Authors: Margaret Mayhew
She had avoided looking at any more faces. The trick was not to think about it at all. To join in the game of make-believe that everybody on the station played â that brave young men were not dying almost nightly and that all of them would be there for breakfast when the new day dawned.
The Group Captain, better known as Sunshine because of the complete lack of any such thing in his nature, had started off the performance up on the stage in his customarily chilling manner.
âPrimary industrial target . . . a blow at the very vitals of the enemy . . . steel works and armaments . . . striking at the morale of both the enemy civilian populations and the industrial workers . . . all the might of aerial bombardment . . . bringing them to their knees . . . maximum effort expected from all crews . . .'
When he had finished his harangue, the squadron COs had had their little say, followed by Navigation, Bombing,
Signals, Intelligence and Met. Any questions had been asked and answered. Then the crews had synchronized their watches and collected their rice paper flimsies, to be eaten if there was any danger of the information they contained falling into enemy hands. To add to the illusion of some
Boys' Own
adventure, they were issued with escape kits containing foreign banknotes, a silk scarf that was also a map of northern Europe and a brass RAF button that was a compass in disguise. They had handed in their personal papers and snapshots, and anything that might give help to enemy intelligence if they were to fall into their hands, dead or alive, and had been doled out their cans of orange juice, barley sugar, Wrigleys chewing gum and two keep-awake pills. Then they had gone off to have their flying supper â the Last Supper some of the cynics among them called it.
Later, when they had been ferried out to dispersal, she had gone to stand by the beginning of the runway together with a little group of ground crew, WAAFS and other personnel, to see them off. It was an unfailing ritual, whatever the weather â the waving Godspeed, the thumbs-up, the station's display of solidarity and encouragement.
The twenty Wellingtons had taken off at two-minute intervals, beginning their lumbering run at the green signal from the Watch Office. The group had waved to each one as it roared past them, loaded with petrol, incendiaries, explosives and ammunition, to clamber slowly up into the sky, the red and green wing tip lights gradually fading away, together with the howl of the Bristol engines. When the last one had gone and silence had fallen, the waiting had begun â catnapping on a bed and listening all the while, even in her sleep, for the distant drone that heralded the bombers' home-coming.
There had been one Early Return: B-Baker had turned back over the North Sea with engine trouble. The rest of them had returned safely from Essen, except for A-Apple and C-Charlie. They had circled noisily above the station
while they waited to land, rattling the windows. Then the crews had arrived in the trucks from dispersal for their de-briefing. The sprog crew had made it back all right in their ropey kite; she saw their young pilot looking dazedly euphoric, as though he could scarcely believe it.
After the de-briefing Anne wrote up her reports for teleprinting through to Group. When she had finished she went outside. Dawn had come up on the new day and there was still no news of Digger and A-Apple, or C-Charlie, the crew with the spare bod. She looked up at an empty sky. The weather seemed set fair, as though it was going to be a nice March day with a good hint of spring. Don't think about the two missing crews, or whether they would ever see it.
They come and they go
, one of the older WAAFS had said to her when she had arrived.
You have to get used to it.
She could see the bombers standing out at dispersal in the distance, and the midget figures of the ground crews moving about. A Wimpey was progressing majestically round the perimeter track towards the hangars, displaying the stout-bellied outline that had given the aircraft its nickname after Popeye's hamburger-eating friend, J. Wellington Wimpey. Someone was cycling along behind the bomber, weaving from side to side in its wake. Station life was going on as usual.
She had met Digger at a mess party a few weeks before. The tall Australian, in his royal blue uniform, had walked up to her on his hands, upside down.
âI'm from Down Under. Care for a dance?'
He had an Aussie accent she could have cut with a knife and he was one of the craziest people she had ever met. And one of the worst dancers. But he had made up for the bad dancing by making her laugh more than she'd laughed for months and months.
She found out that he had volunteered for the Air Force at the very beginning of war, even though he lived on the other side of the world. Like so many of them. When she had asked him why, he had grinned.
âWhen people ask me that I always say I had to come and help the Old Country in her hour of need, didn't I? That makes it sound good. If I told the truth it'd be more like it seemed like it might be a hell've a good party and I didn't want to miss it.'
He had talked about his home in Mosman, Sydney where his parents had a house near the water.
âIt's a bonza place. You'd love it. Sun, sailing, swimming . . .'
âSharks?'
âYou've got to watch for them, but they don't come in very often.'
âOnce would be enough. I don't know anything much about Australia, I'm afraid.'
âWell, you know we walk about upside down, don't you?'
âYes, I realize that. And you have koala bears, kangaroos, gum trees and Sydney Harbour Bridge. That's about all I can think of.'
He had laughed. âOh, my word! We'll have to change all that.'
Soon after he had taken her up for her first flight, smuggling her on board his Wellington for a cross-country. She had sat beside him in the cockpit and been thrilled by the sudden charge down the runway for take-off, by the exhilarating feeling of speed as the ground rushed past in a blur, and then the sudden, extraordinary lightness as the heavy bomber lifted clear of the concrete and began its climb up into the sky. Digger had grinned as she had clutched at the sides of her seat and given a reassuring thumbs-up sign. The earth had become a hazy, patchwork place far, far below and the clouds, so near, like outsize puffs of cottonwool. The noise of the engines had been deafening, and the aircraft, for all its size, seemed cramped and uncomfortable. She had tried to imagine what it must be like to fly in it on ops for hours on end.
She went on staring up into the empty sky and thinking
about Digger for quite a while before she went back into the Ops Room.
News had just come in from Signals of A-Apple. The Wellington had made an emergency landing at an aerodrome on the south coast, on one engine, but all the crew were safe. She breathed a huge sigh of relief. There was no news of C-Charlie and they were posted missing. The sick gunner must have been thanking his lucky stars.
Later on, Anne biked over to the WAAF site. It was half a mile away from the main buildings and housed a growing contingent of WAAFS from a variety of trades â Code and Cypher, Meteorology, Radio and Instrument Mechanics, Photography, Maps . . . the list had expanded still further. Sometimes she thought back, wryly, to the early days when they had been allowed to do so little.
Like RAF Colston, Denton had been a pre-war base that had grown rapidly as the war progressed. The main station buildings were brick-built and comfortable, the outlying ones, including the Waafery, prefabricated huts put up in haste. She had survived another winter in a bedroom heated by a temperamental coke stove. The WAAF officers had breakfast on their site but messed with the RAF for other meals, and not without resentment from some of the men. When she had first arrived and walked into the ante-room she had overheard one grumble to another: âThis is getting to be a hell of a place . . . all these bloody women in the Mess.'
She had quickly got used to eating with the men, but was still sometimes amazed at being saluted by airmen as well as by airwomen, and at being addressed as ma'am. It was still strange to be giving orders and reprimands, instead of always receiving them.
She had learned her job in Ops Intelligence more or less as she went along. There were two other WAAF officers besides herself and two WAAF sergeants. They worked in three watches, alternating the longest fourteen-hour stretch from early evening until nine the next morning,
so that she now had twenty-eight hours off to recover until she was due back on duty. The next watch had taken over and in Operations Intelligence their day would begin with Group phoning through with the gen on the target for the coming night, if ops were on. They would be given the name of the target, the number of aircraft needed, the bomb load, routes, diversionary attacks, call signs and flashing beacon letters of the day, and any other vital information. Instructions would be typed up ready for the briefing later in the day and the room prepared and locked. And so it would begin all over again . . . the loaded Wellingtons taking off with their crews, the waving Godspeed and safe return, the waiting for them to come back. Sometimes an op was scrubbed, even at the last moment, and usually because of the weather, but with it looking so clear it was unlikely today.
From dropping leaflets, Bomber Command had gone on to dropping bombs on German cities â civilian and industrial targets alike. She knew that in the darkness and over invariably obscured targets, the crews rarely knew where their bombs actually fell â whether on a steel works or armaments factory, or on a children's home or hospital. If any of them felt squeamish about it, they never said so; any more than they ever talked about feeling afraid. She knew that they were afraid â most of them. She had seen them mooching about the station during the daytime before ops, trying to kill the waiting time. Back in the summer, when she had first arrived, she had watched them playing cricket, or lounging around on the grass, smoking and talking. Sometimes they tried to sleep. At briefings she had seen the nervous twitches, the shaking hand lighting yet another cigarette, and heard them being sick in the lavatories afterwards if the target was a tough one. Once, the MO had taken her aside and asked her to sit with a tail gunner who had collapsed on landing back from his first op. He had been a Lancashire lad, small and thin, like most of those who had to squash themselves into the lonely confines of the rear turret, far
from the rest of the crew, without even the comfort of a parachute as a forlorn hope, and with an open panel in front of them onto the bitter cold of the night skies. The gunner had been stiff, not only with cold, but with terror. They had carried him to a bunk where he lay as rigid as a plank of wood, unable to move or speak. She had sat beside him, holding his hand, and it had been like holding a block of ice. Very slowly and gradually she had felt him relax, muscle by muscle, and return to normal. He had even managed to smile as he had thanked her. A few days later he had been posted missing with the rest of his crew on a raid over Wilhelmshaven.
Some never betrayed any fear, but nearly all were openly superstitious. Spare bods, certain aircraft, unlucky beds, WAAFS going too near the bomber before an op, drinking their thermos coffee before the target . . . there were all kinds of jinxes. One pilot always touched her right shoulder as he left the briefing room, and she knew of a navigator who had to turn round three times and touch his Wimpey's tail before he would climb in. Others carried special scarves, lucky cigarette lighters, lucky coins or mascot toys. Some of the fighter pilots at Colston had done that but Johnnie had been right when he had said that the bomber boys were different. There was no room for individual swashbuckling and, except for the ones like Digger, they were mostly quieter, though not necessarily any more sober. The crews drank together, never mind their different ranks, and went out on the town together. Their war was different. When they went to fight it was a long drawn-out ordeal of hours, not a matter of minutes. It asked, she came to understand, for different qualities and a different kind of courage.
A new crew arrived to replace the one that had gone missing with C-Charlie. When the pilot came into the Officers' Mess, she recognized him at once. The last time she had seen him he had been wearing a top hat and tails. The uniform was different now and the spots that had afflicted him then had gone, but it was undoubtedly
Latimer. And he blushed when he saw her, just as much as he had blushed on that summer's day in June at Eton . . . so long ago.
âGood lord,' he stammered. âI knew you were in the WAAF, but I never imagined you'd be
here!
I say, that's absolutely marvellous! Simply wonderful!'
âKit told me you were with bombers but I never expected to run across you either.'
âHow is Kit? I haven't heard anything of him for ages.'
âHe's been sent to North Africa â I'm not sure quite where exactly. When I last heard he was all right.'
This place is nothing but sand, twin. I should have brought my bucket and spade.
âDid you hear that Villiers was killed in France?'
He nodded. âYes. Jolly bad luck. Frightful shame. Parker-Smiley bought it too, you know. He was flying Stirlings. His kite got shot down over France, apparently.' Latimer gestured helplessly, his soft spaniel's eyes sad. âRotten show.'
Little Parker-Smiley who had been afraid of the dark, flying on a night bombing raid. She said with the determined brightness that she had acquired in recent months: âDo you know, I've never known your Christian name. I've only ever heard you called Latimer.'
âOh.' He blushed again and smiled. âIt's Henry.'
She smiled back at him, but with a heavy heart. He had thirty trips ahead of him in order to do his tour and she would be waving him off now with the others, and wondering whether he was going to come back.
He had been on five ops over Germany when he summoned up the courage to ask her to go out to dinner in King's Lynn. She accepted but against her better judgement. The look in his eyes and the way he followed her with them told her that he was still what Kit would have called smitten, but she hadn't the heart to refuse.