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Tuppence to Tooley Street
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Tuppence to Tooley Street
Harry Bowling
Headline Publishing Group Ltd (2010)
Tags: Post-War London, Historical Saga
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Synopsis
As he lay in the mud on the beach at Dunkirk, Danny Sutton didn't think he would ever see his home in London's docklands again. But he was one of the lucky ones. Returning home, he is reassured to find that things are just the same: the smell of the wharves and warehouses in Tooley Street; the usual hubbub in Dawson Street, where aproned figures stand in doorways discussing the war; the men down The Globe; the children playing tin-can copper in the gutters. And at number 26, Danny's family crowd round to welcome their beloved son home. But, scarred in mind as well as body, Danny is to realise that things have changed. Unable to do heavy work because of his war wounds he must adjust to a different way of life. And, worst of all, his childhood sweetheart, Kathy, didn't wait for him ...
Tuppence to Tooley Street
HARRY BOWLING
headline
www.headline.co.uk
Copyright © 1989 Harry Bowling
The right of Harry Bowling to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publishers or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.
First published as an Ebook by Headline Publishing Group in 2010
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
eISBN : 978 0 7553 8155 5
This Ebook produced by Jouve Digitalisation des Informations
HEADLINE PUBLISHING GROUP
An Hachette UK Company
338 Euston Road
London NW1 3BH
www.headline.co.uk
www.hachette.co.uk
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty–One
Chapter Twenty–Two
Chapter Twenty–Three
Chapter Twenty–Four
Epilogue
Harry Bowling was born in Bermondsey, London, and left school at fourteen to supplement the family income as an office boy in a riverside provisions’ merchant. He was called up for National Service in the 1950s. Before becoming a writer, he was variously employed as a lorry driver, milkman, meat cutter, carpenter and decorator, and community worker. He lived with his wife and family, dividing his time between Lancashire and Deptford. We at Headline are sorry to say that THE WHISPERING YEARS was Harry Bowling’s last novel, as he very sadly died in February 1999. We worked with him for over ten years, ever since the publication of his first novel, CONNER STREET’S WAR, and we miss him enormously, as do his many, many fans around the world.
The Harry Bowling Prize was set up in memory of Harry to encourage new, unpublished fiction and is sponsored by Headline. Click on www.harrybowlingprize.net for more information.
To the memory of my parents, Annie and Henry Bowling.
With special thanks to Edie Burgess for her help,
advice and her special knowledge–what a gal!
Chapter One
Dunkirk
A blood red sun was dipping down behind a clump of trees and evening shadows lengthened across the flat French countryside as the two soldiers journeyed towards the coast. Private Danny Sutton felt deathly tired under the weight of his pack. He glanced at Albert Sweetland, the young soldier from the Royal Norfolks, as he trudged along with a cold determination, his thumbs hooked through his pack-straps. Danny gritted his teeth and cursed to himself as he tried to keep up.
The road the two soldiers travelled was busy. Laden trucks drove past carrying battle-weary troops. Civilians rode past on bicycles with large bundles slung across the handlebars, and occasionally a horse-cart went by carrying French women and their young children perched on top of their salvaged belongings. Up ahead, the tar-black pall of smoke from the burning oil installations at Dunkirk was rising high in the already darkening sky. The guns had ceased and it was strangely quiet. A faint bird-song sounded from a hedgerow and Albert held up his head.
‘That’s a jay. First I’ve heard this year,’ he said.
‘Is it? I wouldn’t know a jay from a cock robin,’ Danny replied irritably. ‘I can reco’nise a sparrer though,’ he said as an afterthought. ‘Plenty o’ sparrers in London. Quite a few chickens as well. They keep ’em in their backyards where I come from.’
Albert grunted and hoisted his pack higher onto his sore shoulders.
The two soldiers lapsed into silence. The mention of chickens had conjured up visions of food which niggled at their empty bellies. Danny tried to forget that he hadn’t eaten all day. Christ! What a mess, he thought. Two starving infantrymen without a rifle and a round of ammunition between us. He puffed and hoisted his backpack higher onto his shoulders. They had to reach the coast as quickly as possible. The bloody remnants of the British Expeditionary Force were being squeezed into a pocket around the port of Dunkirk. Danny and Albert had seen their units decimated, and now the German Panzers were closing in behind them.
A breeze had sprung up and Danny shivered. The stocky figure of Albert plodding on steadfastly in front made the young cockney feel a grudging admiration. The country boy was not the most talkative soldier he had met but he seemed able to go on marching for ever. They could smell the stench from rotting carcasses of farm animals and it mingled with the acrid smell of the burning oil dumps as darkness settled over the French fields. It was May 29th, and only a few days away from Danny’s twenty-first birthday. He was feeling pessimistic about his chances of being around to celebrate the occasion. If he didn’t find a place to rest pretty soon he felt sure he would fall asleep on the march and sink beneath the muddy ditch-water. He tried to focus his mind on home. He attempted to picture his family in Dawson Street, and Kathy from the next turning, but all he saw were the faces of his comrades as they faced the onslaught of the German troops.
An old woman shuffled slowly along the road, her frail body bent forward in the shafts of the creaking cart which rattled and jumped over the uneven surface, the contents swaying and bobbing around; a shrouded figure sat slumped in the back. When the woman reached the two soldiers she stopped and put down the shafts. She looked at them with baleful, sunken eyes and her lips moved silently. They could see she was very old: her face was skeletal and her hollow cheeks puffed out with her exertions; her dark clothes hung in tatters and her skirt touched the cobbles. Slowly she turned her head as they passed, her eyes narrowed, and she mumbled something, then her body bent as she picked up the shafts and set the cart into motion once more. The shrouded figure on the bundles rocked back and forth and Danny caught sight of the face. His flesh crawled and he gripped Albert’s arm. ‘Gawd Almighty! Look at it!’<
br />
Albert stared at the grey, bloated face of death and he turned his head away. ‘It’s been dead for at least a week,’ he muttered, unable to decide whether the corpse was male or female.
‘It’s tied on,’ Danny whispered.
They could now smell the stench and Danny retched into the hedgerow. He felt Albert’s hand on his shoulder and he straightened up. He had looked upon death before, but this was different. ‘Let’s go,’ he said, shuddering.
They trudged on for a few paces then both reluctantly looked back down the lane. The stretch was deserted. There was no sign of the cart.
The light had faded and Albert quickened his pace. Danny tried to keep up with him, and after what seemed an eternity the two young soldiers reached the edge of Dunkirk. For a while they trudged wearily along the bomb-damaged streets, then Danny leaned against a wall. ‘It’s no good, Albert. I’m done in,’ he said breathlessly. ‘We gotta find a place ter kip fer the night.’
Albert pointed to a row of shattered shops further along the road. ‘What about there? The roof looks solid at least.’
They walked over and entered a small shop. Inside a group of soldiers from the Middlesex Regiment sat propped against the walls. One of the soldiers nodded at them and then pointed to the back of the shop. ‘There’s a tap out back,’ he said.
The two went outside into a small courtyard and washed the dust from their dry throats before filling their water bottles. Danny raised his pale blue eyes to the dark sky. A few tiny stars twinkled through the smoky clouds, and he thought of his home in Bermondsey. His folk might be looking at those same stars right that minute. He thought of Kathy and vowed to put things right with her if he ever got out alive . . .
He knew he had done wrong by taking her for granted. She had always been there when he needed her. It had always been him and Kathy ever since they were youngsters. She had been content just to be with him and he had to mess everything up. The other girls never meant anything to him; he could hardly picture their faces now. But there was the image of Kathy, strong and clear in his mind, as it had been throughout the long months away, filling him with a sense of calm. Only now it was too late. His sister had told him in her last letter that Kathy was seeing someone else.
Albert had gone back inside and now Danny bathed his feet and used the last of the boracic powder on his raw heels. He rummaged through his pack and found another pair of socks and a field dressing. Once he had bound up his feet and put on the clean socks he felt a little better. The desire for food was giving way to tiredness and he went back into the dusty interior and slumped down beside Albert. The young soldier who had first spoken to them leaned over and nudged Danny. ‘Ain’t yer’ad any food terday?’ he asked.
Danny shook his head. ‘Me stomach finks me froat’s bin cut, mate.’
The soldier grinned. ‘Don’t worry. Oggy Murphy’s out on the scrounge. ’E’ll find somefink.’
Time passed and Danny felt his head drooping. Albert was already snoring, his head resting against the crumbling plaster. Suddenly there was a commotion. Danny looked up and saw a huge soldier standing in the shop doorway. He walked in to ragged cheers from his comrades. He was bareheaded and his shaven skull shone in the light of the candle. His features were large and his fleshy lips were parted in a wide grin. ‘Oggy’s got the goods,’ he said in a bellowing voice.
He placed a sack down on the floor and immediately one of the soldiers grabbed at it. Oggy cuffed the young man smartly around the head. ‘Wait, me beauty. There’s bottles in there!’ he growled.
Everyone was now wide awake. Oggy laid down a bundle beside the sack and grinned at the group. ‘Wait fer it,’ he said as he reached into the sack.
Soon Oggy had spread out the contraband on the dusty floor. There were six bottles of red wine and two sticks of bread. Oggy then opened the bundle and produced three tins of corned beef and a chunk of mouldy-looking cheese. Last of all he felt into his uniform pocket and took out a packet of Craven A cigarettes.
‘Cor! Where d’yer get that lot, Oggy?’ the young soldier said admiringly, rubbing his head.
The ugly giant of a man touched the side of his nose with the tip of his finger. ‘Never you mind, sonny. Oggy could get court-martialled fer nickin’ officers’ grub an’ comforts.’
The food was shared out as fairly as possible and everyone in the room ate in silence. The wine tasted like vinegar but it helped the food down their dry throats. When the meal was finished some of the troops lit cigarettes, and Oggy pulled out a wooden pipe and packed it to the brim with tobacco which he took from a greasy pouch.
The loosely hanging shutters rattled in the wind and gunfire sounded in the distance. After a while the soldiers began to fall asleep. Albert was snoring again, his head tilted forward onto his chest. Danny tried to think about home but tiredness prevented him from focusing clearly. His head drooped and he fell into a fitful sleep.
Danny was awakened by the noise of the Middlesex troops mustering outside the shop. Albert was in a dead sleep and he jerked violently as the young cockney shook him by the shoulder. ‘C’mon, Albert. It’s time ter go,’ he said, yawning widely.
In the grim light the two trudged slowly down towards the harbour. The scene that met them caused the two comrades to look at each other in disbelief. Thousands of troops were milling around, and long ragged lines of exhausted soldiers were wading out into the water in an attempt to board the small craft that were coming inshore. One large transport ship was moored at the jetty, and the long line of troops was four deep as the loading went on. The queue stretched back to the sea road and military police struggled to keep order.
‘It looks ’opeless,’ Danny said, puffing hard. ‘We’ll never get aboard that ship.’
Albert pointed to the beach. ‘Let’s catch a rest in them dunes. The tide’s coming in. There’ll be more boats soon.’
The two had only just made the dunes when the air attack started. Planes dived out of the sky and bombs fell, exploding in the water around the transport ship. The long line of waiting troops dived for cover as more planes swooped low and machine-gunned the defenceless men. Screams of the wounded and dying rose above the roar of the aircraft and the noise of the gunfire from the ship. Bullets whipped up the sand and soldiers were caught as they tried to clamber aboard the overturning craft. The bodies of the dead floated back to shore.
Danny lay beside Albert in the dunes as the aircraft made repeated runs over the churning water; they pressed their faces into the sand and waited, hardly daring to move a muscle. As the carnage went on, thick, black smoke filled the sky and the lifting sun became red. When at last the planes roared off out to sea, the two young soldiers picked themselves up and dusted the sand from their uniforms. They could see the transport still intact by the jetty. Already the lines were forming up once again and more men began to wade out towards the few boats that were still afloat. Stretcher bearers moved along the beach and soaked, grey-faced men moved into the shelter of the dunes. A small group of bedraggled troops came by and one called out to Danny and Albert. ‘We’re trying La Panne. It’s hopeless here.’
Danny looked at his pal. ‘Where’s that, Alb?’
Albert pointed along the sea road. ‘It’s a couple o’ miles on. What d’yer reckon?’ he asked, looking at Danny.
The young cockney slumped down into the sand. The thought of another two miles walking on his raw and blistered feet made him feel sick. He looked around. At that moment he felt ready to give up. ‘Let’s wait till the tide comes right in, Alb. There’ll be more boats then,’ he said unconvincingly.
Albert was feeling too exhausted to argue and he slumped down beside Danny.
The sun rose overhead and the planes came back. The intermittent strafing went on until the sun began to fall towards the west, and then there was a lull. Danny mustered his last reserves of energy and stood up. ‘C’mon then, Albert,’ he groaned. ‘Let’s try that uvver place while it’s quiet.’
They left
the dunes and walked wearily along towards La Panne. The road was busy, and they reached their destination only to see the dunes crowded with exhausted soldiers. As they walked along the sands a voice called out to them, ‘No luck at the jetty then?’
The two looked over and saw Oggy’s men sheltering in a hollow. They went and sat down beside the shivering hollow. They went and sat down beside the shivering Middlesex lads. One of the soldiers nodded towards the sea. ‘We all got dumped in the drink, jus’ when we reckoned we’d made it. We ’ad ter tow Oggy back. ’E can’t swim.’
Oggy looked embarrassed. ‘All right, all right. Don’t tell everybody. Yer won’t get a medal fer it,’ he growled.
The soldier grinned and turned to Danny. ‘The boat we got on was a small fishin’ boat. The feller told us they’re sendin’ a lot more soon. That’s what we’re waitin’ for.’
‘What ’appened ter the bloke?’ Danny asked.
The soldier’s face suddenly became sad. ‘Poor sod didn’t make it. ’E got a bullet in ’is back. ’E only come ter ’elp us,’ he said, looking down into the sand.
A breeze began to blow, chilling the soldiers as they waited on the sands. The strafing had ceased completely and an eerie quietness settled over the dunes. Danny suddenly turned to Albert. ‘What did yer do in civvy street, Alb?’ he asked.
‘I was a clerk in a firm that sold farm machinery. What about you?’
Danny eased his position in the sand. ‘I was a bookie’s runner. Me ole man wanted me ter go in the docks wiv ’im, but I wasn’t ’avin’ none o’ that. ’E’s bin in the docks all ’is life. All’e’s got ter show fer it is ’ands like dinner plates an’ bronchitis frew workin’ out in all weavvers.’