Spandau
Sweetheart 1971
RAF
Gatow, Berlin, 1971
“Rocking-Horse,
Rocking-Horse! The siren sounds the alert, and then you'lll get the
voice alert. Rocking-Horse. If you hear Operation
Rocking-Horse
it's for real. The Russians are here and there's a war in Europe.
It
was sheet-change day on the base. The British Air Force wives took
their sheets to a building with a kind of long metal counter, that
reminded her of a slaughterhouse. Or maybe an operating theatre.
Something vaguely medical, where creatures or people died. She had
gone there with Olive, in whose house she was staying, two days after
she had arrived. Now, a week on from that day, she wasn't going to
sheet-change. She supposed Olive had wanted to show her around, help
her feel at home. Or maybe Olive, with the three little girls to
amuse and look after, in the long hot Berlin summer holiday, could
have done with some help. But, she shrugged, she probably wasn't
going to start now.
Much
later she would think herself unkind for ignoring Olive, as she had.
She got up late, ate the bread and preserves (Rose's Lime Marmalade
was her favourite, and it went surprisingly well with the dark German
bread) Olive had left out, and went wandering. Or sat around the
house, idly picking up and putting down the little girls' reading and
colouring books. She didn't talk to Olive. She was seventeen, and in
Berlin for the summer, for reasons that were not entirely clear to
her.
The
British Air Force base was in outer West Berlin. Spandau was the
nearest shopping centre off the base itself. You could get most
things in the NAAFI though. The days were hot. The nights, too.
Sometimes there were violent electrical storms, with bouncing balls
of blue lightning and sudden, angry downpours. She had told her
friends she was going to be “living in Berlin” over the summer.
Most of them had said something like “Oh, that”, or, sometimes,
“East or West?” with a smirk. People didn't travel, much, in
1971. She had saved up from her Saturday job, and gone to Berlin.
Her father had driven her to Harwich, spending most of the journey,
it seemed, wondering irascibly aloud why she had to take all these
records with her. Vinyl LPs were quite heavy. She had taken along a
dozen or so, because after all she was going to be gone for weeks,
and how else could she have sounds? At the time she was into the
Incredible String Band. She liked Barclay James Harvest and Mott the
Hoople too.
She
had taken the ferry to the Hook of Holland, and then the train. Just
as far as Hanover, because although you could go directly through
East Germany to West Berlin, you couldn't arrive at an Allied base
from Eastern bloc territory. So she flew from Hanover. It was all
terribly exciting and glamorous, and yet somewhere inside she knew
that there was nothing at all truly glamorous about being a little
grubby, and feeling a little sick, because Potato Puffs, and Mars
Bars, and nothing else, had seemed like the right things to eat on
the way over. She knew already, as they started their descent into
Tempelhof, that she would invent a Berlin summer which would not be
much like the summer she was about to have.
Tempelhof
was a Nazi airport. She did not know this when they landed there, but
it was. Albert Speer had had a hand in its design, and it had amazed
Europe when it was opened, in the mid-1930s. It was still avant-garde
now, in 1971, and would remain so until it closed, in the first years
of the next millennium, when glass and swooping spaces began to be
airport vernacular architecture, in Madrid and Manchester and
elsewhere, and until airports began to be routinely named after
people.
She
had followed her brother to Berlin. She had spent most of her life
following him, and he most of his ignoring her, or, charmingly,
politely, tolerating her. She remembered another summer moment, when
she had been perhaps five, and her brother perhaps eight, and they
had been in the garden, and he had looked up from something he was
doing and said to her, “Lovely sister, it would be so
helpful
if you just went away for a while. I'll see you at lunch.”
She
was not stylish. Her brother often had girlfriends her age. Sometimes
they were her friends, or her classmates. They were never the
beautiful ones. But they always had style. She remembered a bright
blue, rather odd-shaped jacket made of felt, that one of the
girlfriends had worn. One of the plainer ones. She had accessorised
it with an orange silk scarf, which should have looked ugly, but
didn't. Seven years later, she would see a magazine feature styled
exactly like it. She herself was not stylish, though. When she looked
in the mirror at home she quite liked the way she looked. A mass of
auburn hair, which made her look a bit like the girl on the cover of
the Blind Faith album, white freckled skin, and very long legs. She
had a pair of patchwork hotpants that year. Not the bib ones, those
were just wrong: these were just patchwork shorts really, and she
liked them, but she knew that all in all she was not stylish, and
never would be.
She
had followed her brother to Berlin. He had followed his girlfriend of
the moment, who was called Magda and was short and rather plain, with
straight hair and a pointy nose, and an underbite. Magda was Olive's
daughter, and of course her husband Johnny's too. He was the Air
Force man, and his job was the reason they were all in Berlin. Magda
owed her exotic name to the fact that she was adopted, and it was the
name she had come with. It had never been said where Magda had been
adopted from, and she privately suspected that Magda was a
by-blow of Johnny's, perhaps from earlier times in West Germany.
Johnny had an underbite, too. The next child in the family was seven
years younger than Magda, and then they went down in two-year stages,
all girls. Their names were not at all exotic. They were Susan and
Jennifer and Marilyn. When Johnny had been posted to West Berlin two
years before, Magda had been just about to take her O-levels, and had
been left behind to lodge with family friends. This too was exotic.
Magda herself had invited her to Berlin. There had been talk of one
or two others coming too, male friends of her brother's, at least one
of whom she might have had hopes of, but at the last minute they had
not come. So she was very much alone that summer. She didn't really
mind that, she thought - it saved bother.
Her
own name was Nicola. She didn't like it much. She knew several other
girls called Nicola. All of them were her own age. There had been a
brief vogue for the name before she was born. It had then disappeared.
She didn't think it would ever come back. Nicole was good, though you
probably had to be French to carry it off, but Nicola was no good
really.
In
1971 the Wall had been there for ten years. It was there to keep the
people of East Berlin from crossing to the West. Which too many of
them had been doing for the government's liking. Berlin remained a
city divided into sectors by the Allied powers, as it had been since
1945. The Wall was, in a way, a separate thing from what the city of
Berlin was. It cut across Unter den Linden, so that the Brandenburger
Tor sort of peered over the top of it. In the West the Axel Springer
empire had its building right up against the Wall, so that those
engaged in capitalist comings and goings might look down, as they
drank their morning coffee, on no-man's-land, where the number of
those killed trying to cross was growing. If they were there at night
they might even see it happen. The guards had a shoot-to-kill policy.
The
RAF base at Gatow was inside West Berlin, but only just. The Wall ran
along the edge of its airfield, though here it was a wire
fence rather than a wall. This was supposed to be a military courtesy
- when Berlin was originally divided into sectors this had been a Russian base, and had been transferred to the British sector after
some negotiation. It was widely thought by those who worked on the
base that the wire fence was there to make a military incursion easier. If
this happened it would attract the famous Operation Rocking-Horse
alert. Most of the people who worked and lived on the base hardly
ever left it - they were inside a wall within a Wall.
The
river Havel meanders through much of southern and western Berlin. The
city is green, at least in the West, and the parks and riversides
are full of people on summer days and nights. She wandered them too,
sometimes getting herself an ice cream, and then, daringly, a beer,
at a cafe in a park. Although she went to pubs sometimes in England,
and drank a bitter or a cider there, she did not drink much yet - and
she had noticed that while in Germany you might often see a lone
middle-aged or elderly woman with a beer, as you did not in England,
you did not see a lone teenage girl. In fact you never saw teenage
girls on their own. They were always in twos and threes and larger
groups, chattering and linking arms, their quick-fire German snapping
in the hot air. She did not speak German. But most of the families on
the base spoke no German either. This was beginning to change. Quite
a lot of the servicemen married German girls instead of bringing
wives from England, and they had bilingual children. Some of the
families stayed on after their term of service, and became German.
But in 1971 this was still rare.
She
began to ride the S-bahn, “Einmal Umsteige, bitte!”, which ticket
gave her the freedom of all the public transport she dared use. West
Berlin, in 1971, though the city did not know it yet, was approaching
a crossover point. It was about to cease to be a bastion of
capitalism, of creativity, of the alternative, of anything really.
After all, Berlin was no longer the capital of Germany. The corridors
of West German power were in quiet, complacent Bonn. The little
creaking wooden advertising signs in the S-bahn carriages, (“Was
trinken wir? Schultheiss Bier!”) and the swaying trams with their
leather hanging straps were about to become quaint, as West European
cities modernised in the long postwar process, created flyovers and
motorways, and streamlined their public transport systems, which
usually meant shrinking them. West Germany was doing some of these
things, and of course the autobahns were a pre-war notion, but West
Berlin
was
not.
She
sat with her beer in the cafe in the park. She was wearing her
patchwork shorts, and the backs of her legs were sticky against the
wooden seat. A radio was playing inside the cafe, “That's Not The
Way To Have Fun, Son”. Then, someone was speaking to her, in
German. A Turkish kid, a boy who looked eleven or twelve. When he
saw she didn't understand, he mimed a cigarette, with two fingers in
front of his mouth. His fingernails were dirty, and his finger ends
looked bluish under the dirt. His chest was thin. She shook her head.
She'd smoked a cigarette from time to time in the past year or two,
but she'd never yet bought any. The Turkish kid moved away, quite
purposefully, and she watched him go. She thought he would stop by
other people in the park and ask them for cigarettes too, but he did
not. On an impulse she got up and followed him.
He
walked fast, head down, and was quickly away from the streets which
were familiar to her. The pavement got narrower, the sounds and
smells changed, and she began to hear what she supposed was Turkish
and Arabic as well as German spoken around her. The shops stopped
being clean, well-lit supermarkets, and began to be dark-fronted
places with meat and fat smells coming from inside, or tattoo
parlours, or had military memorabilia and greatcoats in the windows.
There were not many women on the street, now. it was still hot, but
dimmer. As the light began to fade the Turkish kid ducked in
somewhere, she didn't see where.
She
stood for a moment, uncertainly. There were cigarette ends and greasy
paper wrappings under her feet. She stood there, feeling suddenly
very white,
in
her tie-dye T-shirt and patchwork shorts and bare legs. A woman
laughed, somewhere behind her, and another woman's voice called out
in Turkish, from somewhere above her. A neon light flashed on in a
shopfront to her left. A narrow staircase beside it had Kino Club
painted on the wall beside it. She was lost.
She
turned back the way she had come, walking fast, not daring to run.
Anyway, her feet were flat, and she had never been able to run. The
flat wooden sandals she had on, which laced up her thin freckled
calves, were no help either.
She
was lost. She had turned right into the street she was in, and she
turned right out of it instead of left as she should have done. She
often did this, and her family said she could get lost in her own
living room.
She
walked as fast as she could, in the gladiator sandals that were not
made for walking fast in. A sign for Spandau was up ahead. When she
had been sitting in the park with her beer, a sign like that had been
over to her right. But she couldn't see the park, or any trees at
all, and the Spandau sign was for cars anyway, and she knew she would
be wrong if she tried to cross the dual carriageway she could see
ahead of her at the next junction. She stopped for a moment, hearing
her heart in her chest and her breathing, noisy now in fear. Ahead of
her there were more people, and it was lighter. People were walking
fast, getting on and off buses, going home from work. But she
couldn't speak German. She didn't even know how to ask a person if
they could speak English.
Across
the road, before the junction, was a little shop, a mini-supermarket.
She could see a plump white lady behind the counter, with scarlet
hair, smoking a cigarette. She could go in there. The lady might
speak English. Or anyway, she could mime enough to make the lady
understand that she needed the phone, and then she could call, and
Johnny or Olive would come and get her.A sign flashed on next to the
shop, Girls, and the neon sparked on and off, making the hourglass
silhouette it showed wink crudely. Her breath rasped in her ears.
She stepped off the pavement.
A
hand grasped her elbow. She started, her heart still loud in her
head. "Careful, girl, you get kill that way. I help you? You lost?" The voice was guttural, the English heavily accented, Turkish, she
supposed. Hoarsely, breathlessly, she said “I need to get to
Spandau”. “OK, no problem”, the man said. “I take you. My
car near.” “No”, she panted, “just tell me how to get
there.” She knew it was not a good idea to mention the base at
Gatow, because not many people in the centre of the city knew where
it was, and might not like it if they did. But Spandau, everyone
knew, and she could get back to Olive and Johnny and the British
authorities and safety from there. Spandau, Spandau.
The
man was heavyset, with old-fashioned long sideburns and, something
she had never seen before on a man, a gold earring. He was wearing a
T-shirt and jeans, and biker boots. She supposed he was about forty.
She had never seen a man his age in jeans before, not anyone she
knew, anyway. He had hold of her elbow now, and they had turned a
corner. The bright thoroughfare with the bus-stops and the commuters
in summer jackets had disappeared. She was gasping now, trying not to
sob. There was a car. He began to push her in, not gently. For the
first time, she pulled away from him, hard, and leaned her body away
from his, ready to run. He pushed down on her shoulder, roughly, and
she lost her balance and tipped into the passenger seat.
In
the car, he closed the driver's door and slapped the side of her
thigh, hard, and she moved her legs away. The car moved off, round
corner after corner. It was dusk now, and the street lights were
coming on. They stopped. She was paralysed with horror. It was almost
as though she were watching a film, a film in which she herself was
being taken away.
“Spandau,
please", she said faintly.
“Get
out of car."
“Where
are we?"
“This
Kreuzberg. My place. Get out.”
Then
they were down some stairs, in a dark room that smelt of cigarettes
and sweat and something like incense. He kept hold of her forearm. He
sat down. He said, “You lovely girl. No worry, no frighten, I with
you. You not hurt.” He ran his hand up the inside of her thigh. He
put his thumb inside her shorts, just far enough, and with his other
arm moved her, slowly, slowly, back and forth, then quicker. He was
breathing hard, and then, with a profound exhalation, sat back.
“Now,
lovely girl, I take you Spandau. You my Spandau sweetheart.”
He
dropped her off at the Spandau shopping centre. He said, “I find
you again. Every day here, four o'clock. This good for you. My
Spandau sweetheart. I lucky I find you.”
She
told Olive and Johnny she had got lost walking around, and they told
her to be careful and stick to wide streets and where there were
plenty of people. She had thought her brother would have arrived that
afternoon, but he had not. He and Magda had taken off to the Wannsee
and would meet some others there, maybe go camping.
That
night there was a storm. She lay awake as the thunder crashed,
listening to the electrical hiss of the power lines outside her
window, and to the plaintive chatter of the little girls in the next
room.
“This
good for you.”
She
was there, at four o'clock the next afternoon, and he took her again,
in his car, to Kreuzberg. This time two other men were there in the
shadows, watching. She didn't see their faces clearly, and she didn't
look at them anyway. She looked at her own white arms and legs, there
in the sticky gloom.
Every
day she was there, in the room in Kreuzberg under the Wall, and every
day she was there in the dark. Men were there, watching. Sometimes
they touched her. Sometimes not. Sometimes they told her what to do.
Afterwards she found Deutschmarks tucked into her tiny
shoulder bag or the waistband of her shorts. She was glad to have
them.
Especially
as she hadn't done anything to get them.
Three
weeks later, in the last days of August, she told Olive and Johnny
she didn't want to wait for her brother any longer. She was polite,
and thanked them for having her, and said she had changed her ticket,
and thought it would be fun to fly all the way back. They didn't say
much, but drove her to the airport. It was an evening flight, and
they were almost late, because they had to pick up the little girls
on the way, from a Kinder Party. This was something the German
community in Spandau put on several times a year, to bring the Allied
(no longer occupying) forces closer to ordinary German people in West
Berlin. The little girls were deeply unimpressed with the Kinder
Party. It was full of Germans, they squealed in some disgust,
squirming and shrieking in the back seat, over the top on sugar and
superiority.
It
was only on board the plane, when the No Smoking sign went off and
people around her lit up, that she realised that in all those days in
Spandau she had never once seen the prison.
1 comment:
This is extremely good - and also, I think - rather nasty.
There is an excellent sense of clautrophobia and supressed hsyetrai in the 'lost' sequence and I also like the sense that she is a misfit - always on the edge of thingss - not knowing who or what she is - which is why of coruse she goes off with that horrible man ( and then, presumably the rest). She is seeking definition. And of course, she is WANTING to be accosted and also assaulted -- DH Lawrence said that for every murderer there is a murderee. I think she is certainly a murderee - why otherwise would she succumb to following for no reason, that nasty youth who wanted the fags?
And really, those appalling patchwork shorts of which she is so inordinately proud - make her exactly the sort to stick out in the wrong way and attract that sort of person. One wonders if she gos on attracting them - or if and when she is killed. Brutally, I think - she attracts cruelty and brutality.Her type of passivity is in reality, extremely aggressive
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