
The Day War Broke Out
T Henry Shanks
It was September and another hot Sunday morning.
As the Commanding Officer of a British Tank Division I was leading and invasion through enemy territory. But my Dinky Toy tank was making slow progress along the soft cushion of catmint in the herbaceous border beside the open scullery door.
Then I head the announcement we had all been waiting for. The voice seemed thin and reedy. Maybe it was the overheating of the valves again inside my fathers homemade wireless set.
The words war and Germany were clear enough. And something about undertaking. I knew that was something to do with arranging burials. I remembered my grandfathers funeral. Things were serious.
Around the corner of the back door I could see my mother and father sitting in their usual places at the kitchen table opposite each other but unusually they were holding hands across the pale blue oilcloth cover.
I jumped up and ran down the garden path to the shed where my brothers were busy building a balsa wood model of a Spitfire. I could not help screaming with excitement Were at war with Germany! Its on the wireless. They both breenged out of the hut and we all ran back to the house. Leaping and shouting, Its war! Its war!
We dodged round our fathers prize strawberry bed which had already been earmarked for an air raid shelter and skirted the rhubarb patch, soon to be a hen run as part of the War Effort. But that was all the future.
My imaginings were brought to a halt when I saw my mother standing at the back door waiting for us. Her arms were folded across her apron as usual. I thought that I was to get a row for screaming in the garden. But she wiped her cheeks which were wet and said very quietly You heard then. Well, I hope it wont be as long as the last one. She held each of us by the shoulders for a minute and looked into our faces. She wasnt one for crying much but I could see that she was upset. Our father came up behind her and put his arms around her. We had not seen him do that before. He said to us gruffly On you go now. Out and play while you can. We hurried off down the lane, our bare feed hardly touching the hot cobbles.
The important thing was that we could now play a new Gang Game the British Army against the Germans. Better than our usual games of cowboys and Indians or Cops and Robbers which were getting a bit stale. Not only that This was real.
I began to thinking out the plot ... (continues)


