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A Shining Boy
Culworth. Culworth. It said on the piece of paper
Auntie Jessie had given him. It had got messy because she’d
pushed it into the paper bag holding his cheese sandwiches and cheese
sandwiches with marge made for a mess. For the umpteenth time he
took it out to memorise it all over again. It was vital to remember
Culworth because that was where he had to get off.
He shivered at the thought of missing the station
and going heaven knew where and being lost somewhere in England;
an abandoned boy with no home. He wished his Mam was with him but,
as Auntie Jessie told him repeatedly, his Mam was too poorly to
live any more and she’d gone to heaven. He looked out of the
window at the sky, they said you went there when you died and always
pointed upwards, but he still couldn’t see her, his Mam whom
he’d loved.
If she hadn’t died so suddenly he’d have
been at school, and it being the middle of the morning he’d
be doing arithmetic and he loved arithmetic. It was the best subject
in all the day. But no he was on a train for the first time ever.
He’d watched them rattling over the bridge at the end of their
street all noise and steam and hooting, making a great fuss as though
they had no time to stop. This one had better stop or else. . .
. . .
Auntie Jessie had given instructions that when he
got to Culworth he’d to wave the snow white hanky she’d
given him out of the window, because that was the signal. He’d
no idea about how long he’d been on the train. She said it
would be three hours to Culworth, had he been on the train half
an hour or ten minutes, or an hour, he hadn’t the foggiest.
He did know he felt hungry, and he fancied his sandwich.
But when he looked at his hands they were too dirty to hold a sandwich.
It had all come off the carriage window frame where he’d gripped
it in his fear. So he wet his fingers and rubbed them clean with
the snow white hanky but then it wasn’t snow white any more.
Panic set in. What would this new Auntie and Uncle
think of him waving with a dirty hanky? He’d been told to
make a good impression, polite, clean, speak when spoken to, no
running. His new Auntie had no children so she didn’t know
about boys so he had to try really hard else she’d send him
to an orphanage, and he knew all about them. He’d been threatened
by his Auntie Jessie about going to an orphanage for most of his
life. Which wasn’t long but there’d been plenty of time
to frighten the living daylights out of him.
But his new Uncle and Auntie couldn’t make
life any worse than it was with Auntie Jessie, that was certain.
She shrieked and complained at him all day long. He ate too much.
He got too dirty. He wouldn’t stop growing, always needing
a bigger pair of shoes. He made too much noise. He didn’t
deserve her. Tears came close to welling up in his eyes.
Thing was when he got to Culworth would she be there,
this new Auntie? Had she got the letter saying he was coming? Had
Auntie Jessie explained in it that his Mam was Uncle Alfred’s
sister? If she hadn’t got it, then an orphanage would be the
next stop for Vincent Edward Jones.
The train stopped but it wasn’t Culworth, and a man got in.
He’d a big handle bar moustache and a thick overcoat on and
a scarf and a hat and big leather gloves. Vincent studied his clothes
and realised that never in all his years had he ever been warm enough
in winter but this man surely was.
‘Excuse me, sir, do you have the time?’
‘Half past ten.’
‘Thank you.’ Vincent did a calculation
in his head if it was half past ten then there was another hour
and a half before Culworth. He gazed out of the window and to his
amazement saw some cows in a field. Dozens of them! Black and white
just like in that book at school! But these were real cows, eating
grass and walking about. He tried counting them but there were too
many. Where had all the houses gone? There weren’t any. Well,
just a few but not houses like he knew, these stood by themselves,
what about all the others that should be joined on to them in a
row, where had all the smoke gone? The factories, the shops? This
was all fields just like in that book at school. It dawned on him
that this then was the countryside and he’d thought when he
saw the pictures that it was all pretend, but it wasn’t. It
was for real! And trees! Beautiful huge big trees with the start
of new leaves just peeping. So this then was what they called Spring.
If Culworth was like this. . . . .his mind raced
at the prospect. Something within him responded joyously, and he
knew this was where he belonged. In the countryside.
His Mam would have loved this. She always yearned
for fresh air when her breathing was bad, “just a breath of
fresh air” she used to whisper.She’d get plenty here.
His heart almost tore out of his chest at the thought of her never
getting the chance to breath easily and Auntie Jessie saying she
couldn’t keep him no more and he’d have to go.
There’d never been a dad. Other children had
dads but not Vincent, but his Mam had a wedding ring on her finger,
a cheap thing that looked toVincent like a curtain ring but he never
said, so there must have been a dad sometime but he was never mentioned.
‘Excuse me, sir, what is the time now please?’
‘Eleven fifteen. Where are you getting off?’
‘Culworth.’
‘I’ll tell you when we’re nearly
there, don’t worry. You’re young to travel on your own.’
‘Got no Mam and no Dad so now I’m going
to live with someone else.’
‘I see. I think you’re very brave to get on a train
by yourself. Do you feel brave?’
Vincent studied this question and decided to answer
truthfully. ‘No, I’m scared to bits.’
‘I see. I’ve got some chocolate in my
case, has that paper bag you’re clutching got sandwiches in
it?’
Vincent nodded.
‘Well, you eat those and then you can finish
off with some of my chocolate. How’s that for an idea?’
Vincent almost died of joy. Chocolate! He wondered
what it tasted like. ‘Thank you very much, sir, I’ll
do that.’
Vincent ate his sandwiches, made a bit of a mess
and his hands were crumby and he longed for a drink but when he’d
finished the sandwich, which was dry and unpleasant, just like all
Auntie Jessie’s food. But needs must. . . .the gentleman got
the chocolate bar out of his case and gave it to him. Dairy Milk
it said. Dairy Milk. He didn’t know whether to eat it or not,
there was so much of it.
‘Unwrap one end of it and eat a few squares.
Don’t eat it all at once or you could be sick.’ He smiled
in such a kindly way that, encouraged, Vincent burst into activity,
ripping off the paper and cramming two squares into his mouth all
at once. Was he in paradise then? he’d never tasted such wonderful
stuff in all his life, and that was ten years. All those years without
chocolate. What he’d missed!
‘Who is meeting you at Culworth?’
‘My new Auntie and Uncle.’
‘I know some people in Culworth, what are their
names?’
‘Well, Culworth is the station I’ve to
get off at but they don’t live there, they live in Turnham
something or other.’
‘Turnham Malpas. Yes, I know that village.
You’re a lucky boy and the school is lovely too. Have you
been to school?’
Vincent felt quite indignant, him asking that. ‘Of
course, I’m ten and top of my class.’
The gentleman smiled gently and Vincent felt foolish.
‘Been going since I was five and I can read and do arithmetic
and things.’
‘Of course, if you’re ten. Do you know
their names? These people who are expecting you?’
‘Nellie and Alfred Jones.’
‘I see. They’ll be pleased to have such
a bright boy to look after.’
Vincent gave the gentleman a wide beaming smile, in fact the biggest
smile in all his life because this was the kindest man he’d
ever met. And he spoke so nicely, and he’d given him the chocolate.
‘Would you like a piece, sir?’
‘Why, thank you, I would.’
So they shared the chocolate and talked and suddenly
it was Culworth.
His hanky! He’d got to wave! He’d got to wave! He heaved
on the leather strap pulled down the window and waved and waved.
Stepped out onto the paltform and it was a big jump, his heart was
pounding, he was short of breath, and he couldn’t see anyone
who looked like an Auntie Nellie or an Uncle Alfred. He began to
sweat, his mouth went dry and he felt totally abandoned and mortally
afraid. He’d no ticket to get back to Auntie Jessie and no
money, so it was the orphanage no doubt about it. Oh! Please God,
not the orphanage.
‘Alfred! We shall be late. They’ll be
taking him away and we shan’t know where he is and. . . .
.’
‘Calm down I’ve just heard it pulling
in. Whoa, Duke, whoa.’
‘I’ll go look for him while you turn
the cart round.’
Nellie, terrified that her only chance of having
a child would be snatched away from her, raced through the barrier
and on to the platform. There he stood. One unclaimed scrawny, shabby
boy. With his bright blue eyes, his fair skin and his hair so blond
it positively lit up the platform, he was an angel sent to her directly
from heaven. He’d the same colouring as Alfred and could have
been his son. So now she knew for certain that God was in his heaven
and all was right with the world.
Nellie opened wide her arms and rushed towards him.
‘You must be Vincent? I’m your Auntie Nellie.’
She hugged him with a passion he’d never experienced before
in all his life and he responded to her hug with equal passion.
He remembered his manners. ‘Good morning. Pleased to meet
you. . . . . .Auntie Nellie.’ Holding out his hand for her
to shake he looked like the angel she knew he was. Uncle Alfred,
waiting with the cart in front of the station, saw Vincent coming
through the barrier, and his heart leapt. He’d always dreamed
of having a son. There was no doubt in his mind that this boy was
his sister Minnie’s, because he looked so much like himself.
What a shining boy he was. Then Nellie appeared through the barrier
and Alfred saw she too was shining; with love.
This is a story about Vincent Jones the father
of Vince Jones. Vince features in all of the Turnham Malpas books.
Vince is married to Greta, and lives down Shepherd’s Hill
in Nellie and Alfred’s old house. They have three sons, Kenny
and our Terry who live in Canada and Barry who works on the Turnham
House Estate and is married to Pat.
For the record this event occurred on April 5th
1915.
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