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THE TRILBY HAT
[Part 1 of 2]
It was a snow-laden Christmas Eve. Police Constable Paul Reeman
was approaching the end of his shift and glad of it as he rounded the corner of
Fenchurch Street.
Then he saw
them. Two youths. Faces partly covered by woollen scarves, they were leaning
threateningly over an old man in a snow-heaped gutter. Paul broke into an
unsteady run, careful lest he slipped on ice. It looked like Alfred Munro, the
loner.
Wisps of
breath gushing out of his mouth, Paul lifted the cold whistle to his blue lips.
The two
muggers froze at the shrill noise.
"The
filth!" one of them yelled.
Paul was
barely yards from them when his boots slipped. Although he retained his
balance, the few seconds delay gave the two thugs time to scurry off.
He was
tempted to follow, but Alfred seemed in a bad way. There was no blood or
obvious injury, but the old man was sobbing.
"It's
all right, Alfred," he said. "They've run off." He helped the
frail old man up.
Alfred
wiped his blood-shot eyes. "I - I'm all right," he wheezed, "But
- it's my hat - they stole my trilby."
Thinking
back, Paul did recall one of the youths had worn a hat. They must have been
baiting Alfred. He flushed hotly. "I'll see what I can do," Paul
promised, not holding out much hope.
But Alfred
didn't seem to hear. "Must get it back… You see, I've had it nigh on fifty-two
years. Christmas..."
***
The war was
in its fifth Christmas. Alfred gazed at the 1943 calendar with its popular
scene of skating on the Thames in the days of Queen Bess. He thought about Liz,
his wife, who died six years ago. Thank God she missed this terrible war.
He looked
around the cosy room: utility furniture, an embroidered pouffé, a whicker
basket sewing box and a well-placed chintz-covered suite that concealed the
thread-bare carpet's many patches, whilst the dining table stood cluttered with
the remains of their frugal evening meal.
The tiny
coal fire flickered warmly in the tiled fire-place, its firelight reflected
from the far corner where stood the proud Christmas tree, a battered fairy
perched precariously on top; sparkling tinsel was draped over the branches. The
tub, tightly packed with fresh black soil was wrapped with brown paper, which
had been painted by Connie, his grand-daughter.
The other
decorations were sparse, but for all that the festive season shone from
wherever Alfred looked.
There was a
gaiety, a family warmth, an atmosphere here that no war could possibly destroy.
Beyond the
shielding hills of their small Hampshire town, air-raid sirens wailed.
Alan, his
son-in-law stopped playing with Connie on the hearth-rug. "They seem
closer tonight, Pop," he said.
Denise, his
daughter, paused from her knitting and her troubled eyes sought Alfred.
He forced a
smile of reassurance. "We've nothing worth bombing." Accepting this,
they returned to their own amusements, whilst Alfred smiled contentedly to
himself and looked at his daughter.
She's grown
into a fine woman, he thought. Liz would have been proud of her. A full- no, a
comely - figure, married so young, with her mother's auburn hair and hazel eyes
aglow in the firelight. But she possessed his stubbornness.
And the
memories flooded back. With an effort he blinked them away.
Yes, and
Alan made a good husband. Denise was lucky to have Alan home, in a reserved
occupation in the dockyard. Alan stood by her side, his thick spectacles
reflecting the fairy lights.
He just had
to look at young Connie there, the best of both of them already noticeable in
her. Precocious, certainly, with a will of her own at times, but a little
darling with it. He spoiled her unashamedly. And Denise scolded him, but she
didn't mind, not really. Surely all grand-fathers are the same.
In a few
more hours they would be opening their gifts. But he couldn't face that yet; it
still sorely reminded him of Liz and how they used to dote over Denise...
Perhaps next year the wound would have healed sufficiently, though of course
never completely; he didn't want to forget her, just to deaden the hurt at
times like this.
Reluctantly
he rose from his comfortable chair. "Denise." He cleared his throat. "Denise,
I think I'll be off now. It's getting late for me - and for you, Connie -
Father Christmas will want to climb down the chimney soon..."
Connie
giggled excitedly at mention of Santa.
Denise
bundled her knitting into an embroidered bag. "As you wish, Dad." She
helped him on with his great-coat.
"Granda!"
Connie shouted, crushing herself against his legs. "You can't go yet. You
haven't had your present."
Alfred
patted his coat-pockets, each filled with a package from Denise and Alan to
open first thing tomorrow morning before his return here for lunch. "But I
have. I wouldn't forget these."
Connie
shook her head vigorously. "No, Granda! No, you haven't had mine!"
Alfred
noticed a puzzled look between Denise and Alan. Apparently, then, their
daughter had kept her secret well.
Perhaps
their neighbour had bought the present. With great ceremony his grand-daughter
walked to the under-stairs cupboard and tossed out two gas-masks in cardboard
boxes then handed over a large brown-paper parcel. It seemed to be a
gift-wrapped boot-box.
"Thank
you, darling," he said and he leaned forward to kiss her.
But she
backed away, lips pouted. "Aren't you going to open it now, Granda?"
"But
it isn't Christmas yet." He pointed to the mantel clock. "A few hours
to midnight, you see?"
"Please,
Granda," she pleaded, face slightly pulled.
"Well...
all right, but only if you promise to stop making faces."
She stopped
almost at once, changing her grimace into a mischievous smile.
Slowly and
carefully he unwrapped the gift.
"Hurry,
Granda."
It was an
old boot-box. He lifted the lid and the sight took his breath away. Nestling
amidst a bed of tissue paper was a brown trilby hat, its brim slightly bent so
it would fit into the confines of the box.
"Put
it on, Granda!"
He
swallowed hard but the lump in his throat persisted. Alan and Denise smiled.
Removing
the hat reverently from the box, he knelt in front of her. "No, you put it
on for me, Connie."
She almost
knocked him over as she dashed to do just that.
As it
finally sat snuggly, a perfect fit, he held Connie at arm's-length and asked if
she thought it suited him.
"Oh,
yes! You look just like a Granda. Really important."
And they
all laughed.
Then he
suddenly lifted her high, almost touching her head to the ceiling. Connie
shrieked happily.
Presently,
he lowered her and kissed her flushed cheeks.
"Well,
merry Christmas, everybody," he wished them as he walked to the door with
Connie's small hand in his. He carefully wrapped his long woolly scarf round
his neck, criss-crossed his chest then buttoned up his great-coat. "I must
go now, Connie."
Denise
opened the front door.
The cold
air made them all gasp. The snow still fell silently, lending a bright peaceful
glow to the otherwise drab street.
"I'll
keep this hat always. I promise," he said.
Connie's
little chest swelled and her smile seemed to fill the doorway. Alan held his
daughter back. "Merry Christmas, Granda!" she said.
Shivering in
the cold air, Denise whispered, "Is the hat all right, Dad?" He
nodded. She then whispered, "It was a gift to Alan from his poor Mum, but
he doesn't like hats... We didn't know Connie'd planned this - "
"It's
all right, love. It's a smashing present. Now, go back in, it's cold out here. I'll
see you tomorrow for Christmas dinner..."
Quickly he
stepped onto the crisp snow. Flakes whisped onto his shoulders and the brim of
his new hat. He waved. "Merry Christmas!" His voice echoed through the snow-filled
night.
Far-off
could be heard the crump of bombs and ack-ack, but not here.
At that
moment a whistle shrilled. An ARP warden came running up the street. "Put
that light out!" he called.
Turning,
Alfred noticed the hall light on and his family silhouetted in the doorway. Hurriedly
waving, they closed the door and the house darkened.
Further
over to the east he spotted searchlights. The snow was like dust in a
light-beam. Tracer and ack-ack blossomed, more reminiscent of Guy Fawkes than
Christmas Eve.
He then
took off his hat and wiped the snow-deposits away. It was a beautiful hat. Really
good quality and hard-wearing. Yes, it would last for years.
The sudden
whistling alerted him first. A terrible coldness clutched his heart. The bomb
cluster was close and there wasn't an air-raid shelter near.
He froze
fearfully to the spot, panic weakening his limbs.
Seconds
later, the explosion's impact reached him, blinding yellow and red, the shock
waves throwing him painfully to the sludge on the road.
… To be concluded tomorrow…
***
If you liked this short story, you might like my collection Spanish Eye, published by Crooked Cat
Publishing, featuring Leon Cazador, private eye in 22 cases.
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Canada: http://amazon.ca/dp/B00GXK5C6S
UK: http://amazon.co.uk/dp/B00GXK5C6S
France: http://amazon.fr/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Germany: http://amazon.de/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Austria: http://amazon.at/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Italy: http://amazon.it/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Spain: http://amazon.es/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Japan: http://amazon.jp/dp/B00GXK5C6S
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