The Bike Escape
Page 1
WORLD WAR II TALES
THE BIKE ESCAPE
WORLD WAR II TALES
THE BIKE ESCAPE
Illustrated by James de la Rue
Chapter 1
Chalk and cheese
October 1939, Highgate, London
It all started when I stole one piece of chalk. Mr Denton our teacher wasn’t looking and I stole his chalk. Not all of it. Just a new stick of bright white chalk. My friend Myra Dodds kept watch at the door.
‘He’s out of sight, Harry!’ she said in a whisper loud enough to wake half of Highgate Cemetery. You don’t want to wake up the dead in Highgate Cemetery. They say one of Dracula’s victims is buried there. It gives me the creeps.
Anyway, Myra watched Mr Denton go down the corridor and into the staff room. I opened the door to his cupboard, found the box of chalk and pulled it off the shelf. The blackboard rubber fell off the top of the box and hit me in the chest. It clattered onto the floor and left a white cloud to settle quietly. I didn’t notice the white mark on my school tie.
There were three sticks of chalk left in the box. I slipped one into the pocket of my grey jacket. I picked up the rubber and put the box back where I’d found it. Then I ran out of the classroom to join the lads in a game of football.
There weren’t a lot of lads left in the school. As soon as the war started in September that year they shipped half of the kids into the countryside. Evacuees, they called them. Mr Denton, the head teacher, had stood up in assembly with his serious face on. ‘When the war starts Mr Hitler will send his bombers to drop bombs on London.’ He stopped. He looked around. He waited for us to start shaking with fear and screaming.
I think I just looked bored. ‘My mum says he won’t waste his bombs on Highgate,’ I muttered to Myra.
Mr Denton glared at me. He went on, ‘The children of London will be sent to the countryside where they will be safe. When you go home this afternoon you will have a letter for your parents giving you the details. You will pack a small suitcase, take your gas mask, and bring them to school. Get your mums to make you some cheese sandwiches too. A bus will take you to your new home somewhere in England or Wales.’
I shook my head. ‘My mum says we don’t have to go if we don’t want to. My mum says I’m staying. My mum says it’s safe.’
‘Your mum says a lot,’ Myra said.
‘Suppose so,’ I agreed. What she said was true.
So most of the boys and girls went off looking more miserable than a wet dog, but I stayed. I could have stayed the whole war if it hadn’t been for that bit of chalk.
I just wanted to chalk a goal on the wall of our back alley so we could play football.
I didn’t think I’d get caught, did I?
Chapter 2
Time and crime
We kicked a shabby tennis ball around the school yard until the whistle went and we had to line up at the school entrance. We walked in silently to queue again outside the classroom door. Mr Denton marched down the corridor. His black teacher’s gown swirled and smelled of cigarettes and chalk dust.
We stood at our desks until he told us to sit and then he stared at the floor and the mark left by the blackboard rubber. He turned quietly to his cupboard and took out the box of chalks. If there had been twenty sticks in the box he wouldn’t have missed one. But there were two. There should have been three.
‘Stand,’ he barked. Chairs clattered as we stood. He walked slowly down the aisle looking at us with the eyes of a hawk. He stopped when he reached me, glanced at the chalk mark on my tie and thrust a hand into my jacket pocket. He pulled out the chalk and waved it under my nose. ‘Mine, I think?’
‘It hasn’t got your name on it, sir,’ I said.
His hand was so fast I didn’t see it move but I felt the pain as it smacked my left ear. He breathed through his tobacco-stained teeth. ‘The boy who steals chalk today steals from shops tomorrow. He grows up to steal from houses and then he robs banks. And where does he end up?’
‘Rich?’ I said.
I was ready for the slap on my left ear but this time he caught me out by hitting the other side of my head. I almost fell over. I wondered if they taught teachers the tricks of how to slap heads and cane hands when they went to college.
‘The thief ends up in prison. Just like your father,’ he hissed. ‘And it all starts with stealing chalk from school. So I am going to do you a favour, young Burdess. I am going to teach you a lesson. When you have learned that it is wrong to steal, you may be saved from a life of crime.’
I thought he was going to cane me. That would be my ‘lesson’. I was wrong. Again.
‘After school I will come to your house with Constable Wright. We will have a word with your poor mother.’ His hand reached up and grabbed the short hair in front of my ear and tugged at it till my eyes watered. ‘Then we’ll see what happens to thieves.’
He strutted to the front of the class with a smirk on his face.
As I walked home that night I tried to act as if I didn’t care. ‘I won’t go to prison. Not for stealing a piece of chalk,’ I said to Myra Dodds as we reached the street corner and leaned against the bin they put there to collect pig food.
‘They’ll just tell you off,’ Myra said. ‘You won’t be sent to prison.’
‘Suppose so,’ I agreed. I didn’t know I was going to be sent somewhere much worse.
Chapter 3
Biscuits and bombs
My mum was cross. ‘I’ll have to tidy the front parlour if we have the copper coming round. What on earth were you thinking of, pinching chalk? Eh?’ she said as she rubbed a duster over the table.
‘Sorry, Mum.’
‘If you’re going to start pinching stuff why can’t you pinch something useful, like food – a pound of sausages for our tea – or a new dress for me? Your dad would be ashamed of you. Chalk!’ she squawked and spat in one of our best china cups to rub off a mark with her duster.
‘Mr Denton can have that cup,’ I said.
‘The tea leaves are in the pot, pour on the boiling water. I haven’t got any cakes or scones to give them,’ she moaned. ‘I don’t have enough ration coupons. They can have some of those old ginger biscuits I bought before the war.’
‘Mum, they’re coming here to shout at me, not to have a teddy-bear’s picnic.’
‘I’ll not have them saying I have a dirty house,’ she said and spat into another cup. She took off her headscarf and took out her hair rollers – she only did that when she went to visit Dad. I made the tea.
PC Wright was almost too tall and wide to fit in our doorway but he kept his helmet on as he sat at the table. Mr Denton was like a grey eel beside him as he slimed his way into the best room.
Mum poured the tea as the policeman spoke in a deep brown voice, like a judge that was going to send a man to be hanged. Mum pushed the plate of stale biscuits across the table and wrapped her pinafore tight around her. ‘So? Are you sending our Harry to prison or not?’ she asked.
PC Wright looked at the teacher who gave an oily smile. ‘I was thinking of how we could spare the lad,’ he said.
‘What?’ Mum asked, almost as surprised as I was.
‘Many young evacuees have left the school to go to the country where it is safe from bombs,’ Mr Denton went on.
‘I haven’t seen any bombs,’ Mum argued. ‘We have shelters in the back yards and on the waste ground. We have those sirens going off at all hours. We have searchlights and barrage balloons. We have everything except bombs.’
‘They will come,’ PC Wright rumbled.
‘The point is,’ Mr Denton said, ‘you have a choice. You can send the boy away as an evacuee, or we can charge him with theft.’ The teacher looked as happy as a dog with a leg of lamb. He wa
nted rid of me from his school and this was his chance. I was sure Mum would stand up to him and tell him to go to…well.
Mum scowled. ‘You can send Harry off as an evacuee,’ she said sourly.
‘No, Mum!’ I wailed.
‘You can leave tomorrow,’ Mr Denton said.
Chapter 4
Wizard and War
I had seen the pictures in the newspapers. The children who were evacuated. Little angels in their best clothes, holding hands. Labels and gas masks around their necks. Little suitcases with a change of clothes and a jam sandwich. Tears. Waves. Sobbing mothers and steaming trains pulling away from cold platforms.
I heard about what happened at the other end. The kids in our street sent letters home from their new homes. They said the hosts picked the cleanest, prettiest little girls first and the scruffy lads were left till last. They said it was like a slave market. They said the country kids in the villages hated them and called them ‘vaccies’, not evacuees.
Myra Dodds said her brother was evacuated and thought he stepped off the train into a war. The local children said the London kids talked funny and called them ‘Townies’ or ‘slum kids’. The evacuees called the locals ‘yokels’ or ‘clodhoppers’ or ‘turnips’. There were battles with throwing mud and stones and sticks. In the end they sent the evacuees to school in the mornings and the locals in the afternoon so they wouldn’t fight. Of course the locals just lay in ambush, waiting for the vaccies to walk home at dinner time.
But I wasn’t in the swarms of screaming kids. I was sent off by myself. Mum took me to the station half an hour early. ‘I’ll not wait to wave you off. It’s cold on this platform.’
‘Yeah, you go home, Mum,’ I said.
‘You got your book that Mr Benton gave you to read on the train? He said it would do you good to read it.’
‘Yes, Mum,’ I sighed. The book was called Great Expectations and it started off all right but it was hard work. I had a copy of Wizard comic in my gas-mask box. That would be better. It had a picture on the cover of a giant beetle attacking a man and exciting war stories inside. And I borrowed a copy of The Skipper comic from the newspaper shop – I knew Captain Zoom: Birdman of the RAF would win the war for us.
Mr Denton had also given me a map book to study. ‘Geography,’ he said.
‘And have you got that clean handkerchief? It was one of your dad’s. Look after it.’
‘Yes, Mum.’
With a wave she was gone. The station clock ticked round. Fifteen minutes to go. A troop of soldiers crowded into my carriage with kit-bags and rifles. The cigarette smoke was choking. I stepped into the corridor and pulled down a window.
I saw a girl push past the ticket collector and run down the platform. She had two untidy bunches in her hair, each tied with a different ribbon. She saw me and grinned. ‘Hello, Myra,’ I said. ‘Are you being evacuated?’
‘No,’ she panted. ‘I just came to say goodbye. I missed you in class and Mr Denton said you were being sent away. I had to say goodbye.’
She looked pink and awkward. I didn’t know what to say. So I said, ‘Goodbye.’
‘Can we write letters while you’re away?’
‘I suppose,’ I muttered. ‘If they let me have stamps and paper.’
‘You could tear a sheet from your school exercise book,’ she said.
‘Suppose,’ I said.
‘See you soon,’ she said. A daft thing to say.
Then a whistle blew and the train sent out clouds of steam and smoke as it pulled away. Myra was hidden in its fog. When it cleared a minute later she was waving. The smoke seemed to be making my eyes water. I waved back. ‘See you soon,’ I shouted.
Chapter 5
Polish and pyjamas
The train took six hours to travel just sixty miles. There was no slave market at the end of it, no evacuees on the draughty platform except me. A pale and pinch-faced woman in a green coat and a purple hat was waiting for me. She was old enough to be my granny. She might have been a hundred. I was just glad to get off the train.
‘I’m Miss Pimm,’ she said. ‘The vicar of our church asked me to take you in, Harry.’
She gave a smile that was vinegar thin. I could tell she was trying to be friendly. She just didn’t know how. ‘Do I have to go to church?’ I asked.
She turned paler. ‘We all have to go to church, Harry. Let’s go and get you some tea, shall we?’
‘Suppose,’ I said.
Her house was a terraced one like ours but it smelled of furniture polish and lavender. Everything was so clean it made me feel dirty. Mum’s house was a bit of a mess to be honest. My bed in Miss Pimm’s spare room had clean white sheets. Miss Pimm said I should have a bath before I went to bed. I knew why.
As I went into the bathroom she handed me some shampoo for my nits. ‘The London evacuees often come with nits,’ she twittered like a bird. ‘Nothing wrong with nits, but the local children often pick on the London children because of them. Better safe than sorry.’
She wanted to be kind, I suppose. At least the bath was a proper one – not the tin tub we had to use in front of the fire back home. I soaked for a long time before I stepped out and went downstairs in the pyjamas and dressing gown the church had found for me.
Miss Pimm listened to the radio while I opened Mr Denton’s map book and began to study it.
She cleared her throat with a chirp like a sparrow. ‘The vicar said you…erm…had been in a little trouble back in Highbury. Some stealing, I believe. I am a poor old lady. There’s nothing in the house worth stealing. If you want anything, ask and maybe the vicar will find it for you?’
I just looked at her. So Mr Denton had warned them about me, had he? ‘What’s this place called?’ I asked.
‘Wootton, near Northampton,’ she said.
I found it on the map. I used my clean finger to trace a line down a road marked in green on the map. The road was called the A45. At a place called Towcester it joined the A5 and that led straight back to London.
I smiled at her. ‘What’s this road called? The one you live on?’
‘London Road,’ she said.
Perfect. Couldn’t be better. I slept well that night in the soft, clean sheets and dreamed of escapes as daring as Captain Zoom’s…except I didn’t have his wings.
Chapter 6
Straps and saddles
The local turnip kids were no problem. They called me names but as soon as I turned and stared at them they ran away. It was the London kids in the Wootton village school who were worse. They’d been there in Wootton a month and formed their own little gangs and groups of friends. I was the outsider. And I was from North London, they were from the East End of London – another world.
I could list the miseries but it would bore you, and I want to forget them. The teacher was worse than Mr Denton. She was called Miss Sparling and she used a strap instead of a cane. Then there was the vicar, Reverend O’Brien, who raged at me for my thieving past, and the policeman, Constable Grey, who watched me like a snake watches a rabbit.
The one thing I looked forward to was the end of the day. At the corner of Miss Pimm’s road a gang of young women gathered at the end of each day. Buses dropped them off and they met up to smoke and gossip.
They all wore trousers – I’d never seen a woman in trousers. One day, when I’d been in Wootton a week, I guess I gawped at them too long. ‘What’s the matter, lad, never seen a beautiful woman before?’ one of them asked me. She had wavy red hair and she wasn’t all that pretty. But she was cheerful and friendly, not like the rest of Wootton.
‘Are you in the army?’
‘The Land Army,’ she said. ‘We help out on the farms while the men are away fighting. I’m Ellen.’
‘I’m Harry,’ I said and we shook hands.
‘Is that your bike?’ I asked. It was painted black and the wheels were crusted with mud, but it looked like Dad’s getaway car to me.
‘Yes. I need it to get around the farm
– I have to set a dozen rat traps every day. I have to cycle miles.’
‘Can I have a go?’
‘Catching rats?’
‘No. Riding your bike,’ I said.
She reached into the little leather bag at the back of the saddle and took out a spanner. She lowered the saddle so it was right for me. I set off down the road and pedalled hard to see how fast I could go. Then I turned back and pulled up beside red-haired Ellen. ‘Can I borrow it?’ I asked.
She shrugged. ‘It’s not mine. It’s the farmer’s. What do you need it for?’
I sighed. There was no point telling her. But she had a kind face. I thought she might understand. So I told her my problem.
Chapter 7
Fence and firewood
I told Ellen what had happened the day before.
Old Miss Pimm had been kind to me in her own odd way. I wanted to be kind to her.
Leaves were tumbling off the trees and the wind from the East was icy. Miss Pimm had a miserable little fire of coal dust. I sat there with the Wizard comic and heard her false teeth chattering.
Those winds had snapped a tree branch and it lay on waste ground just down the road. On the weekend I climbed through a gap in the fence with a saw I found in her back-yard shed. She said the saw belonged to her dead brother. I sawed the branch into logs and took them back for her fire. It was good to see her warm and comfy, listening to Winston Churchill speaking on the radio.
The next day there was a hammering on the door as I was just about to leave for school. Constable Grey stood there with a cruel leer on his ugly face. ‘Hello, Miss Pimm,’ he said. ‘I have reason to believe your little vaccie is a thief.’
The old lady gasped. ‘What’s he done now?’
‘Stolen a branch from private land. Cut it up for firewood.’