Over the years I’ve been asked to contribute a Christmas story to a variety of publications. In the next few days I’ll feature some of them. Here is ‘The Trilby Hat’ which was read on BBC Forces Radio Malta in 1975 and published in The Portsmouth Post magazine in 2003, after some judicious tinkering. It is one of 18 historical stories in Codename Gaby, my fourth collection of stories, here.
THE TRILBY HAT
Portsmouth, England, 1995
It was a
snow-laden Christmas Eve. Police Constable Paul Knight 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 painted 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 pouf, a wicker 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 wisped 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.
All around stark
blasts deafened him. Flashes of light and flames sprouted everywhere. Black
smoke mush-roomed into the wintry night sky.
Still giddy, he regained his feet. A sickly knowing feeling in the pit of his stomach gave strength to his ageing legs. Ignoring the dull ache of a bruised hip and shoulder, he rushed back to the ruin.
An ARP warden
and a couple of neighbours were already sifting through the rubble, even though
the dust cloud hadn't settled yet.
Mercifully the houses on either side had been spared, only their windows shattered, a few roof slates dislodged.
Alfred stood,
unable to move, and his mouth felt very dry. Somewhere a fire bell clanged, and
another.
A fractured water-main gushed high, sparkling in the torch-light.
Hardly aware of
what he was doing, Alfred knelt by the debris where the front of the house had
been. ‘Here!’ he cried out to the frantic helpers. ‘They were here!’ And he
started heaving bricks to one side, gashing his knees and hands in his haste,
heedless of the cold.
The ARP warden who shouted the warning earlier was soon panting by his side. ‘They won't have known what happened, mate. It will've been over quick. A direct hit, you see?’
Two hours later
Alfred collapsed, exhausted, after they unearthed the battered Christmas tree.
Miraculously, the fairy survived intact. The ARP carried him to the doorstep
next door. There, a kindly neighbour gave him a chipped metal mug of sweet tea.
Now, shakily, he got to his feet and shuffled over to identify them. His whole family, wiped out. He would never forget the joyous look on little Connie's face, he thought, gripping his trilby hat tight.
***
Paul Knight was on his way home when he heard scuffling in the dark. He flashed the beam of his torch across the nearby waste-land and relaxed. It was only a fox.
Then he picked
out the shape of a battered hat and he recalled the incident earlier with old
Alfred. Could this be his trilby? It looked the same colour. But it was so
timeworn, and crumpled.
The hat felt dry though cold and it was reasonably clean. It hadn't been lying here long, then. The label was faded but he could just make out GRANDA and LOVE. Might as well call round on my way home, he decided, and tucked it inside his overcoat.
The dawn light
was streaming down the deserted street as Paul walked up to the door. A few
curtains twitched in the neighbouring terraced houses even at this hour. He
rang once, his eyes drawn to the flaking paintwork.
The door opened. A musty smell greeted him, of untended dust, of age. Alfred stood shivering in his worsted trousers, shirt sleeves and braces. In the weak hall light Paul noticed a bruise under the old man's left eye. ‘You all right?’
Alfred nodded,
eyes questioning.
‘I think I recognised those louts,’ Paul continued. ‘Would you come to an identity parade?’
Alfred's three
remaining teeth shone as he smiled. ‘Yes, it'll be a bloody great pleasure.’ He
hesitated on the doorstep. ‘It was good of you to call. Erm, come in.’
‘No, I can't stop. I'm expected home,’ Paul explained. He rummaged inside his coat. ‘Is this yours?’ he asked awkwardly, handing over the aged trilby hat.
The expression
on Alfred's face had Paul worried for a moment. Then the old man seemed to
collect himself. ‘You've made me very happy, constable.’ Tears gathered around
his weak grey eyes.
Feeling uncomfortable all of a sudden, Paul backed away and bid Alfred good-morning.
‘Merry Christmas!’
Alfred called after him. ‘Merry Christmas.’
Paul waved.
He couldn't
understand it. It was as though he had bestowed some wondrous gift on Alfred.
Then he remembered the label in the hat. Granda and Love.
Indeed, it was sometimes easy to forget in this material world, Christmas was not only a time for giving but also a time for remembering.
‘Merry Christmas!’ Paul replied.
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