Always in My Heart (29 page)

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Authors: Ellie Dean

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Family Saga, #War, #Literary, #Romance, #Military, #Sagas, #Literary Fiction

BOOK: Always in My Heart
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Ron chuckled and filled a bowl with porridge. He sat down at the table, poured a cup of tea and began to eat. ‘There’ll be no prison and no police,’ he said, ‘and I’m old enough to stay out all night if I want to. Don’t worry about me, Peggy girl. I’ll not bring trouble to your door.’

Peggy finished feeding Daisy and deposited her in the playpen, then she went upstairs to check that the girls had stripped their beds properly so she could do the laundry.

‘I have good news,’ Ron said quietly as Peggy’s footsteps could be heard on the upstairs landing.

Cordelia leaned closer so she could hear him properly, and when he’d finished, she grasped his hand thankfully. ‘That’s wonderful, Ron,’ she said. ‘How soon do you think we’ll hear whether they’re on their way here, or have stayed in South Africa?’

‘My friend didn’t say, but I would imagine they’d be in touch fairly quickly if they were wanting a place to stay here.’

Cordelia could feel her face going pink as he looked into her eyes and patted her hand. ‘I must start organising their rooms just in case,’ she twittered, all of a dither. ‘Thank you, Ron.’

‘Now, you’re not to be upset if they’ve decided to stay in Cape Town,’ he warned.

‘Oh, I won’t,’ she said happily. ‘Not now I know they’re alive.’

Chapter Eighteen

The journey south seemed to take for ever. The seats were hard and uncomfortable, making it almost impossible to sleep, and there always seemed to be a baby crying somewhere or a toddler demanding attention. It was also frustrating not to be able to see out of the windows, and the stifling darkness soon became claustrophobic.

Jane eventually fell asleep, her head resting on Sarah’s shoulder as the train chugged and chuffed and rattled along the rails with a gentle sway. But for Sarah, plagued by the worry of what lay ahead, it was a very long, sleepless night.

Eventually there was a change in the rhythm of the wheels and the swaying lessened. They were slowing down. With the aid of the pale glimmer of light above her head, Sarah glanced at her watch and realised they must be nearing London, for it was almost five in the morning.

The women around her began to stir as if they too sensed that their journey was almost over, and as they woke their children and prepared for their arrival in London, there was a tangible sense of excitement. Many of them had relatives living in London or the suburbs;
some had people in Kent and Surrey; others would have to take another train and head further west. But the knowledge that they were nearing journey’s end seemed to give them added energy, and as they queued to use the lavatory and checked that everything was packed away, their voices rose in excitement.

Sarah nudged her sister awake and stood to stretch her tired, stiff limbs. The hours of sitting about had made her feel cold again, and she pulled on the coat, beret and gloves and wrapped the lovely soft scarf around her neck. The slightly unpleasant fug of too many people packed into a tight space was giving her a woozy head, and she was looking forward to fresh air and a bit of exercise to chase away the feeling of being stifled.

The train was going even more slowly now, the wheels clanking over the rails as the steam and smoke puffed more laboriously. Everyone was standing, reaching for cases and parcels, pulling on coats and hats, rounding up children and comforting babies.

Sarah pulled their cases from the overhead rack and handed Jane her gas-mask box. ‘We’re almost there,’ she said, ‘so when the train stops, let the others off first. I don’t want to lose you in the crush.’

‘Honestly, Sarah,’ sighed Jane. ‘I’m not a child, you know.’

Sarah smiled at her. ‘Of course you’re not,’ she said, ‘but humour me, Jane. We must stick together, otherwise
I
might get lost, and then where would we be?’

Jane grinned. ‘I know we have to catch a train down
to Cliffehaven, and I’m sure a porter could point me in the right direction. If we do get separated, then I’ll meet you by that train.’

Sarah digested this piece of wisdom and wondered if Jane’s experiences over the past few months had somehow helped her to reason better now she didn’t have her parents and Amah to fuss over her and make all her decisions. There had been fewer tantrums, certainly, and she’d knuckled down well into the routine of the ship, showing a much more adult and quieter side than ever before. Perhaps the doctors had been wrong – for Jane seemed to be slowly picking up the scattered pieces of her lost years and putting them together again in a coherent and mature order.

Sarah didn’t have time to mull over this thought, for the train had come to a halt, and there was a flurry of activity as everyone tried to cram into the aisle and get to the door. She checked they both had their cases and gas-mask boxes and that they’d left nothing behind before she took her sister’s hand and slowly joined the end of the shuffling crush. There were tearful goodbyes and promises to stay in touch, but the one thought that consumed them all was the feeling of having arrived at last.

They stepped down onto the platform and were instantly surrounded by the confusion of rushing people and deafening noise. Train whistles blew, steam billowed, and men and women scurried around piles of kitbags and suitcases, while children wailed and voices were raised to be heard above the unintelligible
announcements that blared into the great, echoing building from several loudspeakers.

Soldiers, airmen and sailors in the uniforms of many Allied countries stood in huddles or marched purposefully past porters who pushed laden trolleys and shouted to one another. Women and children gathered in groups, greeting or saying goodbye to their loved ones as steam hissed and shrill whistles blew. Girls in uniform hurried importantly across the vast concourse, while others stood about gossiping by the refreshment room, sipping tea and smoking cigarettes as they pretended not to notice the admiring glances and wolf whistles from a group of passing Australian soldiers.

Sarah and Jane took all this in as they approached a young woman in the black uniform and peaked hat of the railway company who pointed out where they should go next.

‘Thank goodness for the ladies of the WVS,’ murmured Jane as they headed for the wonderfully familiar sight of green uniforms and a makeshift canteen. ‘I never realised how big and confusing the station would be.’

Sarah was of the same opinion, and she was grateful for the clasp of her sister’s hand as they crossed the concourse and joined their fellow travellers. They were fewer in number now, and even as they accepted a very welcome cup of tea and dry biscuit, they could see some of their friends being greeted by relieved relatives and bustled away. Those who were familiar with London
had already left, and Sarah was beginning to fret that they might miss their connecting train.

Their names were called and they pushed their way to the front of the gathering. A middle-aged woman greeted them with a rather distracted smile as she ticked them off on her clipboard and handed them their rail passes. ‘There is a bus waiting outside that door over there, which will take you to Victoria Station,’ she explained. ‘Your train is scheduled to leave at noon – although if there’s an air raid, or the lines are up, it might be a bit delayed.’ She shot them a smile. ‘Don’t worry. You’ll get used to delays – there is a war on, you know.’

This seemed to be the stock explanation for most things, and Sarah smiled back at her. ‘How long will it take to get to Cliffehaven?’

‘About an hour and a half – unless there’s a holdup somewhere down the line. Do you have people waiting for you at the other end?’

‘We’re not sure,’ Sarah admitted. ‘But we do have two addresses to go to.’

The woman frowned. ‘That area has suffered a fair bit of air-raid damage being so close to the Channel, and some people have had to move out of their homes and find billets elsewhere. If you have any problems, then go straight to the nearest WVS homing centre. They will help find you accommodation and so on.’

Sarah hadn’t thought about the great-aunts having to move out, but she smiled her thanks, shifted the gas-mask box and handbag straps more firmly over
her shoulder and picked up her case. ‘Come on, Jane,’ she said with studied cheerfulness, ‘we can’t afford to miss that bus.’

They walked through the milling crowd and eventually found their way out to where a double-decker bus stood by the kerb with its destination written on a large piece of card that had been propped inside the windscreen. Another WVS woman was waiting to check their travel passes, and she bossily ordered them on board as if they were schoolchildren.

Staring through the grimy window, Sarah got the impression that London had been bleached of any colour, for wherever she looked there was nothing to gladden the heart – nothing vibrant or exotic to catch the eye. Even the people looked dowdy in their black, brown and navy blue as they picked their way over the scattered remnants of shattered buildings beneath a leaden sky, their faces wan, their eyes downcast as if they couldn’t bear to look at their surroundings.

The few surviving trees had a pale fuzz of new growth, but even that was coated in dust. Vast silver barrage balloons swayed above the colourless rooftops and piles of rubble that had once been buildings. Stacks of grubby sandbags guarded dark, gloomy doorways where men in black bowler hats with tightly furled umbrellas and briefcases dashed in and out. Skeletons of houses lay open to the elements revealing ash-coated furniture, ragged curtains and dun-coloured walls. There were grey pigeons pecking at the cracks in the broken pavements and dusty brown sparrows
darted between hurrying feet in search of food.

Sarah blinked away her tears as a wave of homesickness overwhelmed her. How she longed for the verdant jungles of Malaya where the birds were painted every colour of the rainbow and the flowers blossomed in gaudy, riotous brilliance, where the azure sky was matched only by the sea – and the beautiful saris of Amah and the other native women took on the vibrant hues of their tropical surroundings.

‘It’s all right,’ murmured Jane. ‘We’ll soon be at the seaside, and it’s bound to be nicer than this.’

Sarah squeezed her fingers, grateful for her comfort, but the woman in the station had said Cliffehaven had been hit by air raids – were they simply leaving one grey place for another? The thought was deeply depressing, and the longing for home, for family and for Philip weighed heavy on her heart.

The journey across a battered and fractured London was something of an eye-opener, for although Sarah and Jane had witnessed the effects of the heavy bombing raids in Singapore, they’d seen nothing like this. A shocked silence fell amongst the passengers as it slowly dawned on them that this once beautiful city had been ravaged by the years of war, and that although they had managed to escape the Japanese they now had to encounter another formidable enemy.

Delicate church spires tentatively poked their heads above the blackened ruins of houses, tenements and shops. Whole streets had been flattened, roads had been pitted and holed from bomb-blasts, and nearly
every window had been boarded up. Tarpaulins were stretched across roofs; chimneys had toppled leaving remnants behind like broken teeth. Parks had been turned into vegetable plots; deep trenches offered dubious shelter during air-raids; and where there had once been ornate gates and railings there were only scarred pillars.

But Sarah realised that although there was no colour in London, there was a vibrant spirit which manifested itself in the defiant messages that had been plastered on walls and taped into shop windows. ‘Open despite Hitler’, said one. ‘We’re with you, Churchill’, proclaimed another – and written on the wall below a boarded-up butcher’s was ‘Called up OHMS. Back as soon as we beat Hitler.’

Sarah returned Jane’s rather wan smile, but there was nothing either of them could say that would relieve the awful sickness for home, so they sat hand in hand, lost in their own separate thoughts until they reached Victoria Station.

Yet another woman from the WVS was waiting for their group, and she led them into the large concourse where they were once more assailed by noise and an endless stream and eddy of hurrying people. Their travel passes were checked again and they were directed to the appropriate platforms for their destinations.

Jane said goodbye to the small children she’d helped to teach, while Sarah exchanged addresses and promises to write with the women. And then they
were alone, waiting on the platform, their cases at their feet where the chill wind blew down the platform and stirred dust and bits of rubbish into tiny whirlwinds.

Sarah was just congratulating herself on how easy the journey had been so far when she heard the all-too-familiar shriek of the air-raid siren.

‘Where do we go?’ said Jane fearfully. ‘What do we do?’

‘We follow everybody else,’ said Sarah. ‘Grab your things and don’t forget your gas-mask box.’ She saw how everyone was making a beeline for one particular place and took Jane’s hand. ‘Stay close and don’t let go of me,’ she shouted above the terrible noise of the sirens.

They found themselves at the top of a flight of steep steps which disappeared into a dark tunnel. There was no turning back, for they were trapped in the crush of hundreds of people. Holding tightly to one another and their few possessions, they were almost carried down the steps and then deeper and deeper under the ground.

Sarah could hear the rumble and hiss of a train and felt the vibrations under her feet as it raced through the darkness nearby. She was terrified and knew Jane must be too, but they had no choice but to be swept along with the crowd.

As they reached the bottom of yet another long flight of stairs, the crowd thinned and the crush lessened as people began to disperse through the numerous tunnels that seemed to stretch in every direction. Disorientated
and frightened, the sisters clung together. What were they meant to do? Where were they supposed to go now?

A portly man wearing a dark uniform and a determined expression came up to them. ‘C’mon, girls, you can’t stand about ’ere gettin’ in the bleedin’ way,’ he shouted above the noise, his Cockney accent making it almost impossible for them to understand him. ‘Shift yerselves and find a place on the bleedin’ platform.’

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