Read The Shop Girls of Chapel Street Online
Authors: Jenny Holmes
That's the last I'll ever see of him
, Violet decided. Her thoughts flew to her beloved aunt. âI'm sorry, Aunty Winnie,' she whispered with a final pull on her heart strings; sorry that the only solid link with her past had ended this way in bitter regret.
Violet was in the shop window, putting the finishing touches to Gertie's wedding dress that she, Ida and Muriel had slaved over for weeks. She spread the full skirt as wide as the small space allowed then tweaked the gathering at the shoulders, puffing out the sleeves for maximum width. Having arranged things to her satisfaction, she went outside to judge the effect.
âNot bad,' was Sybil's comment as she rounded the corner from Brewery Road and cast an appraising eye over the satin confection in the window.
âIs that all?' Violet prompted with a secret smile.
I hope Aunty Winnie's up there listening to this echo from the past
, she thought.
The practised seamstress gave her professional verdict. âYou've overdone the pearl trim around the cuffs for my liking, otherwise you've made a good job of it.'
âThank you, I'm glad you like it.'
âTell Muriel and Ida they'd better be on their toes, though.' Sybil was ready to walk on but not before she'd delivered a lively parting shot. âWe're putting new adverts in the
Herald
next week.'
âI'll let them know,' Violet promised.
âAnd
two
mannequins in our window.' On Sybil went without waiting for a reaction, head held high, humming a tune.
âGood â the race is hotting up,' Ida said when Violet passed on the latest development. She was like Boudicca at the head of her small female army, holding a sewing machine aloft and marching on.
âI'll make posters to put in Hutchinson's and Sykes' windows,' Muriel decided. âAnd we can pin one up on the noticeboard in the entrance to the library if they'll let us.'
This was a Friday in early September and Muriel had an appointment with the bank manager. She would be back before dinner, she said. Meanwhile, Ida decided she would man the shop while Violet made a few deliveries.
âMy bike's in the back yard,' she told her. âI want you to go to Hutchinson's with the blouse Lizzie ordered and then on to the Victory to drop off that bolero jacket with George Ambler â it's a surprise birthday present for his wife. Last but not least, there's the evening dress for Ella Kingsley. She's asked us to leave it in the mill office for Mr Kingsley to take home later on today.'
Violet took the bike and set off willingly up Chapel Street. By the time she reached the mill, her hair was flyaway and her cheeks flushed.
Doubting that she looked her best, she tucked her blouse more firmly into the waistband of her skirt and patted her hair as she approached the wide stone entrance to Kingsley's Mill, where overpowering noises and smells told her that spinning and weaving machines were going full tilt.
Tall buildings to either side of the street formed a wind tunnel down which thick smoke billowed from two tall chimneys that dominated the skyline â acrid, dirty stuff that clogged up the lungs, adding to other unhealthy conditions surrounding mill work. For a start, in the yard behind the elaborate stone façade there were insatiable, roaring furnaces that powered steam engines to drive the giant machines. Then there were the notorious spinning and weaving sheds â cavernous spaces that were so cold in winter that ice formed on the insides of the window panes and so stifling in summer that young loom cleaners and reaching-in workers fresh from school would often collapse from heat exhaustion.
Grateful as always that she didn't have to endure this kind of daily grind, Violet took her last delivery from the basket then ventured under the archway where the stench of raw wool hit her and the sound of pounding engines overwhelmed her.
âWho are you looking for, love?' a boiler man in grubby grey overalls shouted across the yard.
âMr Kingsley,' she called back.
âTry the General Office. They'll know where to find him.'
Violet thanked the man and followed the direction of his pointing hand. She knocked on the office door and heard a faint, âCome in.'
Violet turned the handle and entered to find a homely, middle-aged woman wearing horn-rimmed glasses seated at a desk. âI've brought a parcel for Mr Kingsley,' she explained.
âHe's out. Try the chemist's next to Brinkley Baths,' the secretary suggested, giving short shrift as she tapped busily at her typewriter.
Violet's heart sank to hear that her errand was taking her to a branch of Barlow's, but what else could she do other than carry on with her task? She went back out onto the street to wheel her bike a hundred yards further on until gold lettering on a shiny black background told her that she'd arrived at one of Colin Barlow's five shops.
Propping the bike against a lamp post, she squared her shoulders and entered an unfamiliar scene. Hundreds of glass jars lined the shelves behind the counter, each with a gold-edged label inscribed with an abbreviated Latin name: P:SANG:DRACON, TAB:SODA.MINT and PULV:BISMUTH:CO. Below the jars were small drawers with more mysterious chemical ingredients for the medicines made up by the dark-haired female pharmacist working intently in a glass booth to one side of the shop. Then there were shelves reaching the ceiling to all sides, stacked with tooth powders and toothbrushes, shaving soaps and talcum powder, razor blades, tweezers and Brilliantine and in the centre of the shop a stand displaying Max Factor face powders and rouge.
The pharmacist, who was young, fashionable and evidently short tempered, glanced up from her work rolling out a thin white paste from which to make prescription pills. âYes?'
âIs Mr Kingsley here, by any chance?'
âIn the back,' was the snappish reply.
Violet spotted a door to one side of the counter. âShall I knock?' she asked tentatively.
But just then the door opened and Thomas Kingsley emerged, followed by his wife, Ella. âNo need,' he said, taking in the sight of a confused Violet holding a parcel wrapped in tissue paper and tied with white ribbon that could only be for his wife. âFor you,' he told Ella before saying he had important things to do and quickly departing.
Ella Kingsley took delivery of her evening dress with a pleasant smile and a sincere thank-you. âIt was clever of you to track us down,' she told Violet. âWe called in here to finalize arrangements with Mr Barlow for an outing to the theatre.'
âAnd lo, speak of the devil!' Colin Barlow announced as he emerged from the back storeroom, dressed in a dark business suit with a grey silk tie. âAnd if it isn't our shrinking violet,' he smirked.
âI'll love you and leave you,' Ella Kingsley told him, pretending not to notice Violet's blushes. âThank you again for finishing my order in good time for our night out,' she said as she followed her husband onto the street.
Violet hurried after her but haste made her clumsy and she knocked Ida's bike sideways from the lamp post onto the road where it was almost run over by a tram. Violet watched helplessly and with frayed nerves as the tall tram rattled by.
âBy Jove, that was a close shave.' Colin Barlow came rushing out of the shop and pulled Violet back from the kerb. Then he made a big show of dusting her down and picking up the bike. âWhy not come back in and sit down until you've got over the shock?'
Violet shook her head and took the bike from him. âNo, thank you. I'll be getting back to the shop.'
âThis is a busy road. You have to watch your step.' As Violet crossed the road then got on the bike and started to pedal towards Kingsley's Mill, Colin Barlow strode alongside her. âLook out for the drain cover. And there's a stray dog ahead. Mind he doesn't bite.'
Barlow's solicitations made Violet wobble unsteadily, giving him time to step out in front of her and lay one hand on her handlebars, the other on her shoulder. âYou see â I was right to be worried about you. You should have let me look after you, as I suggested.'
Without saying a word, Violet shook his hand from her shoulder then waited for him to step aside.
He stood firm and smiled. âLittle Violet â has anyone told you how beautiful you are when you're angry?'
His nonsense rendered her speechless though inwardly she seethed. Who did Colin Barlow think he was, standing in her way and doling out compliments willy-nilly? Did he suppose she would be taken in, even for a second?
âBecause you are a truly lovely specimen in anyone's book,' he went on, shamelessly disregarding the curious glances of passengers in a double-decker bus and of the girl running to catch the stray dog. âYou know, Violet, your looks could be your fortune if you play your cards right.'
This was enough! Violet wrenched the handlebars free and launched out into the middle of the road before pedalling full steam ahead past Kingsley's. She was too furious to glance back to see what Barlow was up to now or to notice Ella Kingsley standing with a puzzled expression under the imposing portico entrance to her husband's mill.
If it happens again I'll be good and ready for him
, she swore to herself, cycling furiously up Canal Road.
No more perfume, no more compliments â I'll give Colin Barlow a piece of my mind and let him know exactly where he stands.
For a change the next evening, Violet agreed to meet up with Kathy at the Green Cross on Ghyll Road, where they would have one drink then catch the late evening showing of a new film at the Victory.
âTwo birds with one stone,' Kathy said with a wink as they sat at a copper-topped table sipping at their cold ginger ales. âYou can watch the picture then enjoy a tryst with Eddie afterwards.'
âThat's the plan,' Violet agreed brightly.
âIs that why you've come out in your best bib and tucker?' Kathy teased. She was the sort of girl who could chat with a friend at the same time as staying alert to the possibility of flirting with any likely lad who happened to catch her eye. This included Stan, drinking at the bar with a couple of football teammates, and Harold Gibson, sitting at a table near the window with Dick Thomson.
âI thought I'd make an effort.' Violet admitted that getting ready for her evening out had entailed extra time in front of the mirror. She wore a new red dress with cap sleeves and a skirt cut on the bias, with canvas, wedge-heeled sandals that she'd Blancoed a pristine white for the occasion. Her hair too was looking especially nice â glossy and groomed to frame her oval face with its touch of lipstick and rouge.
âStan, come over here,' Kathy called with a devilish air. She too had dressed up for the girls' night out in a flowery summer dress, nipped in at the waist by a thin white belt. Her hair was swept up at the back and waved on top, tumbling forward over one side of her forehead. âTell Violet how pretty she looks. Come on â it's not like you to be shy.'
âStop it, Kathy.' Violet's protest was mild and unworried. âLet poor Stan drink his beer in peace.'
Unable to resist the invitation, Stan and his two pals joined Violet and Kathy at their table, drawing up stools and bantering loudly.
âBlimey â it looks like you picked the whole blooming garden for that outfit,' Stan told Kathy as he sat close to Violet, backing her into a corner in order to make room. He nudged her with his elbow. âThis is snug, isn't it?'
âBut not for long,' she told him, still confident that their last talk had set new ground rules which Stan would keep to. âWe're off to the Victory in two ticks.'
âAnd we're off to the Assembly Rooms, aren't we, lads?' Stan's high spirits made him the centre of attention as usual. He raised his glass at Harold and Dick, who were crossing the bar to begin a game of darts. âWhere's Ida tonight, Harold? Has she let you off the lead for once?'
âHa-ha, very funny, Stan.' Harold knew better than to rise to the bait, though he gave Violet a long stare as he and his prospective father-in-law passed by. Soon the thud of darts into the board in the far corner told Violet that the game had begun.
âWe have to go,' she reminded Kathy, who by this time was perched on the knees of Les Craven, a tall, gangly lad who was learning to be an electrical engineer and who played goalkeeper in Eddie and Stan's team.
âYou see â we have to love you and leave you,' Kathy cooed at Les. âBut you can look out for me later at the Assembly Rooms if you like.'
âWill you be there too?' Stan asked Violet, who had stood up and was waiting patiently by the door.
She shook her head. âHave a nice time without me.'
âAnd don't forget to save me the last waltz,' Kathy called to Les as she followed Violet on to the street.
The chat with the lads had left them short of time so they hurried along Ghyll Road towards the cinema on Canal Road. When they passed Barlow's, Violet saw fit to recount her recent close shave with the tram. âAnother second and Ida's bike would have fallen clean under the tram wheels, then what would I have done?'
âBetter that the bike had got flattened than you,' Kathy reckoned. She had her money ready for her ticket and went ahead up the steps and into the shiny, well-lit foyer of the Victory. âAnd you mean to say, Mr Barlow saved your bacon?'
Violet put her right. âNo. He likes to think he did. But little did he know that he was the one who made me all fingers and thumbs in the first place. I was in such a rush to get away from him that I lost my balance and that's how it happened.'
Kathy slid her money across the desk to the cashier and took her ticket. âI don't blame you for keeping Colin Barlow at arm's length,' she sympathized. âHe's a nasty piece of work. I've heard he tries it on with a lot of the girls who work for him â usually the best looking ones. And lo â if they turn him down, they're out of a job before you can say Jack Robinson!'