Authors: Margaret Mayhew
âDo you think so?' Anne said curiously. The thought had never occurred to her.
âOh yes. You were born at just the right time, weren't you? Very lucky. You didn't mind my asking, dear, did you? I was just wondering . . .'
Her mother met her at the station in the Morris and Barley was sitting on the back seat. He wagged his tail furiously and licked her face.
âI'm sure he knew you were coming, darling. He's been waiting by the front door all day. Remember how he always used to do that when you came home from boarding school? Is that your new uniform?'
âIt's all we have at the moment. Not the proper thing. We're supposed to be getting tunics and skirts eventually. Horrible, isn't it?'
âWell, I can't honestly say that that raincoat is the most flattering garment I've ever seen. Or the beret! It looks much too big for you. To think you used to grumble about your school hat.'
âThanks, Mummy! That makes me feel a whole lot better!' Anne pulled off her beret and ran her fingers through her hair. âWe're meant to wear the disgusting things going on leave. One of their hundreds of dotty rules.'
âWell, you can change into your own clothes the minute
you get home. There's a letter from Kit, by the way. He sounds fine. They're billeted in some frightfully grand place, apparently.'
They drove out of the station yard and took the familiar route that would bring them to Beechgrove. Her stomach began to flutter in anticipation again. She watched the scenery go by â sheltered, wooded slopes so different from the open, flat land round Colston.
âSnow's been pretty bad here too, by the looks of it.'
âPerfectly dreadful. We've had more burst pipes in the house. Have you managed to keep warm?'
âJust about. At least it's warm in the kitchens.'
âI wish you weren't doing that sort of work, darling. Can't you change?'
âDon't you start, Mummy. People keep
on
saying that to me.'
âWell, it seems such a waste. You had an expensive education at St Mary's. Surely they could make better use of you?'
Anne thought of ASO Newman's sharp remarks. âIt's not very likely at the moment. Anyway, didn't someone say that an army marches on its stomach? Same with the RAF, I suppose, though you'd think they'd fall out of the sky after some of the food.'
âI think you've put on a bit of weight.'
âWe all have. It's the stodge.'
âAnd you look a bit tired.'
âThey work us pretty hard.'
âWell, you must have a good rest while you're here. Catch up on some sleep. I hope Fred and Betty don't disturb you.'
âFred and Betty? Who are they?'
âOur tame evacuees. Have you forgotten? Well, not all that tame, unfortunately. In fact, they're both little menaces. You wouldn't believe the way they seem to have been brought up. Actually, they haven't been brought up at all â that's the trouble, poor things. It's not their fault. Do you know they'd never seen an inside lavatory before,
or a proper bath with taps, or used a toothbrush. And they were absolutely infested with head lice.'
âSo were some of the new WAAFS.'
âGood heavens, were they really? Whatever sort of girls are they recruiting now? I do worry about you sometimes, Anne . . . I didn't really want you to join up, you know. It would have been so much better if you could have done something from home.'
âWhat sort of thing?'
âI don't know . . . VAD work. Something like that.'
âBedpans and blanket baths? No, thanks. I'd sooner be peeling potatoes.'
She had forgotten all about the two evacuees from somewhere in the East End of London, packed off with thousands of other kids to escape the bombing that had never happened.
âWhat room are they in?'
âI put them in the old sewing room. They can't do much damage in there. I'm afraid I've let them play with some of your old things in the nursery, darling. I didn't think you and Kit would mind too much. Poor little wretches, I don't think they've ever had any real toys to play with.'
She did mind, in fact, but she didn't say so. Just now the old things in the nursery seemed rather important. She didn't want other children touching them, even though that might be mean-spirited.
The house was waiting for her â solid and unchanged and like a faithful friend. On all her home-comings she had always felt this deep satisfaction at the sight of it standing there at the end of the drive, mellow, beautiful and unchanging.
She went up to her bedroom. That, too, was just the same and very little changed from her childhood. She had insisted on keeping the Three Little Pigs curtains and the Miss Muffet rug and the nursery rhyme picture on the wall. Her collection of china animals still stood on the chest-of-drawers, together with the photographs of Barley's predecessor, Honey, and of her old pony, Rocket.
The faded rosettes that she and Rocket had won together at local gymkhanas hung from ribbons on the wall. Her old books were on the shelves:
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, The Wind in The Willows, Little Women, What Katy Did at School, The Water Babies, The Secret Garden
 . . . Everything was in its usual place. Except Eliza. Where was Eliza? She should have been sitting, propped against the cushion, in her corner of the window-seat.
Anne went along to the nursery. She could hear noises coming from behind the closed door â heavy thuds and a whacking sound. She opened the door. A boy of about seven sat astride Poppy, the rocking horse. He had short dark hair that stuck up in an untidy crest and his thin legs dangled from baggy grey shorts. He was jerking at the reins and making Poppy rock so violently that she was jolting across the floor on her wooden stand. And all the time he whacked at her with a stick.
â
Stop that this minute!'
He turned his head towards her, startled at first and then defiant. And he went on faster and harder. Thud, thud, thud. Whack, whack,
Whack
! Anne could see the weals he had made on poor Poppy's hindquarters. She went over and grabbed hold of the rocking horse's ears, bringing it to such an abrupt stop that the boy fell forward onto its neck.
âWot yer do that fer?' His small, sharp face was aggrieved and indignant.
âDon't you dare treat my rocking horse like that! Just look at the damage you're doing!'
She snatched the stick from his hand, opened the window and threw it out into the garden.
He looked at her sulkily. âIt's not yer 'orse. It belongs ter the lidy.'
âThis is my nursery. Mine and my brother's. I live here.'
âNo, yer don't,' he scoffed triumphantly. âI never seen yer before. There's only the lidy and the toff lives 'ere. That's right, ain't it, Betty?'
âThat's right, Fred.'
A small girl, thin and pale as the boy, but a little younger, was sitting on the floor by the nursery fireguard. Her legs were stuck straight out in front of her and on her lap she held a helpless Eliza who was having the clothes wrenched from her cloth body. Her plaits had already been undone and her black hair straggled wildly about her painted face.
âAnd that,' said Anne, fuming, âis my doll.'
She rescued Eliza from the child's grasp and gathered up the scattered clothes and the red hair ribbons. Betty began to wail loudly, screwing up her face and drumming her heels on the linoleum.
âShe took my dolly! That lidy took my dolly, Fred, and I never done nuffink!'
Anne ignored her and looked, appalled, round the nursery. Nothing, so far as she could see, was in its proper place. Every cupboard door hung open and toys and games had been dragged out and left higgledy-piggledy all over the floor. Kit's precious lead soldiers lay about like battlefield casualties, some with limbs or heads missing. Engines and carriages, railway track and clockwork cars were all jumbled up together. The old Snakes and Ladders board was upside down in a corner with its spine split, and counters, jacks, bricks, pick-up-sticks, playing cards and marbles were scattered all over the room. The front of her doll's house stood open, its contents a shambles. Only the books in the bookcase were undisturbed.
As she stood looking at it all in silence, tears came into her eyes. The girl had stopped wailing and was staring at her, her mouth still open wide, her nose running. The boy watched slyly from the horse. Anne turned and left the room, holding Eliza in her arms. As she closed the door behind her she heard the thud, thud of Poppy being ridden hard once more.
She went into Kit's bedroom and stood by the window, trying to stop the tears. Through them, with watery vision, she saw that the snowdrops were out round the beech trees
at the far end of the lawn, showing bravely through the snow. The terrace where she and Kit had sat and talked that night of their dance was just below the window. It was hard to imagine that now . . . that warm summer evening before the war had started, before any of it had begun.
She found a handkerchief, blew her nose hard and wiped her cheeks. She did not know why she minded so very much about the things in the nursery. After all, they were only toys and games that she had not touched for years. Kit would probably not have minded at all.
Come on, you chump, don't make such a fuss . . . Let the little beggars have some fun in their lives for once. We'll never play with any of those things again
. She could hear him saying it as clearly as if he were standing beside her, and maybe he would have been right. She should have felt sorry for Fred and Betty â underprivileged, deprived, torn from their mother and sent to a strange place far away â but instead she hated them for what they had done. They had wrecked something magical that she and Kit had shared. Even if everything were sorted out and mended and restored to its rightful place, the nursery could never be the same again.
She sat down on the window-seat and re-dressed Eliza in her torn clothes and re-plaited her hair carefully, making bows with the red ribbons.
Kit's room, at least, seemed unplundered. His balsa wood aeroplanes were still safely suspended on their strings from the ceiling . . . the Lockheed, the Ryan, the Fokker, the Ford Tri-Motor, the Junkers JU52, the Tiger Moth, which she supposed must be like the one Johnnie Somerville had bragged about owning, and others in perpetual flight whose names she had forgotten. She looked round the room, making an inventory. The model cars were still ranged in their places along the shelves, the blue-bladed Eton Eight oar was on the wall, together with all the Wet Bob trophies: the winning pennants, the boat lists, the calendar with his name as Captain of Boats. She
got up and went over to look at them again. Stuck against the wall at the back of the chest-of-drawers, where he had left them, were the leavers' photographs given by Kit's friends at the end of last summer term. She looked along the row of smiling faces â Villiers, Atkinson, Stewart, Latimer and Parker-Smiley. Villiers, Kit's best Mend, was in the same regiment and must be in France with him. Atkinson and Stewart were in the army too. Maybe they were in France as well. Latimer was probably in the RAF now â in bombers, Kit had said. She had no idea which of the services little Charlie Parker-Smiley had joined. He was grinning away at her. Funny how good he had been at the waltz.
She could hear her mother calling from downstairs. Tea was ready. As she left she locked the door and took the key with her. Whether Kit would mind or not, while he was away she was going to see to it that his room was safe from Fred and Betty.
When she returned to RAF Colston at the end of her leave, she found that Croesus Squadron had been sent to France. The station was full of strange faces belonging to the replacement squadron and with their new type of fighters. As well as the Hurricanes roaring overhead there were now Spitfires too.
Pearl was mournful. âUpped and flew away, just like that. All those lovely millionaires gone! Here, your Johnnie left you this note. Gave it to me in the Mess when I was serving his mulligatawny. I went all weak at the knees when he spoke to me.'
âHe's
not
my Johnnie, Pearl.'
âMore's the pity, dear. You must have a screw loose.'
Anne opened the envelope. The writing paper inside was headed Officers' Mess, RAF Colston. Beneath that Johnnie had scrawled one line:
Dinner when I get back? Johnnie
. She tore the paper up and threw the pieces away.
THE SNOW MELTED
away at last leaving a messy legacy of slush and mud. It was still cold but the days gradually grew longer and brighter and the sun shone with a forgotten warmth. Buds began to show on the branches and new grass to spring up on the station lawns.
The remainder of the WAAF uniform and equipment arrived â with the exception of greatcoats, but with spring so near this seemed less important. Far more disappointing was the fact that so few of the garments seemed to fit properly. The airforce blue tunics and skirts were either large, medium or small and their felt-like material wasn't a patch on Susan's privately-tailored uniform. The clumping black lace-up shoes did not come in half sizes and produced blisters, and other clothing issued â more
blackout
bloomers, knicker linings, thick grey stockings, vests, bright pink brassieres and suspender belts and striped pyjamas â were greeted with wails of horror. The kitbags, intended to hold it all, were so heavy when loaded up that they could scarcely lift them off the floor let alone swing them over their shoulders as the men did. Vera succeeded after several tries but fell clean over backwards as she did so and lay on the floor, giggling helplessly. As for the caps with their over-risen piecrust crowns and shiny black visors that jutted out like a bird's beak, hardly anybody liked them.
Winnie, though, felt thrilled when she first put on her uniform. She adjusted the tunic belt by its brass buckle, fingered the four patch pockets and the shiny buttons and patted the puffy crown of her cap. Gloria was standing on a chair, trying to see herself in the mirror hanging on the
inside of her locker door. Winnie had no idea what she herself looked like but she didn't care all that much. It was enough to have a proper uniform at last. She twisted her head to see the patch she had sewn onto her left shoulder â the RAF eagle with wings outstretched and the A for Auxiliary beneath.