âThat's our beauty,' Jim wrote. âAin't it grand? Now we've got two fighters faster and more manoeuvrable than anything Hitler's got or anything he's likely to get. First the Hurricane and now the Spitfire. Thank God. You should see the engine, Peg. A masterpiece of engineering. What am I saying? You should see the engine. I don't want you to see an engine.
I
want to see
you
. Still we're more than half way there now. I shall be home in March. Can't wait.'
In February the ARP began to distribute shelters for people to dig into their back gardens. They were little more than a hoop of corrugated steel but the Chief Warden said they would withstand anything short of a direct hit. Peggy would have liked to order one for her own family, but you had to have a garden big enough to contain it and the little backyards in Paradise Row were much too small. Somehow or other, during the quiet months of that winter and the growing menace of that early spring, acceptance of this war had been gradually seeping into her mind. The papers were always full of pictures of Hitler and his storm troopers, marching about in their jackboots and those ugly tin hats of theirs. And more and more people were making preparations for air raids. Madame Aimee had cleared the coal from one side of her cellar and taken down stools and deckchairs and a square of lino to stand them on, and her latest idea was to see if she could run the radio from the electric light. And at home Mum and Mrs Geary had taken everything out of the cupboard under the stairs and put it up in the attic, âjust in case'.
And two days after Jim came home on leave at last,
Hitler marched into Czechoslovakia, just as Mr Cooper had predicted. There was no opposition. How could there be? Six days later he was telling Poland he wanted Danzig and the Polish Corridor.
Now everybody in England knew it was just a matter of time.
âNow you make good an' sure you send the kids off,' Sid Owen said, hoisting his kitbag onto his shoulder. âThe minute they're sent for, you send 'em.'
âYes, well all right,' Joan said unwillingly.
âNever mind yes well all right,' Sid said. âYou do it. You want to go, don't yer, kids?'
Yvonne and Norman stood dubiously before him on the kitchen hearth-rug. Neither of them wanted to be âsent off' but they couldn't say so, partly because they weren't quite sure what being âsent off' really meant, but mostly because he was so dead set on it whatever it was. Breakfast was over and another peculiar day had begun and things had a way of happening whether or not you wanted them to. So Yvonne said, âYes, Dad', and tried to sound as though she meant it.
âGood gel,' he approved, buttoning his fags into the breast pocket of his tunic. âYou got yer bags packed aintcher?'
âYes, Dad.'
âRighto then, give us a kiss. Be good kids. Do as yer mum says when I'm gone.'
âCouldn't we just wait an' see before we send them?' Joan tried. The thought of this evacuation was making her feel sick.
He wouldn't even allow the suggestion. âDon't start that again,' he warned. âYou've give your word, so let's have no more of it. If I say they're to go, that's it, they're to go. You
don't want 'em here to be bombed, do yer? OK, then. You send 'em. If I come home an' find 'em still here you'll know about it.' He glanced at the clock on the mantelpiece, ticking the tinny seconds away. âTime I was off. Look after yourself, old girl.'
It was all unreal, Joan thought. Just when they were happy together again he'd got to go to Salisbury Plain as if he was a proper soldier. And the kids had got to be evacuated. It was more than she could bear to think about.
âGive us a kiss then,' he instructed, daring her with those bold dark eyes. And when she kissed him briefly, âGaw dearie me. Is that the best you can do?'
She kissed him again, more passionately this time, but the passion made her feel how wrong this was, all of it. Ever since he'd joined the territorials he'd been such a rewarding, insistent lover, quite his old dashing self again. They'd been really contented with one another, hardly rowing at all, and now they were going to be parted, and he'd be sent off to France, she knew it in her bones, and then what would happen to them?
âRemember what you promised,' he said, heading for the door. âYou're to send 'em. No turning back, eh?'
There's no turning back for any of us now, Joan thought bleakly as she listened to his boots descending the stairs. âCome to the window,' she said to Yvey and Norman, âand we'll wave him goodbye.'
It was Friday, the first day of September 1939, and the news was grim. The British and German governments had been exchanging notes for more than a week, while the German army massed all along the Polish frontier, and at dawn that morning German troops had finally carried out their long-threatened invasion. In England the army and navy were mobilized. Every window in London was hung with black-out curtains of one kind or another, and many of them had been crisscrossed with brown paper too as a precaution against flying glass, because everyone knew the air raids would start as soon as war was declared. That was always the pattern. There were gangs of council workmen in the streets busily painting white patches along the kerbs and white lines around the base of everything
and anything protruding from the pavement, like trees and telephone boxes and pillar boxes, and there were sandbags heaped against the windows of every building in the High Street. Some of the local schools had been evacuated already and the rest were waiting to be called. It was a very vain hope indeed to say, âIt might not come to it.'
Yvonne and Norman's school rang the bell to announce their evacuation half an hour after their father left. And while it was still ringing, a boy on a bicycle came pedalling furiously up the High Street to augment the summons by knocking on doors.
He was in a most enjoyable and dramatic hurry, powering along the middle of the street with his body bent forward urgently over the handlebars. He barely allowed himself time to stop when he rang the doorbells. He simply stood astride the bike and knocked and rang. And at every house his doleful message was the same.
âThey're going, missus! They're going!'
All along his route sash-cord windows were creaked open, anxious faces appeared to acknowledge him.
But Joan was quicker than he was. She'd sped down the stairs and opened the side door before he had time to take his finger from the bell.
âWhere to?' she panted. âWhere they going?'
âNew Cross Gate,' the boy called back to her, already on his way to the next shop. âThey're going missus!'
It was as though he was crying the end of the world.
âGet yer bags,' Joan said briskly. âYou got a clean hanky, Norman? There's a bar a' chocolate each. Put it in your pockets. Better go to the lavvy just to be on the safe side.'
âI don't want to go to the lavvy,' Norman protested as she pushed him towards the bathroom door. âCan I take my gingerbread man?'
âTry,' she urged him. âSee if you can squeeze some out. Then you can take your gingerbread man. Where's yer gasmasks?'
She jollied them all along, being cheerful as much to keep her own spirits up as to help them. The street was full of mothers and children running down towards the school.
âWhere are we going?' Norman asked as they jogged along.
âTo the country,' Joan said, trying to encourage them. âYou know, where it's all fields and there are cows and sheep and chickens. You'll like that, won't you?'
âNo,' the little boy said stoutly. âI shan't. Why can't we stay here with you?'
âIt won't be for long,' Joan said. âYou'll soon be back, you'll see.'
âHow soon?' Yvey asked. She was very near tears, her bottom lip trembling.
âNo time at all,' Joan said.
âA week?' They were very near the school gate. She could see the teachers walking about and the kids forming lines like they did to march in of a morning.
âRun in quick,' Joan said. âMustn't keep them waiting. Make sure you don't get parted, Yvey. You keep tight hold of Yvonne's hand won't you, Norman?' The anguish of this parting was tearing at her throat. âGo on. Quick.'
They kissed her hurriedly and ran into the playground, and for a few seconds they were lost to sight in the crowd of small figures trotting and running to the assembly point. Then she could see them both standing in line, and one of the teachers was checking the labels they had pinned to their coats and opening their gasmask cases presumably to see that the gasmasks were inside.
âYou going home, Mrs Owen?' her next-door neighbour asked.
âNo fear,' she said. âI'm going with them as far as ever I can. I'd go all the way if only they'd let me.'
It seemed a very long time before the lines were all in order and the headmaster blew his whistle for silence. From the pavement the little crowd of mums couldn't hear what he was saying to their children, but presently one of the teachers came out of the building with a banner on which a big letter T was painted. She handed it to two of the older boys at the head of the first line and after a last minute glance at her anxious pupils, she led the crocodile out of the gate.
There was no sound in the street at all except for the tread of all those little boots and shoes. Not a child spoke,
not even when they passed their mothers. They crossed the road meekly, clutching their luggage, with their gasmasks bumping against their legs. Some of the boys had remembered to wear their school caps and some of the girls wore berets, but most of them were bareheaded, neatly brushed and combed like Yvonne or tousle-headed like her brother. They looked very young and very small and horribly vulnerable walking obediently away in the summer sunshine.
Their mothers followed along behind them, uncertain but determined, and the crocodile straggled through the streets to New Cross Gate and up the incline to the entrance, where they had to wait while the school before them was led down to the platforms. The entrance was blocked with children and they could hear the trains steaming below them.
âNow!' the headmaster called and the crocodile shuffled forward, small pale faces looking anxiously over laden shoulders for one last glimpse of their mothers, small pale hands waving unnaturally like flowers in a storm-force wind. They crossed the entrance hall far too quickly and began the descent of the steps. Joan watched with anguish as her two little ones gradually disappeared, first their luggage, then their hunched shoulders, then their two poor little strained faces, then their pretty heads, until all she could see of them was their waving fingers, Norman's still clutching his gingerbread man. It was as though they were being torn into strips and removed from her piece by piece. And all round her mothers were keening to their children with one voice. âGoodbye darling! Goodbye! Goodbye! Oh my darling!' Then they were gone.
Joan found that she was weeping without control, the tears brimming out of her eyes so fast that she could hardly see, and her neighbour was crying too, sobbing aloud. The two of them hung on to each other for support until another crocodile arrived and nudged them out of the way.
âCome home an' have a cup a' tea,' Joan suggested.
âI'm supposed ter be at work,' her neighbour said, but she accepted the tea just the same. âYou need company at a time like this.'
Over in Madame Aimee's High Class Haberdashery, the Chief Warden was talking seriously to Peggy and Mr MacFarlane.
âOnce the balloon goes up,' he was saying, âwe shall need a lot more full-timers. I thought of you two straight away.'
âAye, well, you could have our Peggy I dare say,' said Mr MacFarlane. âI've no wish tae lose the girrrl, but as you say ⦠As to mysel', who'd keep the shop if I were to agree to 't?'
âMadame Aimee?' Charlie Goodall suggested.
âAye well, mebbe,' Mr MacFarlane said doubtfully. âWe'll see.'
âStart tomorrow,' the Chief Warden said to Peggy. âEight o'clock at the flats.'
âYes,' Peggy agreed quietly. It was only to be expected. Somebody would have to look after the black-out, and sound the alarms, and be on duty when the air raids began. But she was only giving him part of her attention, because she was thinking of Yvey and Norman and wondering where they were and how they were getting on. The Greenwich streets had been full of departing children all morning, so they must have gone.
Yvonne was sitting in the middle of a six-seater compartment that was now accommodating eleven children and a teacher. She had her coat wrapped tightly round her knees and she was thinking what an awful journey it was. Katy Burnett had eaten her sandwiches as soon as the train pulled out of the station, even though Sir said she wasn't to, and then, of course, she started sicking up. She would. Sir held her head out of the window but the sick blew back inside and went all over everything, and everybody yelled and said Yuk! and Ergh! and tried to clean themselves up with their hankies. And then Norman said he felt sick too and Sir held him out of the window and such a long way out that Yvonne was terrified a train would come along and knock his head off the way Mum had always said it would.
Being reminded of her mother was the most painful thing about the journey. While she could talk to her friends and tell Norman off and read her comic, she was
more or less all right, but thinking of Mum made her want to cry. Sir tried to make them sing and they
did
sing, for quite a long time. âWhistle while you work, Adolf Hitler is a twerp' and âRun rabbit run', but they didn't know all the words and Sir had to keep stopping to hold people out of the window so it wasn't a success.
But at last, after hours and hours and hours the train chuffed to a halt, brakes squealing, and they were all allowed out of their stinking compartment and found themselves standing on a wooden platform right out in the country.