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Authors: Annie Groves

Some Sunny Day (37 page)

BOOK: Some Sunny Day
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Completely unabashed, once he had struggled
free, Tommy pulled them back on and winked at Sheila, telling her, ‘Now that you’ve had a bit of a look at what’s on offer, how about you and me cutting loose from this lot so that I can show you me tattoo?’

‘Oh, give over, do,’ Sheila laughed back, as unembarrassed as he was.

Such high spirits were only natural, and an acceptable part of the fun of the pre-wedding proceedings, when you didn’t know what tomorrow would bring, and whether or not the young man you had flirted with tonight would still be alive then.

It was dark by the time the punch had been made and sampled. In view of its strength and the effect on everyone’s libidos of the alcohol, a wedding and a full August moon, it was no wonder that some of the girls paired up with the airmen for the walk back through the village to the hostel.

Rosie had already seen Mary and Ian slip away hand in hand, a look in Mary’s eye that made her own mist with emotion.

Not that she was the only girl to be walking back to the hostel without a partner. Audrey and Jean, who were with her, both commented ruefully that they suspected there would be some sore heads and red faces in the morning.

‘Sheila wants to do something with Mary’s wedding night suitcase – you know, put a bit of stuff in it for a joke, like, but I don’t know as we should. What do you think, Rosie?’

‘A joke’s a joke, and no one minds a bit of a laugh, just so long as it doesn’t spoil her clothes,’ Rosie answered her.

‘Well, there’s no confetti.’

‘I’ve collected some flower petals to throw, but they would stain her clothes. We could put a bit of rice in, perhaps.’

‘Yes. Good idea.’

   

Rosie hadn’t been sleeping properly since she had broken up with Ricardo, and when she saw Mary slip from her bed and go over to the blacked-out window, she went after her to ask if everything was all right.

‘Oh, yes,’ Mary whispered emphatically. ‘More than all right, Rosie. I can’t tell you how happy I am and how lucky I feel right now to be marrying Ian tomorrow. I’m too excited to sleep and somehow I don’t want to. I don’t want to waste a second of feeling like this. I wish that I could hold on to it and bottle it in one of them Kilner jars and keep it for ever. I never thought I’d be one to feel this way. Of course, I wanted to get married and have kiddies, but I’m the practical type and it’s our Sheila that I’ve always thought of as more the one who would fall head over heels in love and go mooning around all over the place. But me and Ian…I just love him so much.’

She turned her head and Rosie could see the tears filling her eyes. ‘I was just thinking about Peggy.’

‘I was thinking about her today as well,’ Rosie acknowledged.

There was a small silence, and then Mary said softly, ‘No matter what happens from now on, Rosie, I shall have had this. I never thought that I could be this happy or this much in love. Me heart feels that full of love and happiness I can hardly believe it.’ She gave a soft laugh. ‘Just listen at me. I sound more like our Sheila than meself, but I still can’t wait for tomorrow, and to be standing next to my Ian in church, exchanging vows with him.’

Rosie couldn’t speak. She managed to nod her head, though, and hug Mary back as fiercely as she was hugging her.

As she went back to her bed, the full force of what she herself had given up descended on her, enveloping her in bleak black misery.

There would never be another man she would love the way she loved Ricardo. She knew that instinctively. He had touched something deep inside her she hadn’t even known was there, awakening dreams and hopes so precious and private she wanted to wrap them away as carefully as Mary wanted to bottle her happiness. Only Mary’s happiness now was just the beginning of her love, whereas her own bittersweet memories were all that she would ever have of love.

It was a long time before Rosie was able to escape from her thoughts into sleep.

* * *

‘They’ve bin right lucky with the day, and our Mary’s bin so lucky with all her friends as well, especially you, Rosie. Why, these flowers you’ve done for her would be fit for the grandest wedding you could imagine. A real flair you’ve got, and no mistake.’

‘Indeed she has,’ the vicar’s wife added her own praise to that of Mary’s mother as they all waited outside the church where Ian’s comrades in arms were lined up, wearing their dress uniforms, to provide a traditional guard of honour for the newly married couple.

‘Here they are now,’ the vicar’s wife warned.

All the guests surged forward, throwing the rose petals Rosie had collected over the bride and groom so that their clothes and those of the guard of honour were scattered with petals.

It was a perfect day for a wedding – blue sky, sunshine, the village picture-postcard pretty, and the bride truly lovely in her glowing happiness as she held on to the arm of her new husband when they walked slowly amongst their guests and then on through the village to the church hall.

Rosie had deliberately kept herself as busy as she could, volunteering for all manner of necessary jobs in her desperation not to have to be aware of Ricardo. But of course that had been impossible. She had no idea where or how he had got the smart suit he was wearing, his thick curly hair neatly slicked back beneath the hat he had removed when they all went into church. He was
taller than nearly all of the other men present, and broader too, and Rosie had overheard one of the airmen comment to him knowledgeably that he had the look of a boxer, to which Ricardo had replied that he wasn’t a fighting man but that he had grown up with a crowd of boys who had frequented one of the local boxing clubs and gyms that were part of the Italian immigrant social scene. Such clubs, as Rosie knew from her own growing-up, did a lot of good for their local communities, often sponsoring outings and charities, and were often closely linked to a church. Even her father had been heard to say that he would rather see young lads working off their energy at St Joseph’s gym, and learning a thing or two about handling themselves with the right sort of person, than hanging around the street and getting into trouble.

Rosie was acutely aware of Ricardo now, even though he was standing several yards away from her and had his back to her. Somehow it was as though her very skin possessed the ability to know when he was there and react to that fact, she admitted wretchedly.

He had been given permission by the duke to whom he was now ‘paroled’, to attend the wedding, so Mary had told her, and to judge from the laughter coming from the group of airmen and land girls surrounding him, his company was very welcome. Sheila, as Rosie had already noticed jealously, was flirting outrageously with him, but then as chief bridesmaid no doubt she felt it was her
duty to go round making sure that everyone was having a good time – just so long as ‘everyone’ meant all the best-looking men!

Not that Sheila was reserving her attentions exclusively for Ricardo, Rosie had to admit. She had seen her earlier clinging to the arm of the young airman whose trousers she had held aloft so triumphantly the previous evening.

She shouldn’t criticise Sheila nor be resentful of her because she was having such a good time with Ricardo, making him laugh in a way that showed how much he was enjoying her company, Rosie told herself. After all, hadn’t she herself told Ricardo that he must find someone else? Ricardo and Sheila. Rosie tried to smother the sharp pang that racked her.

It was too soon yet for her to expect to receive another letter from her father – he would probably only just have received her own letter to him – but she couldn’t help thinking about him now because although she was in a room that was packed with people, she still felt miserably alone. Sheila might have lost her parents in a bombing raid but at least she had a loving aunt and uncle in Mary’s parents, along with the comfort of a large extended family of cousins, aunts and uncles, whilst she had no one apart from her father, Rosie thought sadly.

‘Come on, Rosie. Sam here wants to dance with you but he’s too shy to ask.’

Politely Rosie suffered Mary’s mother’s kindly
meant matchmaking as she introduced Rosie to one of Mary’s cousins, a bespectacled, earnest-looking young man, so shy that he was inarticulate, his Adam’s apple bobbling up and down wildly as he looked at Rosie and blushed, whilst making some strangulated sounds that Rosie guessed must be an attempt at conversation. It wasn’t in her nature to be nasty, so she smiled good-naturedly and discreetly managed to steer him round the dance floor.

Not that Sam was her only choice of partner. The young airmen weren’t backward in coming forward to ask her to dance and, of course, good manners meant that she couldn’t refuse. There might be safety in numbers, she acknowledged later on in the evening when she had returned to her seat after a dance with yet another partner, but a treacherous little voice inside her was telling her that there was something much sweeter and more alluring about having a one-and-only to dance with and be held tenderly by, the way that Ian was holding Mary now as they circled the floor together, lost to everything but their love for one another.

And Mary wasn’t the only girl enjoying being held close by her partner as the music changed to a smoochy romantic number. Sheila was dancing with Ricardo – again – her head nestled against his shoulder as she snuggled into him. The lights dipped and Ian took the opportunity to kiss his new wife. Everyone clapped and roared their approval and then when the lights came on again
Rosie saw that Ian wasn’t the only man with a smudge of lipstick staining his mouth. Ricardo too had obviously made good use of the dipped lights to kiss his partner.

Rosie stood up, almost pushing her chair over in her sudden frantic need to be somewhere where she didn’t have to see Ricardo with someone else. Ignoring the concerned looks she was attracting from the others at the table, she almost ran towards the door, half stumbling as she did so.

Outside, a full moon washed the village in pale yellow light. In the semi-darkness, the scent of the land was so much sharper somehow, and so very different from Liverpool. Here she could smell sun-warmed soil, and the dried stubble from the fields, along with the closer scents of still warm tarmac, cottage garden plants, and even the beer from the local pub. Rosie leaned her head against the stone gatepost in front of the village hall. Almost without her being aware of it, she had grown fond of the country and would miss it when the time came to return to Liverpool. Soon Mary and Ian would be setting off on their short honeymoon, the beginning of their married life together. How must that feel? Being married to the man you loved, and knowing that tonight you would be together in every sense of the word, knowing that what you shared tonight marked the beginning of a new life, knowing that it must be guarded carefully because who knew what unhappiness war might bring?

‘Rosie, I have to talk to you.’

She had been so lost in her own thoughts that she hadn’t heard Ricardo walking towards her until he spoke her name.

She spun round, her eyes huge with angry pride and pain.

‘What about?’ Rosie demanded. ‘You and Sheila? Well, you needn’t bother. I’ve seen for myself what’s going on.’

‘Me and Sheila…?’

She could hear Ricardo swallowing a sound that was a mixture of disbelief and a groan.

‘Don’t be silly. You’re the one I want. You know that.’

‘I certainly know what I’ve seen,’ Rosie agreed bitterly.

She didn’t want to stand out here with him in the moonlight, where she was all too vulnerable to her own feelings.

‘I’m going back inside,’ she told him, but as she went to walk past him he took hold of her. The feel of his hands on the soft bare flesh of her upper arms made her suck in her breath and give a small low moan of anguish.

‘Rosie. Did I hurt you? I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to.’

He was rubbing the flesh of her arms gently, having mistaken the cause of her pain, whilst he pressed small pleading kisses on her face, begging her to forgive him.

Rosie couldn’t bear it. It was too much. She tried to pull away from him but somehow ended
up in his arms, crying against his shoulder whilst he held her tight and begged her to tell him what was wrong.

‘I am wrong, we are wrong, this is wrong,’ Rosie tried to say but the words just wouldn’t come out and when she looked up at him to speak them, Ricardo cupped her face gently and kissed her so slowly and lovingly that Rosie wept even more.

‘Go back to Sheila,’ she stormed at him. ‘And see how she likes knowing that you’ve been out here two-timing her with me.’

‘Rosie,’ Ricardo protested, but it was too late. Rosie had taken advantage of his confused distress to pull away from him.

She couldn’t go back to the village hall, not with her face streaked with tears, and everyone there to see them and talk about them. Instead, she went back to the hostel, empty and quiet with all the girls and even Mrs Johnson down at the village hall enjoying the wedding celebrations.

Ricardo and Sheila. She couldn’t bear it but somehow she would have to.

September had given way to October and the weather had turned wet and windy. The gang had been set to work hedging and ditching, a horrible job that involved clearing ditches of brambles and weeds to drain the land. Rosie had developed a dry nagging cough that hurt her ribs and left her feeling deathly tired.

She shivered now in the driving rain. Ricardo and the other men were working several fields away and Rosie’s blurring gaze kept returning to the distant smudges of movement that were the men. It should have been impossible for her to tell which one Ricardo was, but somehow she could.

In contrast to her own despair, Mary was singing happily under her breath as she worked. She and Ian had just had three days off duty together in Ricardo’s cottage whilst he had bunked in with one of the other farm hands.

‘It was so kind of Ricardo to let us use the cottage. Our Sheila told me that it was ever such
a cosy place, but I must admit I was surprised when I saw how nice Ricardo has got it. Given it a coat of lime wash right through inside, he has, and Mrs Graham up at the Home Farm has found him some bits of furniture she didn’t want.’

Rosie couldn’t muster the smile her pride was demanding. It had been weeks now since she had given him up and yet, if anything, it hurt even more than at first knowing that Sheila and Ricardo were together. Not that anyone talked about it in her presence, but she had seen Sheila walking across the fields in the direction of Ricardo’s cottage on several occasions, and now here was Mary confirming what Rosie had guessed was happening.

Soon it would be a year since she had been trapped in the Durning Road Technical College bombing, and then after that it would be the anniversary of her mother’s death. Rosie shivered again. It wasn’t particularly cold but she felt as though she would never be warm again, as though the damp had forced its way right into the heart of her body and her bones. Several of the girls had commented on how much weight she had lost and her constant cough.

‘I suppose you’ll have heard – about our Sheila,’ Mary told her now, looking slightly uncomfortable.

‘I had guessed, yes,’ she admitted, her voice low.

‘Well, she couldn’t have kept it a secret for much longer. My mother wasn’t too pleased at having to sort out another wedding so soon after my own…’

Rosie felt a surge of sick faintness wash over her. ‘They’re getting married?’

‘They don’t have much choice, do they?’ Mary told her bluntly. ‘Not with our Sheila being in the family way. I’ve told her that she’s lucky that he’s prepared to do the right thing by her, and marry her, and that many a lad wouldn’t, but then he is a decent sort. I knew that she’d been sneaking away to see him, of course, but I didn’t realise she’d let things go that far. And you can’t blame him, not with the way she carries on. Rosie? Rosie, are you all right?’ Rosie heard Mary demanding sharply before the blackness overwhelmed her and sucked her down into its depths.

   

‘Rosie. Oh, thank goodness you’ve come round.’

Rosie looked up at Mary. She was, she realised, lying on the muddy ground where she had passed out whilst Mary and a couple of the other girls crouched over her.

‘You gave me ever such a shock, fainting like that,’ Mary told her. ‘Whatever’s to do? I know you haven’t bin so good recently, with that cough and everything, but it gave me a real shock when you passed out like that. I’ve sent Audrey across the fields to get Ricardo, but I reckon you need to see a doctor.’

Rosie struggled to sit up, panic filling her at the thought of Ricardo seeing her so vulnerable; Ricardo, who was marrying Sheila because she was having his baby. Rosie couldn’t believe there could
be so much pain. It filled her and flowed over her, until it totally possessed her and she had no escape from it.

‘I’m sure that Ricardo will make a good husband and father for Sheila and the baby.’ Rosie didn’t know how she managed to get the words out, they hurt so much.

‘Ricardo?’ Mary was looking at her in astonishment. ‘You surely aren’t thinking that it’s Ricardo that Sheila has got herself into trouble with, are you, Rosie?’

Numbly Rosie looked at her.

‘Well, of all the daft things. What on earth put that idea into your head? No. It’s Tommy Lucas, Ian’s best man, the one whose trousers she took off the night before the wedding. Sneaking off together in the evening, the two of them have bin doing, making use of the blackout for stuff it was never intended for, an’ all. But like I said, at least the lad’s prepared to do the decent thing by her. Oh, good, here’s Ricardo now. He’ll know what to do…’

It was too much for Rosie to take in, too much for her to cope with right now, when she felt so ill, and too much for her to bear knowing that Ricardo was here. She could hear Mary telling him what had happened.

‘She hasn’t bin well for a while, Ricardo, and if you ask me she’s bin pining for you that badly she’s made herself ill.’

‘No! That’s not true.’ Rosie finally managed to
sit up. ‘I’m all right, there’s nothing wrong with me,’ she insisted valiantly, struggling to her feet, even though she had to hold on to the hedge to keep herself upright.

‘No, not much,’ Mary agreed drily. ‘She only went and passed right out because she thought it was you that has got our Sheila into trouble, Ricardo.’

How could Mary betray her like this? But before Rosie could tell her how she felt, a bout of coughing had her doubled over, unable to speak.

‘You should see a doctor,’ Ricardo announced.

‘Exactly what I’ve bin saying to her, Ricardo, but she won’t listen. I’ve never known anyone as stubborn as Rosie is.’ Mary shook her head.

‘I keep telling you, there’s nothing wrong with me, or at least there wouldn’t be if certain people left me alone,’ Rosie said sharply. ‘Haven’t you got some fields to plough?’ she asked Ricardo pointedly. She saw the look he and Mary exchanged, but she turned her back on them both defiantly and went back to work.

Beneath her defensive anger, though, she was greedily lingering over the stolen pleasure of seeing Ricardo. Farm work had strengthened and corded the muscles in his arms, and Rosie shivered inwardly at the thought of his maleness. He needed a haircut and there was smudge of dirt on his forehead where he must have pushed his hair out of the way. He still smelled the same, though – of coffee and clean fresh hardworking man, and
of himself. It was a scent she would carry in her memory until her dying day.

   

‘That really is a nasty cough you’ve got, you know, Rosie,’ Audrey pointed out as a fit of coughing had Rosie almost bent double. Leaning against the wet hedge, and unable to speak for the pain in her chest, Rosie waited for the discomfort to go.

‘It’s all this rain,’ she told Audrey when she could finally speak. ‘It gets on my chest.’ The days were drawing in, giving them shorter working hours, which was a relief, but the cold wet conditions in which they were working meant that Rosie felt constantly chilled and unwell. Not that she was one to complain. It didn’t seem right to do that when none of the other girls seemed to be as badly affected by the weather as she was.

She could do with a tonic of some kind, though, she admitted tiredly later as she slumped against the side of the truck taking them back to the hostel. She was waking up at night coughing and she was uncomfortably aware of the fact that she was probably disturbing the other girls’ sleep as well as her own. Mary, who was on leave with Ian, so that they could attend Sheila’s quickly arranged wedding at home in Birmingham, had said to her only the other week that she ought to go to see a doctor, but Rosie didn’t feel she wanted to take up a doctor’s time when there was really nothing wrong with her.

The first thing she did when they got back to
the hostel was go and have a warm shower, but not even that could drive the cold out of her bones.

‘Postie’s delivered a whole sack full of letters today. There’s one here for you, Rosie,’ Jean called out as she sorted through the mail that had been delivered whilst they were out working.

The sight of her father’s familiar handwriting on the letter Jean handed to her lifted Rosie’s spirits. She went straight up to the dormitory with it so that she could read it in private, impatiently opening the envelope, delighted to see that her father had covered both sides of several sheets of writing paper. He had written,

Rosie, Rosie, oh, love, I am so sorry and I feel so guilty. Your Ricardo has written to me to tell me what’s been happening between the two of you and how you’ve told him that you don’t want to see him any more because of me, and him being Italian.

He says that you love him and if that’s true, Rosie lass, and something tells me, as your loving dad, that it is, then I feel really bad. I wouldn’t for one moment want you to put yourself through any kind of unhappiness on my account, Rosie, and I just wish I was there so that I could speak to you myself and tell you truthfully that all I want is for you to be happy. Ricardo has told me all about himself and his family and he’s been straight
with me as a man should be when he wants to marry a chap’s daughter, but he’s also stood up for himself and said how it is for him being both Italian and English, and I respect him for that. I would not want my precious girl to be wed to a chap who doesn’t think anything of himself. He sounds a decent sort, your Ricardo, Rosie. A straight-up, honest lad who will do the right thing by you and look after you like he should.

I can’t pretend that it wasn’t a shock when I first got his letter, especially with you not having said a word, but then when I read what he’d written about you not wanting to hurt me by marrying an Italian, but him believing after what you’d told him about me that I was the kind of dad who would only want his daughter to be happy, I warmed to the lad and appreciated his honesty. He wrote that he could understand my feelings on account of your mother, but that he felt sure that I wouldn’t want you to give up the man you loved because he happened to be part Italian. And he’s right, Rosie. Oh, my poor girl, I’m not ashamed to tell you, lass, that I cried some tears when I read what he had written to me about you; how much he loved you and what a special girl you are, but most of all on account of knowing the sadness you’ve been going through.

Rosie love, I would never expect you to give
up Ricardo on my account, and if I was there with you I reckon none of this foolishness would have happened. Being your loving dad I would have seen that something was wrong with my girl and found out just what it was pretty sharpish, and of course, as Ricardo said in his letter to me, he would have been able to come and see me and talk to me man to man about everything. Did I tell you that he wrote that he ‘didn’t think Rosie could have had a better father’ and that when his turn came to be a dad to a little girl he hoped that I’d be on hand to help him learn the ropes, since his dad and mum only had boys?

He sent me some really nice photographs of himself and his family. Would you credit it, his mum looks a proper English rose. He’s explained to me how he got to be interned, and it seems to me that this duke is a shrewd chap for seeing the good in him and helping him out.

I don’t want to hear about you going through any more unhappiness, Rosie, and I want you to understand that the most important thing in the world to me is you, and you being happy. If you love this lad as he says you do then I promise you that the pair of you have my blessing. I’ve written to Ricardo too, telling him that you’ve both got my blessing.

Your always loving dad

PS. Write me soon, Rosie, to tell me how you are. I’ll be worrying until I hear from you.

Ricardo had written to her father! How dare he do such a thing? How could he have done it? How had he got her father’s address? Rosie frowned as she looked at the drawer where she kept her letters. Mary must have got it for him. She had never felt so angry or so betrayed. I’m not giving up, Ricardo had told her, but she had never imagined he would do something like this.

Her poor dad. What must he have gone through when he had received Ricardo’s letter right out of the blue with no warning? Hadn’t Ricardo realised how unfair he was being? How cruel? Of course her father would say now that he didn’t mind – Rosie had known all along that that would be his reaction. She had never ever doubted her father’s love for her and had known that he would put her feelings first. But that wasn’t what she had wanted. She hadn’t wanted to feel that her father had been forced to accept Ricardo for her sake.

Had Ricardo received her father’s letter yet? And if he had, did he think that he had won and that everything was now all right? A grim determination seized her. Putting down her father’s letter, Rosie stood up.

‘Rosie, where are you going? It’s almost supper time.’

‘I’ve got to go out. I shan’t be long,’ Rosie called
back to Jean before stepping out into the darkness of the wet October evening.

   

It was just over two miles across the fields from the village to Ricardo’s small cottage, by way of a narrow footpath. Not a particularly long walk, on a fine summer’s day, but not a walk to be attempted by an emotionally wrought young woman with a bad cough on a cold wet night in October. Rosie had to stop several times to wait as a bout of coughing made it impossible for her to keep walking. The footpath, churned to mud by cows, was slippery and treacherous, and to make things worse the wind had picked up, driving the rain into her. But the heat of her rage was more than equal to the discomfort of the walk.

Thick clouds obscured the moon, making Rosie glad that she had thought to bring her small torch. It was still a relief, though, when she could finally see the cottage. Her impatience to get there and confront Ricardo made her walk faster, which in turn caused her cough to start up again.

The cottage was double-fronted, with a good solid porch and neat little dormer windows upstairs, which might on another occasion have made Rosie smile with appreciation of its prettiness. But tonight she had other things on her mind. She opened the gate and marched up to the front door, raising the knocker and letting it bang down again loudly. Blackout curtains covered the windows so that it was impossible to see inside,
and when several minutes ticked by with no sign of someone coming to open the door it suddenly struck Rosie that she might have come here for nothing and that Ricardo could be out. Her heart sank at the thought of her long wet walk back to the hostel without having had the satisfaction of telling Ricardo what she thought of him.

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