Part Eight
December 1939
–
The Bore War
The hut was freezing despite the efforts of the pot-bellied stove that glowed cherry red in the darkness. David groaned as he woke and someone snapped on the lights.
"All right you lot, hands off cocks and on with your socks. Let's be having you, gentlemen! Parade outside, working dress, twenty minutes."
The door slammed as Sergeant Rutter crashed his way out and down the path to the next hut where his voice could be heard repeating the same instructions to the inmates, like some absurd echo. David flopped out of bed and stood in his pyjamas, blinking in the harsh light. The others, too, were getting up and they stared at each other with bemused expressions. David grabbed the wash bag and towel from his bedside locker and made his way out to the ablutions. He showered and shaved quickly and hurried back into the main room to dress.
"For crying out loud! D'you know, it's only 4.30! Don't they have any consideration?"
Mark Chapman sounded deeply aggrieved. David had to smile. Typical Mark! All the same, it was unusual. He dressed and started to make up the bed in its 'boxed' blankets. He didn't have to think about it any more, it was a reflex action. Sometimes he would pause and wonder at how quickly he seemed to have been absorbed into this new life but for most of the time he was either too busy or too tired. War had changed everything. The tight discipline had been replaced by a sense of urgency. David and his fellows had found themselves plunged into basic flying training within days of the declaration of war. They had done their initial flying in open-cockpit biplanes, Tiger Moths, that his father would have been totally at home in. They had flown every available hour permitted by the weather and at times the sky had seemed so full of aeroplanes, he'd had the feeling he could have walked across the sky using them as stepping stones.
David had loved every second of his time in the air. Eight of his entry had been 'chopped' already – sent home, unable to make the grade, and the one topic of conversation in the hut each evening was the dread prospect of being thrown out. Aubrey Maitland was definitely struggling. On the ground, he was all easy confidence but he froze once airborne. He confided in David that it wasn't a question of being afraid of flying but that he was terrified of failing. David sympathised; everyone felt the same. Aubrey was convinced he was next for the chop. Now, after forty flying hours, Aubrey was just starting to relax and his instructor had given him the glad tidings that he thought Aubrey 'just might make it after all.'
Mark Chapman, by contrast, had proved himself to be a 'natural' and had been the first to go solo. David was somewhere in the middle, slow to start with but improving rapidly. His instructor encouraged him to fly more gently, not to overpower the aircraft. He had been clumsy at first, his feet had seemed too big for the rudder pedals and his movements were exaggerated. The tiny Tiger Moth had lurched about the sky to accompanying bellows of anguish from the instructor in the rear seat. He had settled down, though, and now felt that he had begun to 'feel' the aeroplane instead of trying to master it. He finished his bed-making and stood back. The others were ready now and they moved outside into the freezing darkness. A mob of cadets was slowly organising itself into a semblance of order and once they had formed up, Sergeant Rutter marched them off to the parade square. A small group of officers waited for them, huddled against the cold. They straightened visibly as the cadets marched on and formed up to their front.
It soon became clear to the cadets that this break with normal routine signalled something momentous. The officers were now holding a hurried conference, sheaves of paper were being consulted and there was much arm waving and urgent whispering. At last, the senior officer, Squadron Leader Bridges, moved forward.
"Good morning, gentlemen. So sorry to have dragged you from your beds at such an ungodly hour but, you see, there is something of a flap on. We have been ordered to send your entry elsewhere for advanced flying training. Some of you will be going to 6 SFTS, Little Rissington and some to 14 SFTS, Kinloss and the remainder to 15 SFTS, Lossiemouth. Transport leaves at 0730. Fall out when your names are called and get your kit packed. I'm going to call the Little Rissington contingent first."
Aubrey Maitland's name was called for Little Rissington and he shrugged as he walked away. David and Mark Chapman were both selected for Lossiemouth in Scotland.
"Harvards," said Mark. "They fly Harvards at Lossiemouth. Little Rissington does too, of course but they also have Ansons. Looks like we're going to be single-seater pilots, David."
"Golly, I hope so! I'd hate to spend the war stooging around in a bomber – far too dangerous!"
Aubrey Maitland looked desolate.
"I can't believe they're splitting us up. I bet I get Ansons."
"They have Harvards at Little Risington, too, you know." David did his best to cheer him up.
"I know, but I'm such a ropey pilot, they're bound to give me the big stuff. Of course, Chapman's the ace of the base. He's bound to be a fighter pilot."
"Jealous are you, Maitland? How unbecoming."
"Leave it out you two. Aubrey, Mark can't help it if he is a natural. I expect that I'll soon get found out and posted to Risington or somewhere to convert to the big stuff, too."
They completed their packing is silence. Mark and Aubrey exchanged glares and David made sure he stood between them whenever possible. The animosity between the two young men had grown worse during their flying training. Aubrey resented Mark's ability. David came to the conclusion that Aubrey was something of a snob and that Mark's humbler origins were seen as an affront to Aubrey's aristocratic ego. As a consequence, David had become less friendly with Aubrey and closer to Mark. Mark never flaunted his superior ability and was always willing to offer encouragement to those for whom flying did not come as naturally. David liked it that Mark never offered advice – that would have been to rub salt in already tender wounds. Instead, he would claim that he was just lucky to have been placed with such a good instructor. It was also noticeable that Mark was no longer getting himself in trouble. Now the serious business had begun, he worked with a will.
The long journey northward took almost two days. The trainee pilots were crammed into a couple of compartments of an ancient railway carriage that seemed to have been added as an afterthought to a slow goods train. They then spent a cold and very uncomfortable six hours on Edinburgh's Waverly Station, waiting for the connecting train to take them to Elgin. At Elgin they were met by transport to take them to No 15 Service Flying Training School. The aerodrome at Lossiemouth and its neighbour at Kinloss had been only been open since the spring of that year and consequently, they were delighted to find the Officers' Mess building was modern, warm and comfortable. David and Mark signed in. Acting Pilot Officers Chapman and Riley 'on posting' and grinned at each other. Now the really serious business could begin.
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Back home in Dorset, Peter was experiencing another bout of intense frustration. Since the declaration of war, he had been trying to get back in uniform. He'd hoped that his engineering expertise would now be recognised and that he could be of some service to the RAF. Once more, he found his pleas falling on deaf ears. Someone in the Air Ministry was pathologically opposed to the technology of fuel injection; that was the only conclusion. Pinky Harris hadn't been able to help much. Bomber Command had been in action since the first day and Pinky had been kept busy. In the brief conversation that Peter had managed to have with Pinky, he learned that the politicians were still interfering with the RAF's efforts. No bombs were to be dropped on Germany in case 'private property' was destroyed. Bomber Command was limited to dropping leaflets urging the German people to overthrow Hitler and come to their senses. The only raids of note had been anti-shipping strikes. The Blenheims and Wellingtons had showed themselves to be vulnerable to the German fighter defences and the bomb loads carried were too small to inflict serious damage.
Only the Royal Navy seemed to be taking the war seriously. Already they had experienced both triumph and disaster. The German pocket battleship,
Graf Spee
, had been run to earth off Montevideo by a Royal Navy Cruiser force and, after a sharp sea-fight, had sought respite in the port. Her captain, mistakenly believing the smaller British ships had been reinforced, had scuttled the ship rather than resume the battle. It was being hailed everywhere as a great victory and welcome news for the first Christmas of the war. Churchill, recalled to the government as First Lord of the Admiralty, was cock-a-hoop. Less pleasing was the loss of the aircraft carrier,
HMS Courageous
, torpedoed in the Irish Sea by the German submarine,