It probably wasn’t magic. Is there really any such thing? But when Jeanie, Sandie and Pegs worked the light, strange things would happen.
I was just a six-year-old kid. I knew little or nothing of the occurrences of the Summer of 1940. Not at the time, anyway. There was a war going on, I learned that from the radio and the whispered conversations that adults have around children. Some folk known as the Jerries were angry at the people of Aberdeen for some reason. Each night, they sent aeroplanes to fly over our city and drop bombs.
The rubble that these bombs created made fantastic places to scramble over. Sometimes, they would burst a water main and leave a geyser streaming into the warm blue sky, and we would strip to our shorts and dance in the fountain. I couldn’t really see why people hated these jerries, as aside from their kid-friendly landscaping, we got loads of days off school because of them.
After one particular house got bombed, the usually friendly Jeanie chased us away from Mrs Baron’s place. She wasn’t clear on why we weren’t allowed to play there; she just kept saying that the barons didn’t go to the shelter that night. To where the barons did disappear was never explained to me. Dougie Baron used to be my mate, it was pretty rude of him to leave the area without saying goodbye or anything. Jeanie told me later that he went to a better place, so I suppose it turned out okay anyway.
Oh yes, I was telling you about Jeanie and her ARP squad. I liked her and the other women, Pegs and Sandie. During the day, Pegs worked at the butcher’s and she constantly smelled of cold meat. When I was really hungry, I would follow her to work. If the wind was in the right direction, the scent of Pegs would take the edge off the hunger pangs for a while. I did ask but she wouldn’t let me lick her.
Sandie headed off to the factory at six. She was filling in for her husband, Bob. Bob was off fighting somewhere. Bob was always fighting about something. Everyone in the street said Bob was a nuisance when he had a drink in him, but when he didn’t come home from this fight, he was suddenly a hero. I tried to get Mum to explain that to me, but she didn’t appear keen so I gave up asking.
Sandie, who was always nice to me, stayed sad until the day the light replaced Bob.
I saved the best ‘til last, though. Jeanie worked in the sweet shop at the top of our road. She finished work at four, and if you caught her on her way home, she would give you sweets. Mum didn’t have money for sweets back then, so Jeanie was the most popular woman in the neighbourhood. By the time she reached her tenement door, Jeanie would sometimes have a dozen kids in tow.
According to older boys and the young men who were left behind by the army, Jeanie wasn’t pretty. Hearing them talk about her one day, I rushed off to tell her that if they were correct, and she was destined to be a spinster, I would be one too. I had no idea what a spinster was, but it sounded pretty exciting to me. I thought she would like it, but I somehow managed to make her cry. I worried she was mad at me, but after dabbing her eyes dry, she ruffled my hair and told me I would one day be a lady killer. I hope that doesn’t happen as I’m afraid of the sight of blood.
Often, Jeanie liked to pretend that there was nothing in her bag, but as she reached her house, she would stop and ask us all if we’d been good. Most days, I’d been good as there really weren’t a lot of opportunities not to be. On the few days that I had maybe been nicking apples or playing on the railway line, I just lied, and she gave me a liquorice shoelace anyway.
Oh, yes. The magic bit/. Well, it all started in late July. It was a fine day and warm enough to hear the crickets creeping in the grass next to the railway line. Me and Scottie caught six. I managed to persuade him not to eat them that day, and we took the lid off the jar and let them go when it was time for us to go home for supper.
When I got in, Mum despatched me up to the chipper to ask Mr Sutherland if his chips were good that day. He sent me back to Mum with four wrapped in paper. After she sampled them, she gave me money and sent me back to buy two bags. We had my favourite that night: chip butties. Mum was a really good cook.
Well, where we stay, it doesn’t really get very dark in July, but the Jerries decided to pay us a visit anyway, apparently. I say apparently, as it was way past my bedtime, and I was asleep. Mum must have carried me down to the shelter, as, when I woke in the morning, I was wrapped in a blanket on the bench in the Anderson in the back garden.
Outside, there was quite a hubbub going on. Something got the folk out of their tenements and into the back gardens.
“It was like magic,” one woman from three doors up proclaimed.
“Nothing of the sort,” Old Bert said as he sucked on the pipe that seldom had any tobacco in it.
“They just froze when the girls caught them in the light,” Antie Bea chipped in. Auntie Bea wasn’t really my Aunt. She lived across the road. Mum and Bea would hang out the window most days and discuss life. If mum wasn’t home any day that I got back, I knew just to go over to Auntie Bea, and similarly, we would often end up with Carrol, Bea’s daughter, should Bea be at work. If she stayed over, Carrol and I would have to share a bed, just as Mum and Dad did before he went off to sea. So, it seemed appropriate that we agreed to marry. I think we have to wait until we are ten, though.
Well, a day or so later, the fuss died down, and what was getting called “The midnight miracle” at the start was quickly forgotten when the butcher finally had sausages for sale again. The women of the area were saving their ration tokens, and the queue outside Old Man McKay’s shop wended right around the block. A half dozen of the local lads stood and mocked the women in their pork-fuelled excitement, but then they drooled, watching those who left the shop with a bag in their hands as if the shoppers were holding the crown jewels.
Sorry! I’m off script again.
My understanding is that the miracle occurred when the girl’s light set upon a Jerrie one eleven. I really don’t know why the bombers have numbers but buses do too, so I guess it maybe the route they take. The number six bus can take you all the way to the beach, but my fiancé, Carrol said the One Eleven comes from somewhere called Norway. I think the Vikings came from there too. Hope I never have to go there.
Anyway, the One Eleven was diving to bomb our street as Jeanie, Pegs and Sandie caught it square in the beam. At only a couple of hundred feet from the ground, with bomb door open, the plane was silhouetted against the darkening summer sky before they lit it up like an actor on the HM theatre stage.
Rumour has it that the light froze the plane in mid-air. Old Bert said this can’t have happened as it breaks the laws of nature, but Bert puts his bucket out the night before the bin men come, and I’m pretty sure that is against the law, too, so he’s not one to speak.
What happened next was only told to me five years later, but the young men on the plane hadn’t really discussed what they were about to do until Jeanie’s “love light” hit them. “Love light was Gunter’s words, not mine. Carrol once asked me if I knew what love was, but I said no, and she thought it had something to do with rabbits; I realise I am straying from the point again, but I like rabbits.
Okay, so something about rabbits happened, and even though the anti-air guns in the Milk Marketing Board yard were now firing at the illuminated bus plane from Vikingland, instead of dropping the bombs and getting away, a debate now raged aboard the plane.
Gunter, Willhelm and Jurgen didn’t really fancy doing any harm to anyone. While weaving and still in Jeanie’s spotlight, they decided to head out to sea, drop their bombs in the water and go home. The problem was blonde-haired, blue-eyed Rudi. Rudi was the forward gunner, and he was a Nasty. I’m unclear on the details of this, but the jerries were having problems with Nasties at the time. I can’t see why anyone would want to be described as a nasty, but by what I have been told of them, a couple of my teachers at school were probably members.
So, the story goes that Rudi is shouting and screaming at the others to do their duty to the Vaterland. Carrol says Vater means fart in German, and Mum clips my ear if I say fart too often, so we will skip over this part of the story, lest she reads it later.
The whole fart/rabbit debate comes to a sudden end when Nasty Rudi trips and instead of dropping a bomb on the milk silo, poor Rudi falls through the open bomb doors and penetrates the top of the tank.
So, bathed in Jeanie’s miracle love light, and now having lost an engine or two. Gunther, Willhelm, and Jurgen decided they had always wanted to visit Scotland, and instead of going home, they landed rather carelessly by all accounts without lowering their wheels.
By 1946, people were always saying, isn’t it good that things are getting back to normal?” I was never sure what they meant, as the war raged for most of my life. I say raged, but for us, after the first couple of years, it was just something they interrupted the radio shows to talk about. Now aged twelve, Carrol tells me we have to be sixteen to get married unless we move to somewhere called Alabama. In a strange coincidence, if you do reach sixteen there, you are considered a spinster.
A couple of years before the war finished, Dad's ship got lost, and he ended up in the same better place as Dougie Barron. Neither of them has ever sent a postcard, but then the mail has been patchy, so I live in hope.
Strangely, Mum seemed saddened at Dad’s good fortune though. She also got really upset with me when I expressed the opinion that the numerous local women who lost their husbands were careless. I’m not sure what I did wrong; she gave me hell when I lost my schoolbag.
But you want to know about Jeanie, of course.
It was a Saturday when the former air searchlight squad of Jeanie, Pegs and Sandie were heading down the road to the dancing. They were just about to stop at the pub on the way for a sherry or two when Jeanie noticed a group of men standing on the other side of the road. Three of them were dressed in ill-fitting demob suits, and the fourth and older gent was pointing across the street to Jeanie.
She tapped the other two on the shoulder. “Hold up girls, I think we’ve finally got ourselves some dancing partners.”
“Bonnie Jeanie,” as Gunther insists on calling her, never did get the job as a spinster. Carrol says they won’t let me be one either.
Carrol’s dad came home, but he only stayed a week or two. He told everyone that everything had changed and then left. Apart from the bombed houses, I couldn’t see what he meant by “everything,” but I’ve already realised that adults talk in code. Auntie Bea now only ever refers to him as the bar steward, so I guess he works in a pub somewhere.
Jeanie still lives a few doors up, but she’s married to Gunther now. He says she caught him in her love light that night, and she never let him go. It turns out they were writing to each other when he was in prison up in Shetland. Jeanie said the letters caused her no end of grief during the war. The police constantly interviewed her as a spy, but unless the Jerries were interested in the price of Barley Sugar, they were barking up the wrong tree there.
Wilhelm took Bob’s old job as Sandie’s husband. Turns out Wilhelm could play football. Football fans are quick to forgive, particularly if you can shoot from thirty yards, and so the fans of Fulham FC regularly chant the name of a man sent to kill them only a few years earlier.
Pegs and Jurgen bought the butcher shop after Old Man McKay retired. They now sell some rather strange German sausages with unpronounceable names. They’re a big hit with local women, as rationing of other foods is still in place, but no one ever thought to ration Bratwurst, or whatever it is called. A rumour goes around that it’s made with horse. I’ve never understood why people don’t eat horses. They always look so miserable. I think we would be doing them a favour.
And what of young Rudi? I hear you ask.
Some say he died on impact, some that he drowned in the milk. Others claim he lives there yet, and if you leave your milk out too long, it turns nasty because of him.
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6 comments
Great job, Jim! The details about 1940s Aberdeen make it feel real. One thing to work on would be pacing. The mix of magic and reality is cool, but some important questions remain unanswered, like what happens to Rudi?
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Hi, Thanks for this. Pacing is something I do need to pay attention to. Comments like this are invaluable. As far as Rudi, did you read the last paragraph? And what of young Rudi? I hear you ask. Some say he died on impact, some that he drowned in the milk. Others claim he lives there yet, and if you leave your milk out too long, it turns nasty because of him.
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What a fun story, Jim.
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Thanks
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Jim, this was a fun read ! WWII from a child's perspective, a very unique take. Lots of moments I couldn't help chuckling. Great job !
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Thanks
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