Authors: Jessica Stirling
âWhich is?'
âAre we taking Vivian on board?'
âNow what do you think?' Mr Willets said with a bashful little giggle that seemed totally at odds with his character.
After consultation with welfare staff the billeting officer who had been responsible for the gaffe in the first place reluctantly agreed that Miss Cottrell might remain lodged with the Pells until a place could be found in one of the âall-girl' farmhouses or a room in town that didn't have two slavering males in close proximity. Mrs Pell's willingness to take on the role of moral watchdog had much to do with the decision, added to the fact that more and more âforeigners' were arriving in Evesham every week and congenial accommodation, especially for females, was at a premium.
In the dog days of February, Griff and Danny saw less of Kate than they'd hoped. Indeed, as Griff glumly pointed out, during her training phase they saw more of Kate's knickers hanging on the washing line than they did of Kate herself.
She hadn't been drawn into any of the little cliques that formed among the foreign-language monitors, however, for the German-speaking group was less tight-knit than most and arguments over entries in the monitor's logbook and Teutonic debates about points of style proved heated and divisive.
Even in the relaxed atmosphere of the Greenhill subtle tensions remained and Mrs Pell's lodgers tended to keep to themselves. On that evening, all together for once, Kate and Danny were seated on a couch in an alcove off the main lounge drinking beer while Griff hovered by the piano in the hope that the present incumbent of the stool, a female, would weary of butchering Rachmaninoff.
âHow long have you been married?' Kate asked.
âCouple of years, give or take,' Danny answered.
âIt must be hard for you being apart for so long.'
âYou get used to it,' Danny said.
âWhat did you do, what job, before you came here?'
âSub-editor on the
Star.
'
âDid you enjoy working on Fleet Street?'
âThere are worse jobs,' Danny said. âAre you wonderin' why I'm not in uniform?'
âThe thought never entered my head,' said Kate.
Danny shrugged. âI failed the medical.'
âOn what grounds?'
âFlat feet an' poor eyesight. I'm off to an optician's for a proper eye test as soon as I can get myself up to London. Are you home tonight or are you on late shift?'
âHome,' she said. âLie in tomorrow. I start at noon on a twelve-hour stretch. They tell me February has been a quiet month but it hasn't seemed so to me.'
âAre you havin' trouble with the translations?'
âSometimes,' Kate said. âFrequently, if I'm honest.'
Back in the East End, when he'd lodged with Nora Romano, Danny had been an arbitrator, a problem solver, the dependable chap to whom everyone, including Susan, had turned for advice. All that had changed when Susan had gone to work for Vivian Proudfoot and had fallen for the agent, Mercer Hughes, after which he had been nothing more than a bridge between what Susan had been and what she was in process of becoming.
He watched Kate put down the beer mug and, stifling a yawn, stretch her arms above her head.
âI must admit I do find it exhausting sitting for hours listening to strange voices crackling through a pair of headphones,' she said.
âWhat you need,' Danny said, âis a couple of days off.'
âWe're not entitled to leave, are we?'
âYou've heard what's comin' down the wires from Germany. Now Europe's thawin' out an invasion looks inevitable. Be no leave for any of us when that happens.'
âHave you been up in London recently?' Kate said.
âNot since Christmas.'
âDon't you want to see your wife?'
â'Course I do,' said Danny, hiding his ambivalence.
âThen why not ask for a forty-eight-hour pass and go home for a day or two, have a proper eye test and spend some time with your wife?'
âI could certainly do with an eye test,' Danny said. âI can barely read the transcripts these days.'
âHeadaches?' Kate asked.
âNow an' then.'
âTime you did something about it, Danny.'
âAye,' he said grudgingly. âI suppose it is.'
If Billy had inherited an argumentative streak from his grandfather â a suggestion Matt vehemently denied â his appetite had surely come down from his dad. He happily devoured anything that was put before him and even opened his beak willingly to receive the daily dose of cod liver oil that Breda ladled into him.
âI wonder if he needs to be wormed,' Ron said.
âDon't be bleedin' stupid. He's a growin' boy who likes 'is vittles,' Breda said. âDon't you, darlin'?'
âYar,' Billy answered through a mouthful of sausage.
It was breakfast time in the Hoopers' kitchen. Since Ron had started shift work at the fire station, it always seemed to be breakfast time for someone and the frying pan was seldom off the stove for long.
Unusually, Billy's routine and Ron's had coincided on that brisk March morning and the whole family, all three of them, were eating together.
Breda scooped two slices of toast from under the grill and spread them with butter. She added marmalade to one and strawberry jam to the other and put the jammy slice on a plate where Billy could reach it without effort. The marmalade she ate herself, standing by the stove and puffing on a cigarette between mouthfuls.
âWhat would you do if we 'ad money?' she asked.
Ron, who was being very careful not to stain his uniform, looked up, a rasher of black-market bacon poised daintily on the end of his fork.
âHow much money?'
âSay, three hundred quid.'
âSpend it all on drink.'
âI'm serious,' Breda told him.
âWhat? You won the pools, or somethin'?'
âIt's two years' wages, close enough.'
âOh, sure,' said Ron. âWe could retire to the country.'
âWouldn't be bad, that.'
âI thought you didn't like the country.'
âI could get used to it, I suppose. Be good for Billy.'
âBilly's all right here. Ain't yah, son?'
âYar,' said Billy obligingly.
Breda finished her toast and, with the cigarette dangling from her lip, said, âThree hundred quid would make a nice nest egg for when the war's over.'
âWhat you talkin' about?' Ron said. âWhere's all this money comin' from?'
Breda dropped her cigarette into a tin ashtray at the sink and ran a washcloth under the tap.
Billy, still eating, stiffened.
âNowhere: I'm just dreamin',' she said and, before he could bolt, snared her son by the scruff of the neck and vigorously applied the washcloth to his jammy face.
âHe's making more of it than it deserves,' Vivian said. âI wasn't much more than a child that summer.'
âBy my calculation you were twenty-four,' said Susan.
âThree,' said Vivian. âIn those dear, dead days that was practically a child. You have no idea just how repressive society could be when I was young.'
âHadn't you “come out” by then?'
âCome out?' Vivian said. âWhat do you take me for? I was never a debutante. We were poor â relatively poor. In any case, Papa made his money from trade and the Old Bailey was the closest any of our lot was ever going to get to appearing at court. Basil Willets and I were thrown together for less than a month, and he wasn't very well for most of it.'
âWhat was wrong with him?'
âI don't know. Yes, actually I do. He had an infection of the blood, a condition that almost killed him. He also had a bit of a limp which I see has gone.'
âSo,' said Susan, âhe was pale and interesting, was he?'
âMore pale than interesting, unfortunately.'
âHe says you were in love.'
âHe may have been in love but I certainly wasn't.'
âI think he's still a little bit in love with you.'
âHe's fast approaching middle age and, I suppose, tends to infuse the past with a rosy glow.'
âWhy didn't you tell me you knew Basil Willets?'
âBecause I thought you'd go all huffy and accuse me of securing you the BBC job which, I might add, you secured entirely on your own merits. Have you been in touch with your husband, by the way? The papers are full of rumours that Hitler is drawing up invasion plans again.'
âDon't change the subject,' Susan said. âYou're going out with him, aren't you? Basil, I mean, not Hitler.'
âWe're meeting for a professional lunch,' Viv admitted.
âA “professional” lunch; what's that?'
âHe's hinted â just hinted â that he wishes to use me on the programme. I can't think why.'
âCan't you?' Susan said. âI can.'
âAt least I wasn't foolish enough to marry a man I didn't love out of â out of â I don't know what. Pity, maybe.'
âOh, that's below the belt, Vivian.'
âIf you really are in love with Danny Cahill,' Vivian pressed on, âwhy are you chasing after other men?'
âOther men? If you mean Robert Gaines, we want him for the programme and I was sent out to get him. Ask Mr Willets if you don't believe me. Besides, I do love Danny.'
âBut,' said Vivian, ânot as much as Danny loves you?'
âI've no idea how much Danny loves me. How on earth do you measure it? I married him, didn't I? It certainly wasn't a marriage of convenience. It's not as if I was pregnant, or anything.'
âMight have been better if you had been.'
âDanny doesn't want children,' Susan said.
âHow do you know? Have you asked him?'
âI don't have to ask him,' Susan said. âWe have a tacit understanding.'
âAt least if you had a baby to look after he'd know where you were.'
âIn some dismal council property in Shadwell, like as not, struggling to make ends meet.'
âGod, what a snob you've become, Susan.'
âSnob? I'm no snob. I've worked bleedin' hard to get where I am and, for your information, woman or not, I earn just as much as Danny.'
âI'm not sure that's something to boast about.'
âWhat's wrong with taking advantage of changing circumstances?' Susan said.
âOh,' said Vivian. âIs that what you call it? Most people think of it as being in danger of losing their freedom, if not their lives. To you it's just another opportunity to haul yourself up the ladder.'
âYes,' Susan said. âI have a career now and I intend to hang on to it for as long as possible. How can you, of all people, grudge me a bit of independence?'
âI don't grudge you anything,' Vivian said, âbut I do hope you're aware what you may be giving up.”
âA home and children?' said Susan. âA home that might be shelled out of existence before the summer's over, and children who'll learn to salute the swastika before they can walk. No, Vivian, I
do
know what this damned war with Germany might lead to, but until it does I aim to make the most of what time I have and plan for a future that might never come to pass.'
âA future without Danny Cahill?'
Susan ignored the question. âGod knows, we might all be dead this time next year. Not you, of course. Oh, no, not a woman who took tea with Dr Goebbels and has a brother who'll be first on to the podium, grinning like an ape, when Hitler marches into Trafalgar Square.'
âI have work to do,' said Vivian curtly. âI think it's time you left. I'll fetch your coat.'
âNo need,' said Susan. âI'll fetch it myself,' and, a moment later, stepped out into the darkness of Salt Street and set off, fizzing, for home.
They were eating at the dining table in the living room, all together for once. With the table pulled out from the wall to accommodate an extra chair the living room seemed more cramped than ever and a certain amount of conga-dancing and scraping of chairs was required before everyone was seated and Mrs Pell, with Kate's help, ferried dishes in from the kitchen.
The news that had crackled down the wires that forenoon suggested that Hitler and his cronies were up to something but so far no one could be sure which way the Jerries would jump.
âCrafty beggar,' Mr Pell said. âDon't trust him as far as I could throw him. What else have you been hearing, Kate?'
Since Kate Cottrell's arrival Mr Pell had addressed all his questions to her as if, Griff grumbled, a pretty face and slim figure went hand in glove with intelligence and they, mere men, had suddenly become numbskulls.
âBabble, mostly,' Kate said. âThere's been rather a lot of stuff about Sumner Welles's visit to Berlin.'
âNow who's he when he's at home?' said Mr Pell.
âUnder Secretary of State for Roosevelt,' Griff told him, through a mouthful of pudding.
âIs that who he is?' Mr Pell asked Kate who, with barely the flicker of an eyebrow, confirmed the information.
âThere's an undercurrent of feeling in some of the broadcasts from Hamburg,' she went on, âthat Welles is trying to drive a wedge between Germany and Italy and that's why Roosevelt sent him on the tour of Europe.'
âHe's in London right now,' said Griff.
âGot the chap now,' said Mr Pell. âI'll swear I heard him on the wireless with that other American feller.'
âEd Murrow,' said Griff with the resigned air of someone who expects to be ignored. âOn
Round Up
.'
âIs that one of your wife's programmes?' said Mrs Pell who had a habit of inflating Mrs Cahill's contribution to radio broadcasting.
â'Fraid not, Mrs P,' Danny said.
âOh!' Mrs Pell exclaimed, sitting up straight. âI clean forgot. There be a letter for you from London. It's behind the vase on the mantel there.'