Read Daughters Of Eden: The Eden Series Book 1 Online
Authors: Charlotte Bingham
âSome of our neighbours,' Aunt Hester told her as they were doing the final lock-up. âThey thought I was off my hinges â particularly Number 30. Taking us all away for a seaside holiday just when war's about to break out â but that's the whole point really. It's because there's going to be a war that I brought us all away. We'll always have this memory to share, you and Billy and me â I wanted us all to be able to remember this time, being happy the way people should be happy, without a care in the world. Since there's nothing much we can do about what's coming, I don't see the harm. For once we've been happy and carefree. Nice word, that. I've always liked that word â carefree. Because really so little of life is ever carefree, so when you get a bit, grab it. That's what I say.'
She gave one last look round the cottage sitting room before ushering Marjorie outside. She then locked the front door behind them, blew the place a kiss, and taking her niece's arm walked off to the car.
*Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â *
By the time Billy had returned to school it seemed there was nothing else to talk about other than the preparations that had to be made for the forthcoming conflict. It actually seemed to be affecting Billy rather more than either Marjorie or Aunt Hester, probably because they found themselves so preoccupied with the business of shrouding lamps and making blackout blinds and curtains, while Billy sat silently at the table under the front window toying with his homework, pencil stuck in mouth, always wondering, trying to think how
war
might be. The word seemed to be echoing through his head. War, war,
war
.
âAre we going to be bombed do you think, Marjorie?' he asked one night as Marjorie sorted out the matches she had been splitting in half into boxes. âThe nearest shelter's miles away â and if there's a sudden air raid, we mightn't make it.'
âWhy should they bomb Castle Gardens, Billy?' Marjorie laughed, trying to lighten the atmosphere. âThey're hardly going to waste their precious bombs on our bit of town.'
âWhat about gas? Everyone at school says they're going to attack us with gas.'
âWhich is why we've been doing our gas mask practice, dopey. Long as you're carrying your gas mask you won't die, will you now?'
Billy pushed his homework to one side and began tapping the table with his pencil.
âWish I was old enough to join up.'
âDon't be daft, Billy. You'll wish your life away if you're not careful.'
âI don't want to just sit here doing nothing. I want to kill Hitler.'
âNever mind killing Hitler, first you must learn to knit,' Marjorie joked. âLike Aunt Hester and me. Help us knit mufflers and socks for the soldiers, and then you can kill Hitler with your knitting needles, poke his eyes out with them, that's what you can do.'
âHow old do you actually have to be?' Billy wondered, ignoring Marjorie's tease. âI'm sure if they really want soldiers, if they really need them, they might take me, don't you think?'
âNo I don't, Billy. And I don't want to â and I wish you'd stop thinking like that, too. All right?'
âI could learn to shoot.'
âYou haven't got a gun, muggins.'
âI could join the rifle club.'
âYou're too young.'
âNo I'm not. George Perry goes shooting there. With his dad. He's the same age as what I am.'
âThat you are â that I am.'
Marjorie looked at him and sighed inwardly, remembering the pale-faced, first weeping then almost silent young boy she had befriended, whereas now all she could see was a boy determined to learn to kill. Seeing the look in his eyes and realising the change that was coming over him, Marjorie felt a momentary despair. Despite their parents' abandonment, the rough treatment they'd had at the boarding school â despite everything that had happened to them, in some strange way, she realised, they had actually remained innocent, until the war clouds started to gather, blocking out the blue skies they'd only just begun to enjoy.
Marjorie sat down opposite Billy at the table,
turning his homework round to her and pretending to study it. She couldn't stand the thought of Billy with a gun, or in a uniform, but she knew that one day she had to stand it. It was just how it was.
Oddly enough, the following day when she turned out to help fill sandbags she found the atmosphere in the street was one of considerable gaiety, as if people were relieved to be out of their houses and doing something positive rather than just sitting inside wondering when all hell was going to break loose.
âYou still going to them anti-gas lectures?' Mrs Watling from Number 31 asked, as they found themselves standing next to each other in the queue for sacks. â'Cos if you are, I wouldn't mind coming with you.'
Marjorie turned and stared at her in barely disguised indignation.
âWhen we asked you last month if you were interested in coming, Mrs Watling, you called Aunt Hester and me warmongers, if you care to remember.'
Mrs Watling blushed, and turned away for a second.
âYes â well I dare say I did,' she excused herself. âBut then I dare say I was wrong, too, see?'
âIt's six thirty at the school, if you want to know. If you knock on our door we can all go along together.'
âJust don't tell Mr Watling, mind. He still thinks it's a lot of fuss about nothing. That it don't affect us â says it's no business of ours what Hitler does.
That foreigners are nothing but trouble and they're nothing to do with us no how, no way.'
âMr Watling won't think it's nonsense when he has to go to work wearing his gas mask, Mrs Watling,' Marjorie retorted. âAnd the whole town's on fire, and there's Nazis delivering censored letters, and putting him in prison, he won't think it's nonsense then.'
âMr Watling doesn't think much of gas masks neither.'
âHe's going to have to. Aunt Hester says they'll soon be compulsory, by law â and no one will be allowed to go anywhere without one.'
âThat so? No doubt I'll hear all about it tonight when we go to this 'ere class.'
Marjorie couldn't help feeling astonished when she saw just how many people had come to the class. The first couple of lectures had been attended by only a couple of retired army officers, half a dozen dutiful housewives and a bored teenager who'd been sent along to get him out from under his mother's feet for the evening. Aunt Hester insisted that both Marjorie and Billy went, for in her opinion there was too much ridicule about anti-gas lectures, not to mention Air Raid Precautions. Not to attend was not only short-sighted and impractical, but unpatriotic. Her stance was belittled not just by the neighbours but by people in the local shops. Now it seemed she was suddenly not alone, for the small schoolroom dedicated to these civil defence lectures was packed to the door.
âIf you ask me it's this Munich business,' a large,
moon-faced woman announced loudly as she settled her ample girth on one of the school benches. âEver since we let Hitler march all over those poor Czechs even my old man's started to think we should stop sitting on the fence and stand up and fight.'
âQuite right too,' Mrs Watling agreed, leaning across Marjorie to tap the other woman on her arm. âWe got to go to it and fight, or sure as eggs we'll all be dead before we know it. Just wish I could get my old man to see it, that's all, but see it he can't â or do I mean won't?'
âMine's just volunteered for the Auxiliary Fire Service,' the large woman replied. âHe's that serious about training he don't even go to darts evenings at the Hero of Inkerman no more â and for my George that's quite something, believe you me.'
âWhere's your aunt, Marjorie?' Mrs Watling leaned forward to attract Marjorie's attention. âThought she never missed a meeting?'
âAunt Hester's out sticking up posters and distributing pamphlets for people to come to meetings of the ARP. She says it's getting so serious we need air raid wardens more than ever. We're going to First Aid tomorrow, Billy and me. Aunt Hester says nobody's too young to learn about dealing with the kind of injuries that will be coming our way.'
âThat's nice,' the large woman said, folding her arms across her ample bosom. âThat's just what I come out to hear.'
*Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â *
âMustard gas blisters on limbs,' the uniformed lecturer who had just walked in began, without any announcement, pointing to a particularly graphic illustration he had just hung up over the blackboard. âThat's our kicking off point this evening â the effects of mustard gas on life and limb.'
At this, Mrs Watling carefully withdrew a large coloured handkerchief from her handbag and held it over her mouth, breathing out loudly as she did so.
Despite Mrs Watling's dramatic reaction the lecturer began a detailed examination of the precise effects of gas attacks on troops in the previous world war, accompanied by increasingly bloody illustrations of severed arteries, burnt flesh and fractured bones protruding from open wounds. Billy, his eyes out on stalks, followed every word, quite obviously riveted, while Marjorie managed to pretend to take it all in while secretly reciting a poem. It was finally too much for Mrs Watling, who after five minutes of hiding her face behind her large handkerchief suddenly excused herself and was not seen for the rest of the evening.
âI say.' Billy was once more an aeroplane as they made their way slowly home in the dark. âThat was really good, wasn't it?' He sighed with some satisfaction before strategically bombing an imagined Nazi division.
âYou quite sure you're up to going to First Aid class with Marjorie, Billy?' Aunt Hester enquired.
âIf you'd seen him at the gas mask lecture, Aunt Hester,' Marjorie replied, âyou wouldn't be
bothering to ask. He can't get enough of blood and guts.'
Billy was silent. Much as he had put on a brave face at the lecture on the fearful effects of gases on the human body, he had actually, finally, found it more than a little frightening, although he would be the last to admit it. Despite this he was determined to attend the First Aid classes, because not to would be thought wet, and that just couldn't happen.
âYou don't have to go, Billy,' Aunt Hester said, turning the boy to her and straightening his school tie. âYou say if you don't want to go.'
âI'm fine, Aunt H,' Billy said as firmly as he could. âI got to learn to do me bit.'
âPlease yourself, dear. Probably best with a war, eh? Bit like swimming â best to jump in with both feet. I shan't forget the sight of you and your ring in the briny in a hurry.'
She ruffled his hair affectionately, and then began to collect her belongings prior to going out.
âThink we'll be sent to the country, Aunt H?' Billy wondered, trying to smooth his hair back down with both hands. âThey said all the kids are going to be sent to the country. I don't want to go.'
âDon't think what you want's going to have anything to do with it, Billy.' Aunt Hester checked her appearance in the mirror, and then searched for her car keys. âAnyway â won't be until well after Christmas, if at all. We've all got that to look forward to, haven't we?'
âWhere are you going tonight, Aunt Hester?' Marjorie asked.
âAmbulance Service. Driving in the dark in a gas
mask, God help me. Just hope I don't crash the blooming ambulance trailer, that's all. It was a close run thing the other night.'
She smiled at them both, then all of a sudden hugged first Marjorie and then Billy.
âYou're not too big for a hug. Yet.' She cuffed him affectionately.
âAunt Hester?' Marjorie asked as she opened the front door. âCould I learn to drive an ambulance trailer? I could, couldn't I? Be much more useful than just sitting at home.'
âYeah? And what would I do? Knit?' asked Billy.
âYou could go next door. You'd be all right,' she replied.
âYou're a bit young, dear,' Aunt Hester replied, pulling on her gloves. âIt's this night-time driving. It isn't easy.'
âI could learn.'
âNeeds must, I know, Marjorie. But let's wait until the devil takes the wheel. I'll think about it. I'll ask our instructor.' Aunt Hester added, about to leave. âHeaven knows you'd probably make a much better driver than me, dear. We're in the forest tonight, for our sins.'
Marjorie and Billy stood at the door and watched Aunt Hester drive off into the dusk, delaying the moment when they would have to shut the door and go back inside the house alone. Even though war had not yet been declared, every time she left the house it felt as if she was going off to fight.
For some reason when she woke up in the early hours of the following morning, Marjorie knew instinctively that her aunt wasn't home. Seeing her
bed not slept in, and not finding her downstairs, she turned on the electric fire in the sitting room, and watched the dawn coming up on the quiet suburban avenue as she tried not to worry.
She had fallen into a half sleep when the doorbell rang at last. Normally she would have hurried to the front door, imagining that Aunt Hester had lost her front door key, or left it behind, but remembering her aunt's warnings about not letting in strangers, and always leaving the chain across the door, Marjorie went first to the window to see who it might be. Outside the narrow suburban house there was a black Wolseley parked in the road, and a policeman on the doorstep. Marjorie at once hurried to the door.
âMiss Hendry?' the policeman enquired politely, taking off his hat. âSergeant Holmes. Might I come in, please?' As Marjorie nodded he added, âThank you.'
He walked by her into the living room, followed by Marjorie who at once turned on the light, shielding her eyes with one hand.
âYou all alone here, miss?'
âNo â Billy's here as well. He's asleep. Billy's my aunt's foster child, like a sort of brother for me, really.'