Read Women on the Home Front Online
Authors: Annie Groves
âWell that's a bleeding relief!' Grace shouted with intentional coarseness. â'Cos
we're
working class!' She spun away from her mother in disgust. âMy dad, your husband, worked in a factory all his life, in case you've forgotten.'
âSee!' Shirley wagged a finger. âBefore you started knocking about with one of the Wilds you wouldn't have talked to me like that. Your language, miss!'
âOh, for Heaven's sake,' Grace muttered. A moment later she'd swung back to her mother, unable to contain her annoyance. âYou're a snob and a hypocrite, d'you know that? Nice as pie to Matilda to her face, weren't you, then behind her back tearing her family to shreds. When we went to see her, why didn't you tell her straight out that she lives in a dump, instead of sitting drinking tea with her then running her down afterwards behind her back?' Grace paused for breath. âAnd why didn't you tell her straight out you'd sooner sit in listening to the wireless than go to Islington and join in her street party on Coronation Day?'
âYou can't tell me Whadcoat Street isn't a dump, and who in their right mind would want to socialise with people like that?'
âI would!' Grace shouted. âAnd I'm going to.'
âWell, you lower yourself if you want to. I only went to see her and have a cup of tea with her to be polite. Didn't really fancy a cup, I can tell you.' Shirley's face was a study of distaste. âAnd I'm only thinking of you and your future, miss, when I say stay away from them. I don't want to see you making more mistakes.' Shirley adopted a pious look. âYou know I've always been pleasant to Christopher. First time he came here I invited him in for a cup of tea to thank him for bringing us home. I know my manners.'
âAnd he's always been pleasant to you, 'cos he knows
his
manners,' Grace returned pithily. âSo his dad can't be that bad, can he? He's obviously brought him up properly.' She barely paused before adding, âYou've not even asked how Stephen Wild is, have you? Yet, know what? Every time I saw Chris's dad he would always say to me,
send yer mum me best, won't you, luv
.'
Shirley reddened. âYou told me yesterday he's well on the mend, and will soon be out of hospital. Can't be asking about his accident all the time. Anyhow, I've never said anything bad about Christopher's dad. His mum ⦠now that's a different matter,' she finished in a mutter and, aware she was defeated, stomped off down the hall to the kitchen. âCould do with a bit of help getting tea ready,' she called irritably.
Grace quickly pegged her coat on a hook on the wall then followed her mum into the kitchen with an urgent question hovering on the tip of her tongue. âDid you know Chris's mum?' she burst out.
âKnew
her
alright,' Shirley said with a nod. She stuck an old pot under the cold tap and half-filled it with water.
Grace was quiet for a moment while digesting that exciting news. Her annoyance at her mother was ebbing away on realising Shirley held useful information. When her mother thrust a peeler at her, and a colander filled with potatoes, she automatically started to prepare them. âChris was only a baby when his parents split up.'
âYes, I know,' Shirley replied, cutting into a cabbage and digging out the stalk. âBarely a year they were married and nobody believed that Christopher was a honeymoon baby, if you know what I mean.' She gave her daughter an arch look. âBeing as they took the trouble to get married â quite a lavish do it was â it surprised a lot of people when they divorced. But I knew it wouldn't last.'
âHow did you know that?' Grace speared a glance at her mother while halving the peeled potatoes and dropping them into the water in the pot.
âFriend of mine told me that Pam Plummer was always more interested in Rob Wild than his brother, Stevie. Can't blame her for that. We all had a pash for Rob Wild ⦠regular heartthrob he was. Even when he was a young hound he had a business and a flash car and plenty of money. But Pam should have left him alone once she married his brother.'
Grace overlooked her mother's farcical, selective snobbery where the Wilds were concerned. A comfortable lifestyle, with a hound of a husband, obviously trumped middle-class morals every time. She had an unexpected opportunity to find out more about Christopher's mother, and that was far more important to Grace than taking her mother to task again for being a hypocrite. Just yesterday, when he'd brought her home, Chris had again seemed swayed towards resuming his search for Pamela.
âHow did your friend know Pam was still after Rob Wild?'
âShe made it her business to know,' Shirley said with an emphasising grunt. âFor a while, people reckoned that Vicky Watson had Rob Wild hooked. She certainly thought so, so she kept tabs on the opposition.'
âVicky Watson?' Grace breathed. âYou knew her?'
âYeah. Went to school together.'
âWhere is she now, do you know?'
Shirley shot a suspicious look at her daughter. âWhy're you so interested in Vicky Watson?'
âJust ⦠Chris mentioned her 'cos she was his mum's bridesmaid.'
âYeah, she was,' Shirley confirmed, with a smile of recollection. âThat's how she knew Pam liked Rob. Pam and Vicky were good friends for a while and confided in one another. But Vicky found out that Pam, even after she was married to Stevie, was chasing after Robert on the sly.'
âAnd how did Robert feel about it all? Was he married then?'
âHe was involved in a really bad fight,' Shirley said, putting down her knife to stare into space. âNothing to do with Stevie being jealous or anything like that, 'cos Rob never showed any interest in his sister-in-law,' she immediately explained, having seen the startled look in her daughter's eyes. âRob was beaten up by gangsters. Anyhow, as soon as he was well enough he surprised everybody and married Faye Greaves and nobody knew much about her as she'd lived in Kent most of her life. Vicky was not pleased about that, I can tell you.'
âSo where's Vicky now?'
âA few years later she got married to a fellow worked for the Water Board, and they moved to Clapham. David Green seemed a weird sort for Vicky. He was a lot older than her, and it was a surprise when they got together. But Vicky and me sort of kept in touch. I used to send her Christmas cards, then during the war it tailed off.' Shirley placed the pot of potatoes on the gas stove. âUsed to visit her sometimes and we'd go down to the Lyons corner shop and have a cake and a cuppa and a natter about old times.'
âSo you've got her address â¦'
âSomewhere, I expect. I used to have lots of friends.' Shirley pouted out a sigh. â'Course the war put paid to a lot of it ⦠moving about ⦠getting evacuated ⦠you lost interest in people â¦' She suddenly turned around to find she was talking to herself.
âWhat's so urgent that it can't wait till after I finish work this evening?'
Apart from his wife, few people spoke to Robert Wild in that tone of voice and got away with it. But it wasn't only Walter Purvis's attitude that was pissing Rob off; he was also seriously narked because it had taken many weeks to get in contact with the crafty git.
Various toffee-nosed secretaries had told him that Mr Purvis was on holiday, or out on site, or in another department, or any other old pony Walter had told them to put forward as an excuse. The fact that the Council's Chief Contracts Manager had been determinedly incommunicado had convinced Rob the man knew why he was after him. He gave him a hard stare. âGet in the car for a minute,' he said icily. âI need to talk to you.'
Walter Purvis slid onto the passenger seat and dumped his battered briefcase down on the floor. âI've had to delay an important contract meeting on the second phase of Whadcoat Street to come here,' he complained, shoving his poplin shirt over his paunch and into the straining waistband of his trousers. He knew enough about Rob Wild's reputation for dealing with those who crossed him not to ignore his summons. It had arrived in an envelope that morning, addressed to his home rather than his office, and he'd been infuriated to receive it.
âDelayed it, have you? That's quite convenient,' Robert drawled. Walter was already sweating from the July heat; Robert knew that in a moment the fat creep would be in a real lather. âWhat I've got to say is gonna have some bearing on your contract meeting so listen very carefully.'
Purvis frowned at him and shoved his spectacles up the bridge of his nose. From behind the wire-rimmed glass his pale eyes blinked rapidly. He was a middle-aged man of about the same age as Rob, but there all similarity ended. Walter was overweight, lacking in personal hygiene, and thinning on top. Hardly a model Lothario, as no doubt his despising wife would have testified, yet he unfortunately had a liking for lithe young men, and the high life, that wasn't satisfied by the salary he drew. He thus supplemented it by taking backhanders in return for dishing out lucrative building contracts.
Robert had had a few illicit dealings with him previously. Those had gone very well and when Walter told him he was the only building contractor he trusted enough to accept sweeteners from Rob had tended to believe him. Walter was scrupulously careful in keeping everything under wraps and he paid him well.
Robert was now feeling annoyed that he'd been uncharacteristically naïve. It seemed Declan O'Connor had also cottoned on to Walter and the greedy bastard was trying to play both ends against the middle. Rob was about to impress on him it had been a bad move â¦
âI thought we had an agreement that the first phase of Whadcoat Street demolition was all mine.'
âIt is,' Walter said, perplexed. âYour brother started on it, surely, many months ago? Payments have been issued â¦'
âStevie's started down there alright, and thank you for the cheques,' Rob added politely. âAre you satisfied with the way things are going?'
âOf course â¦' Purvis looked apprehensive. He was starting to sense trouble.
âSo why get in the competition?'
âWhat?'
âA gang of pikeys have started work there too, just yards away. So do you want to tell me why my money suddenly isn't enough, when we had a gentlemen's agreement?' Rob watched the fellow's chins sag. He smiled. âOr perhaps you're intending to return my envelope ⦠you remember, don't you? It was the one I gave you, stuffed with tenners.'
Purvis's eyes swivelled to and fro as though he believed somebody might have overheard their conversation, even though Rob's voice had been sinisterly soft. âI don't know ⦠I've no idea â¦' He suddenly blinked rapidly. âIt's got to be Kennedy,' he hissed. âHe's been brown-nosing and telling me had everything under control,' he explained. âI recruited him some years ago when he was fresh out of college and brash as they come. He's not changed much.' In fact Walter had given him a job because he'd thought him easy on the eye. And that's all he had done, look, because he'd never be stupid enough to pursue a young work colleague, no matter how fit and handsome he was. âI've been giving him a bit of a free hand for the past six months, and he's been covering for me when I'm on holiday. If I hadn't been seconded to another department to oversee it while some soppy prat's gone off to have a nervous breakdown â¦'
âWell, you'd better shift yourself right back where you belong, Walter, and sort this out, or I will, and then who knows what stones might get overturned â¦' Rob suddenly realised the toffee-nosed sorts answering the phones hadn't been giving him the runaround after all. But he felt not an iota of guilt on realising that Walter had probably just told the truth about the pikeys being nothing to do with him. He reached to start the ignition but the surveyor made no move to get out.
Walter wanted to stay and talk now. âWhat's been happening down there?' he asked nervously. âThis Irish crew ⦠have they been causing any trouble I should know about? Anything that might draw attention?'
âYeah, you could say they've been causing trouble: my brother's in hospital, and there's a brawl down there every bleedin' day. So sooner or later the Black Marias are gonna be racing the ambulances to Whadcoat Street.' Rob smiled sardonically. â'Course that's nothing new for The Bunk, and I'd know 'cos I grew up there.' He suddenly leaned close to Walter and murmured, âI paid you well for this contract, so I reckon I'm due some of my money back, don't you? Let's say twenty per cent for all the inconvenience.'
âYou said your brother's in hospital,' Walter burbled, blanching. The thought of handing back some of his commission, as he liked to call it, was a secondary concern; his mind was racing ahead examining dreadful scenarios that might expose him as corrupt and depraved and put paid to his career and his marriage. Arrest, court, the boys who might be called as witnesses, were all lurid images whizzing through his mind. âDid these navvies beat your brother up and put him in hospital?' he gasped.
âMight just as well have done. He had a fall off a ladder and it wouldn't have happened if the thieving gits hadn't been stealing all Wild Brothers' equipment.'
âYou should have told me before,' Walter complained in a high-pitched squeak. âI could have nipped it in the bud â¦'
âWell, you know now, so sort it out,' Rob announced before giving Walter a withering look. âOr believe me I will sort it out and there'll be blood and guts all over the place ⦠yours included, if your wife finds out about your habits.'
Walter shrank back against the leather upholstery, seeking protection from that image.
âD'you mind?' Rob asked, and nodded at the car door. âI'm meeting my wife for a spot of lunch â¦'
âWho is it you're after, dear?' the old fellow asked again, cocking his good ear at Grace.