A short story inspired by the Help for Heroes campaign and also to commemorate the first awards of the Victoria Cross.
FOR VALOUR
Nik Morton
Victoria Cross - Wikipedia commons
June 26, 1857
‘Good heavens, she should be at home and out of sight! Isn’t
she just deplorable?’ whispered Mrs Armstrong-Holmes, fluttering a lace
handkerchief in front of her nose, as if there was an unpleasant smell nearby.
‘There should be a law against
it,’ opined Mrs Radcliffe, looking down her hooked nose. ‘It is thoroughly common to display her
condition like that!’
‘Come
along, Jimmy,’ Winifred Cambridge said, gently tugging her five-year-old boy along
beside her green brocade skirts. Tears pricked at the corners of her eyes as
they walked past the two women.
Within a
few moments she had forgotten their sour remarks as she was too concerned about
getting through the crowds for a better view of the ceremony. Her heart was hammering in her chest and
little Jimmy was near to tears himself, hemmed in by the people.
Hyde Park was crammed with
representatives from all the regiments who had fought in the Crimea as well as
many families and friends. Fortunately they were blessed with a fine sunny day.
The slight breeze snapped at the countless colourful flags and made the bright
satin and silk dresses ripple and shimmer.
Huge
marquees had been set up, the tables groaning under the weight of food and drink. Coloured pennants fluttered; standing all
around were the proud bearers of the regimental standards. Sunlight glinted off the metal of weapons and
helmets. Across the park carried the
sound of horses snorting and soldiers barking orders.
At last, a
gentleman made way for her and Jimmy, doffing his smart top hat. ‘Don’t mind me, ma’am, I can see well enough
over your shoulder.’
‘Thank you,
sir, you are most kind.’ Winifred moved little Jimmy in front of her, his head
just resting against her bump. ‘I’m hoping to see my husband, Sergeant Philip
Cambridge.’
The man
twirled the moustache above his Vandyke beard. ‘Bless my soul, I recall the
name well.’ He bowed. ‘Charles Gledhill,
ma’am, at your service. I’m the brother
of Captain Daniel Gledhill.’
‘Oh,’
Winifred said, the smile swiftly falling from her face.
Charles
Gledhill turned to the woman next to him and said, ‘Enid, dear, let me
introduce you to Mrs Philip Cambridge. Mrs Cambridge, Mrs Daniel Gledhill.’
Dressed in
fashionable black, Captain Gledhill’s widow wore a slouch hat decorated with
purple and white orchids. Her dark
bright eyes were in shadow and, thought Winifred, understandably puffy. ‘My
dear, I’m pleased to meet you.’ She observed Winifred’s prominent bulge and
added, ‘Are you quite well enough to stand here?’
Winifred
smiled. ‘I must admit my back aches, but I could not miss today.’
‘No, I
agree,’ Mrs Gledhill said. ‘Nor could
I.’ The sun caught a glint of moisture on her eyelids.
‘At least
the weather has turned out fine,’ said Winifred to lighten the mood.
‘You cannot
trust the weather in June, my dear,’ said Mrs Gledhill, ‘but if the Queen is to
be present you can be sure the sun will shine.’
‘They say
it never sets on our Empire,’ Winifred added.
Suddenly,
an eerie hush fell on the entire park. Winifred felt her heart flutter as she
caught sight of the monarch. She had
never been so excited in her life!
The Queen looked simply gorgeous
in her ivory silk dress, the bright blue sash draped elegantly over her left
shoulder. She had reigned for twenty
years and looked almost as fresh as she had when she inherited the throne at
eighteen. Her consort and husband Albert sat beside her in all his military
finery.
Ensconced in a gold-inlaid
throne, Queen Victoria sat on a dais in front of the sixty-two officers and men
who were about to be honoured.
Winifred spotted her Philip
standing to attention about halfway along the line. She leaned down and pointed
for Jimmy. ‘See, there’s your daddy!’
she whispered. Jimmy waved and Philip
saw them both and winked fleetingly: he might be a hero, Winifred thought, but
he still feared the wrath of the sergeant-major who was responsible for the
assembly’s protocol.
The Queen was flanked by several
aides who carried cushions that held the new awards. Now she stood up and addressed the crowds:
‘It gives me great pleasure to present my personal award, the Victoria Cross,
the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy,
to so many brave warriors of our Empire.’
The first to step forward was
Commander Raby of the Royal Navy. Two
years earlier almost to the day this naval man – with the help of two others –
had rescued a private of the 57th Foot, who was wounded in both legs
and lying between the trenches, and carried the soldier to safety.
Many people were stirred by the
bald announcements of bravery in the London
Gazette. Winifred couldn’t begin to
imagine how horrendous it must have been for Philip and all these men.
The siege at Sevastopol must
have been truly appalling, she thought.
Every day hundreds of cannon battered down the fortifications and yet
the Russians repaired them each time before the next bombardment. Ear-splitting shells shattered limbs and
sanity. Soldiers manned the trenches
night after night through two harsh winters.
She gleaned what little she
could from the eloquent and brave newspaper reporters like Mr Russell. When he returned home eighteen months ago,
Philip never spoke about it at all. Her
heart went out to him as he often stared off into space, perhaps mindful of the
wounds that still grew inflamed when he relived that particular day.
On 19 April, 1855, at
Sevastopol, Crimea, Corporal Philip Cambridge
of the 77th
Regiment volunteered for a spiking party at the assault on
the Redan and remained with
the party even after being severely
wounded. Later that same day,
he went out under heavy fire to bring
to safety a wounded man.
It was
notices such as this that annoyed Winifred.
Those responsible made no allowance for people like her who had no idea
what a ‘spiking party’ was, for goodness’ sake!
Indeed, it could have been a jolly jape, like a birthday party, for all
she knew. Of course Philip explained – to her great embarrassment – that he and
the others were sent out to spike the Russians’ guns – that is, to make them
inoperable by blocking or destroying their barrels or hammering a metal spike
into the touch-hole. It sounded awfully
technical – and dangerous.
It must
have been bad enough to face the enemy cannon onslaught, but to actually go
right up to their gun barrels seemed quite suicidal. Even now, two years after the event, she grew
weak-kneed at the thought of it.
Last night
on the settee in their front parlour, where they had retired after eating,
Philip finally spoke in detail about the incident. While she sat with her tea
and he his brandy, he said that he had felt quite scared yet strangely
alive.
‘It was as if everything around
me was moving slowly. My perceptions
were so acute, dearest Winifred,’ he said, sipping some brandy. ‘My senses were attuned; my very skin could
feel the roughness of my uniform. I could hear the blood in my veins. It was almost like a religious experience.’
‘Oh,
Philip,’ she exclaimed, ‘that sounds quite sacrilegious!’
‘I do not
mean it to appear that way, dearest. Perhaps when we fear death or terrible
maiming, we’re closer than ever to God.’
She nodded
and kissed him, tasting the strong liquor on his lips. Wiping her mouth on a napkin, she said, ‘Yes,
that most probably is what you felt.’
‘Heightened
senses, I imagine.’ He grinned, a twinkle in his eye as he patted her gravid
bump. ‘Just like it is when I’m with you.’
Even though
they had been married eight years, Winifred blushed.
She felt
her cheeks glow now at the memory.
The
sovereign began presenting the bronze Victoria Crosses.
At last it
was Philip’s turn. He limped slightly as
he approached the Queen and Winifred’s heart felt fit to burst with pride. Philip saluted and bowed his head as the VC
was pinned to his chest. Her majesty
leaned towards him and spoke briefly.
She would be anxious to discover what the Queen had said for the rest of
the day, until Philip was allowed to fall out or whatever military men do when
they are dismissed.
It seemed
most appropriate that all of the medals were cast from the bronze of Chinese
cannons captured from the Russians at Sevastopol, making them unique. Like the
men here today. Like her husband,
Philip.
The days
and weeks and months of anxious waiting seemed so long ago now, a distant
memory, as if happening to someone else. Winifred could barely remember those
sleepless nights and the terrible constricted feeling in her throat when she
checked the casualty lists.
How her
heart had lurched when she read Philip’s name through blurred lashes. She
thanked God that he was only wounded, that he was alive. She flushed and felt selfish and awful when
she realised that many of the women beside her had no consolation at all: their
husbands, sweethearts and sons were not coming back, ever.
Enid
Gledhill had been one of them. Her
husband was a captain in Philip’s regiment and led the attack on the rifle pits
in front of the Redan. They managed to drive out the Russians at the point of
their bayonets, without firing a shot, but the 77th suffered many
casualties, among them Captain Daniel Gledhill.
Now Mrs Gledhill stood tall and steely-eyed as the monarch honoured the
living heroes. There was no such thing
as a posthumous award, which seemed a little unfair, Winifred thought.
Later, when
Philip limped towards her, his eyes shining bright and full of love for her,
Winifred felt quite faint. He lifted up
Jimmy into his arms and in front of all manner of people he gently embraced
Winifred and kissed her cheek.
‘Philip!’ Winifred
whispered. ‘Everybody is looking!’
He lowered
his son and held his wife at arms’-length. ‘Let them!’ His chest was thrust out and the bronze cross
caught the sun, scintillating. ‘Her
majesty was right. Our loved ones are just as brave, to wait for us.’
Winifred
gasped. ‘Is that what she said? Really?’
‘Yes. And it’s true. Throughout history, while the men go off to
fight, the women have to be brave and carry on with their lives. Looking after
the home and the children.’
‘I never
thought of myself as being brave,’ she said.
‘Well, you
are, my dear.’ Philip Cambridge, VC,
unpinned the medal and put it into his wife’s hand and closed her fingers over
it. ‘That’s our medal, not just mine.’
***
Previously published in The New Coastal Press in 2009.
Copyright Nik Morton, 2014
***
If you liked this story, please consider trying my
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2 comments:
It took me a while to get round to reading this but I'm glad I did. Thanks.
Thanks for the comment, Jo, and I'm pleased you liked the story.
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