Isaac laid the plates in a washing up bowl and set it by the door, in place of a steel helmet which he put on to a pile of books. ‘I used to look a sight in that when I did my firewatching. Yes, I’ve plenty of stories, and I might tell you one sometime. I won’t go into any now though, because as soon as I’ve done with this cigarette it’ll be time for bed.’
They sat as if silence was part of the ritual until Herbert, confident that Isaac was to be trusted, said he found it hard to believe he had left his bloody awful school only that morning.
‘In that case you won’t mind sleeping rough.’ He took a blanket from a cupboard. ‘Though I’ve slept rougher in my time, let me tell you. Spread this over you when you get your head down.’
Herbert unpacked his spare trousers, jacket, shirt, underwear, socks and handkerchiefs, complimenting himself on the forethought of bringing so much. He remembered the wet tents he had slept in. ‘I can hardly believe my luck.’
The response was a don’t-know-you’re-bornlook. ‘There’s no such thing.’ Isaac called from the alcove where he was changing into pyjamas. ‘Everything’s pre-ordained, as you’ll find out more and more as you go on.’
Herbert opened his eyes. Sunlight, albeit watery, came into the room. He folded his blanket with cadet neatness and cleared the space, feeling as if the awareness of freedom all through the night had doubled the intensity of his sleep. Waking up penniless gave him no worry at all.
‘Borrow this cap,’ Isaac said after breakfast of sugarless tea, bread and jam, ‘for when you go to the Ministry of Labour, otherwise they’ll take one look at you and make you a penpusher. You’ll earn a lot more in a factory, and mix in better. But watch your accent. Act the silent sort, as far as they’ll let you, and get a grasp of the accent as soon as you can. You’ll find they’re a lot more tolerant in a factory than an office. Another thing is that for a while anyway say yes to whatever you’re asked to do. As for your proper name, forget it. Tell ’em at the Labour that you’ve just left school and your certificate’s coming from Ireland where you were evacuated.’
He cleared the table and took out a box of pens and rubbers and inks. ‘Give me your Identity Card.’ Herbert looked at it as well, opened before them both. ‘This is one advantage in having been a printer,’ Isaac said. ‘I’m going to alter it so that Ernest Bevin himself wouldn’t know the difference.’
‘Isn’t it a bit criminal? I mean, what if I’m caught out?’
‘You won’t be.’ Isaac cracked his fingers to make the joints supple. ‘A little innocent forgery to fox the bureaucrats never hurt anyone. We’ll make your surname into Gedling, which is a district around here. Bert Gedling you’ll be, and a good honest name it sounds. If and when you want to join the army I’ll change it back for you.’
Herbert wondered if they still wouldn’t smell him a mile off for what he was, while Isaac sipped the rest of his cold tea as delicately as if it had stayed hot and sugar had been magicked into it. ‘Now where’s your ration book?’
‘Ration book?’
‘We might as well alter that while we’re about it.’
‘I don’t have one.’
‘You didn’t bring it?’
‘I never thought to. And I could hardly ask them.’
Isaac’s shake of the head came from thinking what babies there were in the world. ‘All right. Perhaps it won’t matter. They aren’t too particular these days. When you’ve got your employment cards, and they’ve found you a job, go to the Food Office and ask for a ration book. Tell ’em you lost it. Or just look as if it’s your God-given right to have one. They don’t let people starve in this country. At least they haven’t during the war. So good luck to you, or whatever it is. I’ll let you stay here two more nights, in which time you’ll have to get digs. The firm you find a job with will lend you a few pounds to tide you over. That’s what they do for Irish labourers who come over. And don’t look so worried. I’m sure you’ll be all right.’
Four
By the end of the day Herbert had employment cards, a ration book, and a job at the Royal Ordnance Factory. The wages clerk in the machine shop arranged a three-pound loan till his first wages came due. On Isaac’s advice, he spent six bob on a second-hand pair of overalls hanging outside a pawnshop on the Hockley. His cadet boots would look right on any factory floor, as soon as the shine wore off.
‘I knew you had it in you, after the education you’ve had. You’re obviously from the right kind of family. But from now on, hang on to your money. Don’t go throwing it about.’ Isaac put the book he’d been reading back on the shelf. ‘Still, it’s good of you to bring these fish and chips for our supper, though you didn’t need to splash half a week’s rations on me. All the same,’ he fussed, ‘I do like a bit of sugar.’
Herbert’s feet ached from walking the town all day. ‘You did me a wonderfully good turn.’
‘I don’t want to hear any more about that, but if you really think so, pay me back by doing a good turn to somebody I don’t know. That’s what keeps the world a halfway decent place to live in. Now, enough of such platitudes and attitudes, and let’s get down to supper.’
Before any money came to him Herbert had, as it were, to work a week for nothing, though his landlady Mrs Denman said she would board him in the meanwhile on condition that he equalized the thirty-five shillings a week out of his four pounds wages the minute it was possible.
‘I’ve got to be practical,’ she said, ‘where young lads like you are concerned,’ putting the kettle on the gas to make him a cup of tea. ‘And I am practical, I allus was. If I hadn’t been, after my Will died, I shouldn’t have been running this place today.’
Herbert thought of her as Practical Penelope, though she was a bit old, being about forty, and he was to drop the nickname after a while because, for a start, she had no Odysseus to wait for, and no time for weaving. Probably no idea how to. Also, a man who was her suitor came to the house every other evening and, as far as Herbert could tell, stayed the night.
Her straight black hair was just short enough to make the face seem broader than necessary, but she had, he thought, a nicely shaped nose. A clean apron of sacking served over her white blouse and dark skirt. He also noticed her patent leather shoes which looked a bit tarty, the way they buttoned up.
‘I do all the work on my own, though’ — she pushed her glasses straight — ‘because I never did mind it. Mrs Atkins next door said I should get a man in to help. But no fear, I did have one once, not long after my Will died, and I should have known better because he was an idle devil who only liked being at the bookies or in a pub, so I got rid of him. No more men for me, I said to myself. Well, not like him anyway. I just see Frank when it takes my fancy, and he sees me when it takes his, which suits us both. But as for having a man in the house, not likely.’