âYes,' she agreed, hoping he'd kiss her again, because although it had been a rather rough kiss and he'd taken her by surprise, it had excited her.
âDon't tell no one,' he said, pulling her towards him again. âNot yet. Keep it a secret.'
âYes,' she said, agreeing at once because there was another kiss coming.
The Furnivall household fizzed with secrets that spring and summer, like a box of fireworks newly lit.
Even sensible Peggy had a secret. She shared it with Megan because Megan was her best friend and Megan had a similar secret but, like Joan and Sid, neither of them
said anything about it at home. It was too personal and private and Peggy had an occasional suspicion that it was just a little bit silly. But it had happened, it was a fact, and one that took all their attention in the most pleasurable way, filling their minds with delicious dreams and sustaining them with anticipation through the long hours of their working day. Peggy and Megan had both fallen in love.
It had happened on the afternoon they'd cut their hair, almost as if their new appearance had propelled them into new experiences. After they'd eaten Flossie's hash, they walked down to the market together to get a few âbits and pieces' for Mrs Geary, strolling arm in arm and chattering to one another all the way. Although it was still cold for May the sun had broken through the cloud and seemed to be shining straight down onto their heads. Megan remarked upon it.
âQuite right,' Peggy said gaily, âSo it is.' And she began to sing âThe sun has got his hat on', dancing along the pavement in tune to the words.
They were still giggling and singing as they walked into the market.
âYou're in a good mood,' the egg man said.
âYes,' Peggy said, grinning at him. And there standing right behind him was the most handsome boy she'd ever seen, tall and fair with lovely blue eyes and the faintest fluff of fair moustache on his top lip. She was instantly and very decidedly smitten as she told Megan afterwards.
âHe made me go weak at the knees,' she confessed happily. âJust like they do in the novels.'
âGosh!' Megan said. âDo you think you're in love?'
âI don't know,' Peggy admitted. âDo you think he'll be there Saturday?'
He was, and even more handsome than she remembered him. This time he smiled at her, which was hardly surprising as she'd been standing by the egg stall for nearly twenty minutes hoping he'd notice her and wondering where Megan had got to. He didn't say anything, but that didn't matter, a smile was enough. In fact a smile would be enough to live on for the rest of the week because he really was the most handsome boy. Oh
where was Megan? She couldn't wait to tell her.
She found her friend by the china stall, gazing into the middle distance with an enraptured expression on her face. âIsn't he just it?' she said when Peggy arrived beside her.
âWho?'
âThat boy on the till.'
He looked very ordinary to Peggy, but Megan was in love too. âHe's got such lovely broad shoulders,' she said. âAnd heavenly eyes.'
That night at the ding-dong while the others were singing their raucous songs the two girls compared notes. Their feelings were remarkably similar and wonderfully strong. âWe must be in love,' Megan decided. âAin't it grand.'
Peggy wasn't really sure that grand was the right word to describe her new emotions but they were certainly absorbing. She and Megan spent all their time and energy either preparing for their visit to the market or reliving every moment of it afterwards. The visits themselves were short, sweet and soon over. But by dint of careful detective work they discovered what their two young men were called, Peggy's beloved being Tom and Megan's Harry, and they lurked outside the market at closing time in case either of them came out alone and there was a chance to get talking. The chance was never given. Neither of the young men paid much attention to them, but that was part of their charm, and allowed the two girls to weave the most delicious fantasies about the sort of marvellous daring things that might happen if only they would. The more distant they were, the more they loved them.
The summer days passed in a swoon of dreams. They didn't even notice the flies and the smell of drains.
Until the end of the school term and Baby's first day at her new job. Then the storm broke.
âYou're getting dolled up, aintcher?' Joan said when Baby was putting on her uniform in the bedroom that morning.
Baby looked shifty and went on dressing herself. Now that the moment had come when her marvellous secret was finally going to be revealed, she was too anxious to want to show off about it.
âTosh sort a' rig for a servant,' Joan persisted. The anger on her face was growing plainer and more menacing by the second.
Silence.
âWhere
are
you going to work?' Peggy said, growing suspicious.
Silence.
âCome on, Baby,' Peggy said. âTell us.' There'd been altogether too much mystery about this job. Neither Mum nor Baby had ever said anything about it and now she could see how suspicious that was. âWhere are you going?'
âDodds,' Baby admitted, and she could feel her heart sink with the word. Mum had been right to keep quiet about it. There
was
going to be a row.
âThe outfitters?'
âYes,' Baby said, adding truculently, âWell, why not? We don't all have to be servants you know.' If they were going to be nasty she'd fight back.
âI'll tell you why not,' Joan said fiercely. âBecause it ain't fair, that's why not. Me an' Peggy work bloody hard for a living, an' you ought to work bloody hard too. Dodds!'
âWhat's all that row?' Mum called from downstairs. âBreakfast is on the table. Look sharp or you'll all be late.'
âShe's going to work in a shop,' Joan said, furious with accusation.
âYes,' Flossie said. âShe is. She's got to work somewhere. Eat your bacon while it's hot.'
âD'you think that's fair?'
âNow don't start,' Flossie warned, âunless you want to bring on my nerves. What's done is done. There's no point talking about it.' And she busied them and bustled them and refused to let any of them talk again until they were leaving the house.
So the protest was shelved. For the time being. And Baby went off to work looking smug. But that wasn't the end of it. How could it be when it was so unfair? That night when Baby went to bed still full of herself and how well she'd done on her first day, neither of her sisters would talk to her. Even when she grew deliberately tearful and complained that they were being hateful and she'd tell Mum, they still ignored her.
âPeople who behave like greedy little pigs,' Joan said pointedly, âmust expect to be cut.'
On the second night Baby cried so much when they ignored her that Peggy felt quite sorry for her. But she agreed with Joan that something had to be done and as Mum wouldn't allow either of them to talk about it, even though they both tried every morning and evening, punishing Baby with silence was the only thing they could think of to show their disapproval.
That next evening, when Mum had spent the whole of supper-time telling them that they should let bygones be bygones and wailing that they were giving her the most terrible nerves, âkeeping on about it', Peggy decided to walk down to the library with Jim Boxall. It was something she often did now that the weather was fine and she'd developed a taste for romantic novels, and on this particular evening it gave her a break from the brooding bad temper in the house. On the way back, almost on impulse, she told him about Baby's favoured treatment and asked him what he thought about it. He was always so sensible and if he said it was unfair she would know they weren't making a fuss about nothing.
His reply was practical. âIf you don't want to go on being a housemaid,' he said, âwhy don't you get a job in a shop too? They don't pay well but there's plenty of work about.' Which was more than could be said for jobs in the engineering trade. There were rumours that his own firm was going bust, but he didn't tell her that, because he hadn't told anyone. It was a private worry. The sort of thing men kept to themselves.
She looked up at his reassuring face, at the familiar scar on his chin and the broken nose that always reminded her how brave he was, at his blue eyes looking at her so seriously, and she was warmed by his good sense.
âYes,' she said, âof course. That's what we ought to do. That would solve it, wouldn't it.' And a jolly sight better than all this rowing.
But Joan was too enmeshed in anger to agree. âWe ought to have it out,' she said. âWhy should they get away with it? If we just go quietly off and get ourselves new jobs they'll think it doesn't matter any more. They'll have won.
And I'm damned if I'm having that.'
She was so cross that Peggy gave up trying to persuade her. I'll wait a day or two and try again, she thought. It'll start to blow over in a little while.
But of course it didn't. At the end of the week when all three of them arrived home with their pay packets, the second secret was out and then there was no restraining Joan's fury.
She turned on Flossie ablaze with anger, hurling Baby's pay packet across the table. âFive shillings!' she yelled. âYou let this spoilt brat of yours work for five shillings! What were you thinking of?'
âIt's only for four weeks,' Flossie said huffily.
And Baby said, âI'm being trained,' spitting the information into her mother's words and her sister's fury.
âTrained!' Joan said scornfully. âI'll give you trained, see if I don't. All these years we've worked and slaved,' she said to Flossie, âand we've never said a word about all the money you've took from us. Neither of us. Have we, Peggy? And now, just when things ought to be getting easier, you send that God-awful brat into a shop to work for nothing, and we've got to slog our guts out to keep her while she trains. Slog our guts out so that she can ponce about as a telephonist. It's bloody unfair.'
âLanguage!' Flossie reproved. âYou watch your mouth, my girl. You're not too old for me to wash it out with soap and water.'
Joan ignored such a pitiful diversion. âShe got this job on our backs,' she said. âMine and Peggy's. That's the truth and you know it.'
âPeggy,' Flossie said, appealing for help. âTell her to stop. Tell her it's not true.'
âIt is true,' Peggy said. âThere's no point lying. You've been very unfair. Both of you. I wonder you can't see it.'
âShe's too delicate for housework,' Flossie said, trying to justify herself.
âAnd we're not?' Joan yelled. âWe're not? Oh I can see it all now. You've never cared for us, either of us. It's always been Baby. Your precious Baby. Spoiled bloody Baby. I'd like to scratch her rotten eyes out.'
âDon't you touch me,' Baby shrieked leaping away from
Joan's outstretched fingers. âMum! Stop her! She'll do me a mischief.'
Peggy was running between them, aching to placate them, to stop this awful row before it got any worse, but she couldn't find the words to persuade them and anyway they were making such a row they weren't listening to her.
âBaby,' she begged. âHush! Joan, don't. Please don't. They'll hear us next door. Mum, look let's ⦠'
âYou don't care for me!' Flossie shrieked. âYou know what a state my nerves are in. You're making me ill the lot of you.'
âServe you right!' Joan shouted. âYou've had this coming to you for years.'
âOh!' Flossie wailed. âHow can you say such things? Can't you see what you're doing to me, you hateful girl?'
âNo,' Joan said coldly. âI can see what
she's
doing to
us
. And it's bloody unfair.'
Flossie took two strides across the kitchen and slapped Joan hard across the face. The crack of the blow echoed like a gunshot. âShut up!' she shouted. âShut up! Shut up! I've had enough!'
âDon't you dare hit me!' Joan roared. And she dealt her mother a return blow that sent her reeling back against the dresser.
There was a split second of total silence while they all looked at one another in horror. Then Flossie opened her mouth and began to scream. She screamed without stopping and without restraint, on and on and on, in a dreadful hysterical abandonment, her face distorted and her mouth as wide as a cave. Peggy could see her uvula throbbing as she screamed.
âMum! Please!' she begged. âCome and sit down. I'll make you a nice cup of tea.'
âYes Mum, please,' Baby said, shocked white by such a display. âDon't keep on.'
They were wasting their breath. Flossie couldn't stop. She was screaming as she breathed, lost in a echoing limbo of pent-up fury and guilt and self-pity. She couldn't even see them.
None of them heard Mrs Geary hobbling down the stairs but they weren't surprised when she walked into the kitchen.
âHysterical,' she said, speaking calmly as though finding a screaming woman in her kitchen was an everyday event. âMake her lie down. She won't scream so easy lying down.'
But it took all three girls a very long time to coax their mother to her bed in the front parlour, and she went on screaming even when she was flat on her back.
âYou'll have ter get Dr Thomas,' Mrs Geary said. âNip round the corner, Baby. Quick as you can.'
Baby was shaking with fright but she did as she was told. She'd never meant
this
to happen. Never. All she'd wanted was a good job and not to be a servant. Oh dear, oh dear!
Dr Thomas was not accustomed to being called out to Paradise Row. He knew from long experience that the people of that district were loath to ask for medical advice, preferring to dose themselves with patent medicines or horrible concoctions of their own devising, so he was intrigued when a pasty-faced child appeared on his doorstep requesting his immediate attention for a mother who had taken a fit. It could well be something interesting, he thought, as he picked up his bag.