a baby whose father’s never coming home. As for those folk
who look down their noses and cross the street when they
see you coming, well, all I can say is, good luck to ‘em and it makes more room on the pavements for the rest of us!’
Everyone else laughed. Judy looked at them and opened
her mouth in exasperation, but Polly cut in swiftly. Tm
sorry, Judy, I can’t write it all down. We’re just saying we’ll do all we can to help Jeanie, that’s all.’
‘But you laughed,’ Judy said. ‘You all did. You made a
joke and everyone else laughed, and I don’t know what it
was. It’s the worst thing of all,’ she added, ‘not knowing
what jokes are. I never get anything to laugh at now.’
There was a brief silence. Then Polly wrote down some
words quickly and Judy read them and flushed with anger.
She bit her lip, and then sighed and nodded.
‘Sorry, Poll. You’re right, I’m getting sorry for myself.
And it’s Jean we’ve got to be thinking about.’ She turned to
Jean. ‘Look, I was wondering - if you want to go away,
maybe we could ask Mrs Sutton to have you for a while.
She’s our Sylvie’s foster-mother, out at Ashwood. I’ve just
come back from there and she’s ever so nice.’ She looked at
Polly. ‘What d’you think?’
‘Well, it’s an idea,’ Polly said. Cissie came in with the tea
and passed cups round. ‘Judy just suggested Jean might go
out to the Suttons’.’
‘I know, I heard her.’ Cissie sat down again. ‘But would
Mrs Sutton want her? Not that she’d be nasty at all,’ she
added quickly. ‘I mean, I haven’t met her myself but Judy
and Polly both say what a nice woman she is. But she’s
already taken our Judy in, and I don’t know that we could
ask her to take Jean. She’s not running a convalescent home,
after all. And she couldn’t do it for nothing. Where would the money come from to pay her?’
‘And Jean would have to sleep in with Sylvie,’ Polly
added dubiously. ‘She hasn’t got another spare room.’
Jean sipped her tea. She was looking better now, the
colour back in her cheeks, although her eyes were still
swollen. It would be a day or two before that went down,
Polly thought, even if she didn’t cry any more, and she
probably would. ‘What about your job?’ she asked suddenly.
‘Do they know why you haven’t gone in to work today?’
Jean nodded. ‘Well, they know about Terry, of course,
because that’s where I was when Mr and Mrs Taylor came
to tell me. And I think Miss Anstruther must have realised,
when I fainted. She’s passed one or two remarks lately about
my figure. I needed a new black frock for working in the
shop, and I had to have a bigger size. She’s been putting two
and two together for a week or two now, I think.’
‘What will she do? Will she let you go on working there?’
‘I don’t know,’ Jean said miserably. ‘She might if I was in
the office or the stores, but I don’t know about serving the
public. It gives the shop a bad name, see.’
‘Perhaps she’ll let you change over to something else.’
‘But I couldn’t work in the stores because of lifting
things,’ Jean pointed out. ‘And I don’t know anything about
office work. I can’t type, and I don’t understand invoices and
they’re not going to teach me, are they, not when they
know I’ll have to leave soon anyway.’
‘But you’re going to need a job afterwards,’ Polly said.
‘Will she take you back then?’
‘I don’t know,’ Jean said again. ‘And anyway, I’ll have the
baby then, won’t I? I don’t know what I’ll be able to do.’
They gazed at her, beginning to realise the difficulties of
her situation. Then Judy was struck by an idea.
‘But you’ll be eligible for evacuation! If you’ve got a baby,
you can go out to the country. You can go to Ashwood, if
there’s anyone who can take you in, and Mrs Sutton will
help look after you, and you can see Sylvie too. I know you’ve still got to pay the billeting money,’ she added
doubtfully, ‘but can’t you get National Assistance or
something?’ She looked at Polly. ‘They’ll know at the office,
won’t they?’
‘Of course they will. And even if there isn’t anything
official, the WVS will help. It’s what we’re for. One of the
things we’re for, anyway. Look, I’m going in tomorrow, I’ll
find out whatever I can and come straight round to your
house to tell you, Jean. That’s if it’ll be all right to do that,’
she added, remembering Mrs Foster’s attitude.
‘It’ll be all right,’ Jean said. ‘I still live there, after all. At least, I suppose I do.’ Her mouth creased. ‘I don’t think Dad
will let Mam turn me out that easy.’
‘Poor Jean,’ Cissie said after she had gone. ‘It’s only when
you start to think about it that you realise what a terrible
position she’s in. In a lot of ways, it’d be easier for her to
give the baby away and start afresh.’
‘And could you have done that?’ Polly demanded. ‘Given
Judy or Terry away, just because it wasn’t convenient to
have them? I know I wouldn’t ever have parted with my
Sylvie, no matter what it cost to keep her. And now I’ve had
to part with her anyway,’ she added sadly, thinking of the
months it had been since Sylvie had lived at home and
wondering how many more months, perhaps even years, it
would be before she could return. ‘But at least she’s still
mine.’
Cissie glanced at Judy and her eyes filled with tears.
‘You’re right, Polly. I know it would have torn me to bits to
let my babies go. But this is different, isn’t it? We didn’t
have the problems Jeanie’s got.’
‘It’d still hurt her just as much,’ Polly said. ‘Maybe even
more.’
They were silent for a while. Cissie gathered up the cups
and took them out to the scullery. Judy joined her there and
said, ‘I’ll do these, Mum, and then get the supper ready.
You go in with the others. You’ve got a lot to talk about and I’m not much use at that, the way I am.’
‘Judy, don’t talk like that! Of course you’re useful. Why,
it was you who suggested Jean could be evacuated.’ But
Cissie knew that Judy was right. It was too difficult to
include her in discussions between several people, and you
couldn’t write down everything. She laid her hand on her
daughter’s arm. ‘I know how hard this is for you, love,’ she
said, speaking slowly. ‘It’s horrible for you. I just wish there was something we could do about it.’
Judy gave her a wry smile. ‘Well, the doctor said it might
come back all of a sudden, so perhaps it will. She said a
sudden loud noise might do it — or a shock — or just nothing
at all. I might wake up one morning and be able to hear all
the rude things you’re saying about me!’
Cissie laughed, even though she felt more like crying - a
sensation that was becoming all too familiar these days - and
went back to the others. Polly and Alice were discussing the
possibility of Jean’s being evacuated, while Dick listened.
He was looking grey again, Cissie noticed, and breathing as
if it hurt.
‘Are you all right?’ she asked, and he nodded impatiently.
She folded her lips and made up her mind to keep an eye on
him. The last thing they wanted now was for Dick to be ill
again. They had quite enough on their plates, without that.
‘Well then,’ she said, sitting on one of the straight-backed
dining chairs and looking around the room. ‘Let’s start
making plans. We’re going to have a new baby in the family,
and I for one want to make sure we’re ready to welcome the
poor little mite as we should!’
When Polly arrived at the Royal Beach next morning, she
went straight to the Lady Mayoress’s office and asked to
speak to her. The Mayoress was busy with a list of all the
personnel of HMS Hood, trying to arrange visits to all the
families who lived in Portsmouth, but she stopped what she
was doing to listen to Polly’s story.
‘Jean knows they did wrong,’ Polly finished. ‘But I think
it’s understandable, madam, and I don’t suppose they’re the
only ones, not by a long chalk. It was just Jean’s bad luck to
get caught.’
The Mayoress nodded. ‘Poor child. She must be in a
terrible state, hardly able to grieve properly over losing her
sweetheart because of the trouble she’s in. Well, it won’t
help anyone to be judgemental over it, Polly. What we have
to do now is think how best to help her. You say she’s
determined to keep the baby?’
‘Yes, madam, and we want to help her. It’s our Terry’s
baby, you see - none of us wants it to go to strangers.’
‘You realise that the baby itself will face difficulties as it
grows up? There’s a terrible stigma to being illegitimate.’
‘I know, madam.’ Polly flushed at the use of the word
they had all avoided. ‘But there’s going to be such a lot of
kiddies without fathers, we thought perhaps after a while
nobody will think too much of it. I mean, they’ll just think
he was lost in the war. As he was. And Jeanie could call
herself Mrs, couldn’t she? It’s not against the law, is it?’
‘No, although she couldn’t use it on legal documents.
Well, those are problems for the future. So long as you’re all
aware of them.’ The Mayoress tapped her teeth thoughtfully
with her pencil. ‘Now, you’ve suggested the idea of
evacuation. I think that would be a good idea, if only for the
girl’s own safety and that of her child. And she’ll certainly
be eligible.’
‘It’s money that’s the problem,’ Polly ventured. ‘She
doesn’t think she’ll be able to keep her job at the Landport,
you see, and we haven’t got much to spare. I don’t know
about her own family, but if Mrs Foster isn’t willing to
help…’
‘I expect she’ll come round,’ the Mayoress said. ‘Mothers
usually do, especially once the baby’s born. It’s fathers who
are usually the problem. But I think we can find some help
for her in one of our funds, and I’m sure she’ll be entitled to National Assistance. The people to ask about that are the
Citizens’ Advice Bureau. The Misses Kelly will know,
although I believe they’re snowed under with requests for
help.’ She sighed. ‘One Bureau in a city that needs at least
five! If only we could have a little respite - just time to get ourselves properly organised. We seem to lurch from one
crisis to another.’
Polly had heard a great many complaints about this. The
townspeople of Portsmouth were forever grumbling about
the Council offices being ‘all the way out at Southsea’ and
the Citizens’ Advice Bureau practically unfindable. They
seemed to have no idea how difficult it was to run a city in
wartime, especially one that had been bombed as heavily as
Portsmouth. You never knew what was going to happen
next, what new situation would face you, what needs there
would be. She thought of the plans the authorities had made
to treat the injured and bury the dead — hundreds of
thousands of them - when what they should have been
planning was how to help the homeless. But how could they
have known that? There had never been a war like this in
the entire history of the world. No country had been
subjected to these massive and sustained air raids. Nobody
had known what the effects would be.
‘Nobody knew there was going to be a war,’ she said,
trying to comfort the other woman. ‘Nobody knew we were
going to have to do all this.’
‘But we should have done! We were warned enough. Mr
Churchill himself tried to warn us, and what happened? He
was laughed at. Treated with scorn. Now he’s leading us,
and we all realise at last what a great leader he is - but we
could have lost him, you know, Polly. We could have
thrown away the only man who seems able to reach the
people, to touch our hearts and to give us strength to carry
on.’
She sighed again, her face creased with worry, and then
seemed to pull herself physically together. With a brisk lift
of her head, she looked up at Polly and said, ‘Well, we must
get on. We’ll do whatever we can to help your brother’s
fiancee. And we have a lot of other tasks this morning too,
but before you go, tell me about Judy. How is she now?’
‘I’m not sure really,’ Polly said, pausing in the doorway.
‘She came home as soon as we told her about Terry, of
course. I think it did her good, being in the country - she
looks a lot better - but she still can’t hear anything much,
and it’s making her so miserable. She feels left out of
everything. She’s been working out there though, making
camouflage, and collecting moss for soldiers. It heals their
wounds, apparently. I’m not sure I’d want a lump of dirty moss slapped on a cut, mind you, but they say it really helps to heal them.’
‘Well, I’m sure it will be good for her, working out in the fresh air. When is she going back?’
‘Oh, she’s not. She wants to stay at home now. She says
she’d like to come back to work if you’ll have her.’
‘Have her? I’ll be delighted. Tell her to come in as soon
as she feels ready and we’ll find work for her to do. And
now,’ the Mayoress drew a pile of papers towards her ‘I really must attend to these. Thank you for coming in, Polly.’