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Private's Progress

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by Alan Hackney




  Private’s Progress

  ALAN HACKNEY

  Contents

  Title Page

  PART ONE

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  PART TWO

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  EPILOGUE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  Copyright

  PART ONE

  CHAPTER ONE

  “WELL,” SAID THE Warden of Apocalypse with a vague geniality, “good-bye, Wilson.”

  He extended a brisk hand.

  “Good-bye, sir,” said Stanley Windrush, shaking it meekly.

  The college library was fuller than usual. It was the Warden’s Collection. In patches of sunlight the tail-end of an alphabet of undergraduates stood about in groups, waiting to be called. Here were the flushed and energetic rowing-men, discussing their bumps and their Toggers in interminable undertones. A few beaglers and horsey folk gazed with frank curiosity at the books on the shelves. The occasional contemplatives, alone, in sandals, and blinking with defiant purpose, mixed indifferently with the remains of the main body, an amorphous, unremarkable category, its members almost indistinguishable from one another in retrospect. Among them, unnoticeable, Stanley had been waiting.

  It was almost lunch-time.

  “And good luck, Wilkinson,” said the Warden.

  Stanley murmured his thanks.

  “Wootton!” boomed the Dean in summons, and yet another unremarkable undergraduate came forward.

  Stanley made his way, enervated by the bland Oxford sun, across the grey quadrangle to his rooms. As it was wartime he had to share them with a well-meaning young man called Arthur Egan, who wore blue suits, and who had come up, like Stanley, in 1942, but with a scholarship, from a northern grammar school.

  For the past year Egan and he had lived here—Egan conscientious with his law books, Stanley reading his unadventurous English, neither breaking his tutor’s heart nor firing him with the slightest interest, but producing a reasonably competent weekly essay and listening politely to his comments. Sometimes his tutor could hardly remember whether he had taken him or not.

  The rooms were almost exactly the same now as when they had first come into them. Egan was economical by nature and had introduced no new embellishments apart from a black-encased microscope on top of the bookcases and a portable radio. Stanley had always been meaning to bring some pictures from home but had somehow overlooked them each term. They both knew that they would be interrupted after a year and called up, and had let matters slide. Neither of them had apparently gained in stature from their room-sharing, unlike two hefty classical scholars in the rooms above on Stanley’s staircase, known to fall to wrestling when book-learning palled. Sudden rumbles from upstairs would mark the opening of such a bout, as one scholar seized the other in a crafty half-nelson. Occasionally a yell in the Billy Bunter tradition would shake the windows of the quadrangle. After five minutes, panting and refreshed, they would return to their books.

  Relations in the room below were more sober.

  Egan was sitting on the table. Although he was wearing his Senior Training Corps uniform, he somehow managed to convey the impression of a blue-striped collar.

  “I’ll be off in a minute,” he said, closing a book of Stanley’s. “It always means waiting around tea-time at Bletchley, any road. You’re not packed yet, I notice.”

  “No,” said Stanley. “I think I’ll get Nobby started on it after lunch. It seems a pity, all this.”

  “Well, frankly,” said Egan, “I quite welcome it. Army? What’s the Army? Why, we’ve had the basic stuff, training, here already in the S.T.C. Six weeks in the ranks, OCTU, nice commission, off to see life, and back to Oxford again after.”

  “I suppose so,” said Stanley uncertainly.

  He crossed to the open window and looked out into the quad.

  The gardener was poking at the geraniums in the next window-box. A trickle of undergraduates were going across to the Hall for lunch, with little white jugs to collect their milk ration from the Buttery. Pigeons cooed on a pediment above.

  “Should you carry a greatcoat, d’you fancy?” asked Egan, anxious to be correct. “Or wear it, with it this hot?”

  “Won’t it go in a trunk?”

  “It’s been sent off.”

  “I should imagine, carry it.”

  “Well …” said Egan. “Anyway, I’ll see you on the twenty-sixth, then. Cheerio.”

  He put on the coat and went. It was a little long and creased.

  Stanley sat down at the window and watched the gardener fiddling with the plants. He was an old man and wore an antique hat, with vent-holes as large as halfpennies scattered over its surface. Occasionally he removed the hat and rubbed the perfectly bald head underneath. Stanley gazed absently at him till the trickle of undergraduates came back with their jugs full. Lunch was over.

  *

  Stanley’s scout stood at the staircase entrance as he left.

  “Good-bye, sir,” he said. “You haven’t forgotten your umbrella this time, have you?”

  “No, Nobby, thank you,” said Stanley.

  “Mr. Egan is off to Gravestone, too, for the Army,” said Nobby. “Be company, eh, sir?”

  “Yes, he is,” said Stanley. “There are quite a lot altogether.”

  “Well, you’ll be back, no doubt,” said Nobby.

  “Yes, I expect so,” said Stanley.

  “Yerss,” said Nobby. “What I learned in the Army, look after number one. That was our motto. You just remember. Look after number one.”

  “I’ll remember,” said Stanley, “Well, good-bye, Nobby.”

  “Good-bye, sir. Remember me to your father.”

  Nobby watched the small uncertain figure recede through the archway.

  He looked up at the pigeons.

  “Stone the crows,” said Nobby.

  Near the station Stanley remembered his umbrella and went back for it. By the time he had reached the station again the first of the series of local trains that took him home each term over the Cotswolds had left, and he hung about an hour for the next one. It was after seven when he got out of Wetherall’s taxi in front of the solid stone house where his father had lived the life of a literary recluse since his wife’s death in Stanley’s first year of infancy. Since Stanley’s elder sister Catherine’s departure in 1940 into the Land Army Mr. Windrush had been quite alone, except for the omnipotent Miss Canning, his housekeeper, formerly governess to the children, and suspected, unjustly, by the entire village, of being his mistress. Miss Canning’s parents had christened her Letitia, but she had always been Sarah to the family. She gave an impression of vigilance though, inexplicably, not of rectitude, resembling more a widow than the spinster she undoubtedly was; and a certain gentility, combined with this impression, was sufficient for the village to link her name intimately with that of her in fact virtuous employer.

  Of this gossip she knew nothing: the village woman who came daily for the more vigorous work was taciturn and uncommunicative.

  Sarah heard the taxi on the gravel and opened the door to Stanley.

  She greeted him unemotionally.

  “There’s dinner nearly ready, Master St
anley,” she said. “You’re looking a bit thin. Your father’s in his study.”

  Stanley hung up his umbrella and made his way to his father’s door.

  His father was at his desk.

  “Hullo,” said Mr. Windrush, pushing his glasses up onto his forehead. “Did you find your way?”

  Mr. Windrush was convinced that people needed constant guidance when travelling. His desk contained several years’ volumes of Bradshaw, and the ABC; bus time-tables entirely filled one drawer, and a London Underground map was pinned neatly to the wall at his side. When visitors were going he would present them with full written instructions for their journey, with alternative routes and timings, and his own rare trips (on which he always ended by taking the same train) were planned in detail beforehand like a military operation.

  “Yes, perfectly, thank you,” said Stanley.

  “Connections all right?” asked his father. “Good, splendid. Well, now, listen to this.”

  He picked up a sheet from his desk and in a precise voice read:

  “‘When I was a nipper about six-months-old

  My mother and my father too,

  They didn’t know what to wean me on,

  They were in a dreadful stew.’

  Significant. You recognise it?”

  “I’m afraid not,” said Stanley. For three years now his father had been engaged in writing a monograph on music-hall songs. Material had been amassed, whenever possible, from sources in close touch with the halls. Mr. Windrush had spent several periods of up to six weeks in London, staying at Brown’s, and going forth daily to Kilburn or Brentford Market, pestering costers and old men in public bars for new lyrics.

  “It’s the verse as opposed to the chorus,” said Mr. Windrush, “of ‘Boiled Beef and Carrots’. Harry Champion. You don’t often hear the verse. It goes on:

  ‘They thought of this, they thought of that,

  Like a little bit of old cod roe,

  I said, “Take me down to the old cook shop

  I’ll show you what’ll make me grow”.’

  Then the chorus, of course: ‘Give me boiled beef’ and so forth. Have you eaten, by the way?”

  “No, actually,” said Stanley; “I missed lunch.”

  “You must eat alone, I’m afraid,” said his father. “I shall be rather busy with all this. I’m glad to see you seem to have put on some weight.”

  “Nobby wished to be remembered to you,” said Stanley.

  “Clark drinks too much,” observed his father mildly. “Half my port when he got a chance. When do the Army want you to go to Gravestone?”

  “The twenty-sixth,” said Stanley. “It’s a Thursday.”

  “I’ll get you a route out,” said his father, making a note of it. “Remember there are two ways from Paddington to Victoria. If you go by Bakerloo you’ll have to change, of course, and you may not gain anything. What time must you be there? Three? Lunch in Town, then. I would certainly strongly advise that.”

  Mr. Windrush was given to strong advice of this sort. No guest of his could long avoid being strongly advised about certain elementary procedures. Before a projected day’s outing they were strongly advised to take breakfast. If they faced a journey of six or seven hours he would urge them to eat a meal on the way. In the hall before they went he would strongly advise them to call upstairs before leaving.

  The effect of this was that visitors, with few exceptions, stayed away, and Mr. Windrush found his life almost entirely undisturbed by callers. The vicar, a sensitive man, had last called several winters previously, on his being appointed; but after being urged, in the course of a short visit, to wear two layers of wool, to take a fourth cup of tea for the sake of his kidneys, to call upstairs, and to gargle while up there if he had not already done so that day, he had not called again. Mr. Windrush was, as always, quite unconscious of having bored or given offence, and put down the vicar’s not calling to a certain eccentricity.

  “That fellow Stilton,” he had confided to an archaeologist down to look at the dolmen. “Most odd. Never see him from one year’s end to another. Last week I actually saw him dismount from his bicycle and cycle off the other way when I was coming.”

  The archaeologist, however, had found in Mr. Stilton an over-enthusiastic and rather embarrassing digger, who had discovered an obviously Victorian horse-brass at a depth of four feet, whereas he himself had discovered nothing. In spite of this, after being told daily for a week that he would be very well advised to have an anti-tetanus injection in view of his constant dangerous contact with the soil, the archaeologist (a convinced atheist) had found an excuse, in its being nearer the site, to move into Mr. Stilton’s vicarage.

  “Well,” said Stanley’s father. “I really must get on with my commentary.”

  *

  Stanley spent the next three weeks reading. Sometimes he went to a cinema in Cheltenham, but the town was full of Servicemen, and he was usually back well before blackout.

  His father rarely appeared. Once he presented Stanley with an itinerary for his journey, strongly advising him to send any heavy luggage in advance.

  He wrote to his sister Catherine, who had some time previously deserted the Land Army to marry a reasonably successful artist in Sussex. Here they had almost immediately been surrounded by a network of troops and had transferred to London. Her husband Philip had spent much time on predominantly grey canvases in the Tube shelters, with sleepless blanketed figures peering over his shoulder as he worked.

  Catherine’s reply came quickly:

  “S. Darling,

  Lunch with us. It will be bloody, but charming to see you. You must meet Nita. May rise to Spam.

  Fondest Love,

  Kat.”

  In the same post was a railway warrant and a movement order:

  “You will proceed to 628 Primary Training Centre, The Barracks, GRAVESTONE, on Thursday, 26th July, arriving NOT later than 1500 hrs. Uniform and allequipment issued to date will be taken. You will report to the Guard-Room on arrival.”

  CHAPTER TWO

  STANLEY’S TRAIN INEXPLICABLY arrived at Paddington twenty-five minutes early. His father’s itinerary had quite overlooked this possibility. Mr. Windrush, rather reluctantly, had left his desk to wish his son well from the front door. The rather absurd little khaki figure had waved awkwardly from out of the taxi window.

  “Good gracious,” thought Mr. Windrush as it pulled away, “he’s waving with his umbrella.”

  At Paddington Stanley became conscious of having brought the umbrella with him, and almost decided to leave it in the train. The thing was now, however, so fixed in his mind that his conscience would not allow him this course, and he walked to the barrier with it in one hand and his suitcase in the other. There was a little delay while he ferreted out his wallet for the railway warrant, with a press of travellers fidgeting behind. From these came an audible murmur of “Fred Karno”.

  Stanley took a bus to Chelsea and went up to Philip’s and Catherine’s flat. It took him some time to make himself heard, and the door opened onto a blast of sound. A young woman in a man’s check shirt confronted him. Her hair was neutral and braided.

  “Terence is using a hair-drier on the Underground Women,” she said urgently.

  “Is Mrs. Young still here?” asked Stanley.

  “Please come in,” said the young woman, going abruptly into the flat and leaving the door ajar. She seemed to vanish immediately and completely.

  Stanley came in and looked around. The place was filled with the whirr of the hair-drier. He stood there, stunned with the sound. Of the young woman there was no sign.

  Philip, however, stood near the window, applying the drier closely to a canvas. Stanley waited for a while and then went over and tapped him timidly.

  Philip glanced round and then flung down the drier.

  “Oh!” he said, recovering, and switching the machine off. “I thought the soldiery were creeping in. How are you? Look at the effect. Decay! It’s the quick d
rying that gets that. How are my Women? Tell me they’re plastic. Everyone does. Are they? Now where’s Catherine?”

  An inner door opened and Catherine appeared. She was in jumper and slacks and was shoeless. Her long fair hair was untidy over her shoulders.

  “Stanley, darling!” she cried gleefully, nuzzling him briefly and filling the room with a perfume of bath salts. “Forgive my Constant Nymphing outfit, but you’re early. Why do you have to wear that kind of hat? Did Nita let you in?”

  “Oh,” said Stanley, “was that——”

  “That was,” said Philip firmly. “Most peculiar. She is, I understand, a veganin.”

  “A Vegan,” said Catherine. “And really very sweet.”

  “She refers to me,” said Philip, reeling up the hair-drier flex, “as ‘Terence’.”

  “Oh,” said Stanley.

  “Shall I soften her up for you, darling?” offered Catherine. “As it is, she’s moping. That’s why she’s here. She has a husband in Charlotte Street who’s living with some odd man.”

  “No, really,” said Stanley anxiously. “Look, Kat, I’ve to report at Gravestone by three. If you could …”

  He broke off helplessly with a gesture of his umbrella.

  “Actually it sounds very wet of them,” said Catherine, “insisting on a time. Will they commission you, or will it be sordid?”

  “Well,” said Stanley, “they select people now. We may have to have a Board.”

  “Psychiatrists,” said Catherine, appreciatively. “Think of all the lovely cosy questions. Well, now, lunch. Count Nita out; she’ll ferret up some nut-meat roast and the like. Let’s go to the Parapluie and save the rations. Then we can have a rout at the Brass Farthing afterwards and Nita can join us there. How lovely to see you. Clearly you must turn up blind at Gravestone.”

  Nita did not in fact reappear before they went out and walked to the Parapluie.

  The Parapluie was in a side street off King’s Road. Externally, it achieved something less than sophistication by being coated in flat yellow wash. Inside, a good deal of irregular half-partitioning and sudden changes of floor level gave the impression that its builders had been obstinately at loggerheads. From time to time in the ’thirties it had enjoyed some reputation as a firm base for late trips to sightsee newspaper-covered sleepers on the riverside benches. Its fortunes were entirely unpredictable. Two inexplicable bankruptcies, attributed to lack of custom, had paved the way for its being snapped up by its present Armenian proprietor, who had laid on the yellow wash, ubiquitous inside as well as out, and had lined the walls with a myriad of the uglier Van Gogh reproductions, reduced to postcard size and framed funereally in black.

 

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