Authors: Margaret Graham
Lady Margaret was smoking at the top of the steps, watching her. âIs everything all right, Evie?' she called.
Evie replied, âYes, I just thought I saw someone I knew.'
Lady Margaret stubbed out her cigarette. âIt's too cold for me, come and let me help you pour the broth into the tureen.' They went back into the kitchen and it was half an hour before Evie had time to walk along to the laundry. There was Millie, chattering to her staff, her sleeves rolled up, and steam soaking her hair.
By the morning of Christmas Eve there was an inch of snow, with more threatening. Veronica and Evie worked hard, anything to make the seconds, minutes, hours pass. âThey're coming,' they said, every time they passed one another. Evie's mam and da were smiling all the while too, as her mam looked after the villagers' children in the garage and her da helped Stanhope, the blacksmith, in the workshop with the men.
They would be here for lunch.
Evie thought she'd die with the tension. They were coming. There'd been no telegram bearing dreadful news about Mr Auberon, and he would have let them know if the men were hurt rather than let them wait for a letter, so they were coming and she allowed herself to think of something other than the present. They were coming, and soon she'd feel Si's arms around her, his lips on hers. She'd stroke his hair and hear his voice, and Jack would be here too, lovely lovely Jack.
Millie sang in the laundry and nipped out to the garage to see Tim. âYour da's coming,' she cooed as she brought him into the kitchen for a biscuit. âGo to your Auntie Evie, she'll sing to you.' Evie couldn't because she was up to her eyes preparing lunch, but she said she'd sing later, round the Christmas tree with Tim's da and everybody else, as the darkness fell.
Lunchtime came and went and they had not come. Now Evie and her da, who was not on his shift at Auld Maud until 2 a.m., walked up and down the drive in the bitter chill. The train was delayed, that was all. It was just delayed. Over tea her mam said the same. âThey are delayed, that's all. Just delayed.'
Lady Veronica joined them in the kitchen and prepared vegetables for dinner, with Lady Margaret's help. Veronica said to Evie, âThe train will have been delayed, Richard says that we would have heard otherwise.' Her voice was soft when she talked of her husband, and there was a light in her eyes that had been increasing since his return. Mrs Moore had said that sometimes two people needed to be thrown together to really get to know one another.
Simon's da, Alec, arrived from his shift at the pit and together he and Evie's da smoked cigarettes and patrolled the drive, the snow glinting under the hunter's moon. There'd be some rabbits snared tonight. Evie and Lady Veronica joined them after dinner had gone up. Lieutenant Jameson and Captain Neave loitered on the steps smoking their pipes, and over by the cedar others were swinging their arms to keep the circulation going. Harry was with them. He had a greatcoat on, and his head-warmer knitted by Annie, and was puffing on his pipe in spite of Dr Nicholls thundering, âAnd what's the point of getting you better if you're taking that rubbish into your lungs?' But for men who'd faced far worse it was water off a duck's back.
âYou would have heard if there was anything amiss,' Captain Neave told Evie as she stopped next to him, slapping her hands together. Veronica joined them, her shawl wrapped tightly around her. The lights were flooding from the house, and somewhere on the ground floor a few voices were singing âSilent Night'.
An owl was hooting. No, more than one. The moon cast long shadows over the lawn and in the hedges creatures rustled. From the house came a silence, then a scream and a groan, nothing out of the ordinary here. The choir began again. The owls hooted, again. A door slammed shut. Millie joined them. A fox barked, and then there it was, the sound of crunching, carried on the light cold breeze.
The officers lifted their heads, their faces tense, their pipes glowing. Over by the cedar tree the men stood motionless, listening. Footsteps, or was it the telegraph boy's bicycle? Evie and Veronica held hands, so tightly.
No one moved, or breathed, but everyone looked, straining to hear, and see.
They saw pinpricks of light from cigarettes. Then they came, walking abreast in a line. Their three men, Simon, Jack and Auberon, shoulders hunched, feet dragging, greatcoats flapping, caps at an angle, and then another figure. Roger. Veronica and Evie ran towards them, and after a moment, Millie too. They ran and ran and at last they were in their arms, and it didn't matter that the stench of mud and death clung to their men's clothes and skin, and filled the women's lungs, for they were here. It didn't matter that their faces were drawn, pale and exhausted. They had not really believed that they would ever see them again.
âWe came straight here,' Simon murmured. âWe stink but we wanted to come straight here. We have to leave in two days because it took so long to get to you.'
His lips were on Evie's, and nothing else mattered. She wouldn't think of anything, not the lice she could feel moving beneath her hands, not the smell of war. She was used to that. What mattered was that he was home, they were all home, and for two days they'd be safe. âI love you with all my heart,' she said against his mouth, and allowed joy to overwhelm her.
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author's and publisher's rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
Epub ISBN: 9781448184118
Version 1.0
Published by Arrow Books 2014
2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1
Copyright © Margaret Graham 2014
Margaret Graham has asserted her right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.
This novel is a work of fiction. Apart from references to actual figures and places, all other names and characters are a product of the author's imagination and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
First published in Great Britain in 2014 by Arrow Books
Arrow Books
Random House, 20 Vauxhall Bridge Road,
London SW1V 2SA
Addresses for companies within The Random House Group Limited can be found at:
www.randomhouse.co.uk/offices.htm
The Random House Group Limited Reg. No. 954009
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 9780099586838