writing home long ago â part of the myth of the Forgotten Army). They are no longer astonished that I can send and transmit Morse almost as rapidly, as stylishly, as they. What they canât get over is the fact that I appear to be enjoying myself. Nor can I.
Love to all.
3
Clement folded Ellenâs letters carefully back into their envelopes and took them over to the window sill, to tuck them in Box File No. 2, in which he kept anything of his brotherâs relating to the war period.
âGood letters,â Sheila said. She had sat immobile, as was her way, to read them through. âJoeâs excitement comes through. He seems to have had no qualms about going to war.â
âThatâs true.â Glancing out of the window, he saw Alice Farrer in her front garden next door. Holding her green watering-can, she was sprinkling the roots of her pseudoacacia. It was her excuse to have a good look at what was happening in the street. The fact that very little ever happened did not deter her. She used her nose as a tracking device to follow two girl students who walked slowly along the pavement, talking, completely unaware of her.
âHe had made up his mind by then there were worse things than going to war.â He spoke as he turned back into the room. He was fascinated by Alice Farrer only to the extent that he could say honestly that nothing she did would ever interest him.
âSuch as what, exactly? His unhappy childhood?â
âThat, too, I suppose. But I was thinking of an incident he once told me about. Maybe he told me twice. It was about something which had made a great impression on him. It took place outside Calcutta, and so it would have happened just before the first of theseletters to Ellen. In any case, the incident was too horrific for him to wish to report it to a little sister.
âThe group he was in was led by the Sergeant Sutton he mentions in one of Ellenâs letters. After travelling across India from Bombay, they reached a transit camp somewhere on the outskirts of Calcutta. Joe gave me a vivid account of the squalor, and of seeing a water buffalo dying in the railway marshalling yards â shunting yards, we used to call them â surrounded by vultures, who set about tearing it to shreds while it still had life.
âOwing to some confusion in the rail timetables, not uncommon in those days of crisis, with the Japanese army at the gates of India, Joeâs detachment had to leave their train and go to this camp somewhere nearby. It was just a collection of ragged tents beside a railway embankment, no signs of discipline or cleanliness anywhere. Full of flies and filth.
âJoe and Sutton went to the office to apply for money to continue their journey to Burma. I suppose at that time the movement of troops would be towards the east only, across India to the war zone. He said it was like a peristaltic movement. Everyone was drawn into it. But he and Sutton found that this camp was full of deserters, who had got that far and then jumped off trains at Calcutta, rather than face the Japanese. Deserters ran the camp. There was nowhere they could go â they certainly couldnât make it back to England. So they stayed put, waiting for the war to finish. If the camp was inspected, the deserters simply melted into Calcutta, where no one could find them. They lived by making false returns to various legitimate units nearby. The money was spent on food, booze, and whores. The whores came into the camp â quite against army regulations, of course.â
He glanced out of the window again. âThe old bitch next door is watering her tree once more. Anyhow, Joe and Co had to stay in the desertersâ camp that night. The camp was run by a renegade RSM, a Glasgow man, an alcoholic. He approached Sergeant Sutton, inviting him to stay there, since he wanted a sergeant under his command. Joe thought there was some talk of a drug racket, I donât
Andrew Peterson
Gary Paulsen
Ian McDonald
Peter Tremayne
Debra Dunbar
Patricia; Potter
Bob Fingerman
Kevin Michael, Lacy Maran
Margaret Frazer
Nell Henderson