Through The Storm
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Synopsis
The third novel in bestseller Maureen Lee's outstanding Liverpool sequence about family life during World War II Two years of war have taken a terrible toll on Pearl Street, Liverpool. German bombs have reduced some houses to rubble and most of the inhabitants have lost friends and family. While sisters Eileen and Sheila share the anxious burden of absent husbands, the conflict for others brings excitement and freedom. Kitty Quigley, stuck at home for years with an invalid father, is forced to register for war work and is delighted to become an auxiliary nurse. And Jessica Fleming, struggling to earn a living, finds herself and friend Rita increasingly drawn to the glamour and excitement of the Yanks. Look out for more in the bestselling Pearl Street series: Book 1 - Lights Out Liverpool Book 2 - Put Out the Fires Book 3 - Through the Storm
Release date: November 3, 2011
Publisher: Orion
Print pages: 452
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Through The Storm
Maureen Lee
Pearl Street was gradually waking up. Blackout curtains, upstairs and down, were drawn back and smoke began to curl lazily out of the chimneys as fires were lit to boil water for the first cup of tea of the day. The tea would be only half as strong as people would have liked – two ounces a week, which was all the ration allowed, didn’t last long if you drank it strong. Even if you drank it weak, you were quite likely to run out before next week’s ration was due. Few people complained. They knew too many merchant seamen from Bootle who had lost their lives in the struggle to keep the nation fed.
Dishes rattled, a welcome sound to those awake and still in bed. They snuggled further under the clothes in order to savour the last few peaceful minutes before getting up for work or school.
Every house shook briefly as an electric train left Marsh Lane station and clattered along behind the roof-high railway wall at the far end of the street. The trains ran to Liverpool one way and Southport the other.
It was a peaceful scene, tranquil, despite the disparate noises; the boats, the trains, the gulls, and the people inside the houses much appreciated waking up to the sounds they knew so well after the carnage and destruction of the past year, culminating in the May Blitz, when Liverpool had been subjected to an entire week of saturation bombing. The centre of the city had been left a veritable wasteland of dust and debris. In Bootle alone, nearly a thousand people had been killed or injured, and many thousands more had lost their homes along with everything they possessed. Scarcely a house had been left undamaged in some way.
Until that fateful May, there’d been thirty houses in Pearl Street, a terrace of fifteen each side, the front doors opening directly onto the pavement. Now there were only twenty-seven, and an ugly gap on one side where numbers 19 to 23 used to be. They were gone as smoothly as if they’d been cut away from their neighbours with a giant knife, leaving only a crater surrounded by a jumble of broken bricks, smashed slates and jutting beams as a sign that houses had ever stood there. A bedroom fireplace remained, looking pathetic and incongruous, halfway up the wall of number 17, which was miraculously intact. The broken windows, the lost slates, the smashed front doors in the rest of the street, had long since been repaired or replaced in the mammoth and united effort to get the town back on its feet.
The air-raid siren still went occasionally. Everyone felt the same awful hair-raising sensation when they heard its unearthly wail, and waited anxiously for the soothing drone of the All Clear. Planes rarely got through nowadays, much to their relief. No-one, even if they lived to be a hundred, could have got used to the almost nightly raids which had terrorised Liverpool for so long.
It was incredible, people said to themselves and each other, that all this was due to one power-crazed man, Adolf Hitler, who had turned the entire world inside out and upside down and now had virtually the whole of Europe in his evil, vice-like grip. Great Britain had been left to stand alone, with the alarming threat of invasion ever present until June, when Germany invaded Russia, which diverted Hitler’s attention away from the British Isles.
The sun was becoming less hazy as it rose higher in the sky. It shone directly through the upstairs windows, and those in bed felt the welcome warmth on their faces.
In the coalyard next to the railway wall, Nelson the horse munched his oats contentedly as Bill Harrison began to load the cart with sacks of nutty slack and coke, which was sometimes all he could get in wartime. Fuel was in short supply and the Government had recently urged people to share their firesides with their neighbours.
A stout uniformed figure came marching round the corner, whistling cheerfully, and began to deliver letters. The figure was no longer a cause for astonishment or mirth or both; people had got used to seeing a woman doing the job of postman by now. In fact, the population had got used to women doing all sorts of strange things since the war began.
Two girls virtually fell out of the front door of their house, giggling hysterically. They linked arms and ran down the street and around the corner, already late for the bus to work.
Another door slammed and a small man in overalls emerged who tipped his soiled tweed cap, winked at the postwoman and said, ‘Good morning, Vera.’
‘Morning, Dai.’
Dai Evans always tried to time his exit so he would come face to face with Vera Dodds. There was something about a buxom woman in uniform, particularly when she wore trousers …
‘Lovely day,’ he ventured.
Vera nodded. ‘Going to be hot, I reckon.’ She flipped through the letters in her hand. ‘Nothing for you.’
‘I weren’t expecting anything.’
‘Though there’s something for your neighbours, from America.’
‘America! I wonder what that can be?’ mused Dai.
‘And a letter for the Harrisons from their daughter in Newcastle.’
‘I hope it’s not bad news.’ The Harrisons had already lost two of their grandsons in the fighting in North Africa.
‘This looks official. It’s from the Ministry of Labour for Miss Kathleen Quigley.’ Vera showed Dai a brown envelope on which the name and address were typed.
‘Jimmy’ll have a fit if Kitty has to get a job,’ Dai grinned. Like most of the street, Dai had sized up Jimmy Quigley’s incapacity as being wholly put on, a fake. They didn’t blame him – any man able to get a pension out of those mean buggers who ran the docks was a man to be admired – but it wasn’t right, the way he took advantage of his daughter, Kitty. He’d had the poor girl running round after him like a blue-arsed fly for nearly ten years. ‘That’ll cause ructions in number twenty.’
‘We’ve all got to do our bit,’ Vera said primly.
‘I’d best be off,’ Dai said, adding casually, ‘Perhaps I’ll see you in the pub tonight, like?’
‘Perhaps you will,’ Vera replied, equally casually. A spinster in her late forties, she wasn’t sure why, but since she’d started delivering letters there were men in their dozens panting after her. She rather liked Dai Evans with his lovely Welsh sing-song voice. It was rumoured his wife, Ellis, gave him a terrible time at home.
An elderly woman opened an upstairs window, sat her small wiry frame backwards on the sill, and began to clean the glass with a chamois leather. ‘Morning, Vera,’ she shouted. ‘Anything interesting today?’
‘No,’ Vera said shortly. There was no way she would discuss the post with Aggie Donovan, the nosy ould bugger. She finished the street and continued with her round, just as the milkman arrived. He left the cart in Opal Street – it was impossible to turn a horse and cart round in the narrow cul-de-sac – and brought the bottles in metal containers, two in each hand.
A couple of young boys ran out of a house in front of him and began to kick a football to each other. ‘Mind the milk,’ he warned. ‘I don’t have none to spare, not with the rationing. If you break one, your mam’ll have to give up one of hers and she’ll murder you.’
One of the boys stuck out his tongue. ‘No she won’t.’
‘Oh yes she will.’
‘She won’t.’
The milkman gave up. The stable door opened and Nelson came trotting out with Bill Harrison, his face already black with coal dust, sitting behind holding the reins loosely in his even blacker hands. His eyes lit up when he saw the milkman and he pulled the cart to a halt.
‘Just in time. Our Nelson can have a word with your Daisy.’
The milkman chuckled. ‘We should let him get stuck across her one of these days. It must be lousy being a horse and the only oats you get come from a bag.’
‘We might come up with a racehorse between us.’
Nelson had already noticed Daisy waiting on the corner and whinnied impatiently for his owner to get a move on. Mr Harrison slapped his broad brown rump. ‘Giddeup, boy.’
The wooden wheels of the coal-cart rattled noisily over the cobbles and a few seconds later the two horses were nuzzling each other gently.
More people left for work, the men mainly in the direction of the docks. One or two who’d been on night shift arrived home, worn out and eager for something to eat and a good kip.
Aggie Donovan had finished cleaning the bedroom window, but stayed where she was. It was a good vantage point from where she could see everything that was going on. Her beady eyes swept this way and that as eagerly as the seagulls. She could even see into some of the bedrooms opposite if she tried.
A van drove into the street and stopped outside number 10, Miss Brazier’s old house. Two workmen got out and carried in a ladder and several tins of paint. Although Aggie had approached them yesterday, the workmen professed to have no knowledge of who the new tenants were.
‘Funny colours,’ she remarked, staring down the hall which was painted pink. As far as she could see, the living room was white, but perhaps that was just an undercoat.
‘Everyone to their own taste,’ the workman said and slammed the door when it looked as if Aggie were about to elbow her way in for an inspection.
The two boys had been joined by several others, and Aggie nearly jumped out of her skin when a football hit her bony behind with considerable force.
‘Who did that?’ she screeched. ‘I could have fell.’ She struggled into the bedroom and ran downstairs, but when she opened the door the street was empty apart from Nan Wright already sitting on the doorstep of number 1, soaking up the early morning sun in a pink hairnet and bedroom slippers, looking like a great fat wrinkled whale. The boys had vanished as if by magic.
Soon afterwards, the children started to call for each other for school. They began to leave in small groups, gasmasks over their shoulders. They went more cheerfully than they used to. Since the bombs had started falling, their school, St Joan of Arc’s, situated dangerously near to the docks, had closed, and now they went for just half a day to St Monica’s. It was a long walk, but better than spending an entire day being bossed around by teachers.
Aggie waited on her doorstep, hopping impatiently from one foot to the other. ‘Who kicked that ball?’ she demanded when several young lads appeared looking as if butter wouldn’t melt in their mouths.
‘What ball?’ they asked innocently.
Like the milkman, Aggie gave up. Kids today, she thought disgustedly, they had no respect for their elders. They got away with murder, unlike when she was a girl. Many’s the time she’d received a clip around the ear for merely looking at a grown-up the wrong way round.
She crossed over to the end house and began to air her grievances to Nan Wright, but Nan appeared irritated at having her sunbathing interrupted and stubbornly refused to agree with a word Aggie said.
‘We weren’t bombed when we were kids, were we, Mrs Donovan? We didn’t have rationing, either, and our dads weren’t away fighting in a terrible war.’
‘No,’ Aggie conceded grudgingly. Her behind still hurt where the football had hit it. ‘Even so …’
‘Seems to me,’ said Nan, ‘that kids bear up remarkably well, all things considering. They brighten up the street no end. I couldn’t stand it when most of ’em were evacuated and everywhere was dead quiet.’ Her only child, Ruby, then twelve, had died of scarlet fever in the last month of the last century, and Nan, already a widow, had lived on her own ever since.
Aggie, annoyed, decided to change tack. She put her hands on her hips and glared down at the woman. ‘I’m surprised at you, Nan Wright, sitting out so early in the morning,’ she said spitefully. ‘I’d’ve thought you’d have work to do inside.’ She hadn’t even got her teeth in, Aggie noticed, and there were gravy stains all down the front of her cotton pinny which hadn’t been near a drop of starch when it had last been washed. Her nearly bald head shone through the pink hairnet, and Aggie wondered why she bothered to put one on.
Nan Wright rubbed the bright purple knotted veins on her bare sagging legs and seemed unperturbed by the attack. ‘I have, but that sun’s too good to miss. I can always do me work later. When you get to seventy-two, some things don’t seem to matter as much as they used to.’
‘Huh!’ Aggie was seventy-four and as thin and small as Nan was big and fat. An eternally agitated woman, never still, she had the energy of someone half her age and an unquenchable interest in everybody else’s affairs. Almost universally loathed throughout the street, nevertheless she was listened to avidly as she relayed juicy bits of gossip she’d managed to pick up. Every now and then, she surprised the neighbours with acts of unexpected kindness and generosity.
Aggie returned home and decided to clean the back bedroom window, which would give her an entirely different aspect to view.
The street was silent for a while as the women made the beds, washed the breakfast dishes and carried out their other indoor tasks. Then, as if an alarm had been set, at least a dozen emerged to attend to the outside of their houses; to brush the pavement, clean the brass on the front door, wipe the window sills. Several came armed with buckets of warm suds and proceeded to scrub their steps, whitening the centre and neatly finishing off the edges with a border of red raddle. Ellis Evans, a big woman with a florid, unhealthy face, attacked the walls of her house with a yardbrush, rubbing them so hard that clouds of brick dust gently floated down.
Everyone waved to Nan, who sat watching this hive of activity with amusement. Ellis would brush her house away altogether one of these days. There’d been a time, not all that long ago, when she’d been just as house-proud herself, but nowadays she felt thankful just to be alive and able to enjoy God’s warm sunshine when so many people had died over the past two years, including several of her dear neighbours.
Most of the women went indoors, though a few remained, leaning on their mops or brooms talking to each other. Nan watched the steam rising gently from the washed steps as they quickly dried in the heat. Her own doorstep was a disgrace, but she didn’t care. If it got too bad, someone would offer to scrub it for her.
In the house next door, Mrs Singerman began to play a gentle tune on her piano, and Nan felt a wave of blissful happiness pass over her old body. What a beautiful world it was! What a pity folks couldn’t be left to get on with their own affairs without interference from monsters like Adolf Hitler! She closed her eyes and promptly fell asleep.
She was woken by Kitty Quigley shaking her by the shoulder. ‘Would you like me to get your shopping, luv?’
‘Well, I wouldn’t mind …’ Nan said the same thing every day when someone offered to do her shopping. She made to get up, but getting up was such a struggle nowadays.
‘Of course I don’t mind. Don’t budge,’ Kitty said kindly. ‘I’ll fetch your ration book off the mantelpiece.’
Nan leaned sideways to allow the girl to get past into the house. Kitty came back seconds later, tucking the ration book in her shopping bag. ‘Is there anything you particularly need?’
‘A pound of ’taters, and any sort of meat that’s going, as long as it’s not that whalemeat. It’s dead horrible, tastes like cod liver oil. Even Paddy O’Hara’s dog wouldn’t eat it when I offered him a bit.’
Kitty sighed. ‘Me dad doesn’t like it, either.’
‘Are you all right, Kitty? You don’t look at all yourself this morning.’ She was a pretty girl, Kitty Quigley – well, not so much a girl, she must be all of twenty-six or seven – with a mass of unruly brown curls and wide-apart hazel eyes that looked at you with an almost startling clarity. Although she never used a scrap of that make-up stuff, her cheeks and lips were a pale rosy pink. She was always dressed nice, even if it was only to go to the Marsh Lane shops: but then, thought Nan, the shops were as far as Kitty ever got, what with her dad being virtually housebound and needing constant attention since his accident on the docks. She was wearing her lemon-coloured cotton frock with white piping on the collar and the belt. A timid girl, though with a sunny personality, today she looked unusually wan and downcast.
‘I’m okay,’ she said in a tone of voice that told Nan she wasn’t okay at all. ‘I’ll be as quick as I can with the shopping. You can give me the money when I get back.’
‘All right, luv. There’s no hurry. I’ll see you later.’
Kitty left, and Aggie Donovan came sidling over and nodded at her retreating figure. ‘They got a letter this morning at number twenty. It came in a brown envelope.’
‘Did it now!’ said Nan, adding sarcastically, ‘What did it say?’
But the sarcasm was wasted on Aggie. ‘How should I know?’ she asked indignantly.
As she made her way towards the shops in Marsh Lane, Kitty thought about the letter that had arrived for her that morning. Apparently, the Ministry of Labour classified her as a single woman without dependants and demanded that she present herself at the local Labour Exchange next Monday morning at half past ten to register for war work.
There was nothing in the world Kitty wanted more than to get a job and do her bit towards the war effort. There were times when she felt as if the conflict was passing her by; that one morning she would wake up and it would all be over and Kitty Quigley wouldn’t have done a single thing to help her country win, not even in a voluntary capacity. In 1939, when it first started, Dad had nearly been in tears when she suggested she become an Air-Raid Warden or an Auxiliary Fire Fighter or join the Women’s Voluntary Service.
‘But what happens if those air raids they’re all talking about get going?’ he asked piteously. ‘Your poor ould dad’ll be left all on his own.’
‘You can always go to the shelter,’ Kitty said reasonably. ‘They’ve built one only just round the corner. One of the neighbours’ll come in and help you get there,’ she added quickly before he could raise that particular objection.
But Dad immediately thought of another. ‘Say if the worst happens and you’re killed! Who’ll look after me then? I’d have to go in a home.’ His eyes became moist. ‘I couldn’t stand that, Kitty, luv. I’d sooner be dead meself than go in a home. No, I think we should stick together. That’s what families are supposed to do during wartime, stick together if they can.’
Kitty loved her dad dearly. She couldn’t stand it when he cried. She knew he missed his mates and the camaraderie of the docks. He hated being an invalid and dependent on his daughter for virtually every little thing. For his sake, she immediately gave up all thought of joining a voluntary organisation and later on, during the raids, she and Dad sat under the stairs when the bombs fell on Bootle. Sometimes, during a lull, she could hear singing coming from the shelter around the corner, where everyone seemed to be having a dead good time despite the horrendous things happening outside.
There was a queue outside Costigans when Kitty arrived. There was always a queue outside any sort of shop that sold food – some women came well before they were due to open in order to be first – but this queue seemed unusually long, which meant there must be something special on sale.
‘What have they got?’ Kitty asked the woman at the back.
‘I dunno, luv. Look, keep me place a mo, and I’ll pop up to the front and see.’
Kitty willingly agreed. ‘Okay.’
‘I hope it’s biscuits,’ another woman said. ‘I haven’t had a biscuit in ages.’
‘I wouldn’t mind biscuits either, custard creams.’ Kitty’s mouth watered at the idea of dipping a custard cream in a cup of tea. It hadn’t exactly seemed a delicacy before the war, but now … ‘On the other hand, me dad was only saying the other night he really fancied sardines on toast.’
‘Aye, sardines’d be a nice treat.’
The first woman returned to reclaim her place. ‘It’s baked beans,’ she announced excitedly. ‘One for each ration book.’
Two more women had come up behind Kitty. ‘What’s the queue for, luv?’ one asked.
‘Baked beans.’
Kitty waited for nearly an hour, praying all the time the beans wouldn’t be sold out before her turn came. She emerged, triumphant, with three tins, one for Nan Wright, together with some other rations; tea, sugar and half a pound of nice lean bacon. They could have bacon and beans for dinner today.
She then queued for bread, queued for potatoes, and decided not to bother with the butcher’s when she discovered there was only the hated whalemeat on offer. Perhaps Nan would like a few slices of the bacon? Several women were waiting outside the shop as there was a rumour sausages might be available soon. The butcher didn’t dare announce the sausages were definite, else word would flash round like wildfire, and he’d end up with a queue a mile long and a possible riot on his hands if there wasn’t enough to go round.
On the way home, Kitty called in the newsagent’s shop to collect the Daily Herald. ‘I don’t suppose you’ve got any ciggies?’ she asked hopefully.
Ernie Johnson, a middle-aged man with a severe squint, gave her a suggestive wink from behind the counter with his best eye. ‘Give us a kiss, and I’ll let you have ten Woodbines.’
‘I’ll do no such thing,’ said Kitty indignantly. ‘Have you really got Woodbines, Ernie? Me dad hasn’t had a smoke in weeks.’
‘Can I pinch your bum, then?’
‘No you can’t!’
‘In that case, what’ll you give me for ten Woodbines?’
‘The money!’
Ernie sighed as he produced the ciggies from underneath the counter. ‘There’s some women’d dance round me shop stark naked for them.’
‘I’m not sure if I’ll come in here again once the war’s over,’ Kitty said threateningly.
‘Can you imagine it being over, Kitty?’ Ernie’s face grew serious.
Kitty thought, then shook her head. ‘No. It’s funny, but it feels as if we’ve always been at war and it’ll never stop. I’ve even got used to the bomb sites. I can hardly remember Marsh Lane all built up like it used to be.’
‘I feel the same.’ Ernie seemed to be looking at Kitty with one eye and the door with the other. She remembered he had two sons, both in the army, though he was always good-humoured in a crude sort of way. ‘I wonder if things’ll ever be normal again?’
The door opened and a man poked his head in. ‘Any ciggies?’
‘No, mate,’ Ernie shook his head.
‘Ernie!’ Kitty said reproachfully when the door had closed.
‘Well, I’ve never seen him before. I keep the ciggies for me favourite customers – and there’s none more favourite than you, Kitty.’
He smacked his lips and made to come round the counter, and Kitty quickly escaped. She was never quite sure if Ernie was joking or not.
‘Kitty!’
A pretty, harassed-looking woman pushing a black pram containing two rather large children came panting up when Kitty emerged from the newsagent’s. ‘They’ve got baked beans in Costigans.’
Sheila Reilly had been in the same class as Kitty at school. She’d been Sheila Doyle from Garnet Street in those days, but had moved to Pearl Street when she married Calum Reilly, a merchant seaman who was away most of the time.
‘I know, I got some. I got one for Nan Wright, too. Did you know Ernie Johnson’s got ciggies?’
‘I’ve already bought a packet for me dad. He’s a dirty bugger, that Ernie. The things he asked me to do!’ She stopped the pram and fanned her face with her hand. ‘Phew! I’m sweating like a cob. Here, put your bags in the pram, Kit. That’s why I bring it. Our Mary’s two and Ryan’s three and they’re far too big to be pushed round, but it saves having to carry all me shopping. There’s no way I could cart home seven tins of beans, along with everything else.’
‘Mam!’ the children complained in unison as Kitty gratefully planted her two bags on their feet.
‘Shurrup, youse two, else I’ll make you walk,’ Sheila told them severely. She smiled at Kitty. ‘Kids!’
Sheila had six children; the older four were at school. The two women had been good friends once, though nowadays Kitty avoided her whenever she could as long as it didn’t involve being rude. Sheila Reilly with her vast family made her feel uncomfortable, like a dried-up old maid. Sometimes, Kitty felt it wasn’t just the war which was passing her by, but life itself.
‘How are you doing?’ Sheila asked as they walked back home. ‘I haven’t seen you for a natter in ages. Why don’t you pop in for a cup of tea now’n again? We could talk about old times.’
Because they’re the last thing I want to talk about, thought Kitty. It would only remind her of the hopes and dreams she’d once had, that the three of them had had; Brenda Mahon, Sheila and Kitty. They’d stayed friends after they left school at thirteen and went out to work. They’d done the First Fridays together, made the Stations of the Cross each Easter, gone to the pictures, giggled breathlessly over boys. She muttered something about how she’d love to pop in for a cup of tea, but her father always kept her busy.
‘Remember us hanging round North Park when it was dusk waiting for the Parkie to lock up? We used to have a fine ould time with the lads. We even had a bet once on which of us would be kissed first.’
‘I remember,’ Kitty said shortly.
‘You won. You were the best looking and drove the lads wild. Me and Brenda always thought you’d beat us getting married by a mile …’ Sheila paused as she turned the pram into Pearl Street, as if aware of how tactless she was being. Kitty Quigley had been stuck at home with her dad for ten whole years and denied the opportunity even of meeting a man, let alone marrying one. ‘Still,’ she finished lamely, ‘marriage isn’t the be-all and end-all of a woman’s existence, is it?’
‘I didn’t particularly want to get married, did I?’ Kitty did her best to sound cool and unperturbed. ‘I wanted to be a florist. I intended having me own shop eventually.’ She’d been working in Garlands in Stanley Road for nearly a year learning the trade, and distinctly remembered the day someone came running in to say her dad had been taken to Bootle hospital. Kitty left immediately to go and see him, never dreaming at the time she was leaving for good.
Sheila began to manoeuvre the pram down the back entry. ‘That’s right, so you did. You were always the artistic one at school.’
Though Kitty had assumed other things would be on the cards eventually; a husband, children, a home of her own. When they reached the Quigleys’ back door, she put her hand on the latch to go in.
‘Y’know,’ Sheila said, looking at Kitty thoughtfully, ‘I’ve often wondered what would have happened when your dad was hurt if you’d been a boy? Would you still have been expected to give up your job to look after him?’
It was something Kitty had wondered herself, lately; not at first, but when she saw the young men being called up to fight regardless of their family circumstances. If she was a man, if she was called up, Dad would have no alternative but to manage on his own.
‘I dunno,’ she muttered. ‘I had a letter this morning from the Ministry of Labour.’ She had to tell someone. ‘They want me to register next Monday for war work.’
‘That’s good – isn’t it?’
‘I suppose so.’
‘Our Eileen had ever such a good time when she worked in the munitions factory. The women there were an absolute scream.’
‘I know. She told me about them.’ Sheila’s sister, Eileen, had lost her husband and little boy in the raids last Christmas. She’d recently remarried and left Pearl Street to live in Melling, a small village outside Liverpool. ‘It’s just that …’ Kitty paused.
‘What, luv?’
A voice piped from the pram, ‘Mam, I’m thirsty.’
‘And I’m dying for a wee wee, Mam.’
The children were becoming impatient waiting in the entry. Sheila plucked them out and shooed them into the house next door but one. She turned back to Kitty, aware something was wrong, her good-natured face full of concern. ‘What is it, luv?’ she asked again.
‘It’s just that … that me dad’s started writing down all the things I’ve got to say on Monday to persuade them not to take me,’ Kitty said in a rush. She felt cross with herself when halfway through her voice actually broke and she felt as if she could very easily cry.
‘C’mon, luv.’ Sheila put her hand on Kitty’s arm. ‘Let’s have that cup of tea and you can tell me all about it.’
‘But I’m already late,’ Kitty said tearfully. ‘I was ages in that queue waiting for the beans.’
‘So what? It won’t hurt your dad to wait a while longer.’ Sheila took Kitty
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