Ironmonger's Daughter (41 page)

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Authors: Harry Bowling

Tags: #1920s London Saga

BOOK: Ironmonger's Daughter
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‘That’s the trouble, Ada. We don’t know what those boys went through out in that Dunkirk. Some of ’em won’t never be the same.’
Ada picked up her shopping basket and held her back again. ‘Well, luv. I must be orf. I don’t wanna be late down the shelter ternight. I left it late last night an’ those bleedin’ Toomeys nicked me place.’
Lizzie took her foot from her doorstep. ‘’Ere, Ada. Before yer go. Don’t that Morgan girl look ill. I ’ardly reco’nised ’er when I see ’er the ovver day.’
‘Well it’s only natural, ain’t it. She was goin’ wiv that fella fer some time. ’E seemed such a nice chap. Always very polite when ’e see yer out. It’s a bleedin’ shame. All right, ’e wasn’t one of us, but she thought the world of ’im. You could tell that when yer see ’em out tergevver.’
Lizzie nodded. ‘Ain’t she gettin’ like ’er muvver in looks? I fink she’s the spittin’ image of ’er.’
‘Well I ’ope she don’t take after ’er muvver, Lizzie. That Kate Morgan did love the fellas.’
Lizzie grinned. ‘Don’t we all? Chance would be a fine fing, what wiv my ole man. If ’e caught me lookin’ at anuvver fella’e’d kill me, I know ’e would.’
Ada changed her shopping bag over from one hand to the other. ‘Oh well, I gotta go. I got a couple o’ pigs’ trotters fer me tea. I do like them with a few taters an’ pease pudden. See yer down the shelter, Liz.’
‘See yer, Ada.’
As dusk fell the tension grew. In Ironmonger Street the factory gates stayed open as usual and the early arrivals found their regular spot in the dimly lit shelter beneath the machineshop of the Armitage factory. People knitted and chatted together, and some sat quietly reading. Children ran around between the wooden benches or played with their favourite toys, trying not to go too close to Widow Pacey. Mary Brown put a light under the tea urn and laid out the clean mugs. Joe Cooper arrived early and checked the fire buckets, stirrup pumps and spare sandbags. Later on that Friday evening Clara Cosgrove took her place in the shelter and, when the air-raid siren sounded and the bombs started to fall, once more Clara was already fast asleep.
Chapter Thirty
The first few days of October saw the weather turn very cold and damp. Influenza and bronchitis were rife in the docklands and many of the people in Ironmonger Street were affected. Molly Bartlett went down with a bad attack of bronchitis on the first Saturday of the month and, when Helen called in the doctor he was adamant. ‘That young lady should be in bed. It’s just asking for trouble her sitting up all night in that shelter.’
Helen made a decision. ‘I’ll stay wiv Molly an’ you go over the shelter, Matt. Yer can’t do anyfing ’ere.’
Matthew would have none of it. ‘Yer don’t fink I’d leave yer both up ’ere on yer own, do yer? I’m stayin’, too. If fings get too bad I can wrap a blanket roun’ the girl an’ carry ’er down ter the ground floor flat. They wouldn’t mind.’
Helen knew she would get nowhere arguing with him and, as she stood over the gas stove stirring a pot of soup for Molly, she worried for her daughter, and she thought of Connie who had returned to her job at the Dolphin. The raids were starting earlier now and Helen feared that her niece was cutting it a bit fine leaving the pub almost at closing time. She sighed deeply and said a silent prayer that they would be spared the bombing for just one night.
Connie found herself very busy on that Saturday evening. She preferred it that way, for the work and the noisy atmosphere prevented her from brooding too much over her tragic loss.
It was getting near to closing time when Dora French came into the public bar. ‘I thought yer’d be gone by now, Con. Yer better be on yer way, just in case the siren goes early.’
Connie bid the French family goodnight and hurried from the pub. As she walked out into the Old Kent Road she took a torch from her handbag and shone the dim light down on the pavement. She thought about the Bartletts having to stay in the buildings all night instead of the shelter. She had offered to stay with her cousin but Helen would not hear of it. Maybe the siren wouldn’t sound tonight, Connie thought as she picked her way carefully through the darkness. Wouldn’t it be nice to curl up in bed just for one night and sleep undisturbed until morning?
She had just reached the Bricklayers Arms junction when the siren wailed out its mournful sound. Connie hurried on as the drone of aircraft became louder and flashes of gunfire lit the night sky. As she ran along the Tower Bridge Road and turned off into the backstreets the drone sounded directly overhead. The scream of falling bombs sent her scurrying into a doorway and she felt the hot blast of air rush past her as a bomb fell a few streets away. Shattered glass tinkled on to the pavements and cobblestones as Connie pressed herself into the doorway. More bombs exploded nearby and she shook with terror. The crash of guns made her clasp her ears and grit her teeth as she left the doorway and ran as fast as she could into Ironmonger Street. Pieces of red-hot shrapnel landed all around her and the factory gates seemed a mile away as she heard the scream of a falling bomb. She was thrown headlong into the gutter by the blast, the flash of the explosion momentarily blinding her. She picked herself up painfully, her head pounding, and she could see the rising flames coming from the damaged gas main in John Street. She heard running footsteps and, as Joe Cooper reached her, Connie lost consciousness.
 
The street was lit by red lamps and the clean cobblestones were shining in the phosphorescent glow. Connie walked in silence beside the shadowy figure of her mother. The turning was empty and the houses were in darkness. They stopped beside a door and her mother reached out for the iron knocker. Connie could see the tears on her face as the door opened and she stepped over the threshold. The young girl wanted to follow but she was rooted to the spot. She tried to hold out her arms but they were pinned to her sides. Her mother was slowly disappearing from sight and the door started to close. Connie was alone in the turning. She seemed to be drifting along and the light changed to a bright blue. It was cold and she wanted to get far away. She began to run but the street moved with her. Her breath came in gasps and suddenly she screamed. Hands were bearing down on her, squeezing the remaining breath from her body. She fought until there was no more strength left, and she saw the faces staring down at her.
‘Connie! Connie! C’mon now, girl. It’s all right.’
Her eyes opened wide and Connie saw Joe and Frank bending over her. She was lying on her back in the shelter and she could see the familiar trail of conduit tubing which ran the length of the ceiling. Mary was cradling her head and people were standing around, their faces all looking serious.
Joe stared down at her. ‘It’s okay, girl. Yer fainted when we got ter yer. The blast must ’ave concussed yer. You’ll be all right. Jus’ stay quiet fer a while.’
Connie looked up into Joe’s large brown eyes and felt comforted. His wide friendly face was split in a relieved grin and she could see the deep lines that spread out from the corners of his eyes.
‘Yer gave us a scare, girl. What was yer doin’ out there? Yer should ’ave bin in the shelter long ago.’
Connie attempted a sheepish grin and winced as the pain in her head increased with the rush of blood as she sat up slowly. ‘I left it a bit late leavin’ the pub. I thought I’d ’ave enough time before the raid started,’ she said in a faint voice.
‘You’re a daft ’ap’orth,’ Joe laughed with an exaggerated shake of his head.
There was a short lull in the bombing and people had started to chat together. Connie sat in a corner, a mug of hot tea clasped in her still shaking hands. Mary sat beside her whilst nearby her two young children were listening to Frank as he read them a story.
‘You okay now, Con?’ Mary asked.
Connie nodded. ‘I was scared, Mary. I thought the world was fallin’ in on me.’
Mary grinned. ‘Yer was strugglin’ like a good ’un when Joe carried yer in the shelter. I thought yer was ’avin’ a fit.’
‘I was ’avin’ a terrible dream,’ Connie said shivering. ‘It was more like a nightmare. I could see me mum but she was leavin’ me an’ I couldn’t get to ’er. It was really ’orrible.’
Mary patted the young woman’s hand. ‘Drink yer tea, luv, it’ll do yer good. Yer’ve ’ad a nasty shock.’
Connie looked up at Mary. ‘I wonder ’ow me aunt an’ uncle an’ Molly are gettin’ on? They mus’ be frightened up in them buildin’s on their own.’
‘They’ll be okay. Now drink that tea,’ Mary urged her with a note of authority in her voice.
The bombs had started to fall again, and the shelter seemed to shake to its foundations. The gas blanket rustled and dust blew in. People had lapsed into silence, each alone with their secret fears. Strings of plaster dust fell from the ceiling and with every explosion the electric lights dimmed. Joe and some of the men got out the kerosene lamps and began to prime them while Mary poured more water into the tea urn. Lizzie and Ada were trying to get a sing-song going but there was little support, and the strains of the harmonica were swallowed up by the increasing noise from outside. People sat rigid with fear and some of the children started to cry as they were awakened from fitful sleep. More dust and paint flakes fell from the ceiling and the smell of carbolic coming from the toilets hung in the stuffy air.
It was after midnight when the clattering started. Joe cast his eyes up to the ceiling and clenched his fists tightly. It sounded to him as though someone with immense strength was violently shaking a sheet of corrugated iron. It seemed to last for ever and grow into a deep rumble, and then the blast from the explosion threw everyone on to the floor. People were screaming as the lights failed, and in the panic that followed some folk found themselves being trampled on. Joe picked himself up and struggled to the doorway. As he reached the yard, the sight which met his eyes made him recoil in sheer horror. There was a great gap in the buildings. Dust was still rising into clouds of white in the sudden unearthly silence. Half of Jubilee Dwellings had been reduced to a great pile of rubble. Joe could see the exposed fireplaces and the pieces of furniture balanced precariously on the remaining flooring. The part of the dwellings which was still standing had had all the windows blown out and most of the roof tiles dislodged. For a few seconds Joe stood rooted to the spot. He stared in disbelief, not knowing what he should do. As the rest of the men struggled to their feet they stood beside him and stared up at the devastation.
Joe suddenly came to his senses. ‘Quick! Somebody get ter the wardens’ post fer Gawd sake!’ he shouted. ‘There’s people buried under that lot!’
Guns were still screaming out and bombs were falling as Bill Richards ran along the street. Inside the post there was pandemonium. All the lines had gone dead. Without hesitation he ran back into the street and headed for the Tower Bridge Road. The streets were illuminated by fires which were burning everywhere and here and there jets of water shot high into the air from damaged mains and hydrants. Half a mile along the main thoroughfare he found the area wardens’ post and staggered in gasping for breath.
‘Jubilee Dwellin’s!’ he blurted out. ‘They’ve copped it! There’s people buried there.’
The fire watchers of Ironmonger Street had begun burrowing into the rubble and now and then they stopped, listening for sounds of life. Timbers were gently prised loose and huge chunks of brickwork were eased aside as the digging went on. It was almost an hour later when the lorry drove into the turning and men from the Heavy Rescue Squad rushed to help.
Joe pointed to the tunnel they had made. ‘There was a sound come from down there a little while ago, but it’s gone quiet now,’ he said, his face a white mask.
‘Take a breather, mate. We’ll carry on diggin’,’ one of the rescuers said gently.
Joe sat down on the kerb beside Mary Brown’s husband. ‘I can’t stop shakin’, Frank. It’s the first night the Bartletts ’ave stopped in the buildin’s. I feel so bloody useless.’
‘We done all we could, Joe. We’ve jus’ gotta wait now.’
It was under a dawn sky when the first body was brought out. Joe slid back the blanket and saw that it was Molly Bartlett. The man holding the rear of the stretcher shook his head slowly. Soon after the body of Matthew Bartlett was dragged from under a wall of bricks. Joe Cooper’s face was ashen as he pulled back the blanket to identify the body. Tears of frustration and anger fell down his blackened face as he screwed up his eyes and slumped down heavily on a pile of rubble.
‘That’s two of ’em gone, an’ the poor sod’s wife is still under that lot,’ he groaned, staring at the two stretchers lying side by side in the middle of the street.
There was a sudden call for silence. The rescuers stopped digging and crowded around the shored-up tunnel. Joe picked himself up and hurried over to the men. He saw their leader standing by the tunnel, his head held sideways and a stern look on his dust-streaked features. They could all hear it now. It sounded like a mournful whine coming from far away. The sound made Joe’s flesh creep and he gazed helplessly at the rescuer beside him. The man rested his large hand on the warden’s shoulder and motioned to the shelter.
‘We’ll call yer when we reach whoever it is. Yer can ’elp us by tryin’ ter find out ’ow many are likely ter be under the rubble,’ he said.
‘I can tell yer that now, mate,’ Joe replied. ‘Most of the people who used ter stay on the ground floor got scared and started usin’ the shelter in the factory a few nights ago. There’s only a woman by the name o’ Bartlett, a Mr and Mrs Riley, an’ an ole woman called ’Awkins. They’re the only ones unaccounted for.’
The man nodded. ‘All right then, we’ll give yer a shout soon as we can.’
Joe watched as one of the rescuers slid down into the tunnel. Another man followed him in and the rest of the men stood quietly waiting. The street warden turned towards the factory gates. His heart went out to the grief-stricken young woman who sat alone in the shelter, and silent tears ran down his gaunt face. How much more grief was the girl expected to suffer?

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