The Woolworths Girls (35 page)

Read The Woolworths Girls Online

Authors: Elaine Everest

BOOK: The Woolworths Girls
9.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

A tiny flicker of annoyance crept across Maisie’s face as she thought of what Sarah had said. ‘All right, I s’pose I ought to think about not being out late so often. Then I’ll be up to doing the odd shift looking after the baby when I’m not at Woolies.’

They’d reached the gate of number thirteen and Sarah fished around in the pocket of her coat for the door key. Ruby had stopped leaving the key on a string inside the letter box since war had broken out. It was part of her plan to stop Hitler’s army invading their home. ‘That would be nice, Maisie. I want the baby to spend as much time as possible with its aunties as it grows up.’

Maisie grinned. ‘I forgot that I’ll be an honorary aunty. That’ll be fun.’

Sarah nodded in agreement. Perhaps the old Maisie wasn’t far away after all.

Sarah had not long slipped into her comfortable slippers and put her feet up when a familiar eerie sound could be heard. It continued to rise to an ear-splitting wail. Ruby, half into the room with a cup of tea in her hand, was annoyed. ‘It’s always the bloody same. I swear the whole of the German Air Force know when I’ve put the kettle on. Well, they ain’t going to spoil my cuppa. I’ll tip it into the Thermos flask and we can take it into the shelter with us. Maisie, you get Sarah onto her feet and into the shelter. Freda, you grab the bread so we can make a few sandwiches. God knows how long we’ll be there or whether it’s another false alarm. I know I shouldn’t wish the bombs land somewhere else, as it means some other poor bugger has been hit, but fingers crossed we’ll be safe.’

Freda followed Ruby from the room, saluting behind her back, which made Maisie and Sarah laugh. A regimental sergeant major had nothing on Ruby Caselton when she organized her troops. The women were used to working quickly together once the siren went. The cooker was turned off, and tea-making provisions were quickly grabbed. Ruby had taken to leaving cushions and blankets on a chair by the back door, as she found they grew damp if left in the shelter. A little attaché case held her insurance policy and the few items of jewellery that Eddie had bought her. One of the girls made sure it went with them.

Sarah winced as Maisie pulled her from the settee.

Maisie frowned. ‘Are you in pain?’

‘No, it’s just a twinge and a bit of backache. Being the size of an elephant doesn’t help!’ Sarah didn’t want her family to fuss. She was just over a week away from when she’d been told the baby would arrive, although Nan had told her more than once that Caselton babies didn’t hang about for due dates.

Maisie wasn’t so sure it was just a twinge, but decided it was better to get Sarah into the shelter rather than keep asking questions. ‘Do you want help putting yer shoes on?’

‘No, thanks. I’m more comfy in my slippers. It’s not so damp on the floor of the shelter since Dad put down those old wooden pallets. It hasn’t rained for over a week, so I shouldn’t get my feet wet. It’s like home from home in there now, what with the seats and bed that Dad built, plus the cushions you made.’

‘I wouldn’t call it a home from home, but it’s nice enough. Needs must when the devil dictates, as the saying goes,’ Maisie said as she pulled on her siren suit. ‘Are you fit?’

‘Oh, you and your sayings,’ Sarah said as she picked up her knitting bag and they headed out to the back garden. Both stopped to look skywards as they heard ack-ack guns in the distance and saw plumes of smoke in the sky. ‘I don’t think this is a false alarm.’

‘Best we get down the shelter a bit nippy like,’ Maisie said. In normal circumstances she’d have given her friend a mighty push but was considerate of her condition.

‘I don’t feel exactly elegant climbing down into this shelter,’ Sarah said as Freda offered her a helping hand down the wooden steps. ‘As soon as this baby arrives, I want one of those siren suits. It’s as draughty as hell in this frock.’

‘I’ll make you one, and one for the baby as well, but for heaven’s sake, get a move on, otherwise you’ll be wearing a bloody bomb on yer ’ead,’ Maisie said, flinching as they heard a mighty explosion from the river.

Freda shoved the wooden door shut behind them and pulled down a curtain that would protect the inside of the shelter from dust if there should be an explosion outside. George had built a bench along one side that could double as a bed, and opposite there was a narrow bunk bed too. ‘Shall I light a candle?’

‘Save them for now. I’m going to knit. I’ve made that many balaclava helmets I can knit them in the dark. I’ve got my torch if I need to pick up a dropped stitch,’ Ruby said.

‘Knitting in the dark it is, then,’ Maisie declared. ‘I’m knitting a scarf, so a few odd stitches gained or lost won’t make much odds. How about you, Sarah?’

Sarah laughed. ‘Perhaps by the end of this war your knitting might have improved, Maisie.’

‘At the end of this war I’m going to throw away me knitting needles and never cast on or cast off again,’ Maisie said. ‘I’ll stick to me sewing machine, thank you very much.’

‘George said he’s going to fix up an electric light when he has a minute. Vera’s got one in her shelter and she said it comes in very handy,’ Ruby announced from the darkness.

They fell silent listening to the telltale signs from outside that showed the enemy were approaching. Each woman continued to knit, then stopped as they heard another explosion from the nearby docks.

Suddenly Sarah’s groans shattered the silence.

‘Oh my God, Sarah. Are you in pain? Is it the baby?’ Freda shone her torch onto Sarah’s face, causing her to flinch in the bright light.

‘No. It’s just a stitch. This bunk bed isn’t the most comfortable thing to relax on.’ She held her breath as another pain gripped her body. She wasn’t going to worry Nan or her friends while they were in the shelter. There would be time enough later to tell them she thought that baby Gilbert was on its way; she’d try to wait for the all-clear to sound.

Maisie shuddered as the ground shook, causing a dust cloud to form in the shelter, and checked her watch by the light of the candle. They’d long ago stopped knitting. Sandwiches had been made by candlelight and consumed with relish, as it was long past their midday meal and fast approaching teatime. They now sat silently listening and praying for the all-clear.

‘That was a close one. They seem to have moved away from the London docks.’

‘Perhaps they’re heading for home. Someone at work said the enemy planes use the Thames to guide them back to the sea and then home,’ Freda said.

‘What ’appens to the bombs they have left?’ Maisie wanted to know. ‘I doubt they take ’em home to Hitler.’

‘I heard they dump them,’ Ruby said.

‘What, in the river or out at sea, do you mean?’ Freda asked.

‘Don’t be daft,’ Ruby laughed. ‘They dump them on the poor buggers that live between London and the coast. Old George up the Co-op’s son-in-law is in the RAF and he told him that they will look for a likely site and get rid of them. London isn’t the only place that has docks and the like, and the Luftwaffe aren’t daft. They’ll find out where our big factories are and they’ll drop their bombs where they will do the most damage.’

‘Like Burndept’s, where I work, do you mean?’ Freda asked fearfully.

‘And Vickers where George works,’ Ruby added. ‘So think on when you’re chatting to your new mates in the pub, Maisie, and mention where your friends work. Who knows who is listening? And as the posters say, careless talk costs lives.’

‘Blimey. It’s bloody frightening when you think about it,’ Maisie said. ‘Don’t you think so, Sarah?’

There was silence apart from a groan where Sarah lay on the lower bunk bed.

‘Sarah?’ Maisie fumbled for her torch. ‘Goodness, Sarah. Is the baby on its way? Why the ’eck didn’t you say something earlier?’

‘I . . . I didn’t want to worry you. I . . . I thought we’d be out of the shelter and indoors by now.’

Ruby knelt beside the bunk and checked her granddaughter. ‘I think this little one is going to be born right here – and very soon.’

‘No, no, this isn’t how it’s supposed to be . . .’ Sarah sobbed as another pain gripped her. ‘I want Alan. I want my dad.’ She began to sob uncontrollably.

Maisie leant over and took her by the shoulders. Leaning into her face, she spoke clearly and loudly. ‘Now look here. This baby is going to be born, and whether you like it or not, it’s gonna be born in this Anderson shelter. You can yell all you want for Alan and yer dad. You can even yell for yer mum too, although I couldn’t see her down here in a muddy hole in the ground delivering a baby. Even if they was here, there isn’t room in this shelter for them. There’s no room to swing a cat, let alone a baby.’

Sarah stopped sobbing and went quiet for a moment. ‘I’m sorry. I’m all right now . . . Thank you, Maisie.’

‘Well, I don’t know why you’re thanking me, I’m sure. I have no idea how to give birth, and the most Freda’s ever taught at her Girl Guide meetings is how to use her tie to make a knee bandage or a sling for a broken arm. Just be thankful yer nan’s here, as without her we’d all be up the creek without a paddle.’

Maisie’s humour broke the tension and for a few minutes the women laughed as they prepared for the arrival of the baby, making do with what they had at their disposal in the shelter.

Ruby gave Freda the task of sorting out the bedding. She prided herself on the blankets being fresh, and the beds had sheets on them, which meant there would be something to clean and wrap the baby in. Ruby didn’t feel it was right that young Freda should witness a birth, but there wasn’t much she could do about that at the moment.

Maisie tipped some fresh water from a stone bottle that Ruby kept in the shelter onto a piece of torn sheet and wiped the sweat from Sarah’s brow and spoke soothing words to her as contraction after contraction swept through her tired body.

‘I can see the baby’s head,’ Ruby called out as an explosion almost shook Sarah from her bed. Ruby flung herself across Sarah, fearing the worst, as Maisie and Freda righted the candles before a fire started. From outside the shelter, there was an almighty crash and again the ground shook, followed by a groaning noise as something heavy landed close by.

‘My God! The house must ’ave been hit,’ Maisie shouted, while from the bunk there could be heard the sound of a baby crying.

‘Well, you certainly chose a good time to enter the world, Miss Gilbert,’ declared her great-grandmother.

The women worked together quickly to help tidy Sarah up and check that the baby was all right. With dust still settling around them in the shelter, Ruby wrapped the baby in a clean sheet. ‘I’m going to give the little ’un to Maisie to hold while I wipe some of the dust off your face and give you a sip of cold tea. Fortunately, there’s a bit of sugar in it, so you’ll get some energy. God knows you need it after giving birth in this hellhole.’

Freda tugged a blanket from the other bunk, ready to hand it to Ruby as she pulled the soiled ones away. ‘I reckon we’ll have to boil these in the copper on laundry day.’

‘We’re probably best to just burn them, Freda. There’s a few more where they come from and I wouldn’t begrudge a blanket for my beautiful little great-granddaughter, or my granddaughter, come to that,’ she said as she gave Sarah a hug. ‘Now, let’s sort that cup of tea out. It’s not much, but I suppose it’ll be welcome.’

‘You can say that again,’ Sarah said with a weak smile. ‘Thank you, Nan. You too, Freda and Maisie. I don’t know what I’d have done without you.’

‘I wasn’t much help at all. If we wasn’t shut in down here because of the air raid, I’d have more likely run a mile,’ Freda laughed. ‘What about you, Maisie?’

The women looked to where Maisie was cuddling the baby, rocking her back and forth. She looked up at them with tears in her eyes. ‘I’ve just been telling her what a lucky little girl she is to have so many people to look out for her and how we will never stop reminding her of how she came into the world.’

As Maisie spoke, the all-clear began to sound. ‘Thank goodness for that,’ Freda declared. ‘I’ll get the door open. We could do with some fresh air in here after all this dust.’

‘Be careful, Freda. We’ve got no idea what came down after that last explosion.’

Maisie handed the baby to Sarah so carefully she could have been made of china. ‘Here you go, Mum. You hold yer daughter while I give Aunty Freda a hand.’

Ruby roared with laughter and relief. ‘Why, you’re all not much more than kids yourself and here you are calling each other “Mum” and “Aunty”.’

Maisie nudged Ruby in the ribs. ‘Get away with you. You’re only calling us kids ’cos it’ll make you sound younger now you’re a great-granny.’

Even Sarah joined in the laughter, although she felt as though she was in a dream. Looking down at her daughter’s face was like looking at Alan. There was such a likeness. She tried to fight the tears that threatened to fall as she kissed the baby’s forehead. ‘It’s just you and me, my little treasure, until your daddy comes home. Won’t he be surprised to meet you?’

‘I think we’ve got a problem,’ Freda said. ‘The door won’t budge.’

Maisie came alongside her. ‘Let’s both try together. One, two, three, push!’ They both shoved the door and it moved a couple of inches, but try as they might, they couldn’t move it another inch.

Freda squinted through the small gap. ‘I think I know what came down in that last crash.’

‘Please don’t say it was the back wall of the house,’ Ruby cried.

‘I think we’d all be as flat as a pancake if it was,’ Maisie snorted. ‘What can you see, Freda?’

‘I can see leaves and some branches. It must be next door’s apple tree.’

‘Oh bugger. Bang go the cooking apples,’ Ruby sighed.

23

Other books

Bred to Kill by Franck Thilliez
Sail by James Patterson, Howard Roughan
Bridge: a shade short story by Jeri Smith-Ready
Tomorrow Happens by David Brin, Deb Geisler, James Burns
Urban Wolf by Valinski, Zerlina
La sonrisa de las mujeres by Nicolas Barreau
The Hidden Oasis by Paul Sussman