slave of his old man. His dad was nothing, you see, just a casual somewhere in the Company…’
(At this I wondered whether he too had mixed up the two ‘fathers’ of Harvey, not that it made any difference.)
‘Harvey was only on the railways for the uniform – for the blooming gold braid, shouldn’t be surprised. He’d always meant to enlist as soon as he was of age, and then the formation of the battalion was announced, and he came in. Only of course, he wasn’t up to it, and that made him angry. At least, he was angry with me, Jim.’
The kid was white, but he seemed to have mastered himself pretty well.
‘Harvey was giving me a bit of a slanging, saying I didn’t have the looks of a soldier, calling me a railway nut, but I paid him no mind. He’d turned up the lamp on the table, and he was looking at the notice Oamer had left there, so he could see we had our marching orders, that we were going out, and I think it knocked him, Jim, because he
‘In a different glass?’
Tinsley shrugged. ‘Think so.’
The two glasses on the table.
Tinsley blew smoke as though he wanted to get the stuff away from himself as fast as possible.
‘I admit, Jim, I might have said something along those lines…’
‘Along what lines?’
‘Something like, “Well, now we’ll see who’s up to snuff, and who gets the horrors at the sight of a bayonet”.’
‘It was
‘It was, Jim. Those words exactly, and of course I’d take them back if I could, but there’s no help for it, is there?’
I kept silence, because there wasn’t. However, I still could not credit the idea of Alfred Tinsley as a killer.
‘He said, “Well, you can forget about your railway hobby now.” Then he walked out, collecting up his rifle.’
‘Out into the storm?’
‘Just so. I called after him, “What do you mean by that, you pill?” But he was having none of it. Just marched out, slanging me. Well, I went after him. I mean, who wouldn’t, Jim? And since he’d taken his rifle, I took mine, just to put the frighteners on him. I didn’t know what it would come to – bit of shouting, I suppose. Well, I came out into the rain and I could hardly see a thing, but I finally made him out walking on the sea wall, the abutment – ’
‘Revetment,’ I cut in.
‘I walked towards him, and he had his rifle pointing at me. I said, “We’ll have this out, but drop the bloody gun, will you?” He said, “I’ve a mind to shoot you down.” I said “You wouldn’t bloody dare”, and he said, “I’ve burnt your fucking magazine. It’s in the fucking stove.” So he’d taken it from my kit bag, and he’d put it in the stove – the November number. I could have shot him just then, but I didn’t. I was holding my rifle by the muzzle. I swung it, Jim, and crowned him with the butt. I hit him in the region of his left eye, and he would have had a shiner in the morning, but it was nothing worse than that, only…’
‘Go on.’
‘He fell onto the bloody…’
‘The mooring post… the bollard.’
‘… The upright for tying the ships, that’s it. Cracked the other side of his head against that, then just… rolled into the water. Just went in… haversack, rifle ’n’ all.’
Tinsley sniffed and crushed out the stub of the cigarette with his boot, saying, ‘Thanks, Jim, for that. I’m obliged to you… Once he’d gone, he’d really gone, I mean completely. I stood on that sea wall; I looked down, and there was no trace of him, and the sea was still going wild – hungry for more, sort of thing. Well, I can’t swim. I admit it, Jim, I turned away.’
He sat back, then immediately came forwards again.
‘I didn’t murder him did I?’
I shook my head. It was manslaughter, more like, and Tinsley would be able to claim self-defence. He certainly hadn’t shot at Oamer, either, because why would he do that, and then spill the beans to me?
‘I’m not liable?’ said Tinsley.
I gave no reaction. My thoughts were racing in a circus.
‘There were no witnesses,’ said Tinsley.
That was true enough.
‘Why tell me?’ I said, but I knew really. After our adventures in the Baldwin, and our times in Albert and Amiens, I’d graduated to being a person he could confide in.
‘I didn’t tell you at first,’ he said. ‘Well, you’re a copper.’ He sat back, adding, ‘I told Dawson.’
My thoughts whirled faster. In that case, Oliver Butler had
The train was beginning to slow.
‘Anyone else but Thackeray,’ Tinsley was saying, ‘and I’d have let on about it all, but he gives me the willies. I know I should have spoken up when I saw what he was putting Scholes through, but… I
I said, ‘Do you want me to speak to Quinn, get it all straightened out?’
‘I do,’ he said, ‘but just not yet. I mean to set it all to rights, but I want to do it myself… Did I say that his cap had come off? He’d fallen in with his rifle and his haversack, and they were washed away. But his cap was still there, sitting on the sea wall near where he went in. By some miracle the wind hadn’t taken it, and no wave had reached it. I picked it up.’
‘Did Scholes see you? He said he saw something.’
‘He may have done. There might have been somebody moving about near the jakes when I was at the sea wall.’
‘What about the bike?’
‘Tripped over it, Jim. I was coming back from the sea wall, in an awful state, as you can imagine, and I went clattering into the blamed thing, which he’d left lying about between the wall and the hut. I cut my head in the fall, Jim, and it bled a little under the hair. I took my own cap off to check the damage; I set it down, and the wind had it away. Well, of course, I had another cap – I still had Harvey’s. I put it on; it fitted perfectly, and just for that reason, I decided to pass it off as my own. I wasn’t thinking straight, as you can see.
Later, back in bed, I made up my mind that I
I shook my head.
‘I won’t split,’ I said.
The blokes in the carriage were beginning to wake, and to stand. We were now coming in to Albert, clashing over a mass of points. The man in the seat directly behind Tinsley stood, and the greatcoat he was putting on looked quite normal, but when I raised my eyes to his head, I saw something amiss. The head was too small; he turned about, and his eyes were wrong as well – it was Roy Butler, the cleverer of the twins. For once, Andy was not at his side, and for that reason I had not heard Roy: he’d had nobody to speak to. It was an extraordinary thing to see him acting independently, but then I recalled that he had once – when Oamer had levelled the rifle at his brother – gone so far as to address me without prompting. Oliver Butler had clearly known of his brother’s presence, but they had travelled separately within the carriage, and my only hope was that this was in order that Roy Butler could sleep. If he hadn’t slept, then it was likely he would have heard Tinsley. This in turn meant that if Tinsley didn’t tell his tale to Thackeray in very short order then someone else would do it for him, and I could see Roy Butler speaking to his brother at that moment, and looking our way as he did so. I did not believe he had slept.
The mercy was that Tinsley, reaching into the luggage rack for his haversack, had no idea of this.