Authors: Margaret Mayhew
Winnie was sent to a flight out at dispersal where she was greeted with more stares and consternation. Only one of the ground crew showed any friendliness. He came over, wiping his hands on a piece of oily rag and grinning broadly. His hair was carrot red and he wore his forage cap perched so far over on the side of his head that she couldn't see how it stayed on.
âWhat're you doing here, love?'
âI'm a flight mechanic,' she told him. âEngines. I've just done the course and been sent here.'
He whistled. âBlimey . . . what's Chiefy going to think? He hates women.'
When Flight Sergeant Jock McFarlane came out of his office he took just one look at her.
âYou can take yourself off, lassie. I'm not having you out here. I'm counting ten and I don't want to see you when I've finished.'
She could barely understand his Scottish accent and his ice-blue eyes terrified her. So did the sight of the three stripes and crown on his sleeve. But she stood her ground.
âSquadron Leader Ryan said I was to come here, Flight.'
He glared at her ferociously, fists on hips. âOch, he did, did he? Well, we'll soon see about that, my girl.'
He went away to see about it, but the squadron leader won the battle and she stayed. She was issued with men's overalls so big that she had to tie them up round her waist with locking wire, and she was given the worst, the dirtiest and the most tedious jobs to do. She cleaned oil filters, scraping away painstakingly at the rubbery deposits before washing them in petrol; she polished the perspex on the cockpits; she refuelled the aircraft tanks from the bowsers, clambering out on the wing in the wind and getting cold petrol all over her hands; she drained oil from engine sumps and on blustery days
the oil spattered her face and hair; she held tools for the men and fetched and carried for them, shutting her ears to their bad language.
âSorry, Winn,' they'd say. âForgot you was there . . .'
Because she was so doggedly willing they soon gave up resenting her. Before long they began to tease her instead. Bob, a corporal fitter and one of the oldest of the gang, sent her off to the stores.
âGo and ask them for three size seven sky hooks and a long rest.'
She was puzzled. âWhat are those?'
He looked impatient: sarcastic. âThought you said you'd done your training. You don't mean to tell me you've never learned about sky hooks and long rests? You've heard of a spanner, I suppose?'
â'Course I have.'
âJust wondered. Off you go, then, and be quick about it.'
She pedalled away round the peri track on her bike. It was more than a mile to the stores and raining hard. By the time she arrived she was soaking wet. When she asked for the tools the stores sergeant looked at her hard.
âYou tryin' to be funny, or somethin'?'
âNo, Sarge.'
âThere's no such thing as sky 'ooks. Or a long rest either â 'cept on leave, an' you won't be 'avin'
that
yet.
Long rest
, see? Someone's been 'avin' you on. Takin' the mickey. You want to get yer number dry.'
When she cycled back to dispersal they were all laughing, even Ginger the carrot-haired one, who had once asked her to fetch him a left-handed screwdriver.
When the NAAFI van came round she would fetch them their char and wads.
âNAAFI's up!' they'd shout. âWinn, be a love . . .'
She took it all in good part and kept well out of Chiefy's way. His cold eye was often upon her, she knew that, watching and waiting for any excuse to be rid of her.
âShift yourself, woman,' he'd say. âOut of my way!'
Everything she was given to do she did well, no matter how menial or dull the task. And she did it better, she guessed, than any of the men ever did. At Chiefy's bellow of
Two Six
! she was always there at once to help push or pull or lift, whatever was needed. Hands raw and red from petrol, ingrained with grease, the fingernails black-rimmed and ragged, and with her face streaked with dirt, she worked with a will and as hard, or harder, than any of them.
At first they wouldn't let her tail-squat when the aircraft were being ground-tested, saying it was no job for a woman. She watched them lying across the tailplane, keeping it down with their weight, and could see nothing very difficult or dangerous about it. Her chance to find out what it was like finally came when there was a flap on and everyone else was busy. The erk who was going on with her chivalrously gave her the starboard side where he told her there would be less blast from the propeller.
âYou've got to keep down flat, see, so's the slipstream goes over you. Keep yer 'ead well down an' yer eyes shut, 'cos of the stones an' stuff blowin' about. An' 'ang on tight, for God's sake.' He eyed her doubtfully. âI just 'ope you're 'eavy enough.'
She positioned herself as he had shown her, facing aft across the Hurricane's tailplane, and lay with her feet off the ground, gripping the fin with her right hand and the leading edge with her left. She shut her eyes tight. The Merlin engine started up with its ch-ch-ch clatter and exploded into a roar. The roar increased steadily until it hurt her ears and the prop blast felt so strong she thought it would sweep her clean away. Her hair was blowing all over the place and a hail of small stones spattered her back and legs. She screwed her eyes tighter shut as the fitter in the cockpit took the engine up as far as the gate, testing for mag drop and boost, and wished she could shut her ears. The smell of exhaust gas was choking her and the tailplane was juddering and jumping beneath her as it tried to lift off from the ground. She clung on to it
desperately. Then suddenly the fitter throttled back, the revs died and he switched off. The prop blades windmilled to a stop.
She slid off the tail, her ears still singing, weak at the knees. The airman put his arm round her shoulders and gave her a squeeze.
âThought we was both takin' to the air fer a minute there . . . You want to eat up yer porridge before next time.'
From a distance she watched the pilots â young men at the final stage of their training before they went operational. She saw them going to and fro from the crew room, parachute harnesses clinking and clanking, and she envied them as they climbed into their aircraft and taxied out to take off and climb away into the sky. One or two were nervous, she thought. It showed in the way they walked and moved, in the way they lit their cigarettes with hands that trembled just a little, and laughed just a bit too loudly. Once, she was allowed to help strap one of them in.
âThe woman's touch,' Chiefy said caustically. âMebbe it'll remind the laddie of his mother and calm his puir wee nerves.'
The pilot looked very young. He had very smooth, pink cheeks like a schoolboy. Not more than nineteen, Winnie thought, feeling as maternal as Chiefy had intended, with her twenty-one years.
As he climbed up onto the Hurricane ahead of her his foot slipped on the wing. He corrected his balance quickly but there was a tinge of red in his face as he lowered himself into the cockpit. She hopped up after him and stood on the wing-root to help him with his harness straps, handing them over his shoulders from the back for him to fasten in front. She noticed how his hands shook as he did so, and the small beads of sweat on his forehead.
She gave the windscreen an extra little polish with the rag tucked in her string belt and smiled at him encouragingly. âAll right now, sir?'
He nodded and tried to smile too, but his face looked stiff with flight. He shouldn't be doing this if it scares him so much, she thought. Really he shouldn't. She dropped back onto the ground and went to stand ready to pull the chock away on one side. Titch, the mechanic at the trolly acc, was waiting patiently for his signal. It was some time coming from the cockpit and he caught Winnie's eye and raised his own heavenwards. When the Hurricane had started up at last, he nipped smartly under the wing to pull the lead from the socket. Winnie waited for her signal from the pilot and then moved forward to pull the rope, dragging the chock clear of the fighter's wheel. She watched the Hurry as it moved off and went on watching it anxiously as it turned to begin the take-off run. It seemed a long time before the wheels left the ground and it wobbled unsteadily into the sky.
Titch sniffed. âBloody awful pilot, that one.' He dragged the trolly acc off in disgust.
Later on, she saw the Hurricane return. It made an awkward approach, one wing dipped, and to her eyes it was too high up and going too fast for the landing. On touchdown it bounced hard several times and slewed round sharply. One of the undercarriage legs collapsed and the port wingtip buckled as it scraped along the ground. Then the nose tipped forward, crumpling the propeller blades like the petals of a flower. Her ground crew watched in grim silence.
The WAAF quarters were in a damp and dismal house on the edge of the aerodrome. It had stood empty for many years and the boiler, a Victorian monster in the cellar, seldom heated the bathwater above lukewarm, and then only in the middle of the day. In the mornings it was stone cold. There was nowhere to dry their wet clothes. Winnie tried laying her battledress trousers under her biscuits at night but in the morning they were still damp. The three flight mechanics shared a room together.
âJust as well,' Phyllis pointed out. âThe way those others
hold their noses when we're around.'
They reeked of oil and petrol. The smell clung to their skin, their hair and their clothes and the water was never hot enough to wash it away properly, or get rid of the grime from their hands. The five inches of tepid bathwater that they were allowed made little difference. In the Airwomen's Mess the other WAAFS edged pointedly away from them and went to sit elsewhere. A group of admin clerks complained to the officer when she came round the tables.
âDo we have to have
them
in here, ma'am? They're so dirty!'
To their delight and gratitude the section officer responded coldly. âMost certainly you do. And I would remind you all that flight mechanics are classified as Group Two, whereas you yourselves are only Group Four. Your work may be cleaner but it is nowhere near as skilled.'
Irene smirked into her meat pie. âLittle do they know that there's nothing skilled about what we do. We're just blooming dogsbodies.'
She spent most of her time cleaning and polishing cockpit perspex. âThey won't let me touch much else. I scrape off bits of dead birds and squashed flies all day long . . . Then I sweep out the hangar.'
Phyllis passed her days removing split pins from magnetos and, because she was a big girl, tail-squatting. âI don't know what we did all that training for,' she would say morosely. âHonest, I don't.'
Sometimes, though, Ginger let Winnie help him on the engines, when Flight Sergeant McFarlane wasn't looking.
âHere Winn, you can have a go at this. Your 'ands are small-like so you'll reach it better'n me.'
She'd undo a screw or tighten a nut or get at some awkward part of the engine. Ginger watched her.
âIt's a right shame Chiefy won't let you do more, Winnie. You're that quick with it.'
During a spell of cold, wet weather when there was little flying, Ginger gathered up some firewood and made a brazier out of an old tin can. They lit it in a small dugout shelter near the dispersal huts and he brewed up cocoa and condensed milk and water in an old saucepan over the fire for the two of them. One day he brought some bread, too, and a lump of margarine which he produced from his overall pocket.
âNicked it from the cookhouse this morning. We'll make us some toast.'
Outside, the Scottish rain drifted across the aerodrome in grey sheets, but inside the shelter they were dry and quite warm. Ginger took his screwdriver out of his belt, stuck a piece of bread on it and held it over the fire. When it had toasted on both sides he spread it with margarine for her.
âThere you are, love. A feast fit for a queen.'
He never talked much about himself and she didn't like to ask questions. All she knew was that he came from a village in North Yorkshire and had left home at fourteen to earn his own living. After working in a factory and then a garage he had ended up in the RAF and trained, like herself, as a flight mechanic on engines. Soon after she had first arrived he had asked her about the wedding ring she wore.
âGot a husband, then?'
âHe died last February.'
He had clicked his tongue in sympathy. âRAF, was he? Active service?'
âNo, he was ill. He couldn't ever join up.'
âPoor bloke. He must've been bloody choked about that.'
She had been touched that he had understood how Ken had felt.
The toast tasted smoky but good. Ginger poured her out some more cocoa and she curled her hands round the tin mug.
âHave you ever wished you were a pilot, Ginger?'
He shook his head. âNot me. I like workin' on engines best. That's what I like. Feet on the ground.'
âI feel sorry for the pilots when they're nervous.'
âNothin' to what they'll feel like when they go operational. Sooner them than me, that's what I say.'
âI don't think I'd be nervous â not for the flyin' part, I mean. Have you ever been up in a 'plane, Ginger?'
âBeen up on test flights when I was with bombers, before this.'
âWhat's it like?'
He screwed up his freckled face. âDon't rightly know how to describe it. It's noisy, for a start. An' you go up and down all the time, so it feels unsteady. You can see everythin' for miles down below, if it's clear and everythin's little â like toys. Funny sort of feeling, really . . . seein' it from a long way off an' not bein' part of it any more. Can't say I cared for it. We went right through some clouds once and that was just like a whole lot of cotton wool. Bumped all over the place, she did, the Wimpey.'