Danny  Ch. 4  
Page 24-33


5. Read Story





Page 24



My  Father’s  Deep  Dark  Secret




Here  I  am 
at  the  age  of  nine.


 

This  picture  was  made

just  before

all  the  excitement  started

and  I  didn’t  have

a  worry  in  the  world.

 

 

You  will  learn

as  you  get  older,

just  as  I  learned  that  autumn,

that  no  father

is  perfect.

 


Page 25



Grown-ups


are complicated creatures,

full of quirks and secrets.

 

Some have quirkier quirks

and deeper secrets

than others,

but all of them,

including one’s own parents,

have two or three private habits

hidden up their sleeves

that would probably

make you gasp

if you knew about them.

 

 

 

The rest of this book

is about a most private

and secret habit

my father had,

and about the strange adventures

it led us both into.

 

 

 

It all started

on a Saturday evening.

 

It was the first Saturday

of September.

 

 

Around six o’clock

my father and I had supper together

in the caravan as usual.

 

 

Then I went to bed.

 

My father told me

a fine story and kissed me good-night.

 

I fell asleep.

 

 

For some reason

I woke up again

during the night.

 

I lay still,

listening for the sound  

of my father’s breathing

in the bunk above mine.

 

I could hear nothing.

 

 

He wasn’t there,

I was certain of that.

 

This meant that

he had gone back

to the workshop  

to finish a job.

 

He often did that  

after he had tucked me in.

 

 

I listened for the usual

workshop sounds,

the little clinking noises

of metal against metal

or the tap of a hammer.

 

 

They always

comforted me tremendously,

those noises in the night,

because they told me

my father was close at hand.

 

 

But on this night,

no sound came

from the workshop.

 

The filling-station

was silent.

 

 

I got out of my bunk

and found a box of matches

by the sink.

 

I struck one

and held it up

to the funny old clock

that hung on the wall

above the kettle.

 

It said ten past eleven.

 

 

I went to the door

of the caravan.

 

‘Dad,’ I said softly.

‘Dad, are you there?’



Page 26



No answer.


 

There was

a small wooden platform

outside the caravan door,

about four feet

above the ground.

 

I stood on the platform

and gazed around me.

 

‘Dad!’ I

called out.

 

‘Where are you?’

 

Still no answer.

 

In pajamas and bare feet,

I went down the caravan steps

and crossed over

to the workshop.

 

I switched on the light.

 

The old car

we had been working on

through the day

was still there,

but not my father.

 

 

I have already told you

he did not have a car

of his own,

so there was no question

of his having gone

for a drive.




Page 27


 

He wouldn’t have

done that anyway.

 

I was sure

he would never willingly

have left me alone

in the filling-station

at night.

 

 

In which case,

I thought,

he must have fainted suddenly

from some awful illness

or fallen down

and banged his head.

 

 

I would need

a light

if I was going

to find him.

 

I took the torch

from the bench

in the workshop.

 

I looked in the office.

 

I went around

and searched

behind the office

and behind the workshop.

 

 

I ran down the field

to the lavatory.

It was empty.

 

‘Dad!’

I shouted into the darkness.

‘Dad! Where are you?’

 

I ran back to the caravan.

 

I shone the light

into his bunk

to make absolutely sure

he wasn’t there.

 

He wasn’t in his bunk.

 

I stood in the dark caravan

and for the first time

in my life

I felt a touch of panic.

 

The filling-station

was a long way

from the nearest farmhouse.

 

I took the blanket

from my bunk

and put it

round my shoulders.

 

 

Then I went out

the caravan door

and sat on the platform

with my feet

on the top step

of the ladder.

 

 

There was a new moon

in the sky

and across the road

the big field lay pale

and deserted

in the moonlight.

 

The silence was deathly.

I don’t know

how long I sat there.

 

It may have been

one hour.

 

It could have

been two.

 

But I never dozed off.

 

I wanted to keep listening

all the time.

 

If I listened very carefully

I might hear something

that would tell me

where he was.

 

 

Then, at last,

from far away,

I heard the faint tap-tap

of footsteps

on the road.



Page 28



The footsteps

were coming closer

and closer.

 

Tap… tap… tap… tap…

 

 

Was it him?

Or was it

somebody else?

 

I sat still,

watching the road.

 

I couldn’t see

very far along it.

It faded away

into a misty

moonlit darkness.

 

Tap… tap… tap… tap…

came the footsteps.

 

Then out of the mist

a figure appeared.

 

It was him!

 

I jumped down the steps

and ran on to the road

to meet him.

 

 

‘Danny!’ he cried.

‘What on earth’s

the matter?’

 

‘I thought something awful

had happened to you,’

I said.

 

He took my hand

in his and walked me back

to the caravan in silence.

 

Then he tucked me

into my bunk.

‘I’m so sorry,’ he said.

 

‘I should never have done it.

 

But you don’t usually wake up,

do you?’

 

‘Where did you go, Dad?’

 

‘You must be tired out,’

he said.

 

‘I’m not a bit tired.

Couldn’t we light the lamp

for a little while?’

 

 

My father put a match

to the wick of the lamp

hanging from the ceiling

and the little yellow flame

sprang up

and filled the inside

of the caravan

with pale light.

 

‘How about a hot drink?’

he said.

 

‘Yes, please.’

 

He lit the paraffin burner

and put the kettle on to boil.

 

‘I have decided something,’

he said.

 

‘I am going to

let you in on

the deepest

darkest secret

of my whole life.’

 

I was sitting up

in my bunk

watching my father.



Page 29


 

‘You asked me
where I had been,’
he said.

 

‘The truth is
I was up
in Hazell’s Wood.’

 

‘Hazell’s Wood!’

I cried.

‘That’s miles away!’

 

‘Six miles and a half,’

my father said.

 

‘I know
I shouldn’t have gone


and I’m very,

very sorry about it,

but I had such

a powerful yearning…’

 

His voice trailed away

into nothingness.

 

‘But why would you

want to go

all the way

up to Hazell’s Wood?’

I asked.

 

He spooned
cocoa powder

and sugar
into two mugs,

doing it very slowly
and levelling
each spoonful

as though
he were measuring
medicine.


 

‘Do you know

what is meant
by poaching?’


he asked.

 

‘Poaching?

Not really, no.’

 

‘It means

going up
into the woods


in the dead of night

and coming back

with something

for the pot.

 

Poachers in other places

poach all sorts

of different things,

but around here

it’s always pheasants.’

 

 

‘You mean stealing them?’

I said, aghast.

 

‘We don’t
look at it
that way,’

my father said.

 

‘Poaching is an art.

A great poacher

is a great artist.’

 

 

‘Is that actually

what you were doing

in Hazell’s Wood, Dad?

Poaching pheasants?’

 

‘I was practising the art,’

he said.

‘The art of poaching.’

 

I was shocked.

 

My own father a thief!

 

This gentle lovely man!

 

I couldn’t believe

he would go

creeping into the woods

at night

to pinch valuable birds

belonging to

somebody else.

 

‘The kettle’s boiling,’

I said.

 

‘Ah, so it is.’

 

He poured the water

into the mugs

and brought mine

over to me.

 

Then he fetched

his own

and sat with it

at the end

of my bunk.


Page 30


 
‘Your grandad,’

he said,

‘my own dad,

was a magnificent

and splendiferous

poacher.

 

It was he

who taught me

all about it.

 

I caught the poaching fever

from him  

when I was ten years old

and I’ve never lost it

since.

 

Mind you,

in those days

just about every man

in our village

was out in the woods

at night

poaching pheasants.

 

 

And they did it

not only because

they loved the sport

but because

they needed food

for their families.

 

When I was a boy,

times were bad

f
or a lot of people

in England.

 

There was very little work

to be had anywhere,

and some families

were literally

starving.

 

 

Yet a few miles away

in the rich man’s wood,

thousands of pheasants

were being fed like kings

twice a day.

 

 

So can you blame my dad

for going out occasionally

and coming home

with a bird or two

for the family to eat?’

 

 

‘No,’ I said.

‘Of course not.

But we’re not starving here, Dad.’

 

 

‘You’ve missed the point,

Danny boy!

You’ve missed

the whole point!

 

Poaching is such

a fabulous

and exciting sport

that once you start doing it,

it gets into your blood

and you can’t give it up!

 

Just imagine,’ he said,

leaping off the bunk

and waving his mug in the air,

‘just imagine

for a minute

that you are all alone

up there in the dark wood,

and the wood is full of keepers

hiding behind the trees

and the keepers have guns…’

 

‘Guns!’ I gasped.

‘They don’t have guns!’

 

‘All keepers have guns, Danny.

It’s for the vermin mostly,

the foxes and stoats

and weasels who go after

the pheasants.

 

But they’ll always

take a pot

at a poacher, too,

if they spot him.’



Page 31


 

‘Dad, you’re joking.’

 

‘Not at all.

But they only do it

from behind.

Only when you’re

trying to escape.

 

They like to pepper you

in the legs at about fifty yards.’

 

‘They can’t do that!’

I cried.

‘They could go to prison

for shooting someone!’

 

‘You could go to prison

for poaching,’

my father said.

 

There was a glint

and a sparkle

in his eyes now

that I had never

seen before.

 

‘Many’s the night

when I was a boy, Danny,

I’ve gone into the kitchen

and seen my old dad

lying face down

on the table

and Mum standing over him

digging the gunshot pellets

out of his backside

with a potato-knife.’

 

‘It’s not true,’ I said,

starting to laugh.

 

‘You don’t believe me?’

 

‘Yes, I believe you.’

 

‘Towards the end,

he was so covered

in tiny little white scars

he looked exactly like

it was snowing.’

 

‘I don’t know

why I’m laughing,’ I said.

‘It’s not funny,

it’s horrible.’

 

‘ “Poacher’s bottom”

they used to call it,’

my father said.

 

‘And there wasn’t a man

in the whole village

who didn’t have

a bit of it

one way or another.

 

But my dad

was the champion.

How’s the cocoa?’

 

‘Fine, thank you.’

 

‘If you’re hungry

we could have

a midnight feast?’ he said.

 

‘Could we, Dad?’

 

‘Of course.’


Page 32


 
My father got out

the bread-tin

and the butter and cheese

and started making sandwiches.

 

‘Let me tell you about

this phony pheasant-shooting

business,’ he said.

 

‘First of all,

it is practiced

only by the rich.

 

Only the very rich

can afford to rear pheasants

just for the fun

of shooting them down

when they grow up.

 

 

These wealthy idiots

spend huge sums of money

every year

buying baby pheasants

from pheasant farms

and rearing them in pens

until they are big enough

to be put out

into the woods.

 

 

In the woods,

the young birds

hang around

like flocks of chickens.

 

They are guarded

by keepers

and fed twice a day

on the best corn

until they’re so fat

they can hardly fly.

 

 

Then beaters are hired

who walk through the woods

clapping their hands

and making as much noise

as they can

to drive the half-tame pheasants

towards the half-baked men

and their guns.


Page 33


 
After that,

it’s bang bang bang

and down they come.

 

Would you like strawberry jam

on one of these?’

 

‘Yes, please,’ I said.

‘One jam and one cheese.

But Dad…’

 

‘What?’

‘How do you

actually catch t

he pheasants

when you’re poaching?

 

Do you have a gun

hidden away up there?’

 

 

‘A gun!’

he cried, disgusted.

‘Real poachers

don’t shoot pheasants, Danny,

didn’t you know that?

 

You’ve only got

to fire a cap-pistol

up in those woods

and the keepers’ll

be on you.’

 

‘Then how do you do it?’

 

‘Ah,’ my father said,

and the eyelids

drooped over the eyes,

veiled and secretive.

 

He spread strawberry jam

thickly on a piece of bread,

taking his time.

 

‘These things

are big secrets,’ he said.

‘Very big secrets indeed.

But I reckon

if my father

could tell them to me,

then maybe

I can tell them to you.

 

Would you like me

to do that?’

 

‘Yes,’ I said.

‘Tell me now’.