The Complete Pratt (10 page)

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Authors: David Nobbs

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‘I don’t know,’ chuckled Fiona. ‘I suppose that’s their style, to make it more exciting.’

‘Read me another one,’ demanded Henry, the Boy with the Magic Measle, whose Every Wish was Granted.

That afternoon made a great impression on Henry, with dark-haired, brown-eyed, flashing Fiona, who smelt so nice, reading stories in her sparkling voice, glad to be free of her evil, greedy husband, whose Artificial Leg Contained Secret Plans of British Battleships.

When she had gone, Henry decided to learn to read better, to get better quickly, and to rescue Belinda Boyce-Uppingham from her Wicked Family, who were Nazi Spies.

Pssst!!!! Someone was coming. Who would it be? The foul Bagshot? Pansy Potter, the strong man’s daughter? Or Keyhole Kate, eavesdropping again?

It was another Kate. Auntie Kate.

‘Who’s a lucky boy, then?’ said Auntie Kate. ‘Who’s got pilchards for tea?’

They gave Henry the option of not going to church on Sunday, as he’d been ill. To their surprise, he chose to attend.

How he loved her! Who was the man sitting beside her in army uniform?

‘That’s Major Boyce-Uppingham, Belinda’s father,’ said Auntie Kate after the service.

‘And a Nazi Spy!’ breathed Henry to himself.

People stood around and discussed the weather, the losses in the Atlantic, the rationing, and their arthritis, but not God. They’d done that part.

Kit Orris, father of Cyril, approached.

‘Now then, Frank,’ he said.

‘Now then, Kit,’ said Uncle Frank. ‘It’s right thin and parky, i’n’t it?’

‘How’s young Ezra, then?’ said Kit Orris.

‘I’m Henry,’ said Henry. He wasn’t going to start being called Ezra out of school. He began to suspect that Kit Orris was Another Nazi Spy.

‘How’s t’ blackout, then, Kit?’ said Uncle Frank.

‘Well, I didn’t know,’ said Kit Orris, sheep-farmer, sheepishly.

The story had swept the village. Jim Wallington, who was air-raid warden as well as bus driver, had called out, ‘Put out them lights.’ ‘Lights?’ Kit Orris had said. ‘All t’ lights at back of t’ house.’ ‘Oh. Does tha have to black out t’ back and all?’

Very suspicious, thought our hero. It sounded to him like a Beacon for Messerschmitts.

The Nazi Spy Boyce-Uppingham was approaching with his beautiful daughter. The Nazi Spy Kit Orris raised his eyes to heaven and hurried off as if he didn’t want to meet him. That ruse did not fool Henry!

Major Andrew Boyce-Uppingham, to do him justice, did not tap Henry as if he were a barometer. He prodded him as if he were a potato. But instead of saying, ‘Nearly done. Just needs another minute,’ he said, ‘A little bird tells me that somebody we know isn’t exactly short of grey matter. Well done!’

Henry smiled at Belinda Boyce-Uppingham.

She looked straight through him.

‘Play it that way if tha wants to. Keep us love secret,’ thought the Wild Boy of the Woods.

Spring came late and fragile to Upper Mitherdale, and ripened uncertainly into summer. ‘It’s That Man Again’ came from the seaside now, and was known briefly as ‘It’s That Sand Again’. Germany invaded Russia. In the Middle East, Wavell failed to
dislodge
Rommel. The losses in the Atlantic continued. The war was becoming long and grim, not exciting and heroic. The nation seemed to have survived so far through a chaotic mixture of luck and genius. Now luck had run out, and genius wouldn’t do on its own any longer. The war was being rationalised. The planners were coming into their own, thus ensuring, did Henry but know it, that the nation would win the war and lose the peace that followed.

There was a heavily censored letter from Ezra, who was somewhere doing something, and was well. Clothes, jam and tinned food joined the list of rationed goods, and Henry enjoyed his first summer in the country.

He enjoyed collecting the hens’ eggs with Billy, from the huts in the hen coop, which smelt of sweet, hot, healthy decay. He liked to go over to the new shippon, across the thick-mudded, glistening, treacly yard, to watch Jackie milking the red, white and roan cattle with her gnarled, agile fingers. The old shippon, built onto the house, was used for hay and crops now.

On her evenings off, Jackie looked an awesome sight, striding off to the Three Horseshoes in her baggy corduroy riding breeches, in search of men. Now, at work, she was jolly and friendly. She explained that the cattle were shorthorns, dual-purpose cattle, bred for milk and beef. The future belonged with the specialists even among cows. Uncle Frank was a bit old-fashioned. He hankered after the olden days.

Uncle Frank took him round in the cart, which was pulled by a Dales pony. A few of the better-off farmers had tractors, but most still used horses.

The sheep were Swaledales, with black heads and small, curved horns. The little lambs looked as if they had black socks. They all talked in individual voices. Some sounded like human babies, some like gruff old men.

War regulations had compelled Uncle Frank to put twenty-five per cent of his land under the plough. The land wasn’t suited, and his two small fields of oats were indifferent in quality and quantity.

Henry’s reading and writing were improving apace. Miss Candy attributed it to her nurturing, but it was because he wanted to be able to read his comics.

When he went out for walks with Simon Eckington, they were
two
shy lads who sat and chatted, threw stones into the Mither and discovered the quiet pleasures of friendship. They were also naturalists. Simon taught Henry to recognise dippers, and pied wagtails, and how to tell yellow and grey wagtails apart. Once, a kingfisher flashed turquoise along the river. They watched common and palmated newts in the farm pond. They kept tadpoles in jars, which got knocked over. Simon kept budgerigars, but Henry rarely went to Simon’s home, because Patrick was a rotter, who was not above tearing up a chap’s cigarette cards.

They were also in part explorers, known as Sir Simon Eckington of that Ilkley, and Lord Pratt of Thurmarsh, surveying the millstone grit moorland around Mickleborough. High above the valley the two little boys trudged through the cotton-grass and heather in their Wellington boots and baggy shorts. Curlews were albatrosses. Buzzards were vultures. Redshank were Eckington’s Cranes, named after Sir Simon Eckington of that Ilkley, who first discovered them.

They were also in part adventurers, the Wild Boy of the Woods and the Kid with the Magic Wellies. It couldn’t have been mere coincidence that only one Hun was seen in Upper Mitherdale throughout the whole of 1941.

Some of the evacuees were fish out of water, tadpoles in knocked-over jars. Henry discovered that he was a country lad at heart. It was as if Paradise Lane, Thurmarsh, had never existed.

On the Sunday before the hay harvest began, Henry was determined to speak to Belinda Boyce-Uppingham.

They stood by the churchyard, after the service. Uncle Frank was talking to Kit Orris.

‘Now then, Frank.’

‘Now then, Kit. It’s a right dowly day.’

There she was, with her mother and grandmother and older brother. Please look this way, Belinda.

‘How’s t’ oats?’

‘Rubbish. Regulations! Land’s not suited. Those Whitehall willies wouldn’t recognise a field of oats if they fell over it.’

She was coming this way!

‘I’d like to see them come up here.’

‘So would I. I’d set t’ bull on ’em.’

He walked up to her.

‘Belinda?’ he said.

‘I don’t talk to evacuees,’ she said, and walked on, her exquisite little nose pointing straight up to heaven.

This time he couldn’t pretend that it was part of a game.

The hay harvest was below average, but store lambs fetched good prices.

One day, Jane Lugg followed Henry and Simon as they set off on one of their walks.

‘There’s a funny smell around here,’ said Simon. ‘Is it a dead hedgehog?’

‘No. It’s Jane Lugg,’ said Henry.

But she persisted. ‘Can I come too?’ she kept saying.

The two six-year-old boys went into a huddle.

‘She’s a girl,’ pointed out Simon.

‘Aye, but be fair, she doesn’t look like a girl,’ said Henry.

They decided to admit Jane Lugg to their friendship as an honorary boy. She proved all right, for a Lugg. Where other people grew marrow and cabbage, the Luggs put their garden down to prams and rusty bikes. In 1909, in a brawl after a dance at the Troutwick Jubilee Hall, five Luggs had fought six Pitheys from Troutwick, and a Pithey had died. The Luggs bred like rabbits, and kept rabbits, which bred like Luggs. But Jane Lugg proved a keen naturalist, a resourceful explorer, and a doughty fighter against the only Hun seen in Upper Mitherdale that year. The fiendish Hun had a Magic Body, and could Disguise Himself as Anybody. That day he was disguised as Pam Yardley. He ran away, but Jane Lugg, alias Pansy Potter, the strong man’s daughter, caught him and settled him. It was a long while before Pam Yardley dared go out on her own again.

Both boys would have got a lathering if they dared go to the Lugg abode, and the Post Office and General Store was dangerous also on account of Patrick, so the three often congregated at Low Farm. Henry wasn’t banned from seeing Jane Lugg, but he was discouraged. Sometimes she would be sent home. Simon was sent home as well, to make it fair, but when Simon was there without
Jane
he was never sent home. Henry defended Jane stoutly, and vowed to marry her when he grew up. He wouldn’t have been heart-broken if news of his intention had reached the shapely little ears of Belinda Boyce-Uppingham.

The brief Dales summer slipped all too quickly into autumn. It began to look as if the Russians might hold out against the Germans till the winter. In Upper Mitherdale, the sickly oats were stooked. School began again. Maria Montessori did not visit Miss Candy’s classroom, but the nit lady did. It was widely known that the evacuees were not clean, and it would be no surprise to find that they had nits.

None of the evacuee children had nits. Jane Lugg did. Henry’s ardour cooled, and autumn slipped imperceptibly into winter. The oats were threshed communally, since there was only one machine.

Belinda Boyce-Uppingham rode past Henry on her pony, and he decided that he must ride. One Satuday, in late October, his riding career began. Fifty-three seconds later, his riding career ended.

It was the age of the wireless. It was on almost all day, in the dark, cosy kitchen of Low Farm. News bulletins were eagerly awaited, and a tense silence fell during them. Then the music began again. Charles Ernesco and his Sextet. Falkman and his Apache Band. Troise and his Banjoliers. And always, wafting faintly over the darkening, misty dale, one Reginald or another at the theatre organ. There was ‘Music While You Work’ twice a day, and Ensa concerts with Richard Tauber. And comedy. Slowly Henry was beginning to grasp the concept of humour. Apart from ITMA, there was ‘Breakfast with the Murgatroyds’, ‘The Happidrome’, with stars like Izzy Bonn and Suzette Tarri, who sang ‘Red sails in the Sunset’, ‘Varie-tea’ at teatime, ‘Workers’ Playtime’ and ‘Works’ Wonders’, and it was all a wonder that it worked, that the bright, far-away world came flooding into the quiet, gas-lit farm kitchen beneath the stark, silent hills. For the children there was ‘Children’s Hour’. Henry liked the animal programmes, with David Seth-Smith, the Zoo Man, and ‘Out with Romany’, but ‘Children’s Hour’ was of an improving nature, on the whole, and Henry didn’t want to be improved, on the
whole
, and so, on the whole, he preferred the alternative programme, which was called ‘Ack-ack, beer-beer’ and came from the canteens of balloon barrage centres and anti-aircraft units.

The Japanese attacked Pearl Harbour, and the United States entered the war. In the school nativity play, Henry played a passer-by. He had one line, ‘Look at them three funny men.’ He forgot it, but he did remember to pass by. Jane Lugg, shorn and humiliated, was given the part of an angel by Miss Candy, for psychological reasons, and much against the wishes of Miss Forrest. As Henry passed by, an angel belted him round the ear-hole.

Christmas was quiet, but enjoyable. Henry’s presents included an apple, an orange, a Mars bar, two Dinky toys (a Packard and a Lagonda) and a kaleidoscope. ‘I’m right set up wi’ me prezzies,’ he said with satisfaction.

There was a letter from Ezra. He was in…they were hoping to advance to…before…and he loved them both very much.

Summer sunshine streamed into the kitchen. Reginald Foort at the theatre organ streamed out into the fields. Auntie Kate was bottling soft fruit. Ada was humming cheerfully. Henry was buried in his
Beano
. After the sad business with Jane Lugg, he was less sure about Pansy Potter, the strong man’s daughter – ‘Pansy laughs, the cheeky elf – she makes a ‘U’ Boat shoot itself’ – and he could never quite forgive the Boy with the Whistling Scythe for replacing the Wild Boy of the Woods. His favourite was Lord Snooty and his Pals, who were Rosie, Hairpin Huggins, Skinny Lizzie, Scrapper Smith, Happy Hutton, Snitchy and Snatchy, and Gertie the Goat. They had some hard battles with the dreadful Gasworks Gang. He quite liked Cocky Dick – he’s smart and slick – and Musso the Wop – he’s a big-a-da flop. He liked it best when people bopped Huns. The Huns went ‘Der Wow!’ and ‘Der Ouch!’ and serve them right. Henry hated them. That was why, on this, his first day of the summer holidays, Simon and he were going to open up a second front. They owed it to the nation.

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