and I don’t blame her. But she understands the need.’ The
Mayoress leaned across the little table. ‘You see, the kind of
person I need will be someone who can respond to an
emergency — who can work on her own initiative, and who is
practical and won’t mind going out of the office and giving a
hand wherever it’s needed. Someone who can organise
anything from the evacuation of small children to collecting
scrap metal. It takes a very special kind of person to do all
that’s going to be required in these coming days and
months, Judith - not the sort of girl who just wants to sit at
a desk in a nice warm office all day.’
‘And you really think I could do all that?’ Judy asked,
with a little twinge of excitement.
The Lady Mayoress gave her a steady look. ‘You were
bombed out on Friday night, weren’t you? You and your
family lost everything. Yet you still made your way to the
Guildhall - your place of duty - having first made sure that
your family would be cared for at an Emergency Centre.
You even stopped on the way to help others who needed it,
and you then stayed at your post all day, despite the dangers
- there could have been fallen masonry or unexploded
bombs anywhere in the Guildhall Square - to make sure
that everyone from the offices knew the situation here.
Today is Sunday morning, and you’re here again, ready to
start work. That’s how I know that you’re the sort of person
I need.’
Judy glanced round the room once more. ‘But I’m not the
only one, madam. All these others …’
The Mayoress smiled again. ‘I also like the look of you,
Judith. I think we can get along - and that’s important too.
Now, what do you say? You don’t have to agree, and if you
do say yes and then find you’re not happy with the work — I
warn you, it’ll be hard, with long hours, and not always as
clean and pleasant as you’ve been accustomed to — then I
won’t hold you to it. You’ll be able to return to normal staff
duties. But will you at least give it a try?’ She tilted her head a little and lifted her fine eyebrows.
Judy bit her lip, longing to say yes, yet still held back by a
sense of loyalty to her workmates. She looked over at Miss
Marsh again and the supervisor caught her eye, said
something to her companions and came swiftly across the
room.
‘Well, Judy? Has the Lady Mayoress explained what she
wants?’
‘Yes, Miss Marsh. I don’t know what to say. There’s all
the work of getting the office together again, and—’
‘Say yes,’ the older woman advised her. ‘It’s an opportunity
for you, Judy, and I believe you’ll be good at it. I can
manage with the rest of the girls, and the male clerks, and
we may be able to take on extra staff as well. But the
Mayoress needs someone with Council experience as well as
initiative, and in you she’ll have both.’
Judy felt her skin colour. ‘Well, if you really think so …’
‘I do. I’ll be sorry to lose you, Judy, but we all have to use
our abilities where they’re most needed, and the WVS does
an excellent job. They’ll be needed even more as this war goes on. Now, you’ll have to excuse me, I must get back.’
She bobbed her head at the Lady Mayoress. ‘Let me know if
there’s anything else you need, madam.’
Left together, the Lady Mayoress and Judy looked at
each other. Judy smiled awkwardly and said, ‘Well, it looks
as if that’s settled then, madam. And - and thank you for
asking me.’
The Mayoress held out her hand. ‘I’m very pleased to
have you on my team. Now, I told you that I was stealing
two girls from Miss Marsh, but I haven’t told you who the other one is. It’s Laura Godsall - I think you know her, don’t you? She’s rather senior to you and will be my
secretary, but to all intents and purposes you’ll share the
work between you. We don’t have “hierarchies” in the WVS, we like women to be able to use their own individual skills so if you have any ideas of your own, or think things could be done differently, you must say so. Now, I’ve been given
the office next door for my own use, so come through and
we’ll get started.’
‘Yes, madam.’ Still feeling rather bewildered, Judy
followed the Mayoress through to a smaller room where she
found another desk and two of the dining tables. Laura
Godsall, a tall girl a year or two older than Judy, with long
blonde hair rolled up in a thick pleat over her forehead,
Betty Grable style, was sitting at one with a pad of
notepaper in front of her.
‘Here’s Miss Taylor come to help us,’ the Mayoress said
briskly. ‘You know each other already, and I’m sure we’re
all going to get along famously. Now, what’s been going on
while I’ve been out of the room, Laura?’
‘I’m trying to make lists of all the things we need to do,’
Laura said. She had a low, rather musical voice, and Judy
remembered that she sang in one of the church choirs in the
city. Her father was a vicar. ‘If we appeal for more
volunteers, we need to be able to give them jobs to do
straight away. The tea-and soup-stalls all have a rota, but
we need more people for the Emergency Centres, and more
Evacuation Helpers. Mrs Daysh was in here just now from
the Clothing Fund; she says they’re desperate for more
clothes—’
‘You see why I need help!’ the Mayoress said to Judy.
‘There’s an enormous amount to be done. Now, as Laura
says, the first thing we must do is find more volunteers.
That means plenty of notices to be put up, and we can’t get
them printed - the printers have got far too much to cope
with - so I think you’d better spend some time making them
by hand. Big, bold and simple, there’s no time for anything
fancy. We’ll get them into all the Emergency Centres and
First-Aid Posts, and everywhere else we can think of. I’ve
managed to get hold of some large sheets of paper - here,
spread them out on the table. Now, I must get down to the
Clothing Store. We had a new consignment in last week that
I don’t think has even been unpacked yet. I’ll take Mrs
Daysh with me and we can sort them out at once.’
She was” gone, leaving the two girls with a pile of paper
and a box of crayons between them. They looked at each
other and Judy grinned a little ruefully.
‘Well, I suppose it’s important work.’
‘It is,’ Laura assured her briskly. ‘Even if it does feel a bit like being back at school. Let’s see how many we can get
done by lunchtime - and what’s the betting that by then
she’ll have thought of something else for us to do!’
As it turned out, by lunchtime the Mayoress had thought
of quite a few things for them to do. Most of the women
who were already volunteers had gone straight to the
Emergency Centres, but some had come to the hotel with its
new offices to ask for orders. Laura and Judy, by now
inundated with requests for help, were kept busy matching
them up, and Judy soon lost any sense of embarrassment at
asking a well-dressed woman to take a frail old lady to the
lavatory, or sending a young mother with three small
children of her own to look after a crowd of bedraggled
urchins who didn’t seem to have any parents at all.
‘They wouldn’t volunteer if they didn’t mean it,’ Laura
remarked as she helped an efficient old lady to unload a pile
of woollen jumpers that someone had sent in. ‘It’s like the
Mayoress says - if you’re in the WVS you’ve got to be
flexible. Ready for anything. I can’t see anyone offering if they’re not prepared to do whatever they’re asked to do.’
‘Well, I hope we get lots more offers from these notices,’
Judy said, printing wanted - volunteers for the WVS out
for the hundredth time. ‘It’s been busy enough before, it’ll
be even worse now, especially if we get more raids like
Friday’s.’
‘D’you think we will?’ Laura paused in her sorting.
‘D’you think they’ll bomb us that badly again? I don’t know
how much more people will be able to stand.’
‘We’ll stand as much as we’ve got to,’ Judy said grimly.
‘We don’t have any choice, do we? And the Germans aren’t
going to stop because they feel sorry for us. They’ll hammer
and hammer and hammer till they think we’ll give in.’ She
drew a thick black line under the words and looked up.
‘We’ll get more raids all right, Laura. They haven’t finished
with Pompey yet - but what they don’t know, is that
Pompey hasn’t finished with them.”
Back at home at last, Judy stretched her toes out to the fire
and took a cup of tea from her mother. ‘Thanks, Mum. I
really need this. It was a horrible journey back. There’s any
amount of streets still blocked, the bus kept having to go a
different way. Some people said they were further away
from home when they got off than when they got on!’
‘It’s a shame you’ve got to go all the way out to Southsea,’
Cissie said, offering her a tin of broken biscuits before
settling a saucepan on the coals. ‘I hope they manage to get
the offices back into town before long.’
Judy shook her head. ‘They won’t go back now. You
haven’t seen the damage, Mum. We’ll be out at Southsea for
the duration, that’s what Miss Marsh says.’ She nibbled a
piece of Rich Tea. ‘Anyway, what sort of a day did you
have? Did you manage to get the rations sorted out?’
Polly nodded. ‘We’ve got temporary books, and we’ve
registered at the Co-op where Mum gets her rations.
They’ve opened up a grocery store not too far away, being
as the big one’s been bombed. Had to queue half the day but
at least we’ve got a bit of food in the place now. And we got
a bit more coal too, since we couldn’t manage to get all ours
out, but the woman was a bit funny about that, said it didn’t
take any more to warm five of us than one. I told her, we’ve
got to have something to cook on while there’s no gas, and
we’ve got an invalid in the house too, and she gave way in
the end but she didn’t like it.’
‘She only give us enough for a couple of hours a day
anyway,’ Alice observed. ‘I could have practically carried it
home in my pockets.’
Judy smiled. She was tired and cold after the long journey
from Southsea, and it was good to be back with the family
again. ‘I feel as though I’ve been working forever,’ she said.
‘It doesn’t seem like Sunday at all today. Did you manage to
get to church?’
‘Yes, we did, and so did just about everyone else in
Pompey,’ Polly told her. ‘Our church was full and I reckon
all the others must have been as well - the ones that are still standing, anyway. The vicar told us there was - how many
churches did he say got bombed, Mum?’
‘Well, there was the Wesley down Arundel Street, and
the one in Elm Grove, and Kent Street and Lane Road - oh
yes, and Immanuel too, all Baptist places they were. And the
old Unitarian in the High Street, that’s nothing but a pile of
rubble now, they say.’
‘What, old John Pound’s church?’ Dick said, glancing up
from his armchair. He was looking a bit better now,
although still with a slight greyish tinge to his face. ‘I never heard that. Well, that’s a proper shame - bit of history, that
church was. It was where old John Pound the cobbler
started up his Ragged Schools. Many a time I’ve looked at
the old wall tablet that said about how he used to take
kiddies in off the street and teach ‘em their letters while he
mended shoes. Used his own money to feed ‘em too, he did,
and put shoes on their feet and clothes on their backs. I call
that a real shame.’
‘I don’t think he actually mended shoes in the church,’
Judy began, but was silenced by a glance from her mother.
She bit her lip. It hardly mattered anyway. The tragedy was
that so many buildings had been bombed, whether they
were fine old churches or tiny terraced houses. The city was
having its heart torn out.
‘Tell you what,’ she said. ‘I’ve got a new job!’
The others stared at her. ‘A new job? Why? Have you been promoted? You never told us about this, Judy.’
Judy laughed. ‘I didn’t know, that’s why! And it is a kind
of promotion, I suppose, in a way. The Lady Mayoress has
asked me to work for her, helping with the WVS. You know
she’s high up in it, and she says they’re going to be even
busier now, helping in all sorts of ways. She needed some
more staff, so she asked Miss Marsh if she could have me
and Laura Godsall.’
‘But surely they’re all volunteers?’ Cissie said. ‘Does that
mean you won’t get paid?’
‘No, I’ll get the same wage as before. She’s allowed some
paid staff, you see, so that she’s always got people who know
what’s what. And we’re stopping out at the Royal Beach
because the WVS works with the Local Authority - it’s
something like the way the Wrens help the Navy and the
ATS help the Army, that sort of thing - but we might find
ourselves doing all sorts of jobs. I think it sounds
interesting,’ she said and finished her tea while the others
gazed at her.