Read Women on the Home Front Online
Authors: Annie Groves
She shrugged. âNothing, as far as I know.'
âWhat ⦠he didn't even get a good kicking?'
âHe joined up to avoid getting married, and when he came back after the war, he went off to Cumbria. Probably he's Chief Constable by now,' she finished sourly.
âWhy didn't Celia's old man go after him with a shotgun? Cumbria's not that far â¦' One of his hands sliced down on the steering wheel. âStraight up the A1 and you could be there by nightfall.'
A slight grimace lifted Grace's brow. âI suppose it was too late; the baby had been adopted by then. Is that what your lot would do ⦠go after him, even if he was a policeman, and give him a good kicking?'
âToo right, and being as he was a copper, it'd be a pleasure. It's never too late for revenge, not when it's something as bad as that.'
âYou'd do that, for your daughter?' Grace asked.
â'Course â¦' He glanced at her. âYour mum thinks you'll let me get you up the duff and then I'll disappear.' He choked a rueful laugh. âSeems your mum knows me better than she knows you.' He frowned. âThat was a joke, of course â¦'
âDon't worry about her, she's just an old busybody.' Grace turned her head to stare out of the side window into the misty darkness. âIt's getting very foggy out there â¦'
âI had a run-in with one of those today.'
That comment drew an enquiring look from Grace.
âA busybody,' he explained. âI went over to Bexleyheath again and got chatting to me mum's neighbour. Same old girl as before.' He paused, grinning. âShe didn't threaten to set the police on me this time.'
âYou've been to see your mum again?' Grace echoed before her delicate features transformed into a wondrous smile.
âI saw her, but not to speak to. I kept meself hidden in case she caught a glimpse of me and had another turn. I went over there to do her a favour.' He sounded sweetly diffident. âI'd been giving a bit of thought to what you said about people like her not getting anything done for them, even though they help out others. So I fixed her a new gate while she was at work.'
âWhat a good idea!' Grace beamed her approval.
âYeah ⦠I thought so too,' he said, feigning conceit. âJust hope
she
thinks so â¦' He slanted Grace an exaggerated grimace. âI stuck a note through her letterbox, just telling her she don't owe me nuthin'; didn't want her to think I might be sending in me invoice.'
âI'm sure she'll know, from a kind gesture like that, you just want to be friends with her.' Grace endorsed her praise by hugging his arm.
âI found out she's had a really hard time of it. This is where the busybody neighbour comes in,' he clarified. âI didn't ask questions, she just started telling me about why the gate got took off in the first place.' He whipped a quick look at Grace as he steered around a corner. âWhen me mum's husband got back from the war he'd lost a leg and needed a wheelchair.'
âAnd he couldn't get in and out of the gate in the wheelchair?' Grace guessed.
Chris nodded.
âWhat a terrible shame for him to be crippled ⦠and for her too, of course â¦' Grace murmured.
She'd heard similar tragic stories of war casualties. It wasn't unusual to see men out and about, trying to cope with life following the loss of limbs, or their sight, in the wake of the Second World War. Grace was often amazed at how jaunty some of them seemed to be as they hobbled along in their neat clothes and polished shoes. She suddenly realised that poor Mr Riley couldn't be amongst those plucky souls. âSo, if your mum wanted the gate put back ⦠that means no wheelchair and no Mr Riley. He must've died.'
âYeah, she's a widow; he passed on a while ago, not long after he got invalided home.'
âHave you got any half-brothers and -sisters?' Grace asked optimistically.
Chris shook his head. âAccording to the battleaxe, me mum married Mr Riley just as the war started, and he was wounded a couple of years after. She said Pamela ended up being more his nurse than his wife ⦠in which case it ain't surprising they never had kids.'
âAre you disappointed not to have more family?' Grace asked gently.
âYeah; I am ⦠a bit â¦' He fell silent.
âTalking of kids ⦠I did another good turn 'n' all today. Little girl from up the road come wandering into the house we're working on. Lucky she didn't come a cropper; she was walking about barefoot on a building site. So I took her home to her mum. They're the people I was telling you about: the Murphys who moved in earlier in the year. Matilda was doing a bit of babysitting for the woman so she could do a cleaning job. But her husband put a stop to that. He won't let her go out and earn a few bob even though he's scratching around for work now he's lost his shifts with the pikeys.'
âThat's a daft attitude to have,' Grace said emphatically.
âKieran Murphy's asked me for a job a couple of times now but we're not taking on.'
âWhat did the woman say when you took her little girl back?' Grace asked. âAnything could have happened to her. She might have got bricks fall on her while you were working. How old is she?'
âAbout three or four, I reckon. Sweet little thing, she is, polite too; her name's Kathleen.' He chuckled. âShe was after me sandwiches. Poor little mite seemed starving hungry, so I gave her one.'
âThey must be very hard up â¦'
âI reckon they are, but it seems the old man's one of these too proud fer his own good and doesn't want it known he can't provide for his family. He took the sandwich off the kid and give it me back ⦠what was left of it.' Chris frowned. âKieran Murphy was out, but he turned up just as I was handing Kathleen over to her mum. The woman looked guilty as hell and knew she'd been wrong in not keeping an eye on the girl. But she's got another kid to look after, and that one's a lot younger and coughing its guts up all the time.' He sighed. âKieran had a face like thunder so I just left 'em to it. Wish I hadn't now; wish I'd offered a bit more help. But not a lot you can do for a man won't even let his kid have a cheese sandwich he ain't paid for.'
âAt least you tried,' Grace said, feeling proud of him. âSome people would just walk on by.'
âFelt sorry for his wife; she knew she'd done wrong letting the tot out of her sight. I could hear him tearing a strip off her before I got out of the house. Shame I can't offer the bloke a job, then perhaps they could get themselves out of there, but the guvnor says there's nuthin' doing.'
âCouldn't he make an exception?'
âNah, not Rob. He's a businessman and he won't jeopardise his profit margin by gettin' all sentimental. Can't blame him really; if he gives Murphy a job one of the others will have to go and that ain't fair. D'you want to see where me dad and Pearl are opening up their caff?' Chris asked abruptly, changing the subject. âIt's in Hornsey Road; got quite a good spot, they have.'
On seeing Grace's enthusiastic nod, he added, âWe'll probably catch them in; me old man said they'll be working late. He's keen to get it all up 'n' running by next week. He's thinking of doing fancy teas as an opening offer, to draw in the customers.'
âSort of early Christmas cakes?' Grace observed. âHe's obviously got a good business brain, your dad.' She sounded impressed.
âSuppose he has, in his own way.' Chris had always thought his uncle Robert was the smarter of the two of them, and doubtless he was where winning building contracts was concerned. But perhaps now his dad was working at something he enjoyed, instead of felt obliged to do, he might prove to everybody that he could run a successful business as well as his brother, if he put his mind to it.
Stevie might not know a lot about doing paperwork but he knew what people liked to eat. Everybody loved a nice bit of cake, and with Christmas approaching, they were thinking of their stomachs. Chris reflected sombrely on the Murphys, wondering if they'd manage to get themselves somewhere warm and cosy by then, and enjoy a good Christmas Day.
âI saw Vic this evening,' Stevie announced. âHe was just off to the shop to get something for his tea. Unusual for him to do a bit of shopping.'
âDeirdre's playing a blinder there, I'll give her that,' Chris said with a chuckle. âShe'll probably have him burping the baby and changing it after every feed.'
âNothing wrong with that,' Pearl stated flatly. âShe'll need to put her feet up for a while after it's born. My husband used to change our Calvin's nappy.'
Pearl was the same age as Stevie, forty-five. She'd separated from her husband almost twenty years ago, after producing one son. But neither she nor her husband had ever bothered to put divorce proceedings in place. Pearl knew that if Stevie were to propose she'd get the ball rolling the following day. She'd loved him for years and very much wanted to be his wife.
Her son had lived with her until he was eighteen, although he'd seen his father whenever he wanted to as the marriage had floundered without rancour on either side. But Calvin had his own life now, and was a regular in the army, so Pearl only saw him a couple of times a year.
âYou told me he never done nappies willingly,' Stevie protested, frowning at Pearl.
Talk of husbands helping out with their newborn children always made Stevie feel uneasy. He was uncomfortably aware he could have done more to support Pamela when their son had been born, and then things might have turned out differently. When she'd moaned about Christopher's constant crying he'd told her to pull herself together and get on with it. When she'd complained her nerves were playing up, and she couldn't think straight, he'd told her to get off her backside and be a wife and mother, because she was getting fat and lazy.
He'd never seen his father lift a finger to help his mother, whether it was caring for kids or household chores. In fact, Stevie had never seen his father work willingly at anything at all. Jimmy Wild would always skive and sponge if he could.
At the age of twenty-one Stevie had selfishly assumed babies were women's work, and Pamela should naturally be able to cope with hers. But if he'd ever guessed how she'd go about coping with their fretful son, he'd have nursed Christopher to sleep every night rather than risk him being harmed.
For twenty-four years Christopher had been the most precious thing in his life and, although Stevie knew it was time for them to go their separate ways, nobody could take his son's place in the centre of his heart.
Soon they'd not only be working but living apart, and it was the right thing for both of them, Stevie accepted that. Yet still he felt a pang of possessiveness at the thought of somebody else being more important to Christopher than he was.
âMy husband might not have liked doing nappies.' Pearl suddenly took up the cudgels again. âBut he did it all the same. And that's what a woman wants: a bit of support now 'n' again without too much of a song 'n' dance going with it.'
âSounds like you wished you'd stayed with him,' Stevie muttered petulantly.
âNah ⦠couldn't have done that. Couldn't stand that smell no longer.'
Chris and Grace stared at her before exchanging a glance of suppressed amusement.
âHe was a taxidermist,' Pearl explained. âBleedin' stinky stuffed animals in every room in our house, there was. Five years of it and I'd had enough!' She wafted a hand in front of her nose.
âI think it's a good thing for men to lend a hand with children,' Grace spluttered, to stop herself hooting with laughter. âIt's handy for you both to know about rearing babies just in case one of you gets poorly at some time,' she gasped out. âAnyway, if you pull together it makes life easier all round â¦'
âBear that in mind, son,' Stevie said with mock warning, wagging a finger at Chris. But he glanced fondly at Grace, hoping that she
was
his future daughter-in-law. She wasn't just pretty, and nicely spoken, but wise and kind too.
âAnyhow, I've got a problem with me sink out the back, come and take a look.' Stevie pushed back his chair. âThe tap's playing up. Let the girls finish their cups of tea,' he added, as Chris beckoned Grace to accompany him and explore the caff's interior.
Stevie gripped a stiff tap set over an old butler sink in a small storeroom. It wouldn't budge, so he tried the other one next to it but had no luck there either.
âNeed to get a pair of Stilson's on them taps,' Chris said, taking over trying to force the brass crossheads to turn.
âRob's on the warpath,' Stevie said without preamble. He'd wanted to get his son on his own to tell him the bad news. âHe came round this evening, looking for you, just after you went out. Seems you've been taking time off without him knowing and the job's fallen behind again.'
Chris shot a glance at his father. There was no point in denying it. âWho told him I've been taking time off?'
âDon't need to be told, do he? He's got eyes in his head. He went round Whadcoat Street one afternoon to pop in on Matilda then meet the council wallah and do a valuation. Vic said you'd just that minute gone off up the shop, or something equally daft, trying to cover for you. Rob ain't stupid, son, neither's the council wallah, and if you want to keep your job as foreman for Wild Brothers, you need to bear that very much in mind. Rob pays you a good, regular wage and you're gonna need that if you're thinking of settling down.'
Chris nodded slowly, instinctively glancing Grace's way. He accepted he'd got banged to rights. âI'll have a word ⦠apologise â¦' he said gruffly.
âYeah, do that. I slipped in that you've been having a spot of woman trouble â¦' Stevie indicated Grace over his shoulder. She and Pearl were still sitting at a table, chatting over a cup of tea. âI didn't elaborate on any of it, 'cos that's fer you to do, not me.' He watched as his son kept his eyes down, loosening the cold tap enough for a few drips of water to plop into the stained sink. âAll sorted out now? No more need to take time off?' Again Stevie's head jerked backwards at Grace.