Elizabeth Elgin

One Summer at Deer’s Leap


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they left Deer’s Leap, you said. Maybe she would have to do war work when they left the farm?’

      ‘Maybe she would. I was called up myself before the Air Force emptied them out, so I never knew what became of them. You seem very interested in t’Smiths.’

      ‘Not particularly,’ I shrugged, hoping I sounded convincing. ‘It was just that I wondered what it was like for the farmer who once lived at Deer’s Leap. I’m interested in all the people who lived there. I suppose it would have been quite some property when it was built.’

      ‘Still is, I suppose. The man as built it would be well heeled.’

      ‘Mm. He’d have had servants and farm workers. I think they would have slept in the rooms over the kitchen. If we could invent a time machine and dial the year we wanted, we’d know exactly how it had been.’

      ‘Won’t be long,’ he grumbled into his empty glass, ‘afore they do, the rate they’re going on at! Spending all that money shooting off to the moon and what did they find when they got there? Nowt but dust!’

      ‘Are you ready for another?’ His interest was flagging. Mention of a refill revived it noticeably.

      ‘Tell me about Italy?’ I asked, returning from the bar.

      ‘Which bit?’ Carefully he lifted a brimming glass to his lips.

      ‘Monte Cassino?’ I hazarded.

      

      The half-moon of Saturday night was full now. It hung in the sky, large and round and glowing. Was it the harvest moon, or would that be the next one, at the end of the month?

      Everything around me looked beautiful and mysterious and aloof. What was it about the moon that made people think of magic? Trees and hedges cast long shadows, and the road was clear and visible for as far ahead as I could see. Maybe it was on nights like this that witches flew. I wondered if the Pendle women had really been witches? Had a harvest moon looked down when they were hanged, one long-ago August? W. D. and M. D. would have known all about that trial in Lancaster. In 1612, when it happened, Deer’s Leap had already stood for twenty years. Mary Doe, as I thought of her, might even have visited Mistress Nutter and exchanged herbal remedies with her, because in those days the woman of the house was responsible for all the nursing and doctoring that was needed within her family. I wished like mad for that time machine. What would Mary Doe make of my bright red Mini that could rush along faster than witches on broomsticks? I threw back my head and laughed out loud just to think of it, and then my smile set on my lips and my laughter ended abruptly.

      I could see him clearly in the moonlight, and instinct made me switch off my lights. I braked, and dropped a gear. I wouldn’t have expected him to be beside the clump of oak trees; further up the lane, really.

      His outline stood out darkly, and there was no mistaking his extended arm, his jutting thumb. My mouth had gone dry and I ran my tongue round my lips. In the slipping of a second I asked myself if I were afraid and knew I wasn’t.

      He took a step backwards as I stopped beside him. Please, please don’t vanish, Jack Hunter. I leaned over and pushed open the door.

      ‘I’m going to Deer’s Leap,’ I said. ‘Want a lift …?’

       Chapter Five

      My heart was thudding; the little pulse behind my nose had joined in too. I felt a choking excitement and, at the same time, an amazing calm. I willed him to get in.

      ‘Thanks a lot.’ He took off his cap and pushed it under the epaulette at his shoulder. Then he tossed his respirator on the floor of the car, and sat down. This time he could stretch his legs because I hadn’t moved the passenger seat forward. He banged the door shut and I began to wish for a flock of sheep again. Without them it would take less than three minutes to Deer’s Leap, and he would take off, I knew it, just as soon as he saw the kissing gate.

      ‘In a hurry, are you?’ I said, staring ahead.

      ‘Afraid so. I shouldn’t be here really. I’m on standby …’

      ‘What’s that?’ This time, I had the chance to ask.

      ‘It means we might be going tonight.’

      ‘Going?’ I prompted carefully, driving slowly.

      ‘On ops. We might go, and then again, we mightn’t. I shouldn’t be here. When we’re on standby, we can’t leave the aerodrome – or we shouldn’t.’

      ‘Security?’ I suggested, trying to be with it.

      ‘Yes. And there might be a call to first briefing.’

      ‘And if that happens, you won’t be there, will you? What’s first briefing?’

      I was talking gibberish; talking for the sake of talking so he wouldn’t get out.

      ‘First briefing is just that. Pilots and navigators only; the rest of the crew join in later on.’

      He was being very patient with me, and I was grateful for the fact that his mind seemed to be on other things. Not that I blamed him. To Berlin and back in inky blackness with searchlights trying to pick you out and night fighters ready to pounce would have been a bit distracting, to say the least.

      ‘I see.’ I didn’t really; didn’t understand the half of it – only what I’d read in books and seen in films. There had been a lot about his war on television four years back. ‘Are you billeted at Deer’s Leap?’

      ‘Oh, no. The farmer lives there still. There’s a chance that the RAF will take it, though it hasn’t happened yet.’

      ‘They seem to do pretty well as they like, don’t they?’

      ‘Yes, they do.’ He turned to look at me, frowning. ‘But there is a war on.’

      My God! Indoctrinated by propaganda about the nobility of the cause! I’d read about it, but I hadn’t quite believed it. And I could tell him, I thought wildly, the exact day that Hitler would commit suicide, and about the two atom bombs the Americans would drop on Japan. I could, I thought, horrified, tell him the exact day he would die!

      ‘I hope you won’t go tonight; not with this moon …’

      ‘The moon’s good for fighters. They get above it, then fly out of it, and they’re on to you before you’ve got time to think. We call it a bomber’s moon because you could go without a navigator on nights like this. Everything’s there, below you, as clear as day. On the other hand, a Lanc makes a great silhouette against the moon. Given a choice, I wouldn’t go tonight.’

      ‘Do you know Susan Smith?’ I asked like a fool, straight out of the blue.

      ‘Of course I know her! That’s why I’m going to see her; tell her I might not be able to make it. I haven’t met her parents yet, so we decided it would have to be tonight …’

      ‘Only you’re on standby,’ I finished for him.

      ‘Yes, and I don’t want her to think I’ve stood her up. We always meet at the kissing gate, you see. She’ll be waiting …’

      ‘Are you both – I mean, is it steady between you?’ Oh, but I was pushing my luck!

      ‘If you mean are we in love then yes, we are. Very much …’

      His voice trailed off again. He seemed never quite to finish a sentence.

      ‘And you’re going to meet Susan’s parents – ask them if you can get married?’ That’s what they once did, Mum said. Ask permission.

      ‘Yes. And I call her Suzie, by the way.’

      I could see the white gate ahead and beside it, the black-painted kissing gate.

      I