Read The Nightingale Girls Online
Authors: Donna Douglas
Poor Granny. Millie wished she could give her something to crow about.
After several more dances, each less successful than the last, Millie excused herself to watch from the sidelines instead. In the middle of the dance floor, Sophia and her new husband David danced every dance in each other’s arms, hardly noticing the party going on around them.
‘Don’t they look happy?’ Seb joined Millie, handing her a glass of champagne.
‘Not as happy as your mother.’
‘Ah, yes. She does seem rather satisfied with herself.’
‘Like the cat that got the cream.’
Lady Claremont was holding court at the far end of the room, while the guests gathered like satellites around her, admiring and praising her.
‘And why not?’ Seb said. ‘She has her only daughter safely married off, and to a Marquess, no less. It must be such a relief for her. Now she only has her sons to worry about.’
‘I thought you had high hopes of Miss Farsley?’ Millie could already see Georgina out of the corner of her eye, circling them, ready to pounce. ‘You’ve been dancing with her all evening.’
‘Miss Farsley has very high hopes of me. Not the other way around, I assure you.’
‘She’s very beautiful.’
‘And even more snobbish than my mother.’ Seb shuddered. ‘If I were to marry her, I would be paraded endlessly in front of her wealthy American friends whenever they
came over to visit. I would become just another tourist attraction, like the Tower of London.’
Millie laughed, but Seb’s expression was serious. ‘I mean it,’ he said. ‘I’m nearly twenty-two. After this summer I will be at a loose end. Either I get married or I become a playboy.’
‘I can’t imagine you as a playboy!’
‘Neither can I,’ Seb agreed with a heavy sigh. ‘I’m far too sensible, I’m afraid.’
‘Seriously, what are you going to do when you leave Oxford?’ Millie asked.
‘I was thinking of becoming a journalist,’ he said. ‘I’ve always liked writing, and my father says he’ll use his connections to find me a job. Although to be honest I’d rather start somewhere more humble and work my way up. I don’t want everyone thinking I’ve got the job because of who I am.’
Millie understood only too well how he felt. Having a title and a life of privilege was wonderful, but it could make it difficult to make your own way in the world.
‘I’m sure you’ll make a wonderful journalist, Seb,’ she said.
‘Do you think so? I can’t really think of anything else I’d like to do. And I do so want to be useful.’
‘Good for you,’ she said warmly.
‘You’ve inspired me,’ he told her with a grin. ‘You’ve set an example to every lazy, over-privileged chap, encouraging us all to get off our backsides and make something of ourselves.’
‘Heavens, what a responsibility!’
‘I mean it,’ he said softly. ‘You are an inspiration, Millie. A real breath of fresh air.’ He surveyed the dancing couples for a moment. ‘So what’s the story with your Dr Tremayne?’ he asked suddenly.
She frowned at him. She’d almost forgotten he and William had met. ‘There is no story. I told you, William’s just a friend. Why do you ask?’
‘I thought he might be rather keen on you.’
‘I doubt it,’ Millie laughed. ‘And even if he is, I’m not keen on him.’
‘Aren’t you?’ Seb’s eyes were fixed on her.
‘Dr Tremayne has something of a reputation at the Nightingale,’ she said, evading the question.
‘Ah.’ Seb nodded wisely. ‘I suppose it’s for the best,’ he said. ‘Can you imagine what your grandmother would say if she found out you were stepping out with an impoverished junior doctor?’
‘I think by this stage she would be grateful I was stepping out with anyone,’ Millie sighed.
‘Perhaps we should get married?’ Seb said suddenly.
Millie laughed. ‘What?’
‘Why not? We’ve got a lot going for us,’ he said, still with his gaze fixed on the dance floor. ‘We get along all right together, don’t we?’
‘Most of the time,’ Millie agreed, trying to straighten her features.
‘And it would make our respective families very happy, I’m sure.’ He glanced her way. ‘What do you say?’
‘I say that if that’s the best marriage proposal you can come up with, then you really should work on your approach before you seriously pop the question to a girl!’
He pulled a face. ‘Who says I wasn’t serious? Think about it, Mil.’
She looked into his eyes. He looked so earnest that for a moment she almost believed him. But after knowing him for so many years, she knew how believable Seb’s practical jokes could be.
‘I really don’t think I need to,’ she replied.
Seb sighed dramatically, the very picture of a scorned lover. ‘Oh, well, I suppose it was worth a try. Tell you what, I’ll make a deal with you. If neither of us has found someone to marry us by the time we’re twenty-five, we’ll marry each other. How about that?’
This time Millie had to laugh. ‘I’m sure you’ll be snapped up by then, Sebastian.’
Right on cue, Georgina Farsley swanned up behind them. She looked radiant in eau-de-nil georgette that perfectly complemented her dramatic dark colouring.
‘There you are!’ she cried, as if she hadn’t been watching Seb’s every move for the past half hour. ‘I’ve been looking for you everywhere. Some of the gang are heading off for supper. We’re desperate for you to join us. Please say you’ll come?’ She was already tugging on his arm.
Seb turned to Millie. ‘Will you come too?’
Millie saw the sour look that flashed across Georgina’s face. ‘I’d love to, but I can’t. I have a late pass, but I still have to be ready for duty at seven tomorrow morning.’
‘Maybe I shouldn’t go either. After all, it’s bad form to leave your own sister’s wedding . . .’
‘You should,’ Millie encouraged him. ‘The bride and groom will be leaving soon anyway. Besides,’ she added in a low voice, ‘you need to practise being a playboy, remember?’
Later, up in Sophia’s old bedroom, Millie helped the bride take off her heavy wedding dress and change into her going away outfit, a fitted costume in brilliant emerald green.
‘I’m so nervous,’ she blurted out, as she sat at her dressing table while Millie unpinned her hair.
‘Why? The wedding’s over, everything went beautifully. What have you got to be nervous about now?’
‘You know. The wedding night.’ Sophia met her gaze meaningfully in the mirror. ‘I just wish I knew what to
expect,’ she said. ‘I tried to talk to Mummy about it, but she wasn’t very helpful. She told me I shouldn’t refuse my husband, no matter how much I might want to. But refuse him what?’
Millie hid her smile. While she had still never even kissed a man herself, she had learned a lot from listening to Sister Parker and the women on Wren ward. She now considered herself quite worldly wise, in theory at least.
‘Do you really want to know?’ she said.
Sophia twisted round to look at her. ‘What have you heard?’ she said. ‘Tell me, please. I need to know what to expect.’
Millie looked at her friend’s desperate face. ‘Well . . .’ she began, putting down her hairbrush.
By the time she’d finished, they were both giggling like schoolgirls. ‘Are you sure?’ Sophia said. ‘It all sounds so absurd.’
Millie nodded. ‘It is rather, isn’t it?’
Sophia reached for her hand. ‘Thanks for telling me anyway. I’m not nearly so terrified now.’ She smiled archly at Millie. ‘I expect it’ll be your turn soon!’
‘Don’t,’ Millie groaned. ‘Everyone’s been nagging me about marriage today. Even your brother’s been going on about it.’
‘Seb? What did he say?’
‘He proposed, would you believe?’ Millie picked up the hairbrush and started to brush out her friend’s long dark hair again. ‘Well, not really. He came up with a ridiculous plan for us to get married if no one else would have us. I think he wants to save me from ending up on the shelf. He can be such a joker sometimes.’ She smiled fondly to herself, then glanced up and saw Sophia’s serious expression in the mirror. ‘What?’
‘I don’t think he was joking, Millie.’
‘Of course he was!’
‘You really don’t know how he feels about you, do you?’ Sophia shook her head, marvelling. ‘Millie, my brother has been head over heels in love with you for years. But he’s always been too shy to do anything about it. Until now, apparently.’ She rolled her eyes. ‘I can’t believe Seb asked you to marry him like that. I suppose he thought if he pretended it was all a big joke he wouldn’t feel so bad if you turned him down. As if anyone would ever accept such an appalling proposal!’
Millie was barely listening to her. She was too dazed by the revelation. ‘I had no idea,’ she said.
‘You won’t say anything to Seb, will you?’ Sophia pleaded. ‘He’d be simply mortified if he thought I’d breathed a word. I just thought you ought to know.’
But Millie wasn’t sure she did need to know. She wasn’t sure how she was going to face Seb again, knowing he had feelings for her. Sophia’s revelation had changed everything between them. ‘But I don’t want to marry anyone,’ she protested.
‘I realise that, and so does Seb. You know he’d never put any pressure on you, don’t you? He truly admires what you’re doing. I think he’d wait for ever for you, if you asked him to.’ Sophia smiled and Millie tried to smile back, but her lips were frozen. She didn’t want him to wait for ever. She didn’t want him to wait at all.
Her father’s chauffeur Felix drove her back to the Nightingale. Millie sat deep in thought all the way, still shaken by Sophia’s revelation. She had genuinely never realised Seb had any feelings for her beyond just friendship. But now she did, she wasn’t quite sure how she felt about it.
She liked him. He was fun, clever, and witty without being unkind: gentle, sensitive and kind-hearted without
being utterly wet. He could quote poetry and discuss books as well as he could ride a horse or shoot. And he was good-looking, too. A season of dancing with oafs and listening to bragging bores had taught Millie that she could certainly do a lot worse. But even so . . .
As the Daimler turned the corner, it illuminated a couple embracing in the shadows of the looming hospital walls. They were in each other’s arms, kissing passionately, oblivious to everything around them.
Millie looked away, embarrassed, but not before the young man turned his face towards her and she caught a glimpse of his profile. It was William Tremayne.
‘Are you all right, my lady?’ She hadn’t realised she’d cried out until Felix caught her eye in the rear-view mirror.
‘Yes . . . thank you, Felix.’
Millie resisted the urge to look back over her shoulder until they’d reached the hospital gates. By then, thankfully, the couple had gone.
DORA TRAILED TO
the ward with a heavy heart to start her duty, already dreading the thought of seeing Alf again.
Even after three weeks, the sight of him in his blue striped pyjamas, his face florid against the starched pillows, turned her stomach.
Her only consolation was that he seemed as unhappy as she did.
‘Oh, it’s you,’ he greeted her unenthusiastically when she arrived to do his TPRs. ‘What do you want?’
She ignored him, reaching for the thermometer over his bed. He eyed her warily. ‘What are you doing?’ he demanded.
‘Taking your temperature, what does it look like?’ She shook the thermometer with a flick of her wrist.
‘Isn’t there anyone else who can do it? What about that blonde piece?’ Alf craned his neck, looking desperately around.
‘She’s on her tea break, so I’m afraid we’re stuck with each other.’ She jammed the thermometer into his mouth before he could reply.
She gingerly picked up his wrist to check his pulse, and felt him recoil. She watched him curiously as she counted the beats. His eyes were fixed on her, but not in the leering, overconfident way he usually looked at her. This time he looked almost . . .
Fearful.
That was it, she realised with a shock. Alf was actually afraid of her.
She remembered what her mother had said about Alf being terrified of doctors and hospitals. Now, not only was he in hospital, but he was also completely at her mercy. And after everything he had done to her, no wonder he was scared.
‘What you smirking at?’ Alf watched her, eyes narrowed suspiciously, when she took the thermometer out of his mouth. ‘What does it say? Is it bad news?’
She didn’t reply as she noted down the figures on his chart and hooked it back on the end of his bed.
‘You didn’t ought to go around grinning like a bloody Cheshire cat when there are sick people about,’ Alf grumbled.
‘And you didn’t ought to go around telling nurses what to do,’ Dora said, still smiling. ‘I could make life very uncomfortable for you, remember.’
She saw him pale, his face suddenly grey against the snowy pillows. That would give him something to think about, she decided.
And it gave her something to think about too. A way to make sure he didn’t hurt her sister again.
Helen had never been in love, but she was sure it must feel something like she felt now, sitting in the stalls of the Rialto, holding hands in the dark with Charlie Denton.
She had been nervous when he first suggested a trip to the pictures. She had never been to the cinema with anyone but her parents before, and then only on very rare occasions when it was a film of which her mother
approved. She had also heard the other girls talking about what went on in the back row, and she worried that Charlie’s hands might start to wander after the lights went down.
But he was the perfect gentleman as he had been every other time they’d been out together, buying her a box of chocolates and insisting on paying for the tickets.
‘I hope you don’t mind the stalls?’ he said anxiously.
‘It makes no difference to me where we sit.’ Helen would happily have sat on the floor as long as she was with him.
The last six weeks had been the best of her whole life. Every week she and Charlie would meet on a Saturday or Sunday afternoon. They would go to the park if it was fine, take a bus trip into town or go for tea at the local cafe. Helen knew the other girls would probably laugh at her – they liked to brag about the smart places they’d been with their boyfriends – but she was content just to be with him.