and Greek, as well as all the conventional subjects. They also have a very good tennis team, which perhaps interests Rebecca more than their academic qualifications. The Pankhurst sisters went to that school and, of course, Rebecca thinks very highly of them.
- Log in to post comments
Comments
starting work at thirteen! In
starting work at thirteen! In some parts of the world that, or younger, is the norm. Seems strange though and not that long ago. We hardly allow children of thirteen to walk to school now. There's going to be problems with other Belguim refugees attending school. Ticking along nicely.
- Log in to post comments
I started to feel slightly
I started to feel slightly worried by Beth's good English and at her being less shy, that she might say something they wouldn't want her to when the visitors came.
- Log in to post comments
Keep going. If she Rebecca
Keep going. If she Rebecca starts a t'mill and is caught off her guard I guess a sharp-witted mill lass will upend the applecart though it looks like school is her destination. Some good details eg the laughter at the Grenadier Guards Elsie
- Log in to post comments