by Mark Readman
Indian pale ale
Edward Watts had volunteered to take the afternoon sessions
at the local school, though he had been due to retire back in March. The
government had seen fit to have these places of learning open for the key
workers children. With no curriculum for the students to follow it was up to him
to engage them in any subject of his or their choosing. The class size was a lot
smaller, he had found them to be very respectful for their age group.
The classroom door was open. It was a relief to have some of
the windows open as well to lessen the chance of infection, these were strange
times and Twenty-Twenty would be remembered as a year the world was changed by
an unseen enemy.
Though the students had gone home Edward took his time to
remember how the class of eight had reacted to his question of remembrance of
V.J. DAY. The look on their faces said they had no idea of such an occasion,
though V.E. DAY this year had been given its special place in their minds and it
was possible they would remember that in years to
come.
Knowing that Covid 19 would over shadow everything else in their lives for many
years; he hoped they would also remember thousands of people died fighting a war
for the freedom we enjoy in Britain
today.
Though Burma is far away it would have been a disaster had it
fallen to the Japanese, for then it was still part of the British Empire. This
had drawn the students into a good debate on the rights and wrongs of the empire
and Edward had to steer the subject back to V.J. Day . Yes some of the students only aged fourteen had seen the Film Pearl Harbour and
thought only the Americans had been at war with the Japanese. It was easy to forget
the grandparents of the generation he had been talking with hadn’t been to war
to protect the British Isles with the exception of the Falklands. He had asked
that question did any of them have a family member with a military back ground;
this had been met with blank looks. It was interesting that one girl had asked,
a question for which there’s no answer. Would the war have carried on if the
Japanese had beaten the British in the conflict?
Dutifully wiping the desk with a disinfected cloth,
collecting his jacket from the chair and covering his face it was time to leave.
The cleaners signalled with thumbs up as he passed them in the corridors. No
car today. There was no point. It was only a forty minute walk, and now the shops
had reopened there were less walkers and cyclists riding on the pavement, even
the short cut through the park was now a pleasure.
The post person had managed to jam several large envelopes
into the letter box, one of which was his pension application papers. From the
study he watched the birds on the feeders, hanging from the apple tree
grandfather had planted all those years ago on his return from Burma. Four
generations of the Watts family had lived here; Edward and his father James were
the only ones never to have fought in a war, though unlike his father Edward had
escaped the governments’ national service programme.
Pictures of family members hung from the walls, he took a
while to study the one of grandfather and grandmother standing in front of the
apple tree in their Sunday best. Sunlight glinting off his medals it wasn’t long
after this picture was taken they had both passed away he couldn’t recall his
exact age when that
happened.
Like the teenagers he’d spoken with
today, he would have been in his early teens, he recalled being sad for a few
days then his life had moved on and they would become a distant memory but the
medals take pride and place in the glass cabinet along with other family
memorabilia.
Likewise his own mother and father passed away and for whatever reason he
doesn’t always remember to celebrate their
lives.
Try as he might he couldn’t get it out of his head that his
grandfather had fought in a war that in future years the nation would probably forget. People just wouldn’t remember
unless the media mentioned wartime
Britain. For Edward these things matter, mainly because his teaching subjects are
military and social history from the nineteenth and twentieth century. Though it
now seemed that no one had any interest because they have no connection with
those times and the people that did care have all but passed
away.
In twenty five years time it will be the hundredth
anniversary of V.E.DAY or will Corona virus be the headline news? As they
remember those who sadly passed away while Britain was in lockdown. There is a
small chance that one of his students today will remember the afternoon they
talked of the forgotten war.
About the auhtor
Mark Readman enjoys writing short stories for his own
pleasure and of course sharing them with the writing group he attends once a
month, which is most helpful as they are able to help each other with good
writing practice. Cafelit has inspired him to share his work with a wider
audience.
No comments:
Post a Comment