1
Sergeant Frank Johnson
stared in silent defiance at the Union Flag, drawn to the red in the middle. The
roar and rhythm of the turboprops from the Hercules transporter plane merely added
to his hypnotised solemnity. Deep rumblings passed throughout the plane,
through him and around him and went…God
knows where. They were cruising at an altitude of 20,000 feet and had just been
told by the pilot that they had begun their descent into R.A.F. Brize Norton and
would land in exactly 15 minutes. 07.21 hours. So very precise. Must be over England now. The noise
seemed to grow and throb in his head, unapologetic to the occasion. He glanced momentarily
away from the flag and observed his five young sombre companions, each lost in
their own private acts of remembrance. Military Bearer Party Number One. That
was how they were described on the flight manifest. Sapper Davey Howells, 21,
of Coatbridge from the arse-end of Glasgow, skinny for his age, cheeky little
sod, but as determined an Engineer as Frank had seen in his 16 years of service,
was simply described as ‘Other Cargo’.
The plane banked sharply for its final descent of a
familiar route, punching through the lowest of the cloud hanging over the Oxfordshire
countryside to reveal a waking England scurrying over a duvet of green. Frank’s
back stiffened against the red harnessed webbing of his seat. His bearer party
were quick to copy. The flag had remained rigid throughout the flight, fixed
firmly as it was to the coffin which itself was tethered to the floor of the
plane by six military-precision clasps. Frank’s stomach dropped as he felt the
plane touch down. The roar of the turboprops slowly faded from inside the plane
as it taxied to a ceremonial halt. Frank unhooked himself from the harness,
adjusted the red sash on his dress uniform and eyed the others who sharply followed
suit. The cavernous cargo door slowly opened to reveal a solitary, empty black
hearse, a slightly overweight army chaplain clasping the Good Book and the wailing
sound of a lone piper. Howells was nearly home. Frank had never felt as lonely
as he stared out of the pit of the plane and ordered the clasps to be released.
The hardest part of his journey should have been over.
2
The pub in Carterton
was used to seeing its patrons in military uniform. The Americans had brought
some small glamour to this market town in the 50’s and 60’s and subsequently
the R.A.F. had been ever present at nearby Brize Norton. It was the closest
watering-hole to the airfield and as ever it was the noisiest.
‘So where’s Davey gone now?’ Rob Atkins swallowed the
last of his beer and looked around for a refill. The rest of the party shrugged
their shoulders and looked to Sergeant Frank Johnson for an answer.
‘John Radcliffe.’ Frank saw them slowly raise their heads
and realised they were just as confused as Rob.
‘John who…?’ The 20 year old Sapper continued to nudge
and prod his empty glass towards the others as if it were a collection plate,
eager to pass it on. Rob would never win any prizes for tact unless a girl was
involved and yet Frank still trusted him with his life, if not his wallet.
‘Local hospital,’ Frank sighed, ‘their mortuary until Thursday
then we travel up to Glasgow for the service on Saturday.’ Rob appeared to
immediately take this information on board and then dismiss it.
‘Well Davey’s got a pretty decent excuse for not getting
the next one in but it’s not my round and I can still taste desert. Who’s
lining ‘em up?’ He slammed his empty glass down like a gavel and looked around
for a reply. Frank waited all of three seconds before producing his wallet.
‘So what’s a Dragoon, then?’ Nipper Thomas had sidled up
to the bar to collect the round with Frank.
‘Your mum, that’s who,’ quipped Rob, ‘she’s a right dragon
so all the men in your valley tell me’
‘DRAGOON, not dragon, you prat.’ Nipper had ignored Rob’s
barrack-room banter and looked to Frank for an answer. ‘Still, I’m very proud
of the Welsh Dragon, me, very proud indeed. I’m proud of my mam too. Raised
eight of us she did, all alone she was. Very proud indeed.’ The lyrical
inanities of Nipper’s musings were interrupted by Rob.
‘Couldn't have been that alone if she had eight kids.’
Rob winked and smiled before snatching the beer from the bar and going outside
for a smoke.
‘The Bold Dragoon. That’s the name of this pub, Sarge, isn't it? Why’s that?’
‘Why’s what Nipper?’ Frank had barely been listening to
the boy from Bridgend and was watching Rob in the beer garden, who had moved
seats to allow a delivery of beer into the rear cellar. Frank saw Rob’s eyes
fixed on the dray men as they rolled their barrels down the ramp.
‘What’s a Dragoon? And why’s it Bold? Now a bold Dragon I
could understand, red and fiery and the like, a bit like me on a Saturday ni…’
‘…Jesus, Nipper lad, give it a rest. What do I look like!?
Google!!?’ Frank snapped at the small Welshman who shrunk at the rebuke. Nipper quickly
grabbed two pints of lager and took them back to their table whilst Frank took
the other three, his eyes still fixed on Rob in the garden, who had now finished
his cigarette and remained seated outside with yet another empty glass still
watching the delivery with detached intent.
The table had fallen silent. Nipper had decided he didn’t
need or want to know what a Dragoon was and Frank certainly wasn’t forthcoming
with an answer. The other three Bearers in the party, Macintosh, Carter and
Wilkie, had given up on their debate as to who had the best way to disrobe a
young lady of a G-string on a dance floor.
‘I shared my birthday with him, did anyone know? Same year
and everything,’ Nipper thought he was on safer ground here with Frank. ‘Though
he was all of four hours older,’ he added.
‘Not anymore,’ was all that Frank replied, never taking
his eyes off of Rob.
‘We were born in the same town,’ said Wilkie, who was
interrupted by Macintosh.
‘Same town, my arse! You were born in Airdrie, Davey was
from Coatbridge. Chalk and cheese pal.’ He may have lost the G-string battle
but of this he was certain. Airdrie was three miles from Coatbridge.
‘We passed bricklaying together in Chatham,’ Carter
added, ‘were gonna set up a nice little construction company when we got out.
Had it all planned out apart from the name. Carter and Howells sounds so much
better than Howells and Carter, doesn't it?’ He stopped and retraced the words
in his head. ‘Er…didn’t it?’ Macintosh smiled as if a great revelation had
passed over him and had to be shared with the world.
‘Not as good as Carter and Howells (deceased), might drum
up a bit of sympathy trade.’ Frank was used to the sick and twisted humour of
army life. It was one of the few things that seemed a constant. Whilst the boys
were making jokes they were functioning and whilst they were functioning he
could see them through the next few days. Frank’s mind jumped from Carterton to
Kandahar. You never fully wash the
taste of it from your mouth, no matter how many miles or how many pints you try
to put in its way. The dust never really settles and it goes…God knows where.
Rob Atkins was still sitting in silence in the pub garden,
the sounds of the jukebox barely reaching his ears, his cigarette burned
through to the filter and his beer glass empty. He watched as the first dray man roughly pushed the last of the barrels from the delivery truck and saw it roll
down the ramp onto a dirty cushioned mat. It was then kicked nosily along the
cobbled beer garden to the entrance to the rear cellar. A small vein throbbed
in Rob’s temple, the grip on his empty glass tightening. The barrel disappeared
from view but its dark rumblings could be heard from the cellar as it was
placed into its final position. The second dray man, slightly overweight,
emerged panting from the cellar clutching a clipboard as Rob raised himself
from his seat.
‘This,’ he slowly said to the fat delivery man, ‘is my fucking
beer.’
‘You what, mate, you signing for this?’ The dray man was
confused as Rob stood in his way.
‘These barrels, this beer, it’s mine.’
‘If you say so, mate, can I have a signature then?’
‘No. NO! You take care of these barrels, you don’t throw
them around, you don’t crash them into each other and you show them some
RESPECT!’ With this Rob smashed his empty glass onto the table. The dray man backed nervously away as Rob stood silently in the garden with a smile on his
face as the blood from his hand trickled into the cobbled stones and ran
towards the cellar.
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