Welcome Page
Book 1
The Angels of Lovely Lane
Dedication
Contents
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Copyright
Book 2
The Children of Lovely Lane
Dedication
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Copyright
Book 3
The Mothers of Lovely Lane
Contents
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Acknowledgements
Copyright
About Nadine Dorries
Newsletter
Copyright
An Invitation from the Publisher
For Chris
Cover
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter one
Chapter two
Chapter three
Chapter four
Chapter five
Chapter six
Chapter seven
Chapter eight
Chapter nine
Chapter ten
Chapter eleven
Chapter twelve
Chapter thirteen
Chapter fourteen
Chapter fifteen
Chapter sixteen
Chapter seventeen
Chapter eighteen
Chapter nineteen
Chapter twenty
Chapter twenty-one
Chapter twenty-two
Chapter twenty-three
Chapter twenty-four
Chapter twenty-five
Chapter twenty-six
Chapter twenty-seven
Chapter twenty-eight
Chapter twenty-nine
Chapter thirty
Chapter thirty-one
Chapter thirty-two
Chapter thirty-three
Chapter thirty-four
Copyright
Liverpool, December 1940
Young Emily Haycock ran like the wind along George Street towards home. She was ten minutes later than usual and her lungs filled with the Mersey mist as she covered the last few yards uphill to the back gate. She had left the munitions factory on time, but had been frustrated by the slowness of the bus, which seemed to take forever. George Street sat at the top of a sandstone precipice from which well-trodden steps led down to the docks.
Emily knew that no sooner had she set foot inside the door than she would need to collect the food coupons and run back out again, down the road to queue with the rest of the factory workers at the corner shop at the end of Albert Street. She hoped there would be enough bacon and butter left for the family tea by the time she arrived, so that she could feed her younger brothers. Soon, it would be dark, the shop would close and everyone would prepare for the blackout.
Emily’s stepfather, Alfred, had returned wounded from fighting with the King’s Own Lancaster regiment the year before. He now walked with a caliper on his leg and a stick in his hand. His constant pain was obvious to all, although he rarely complained. The day after his full medical discharge, he wasted no time in signing up for the Home Guard, which was where he spent every single night, seven days a week.
‘Hello, queen,’ he said, as Emily almost fell in through the back door. He was sitting on the edge of the sofa. Wooden-framed and stuffed with horsehair, it had taken all their strength that morning to drag it from the parlour to in front of the kitchen range. Here, under a darned and patched blanket, lay the pitifully thin form of Emily’s sleeping mother. Earlier that morning, despite her obvious discomfort, she had insisted on being lifted out of bed and carried downstairs. The air in the kitchen smelt acrid. Of blood and sputum, of unwashed hair and vomit-laced breath.
‘Shh.’ Alfred placed his finger to his lips.
‘How is she?’ Emily whispered as she tiptoed over and gazed down at the once beautiful pale complexion, now the colour of tallow. Her mother’s head was turned to one side, almost facing the back of the sofa. Beads of perspiration rested on her top lip and Emily could hear the gentle sound of her laboured and shallow breathing as she slept the deep healing sleep of the sick. Her dark hair was matted and clung to the side of her face. On one corner of her mouth remained a streak of stale blood she had wiped with her handkerchief during a bout of coughing. The thin, parchment-like skin covering her eyes appeared to have sunk deeply into her skull.
‘Had a good day, love?’ Alfred stroked Emily’s forearm with his hand. A gesture of affection and solidarity in the midst of their shared concern. Emily could not yet answer him; she couldn’t speak. Each time she walked into the house, she required a brief period of adjustment before she could step into her life as it now was, and not how it was supposed to be. She was only just sixteen and during the daytime, as she worked at her factory bench, she was able to pretend that this new situation, with an ailing mother and an injured stepfather, did not exist. She could imagine that life was still as it was, before the war, before the TB, before the days when she was forced to abandon her plans to train as a nurse at St Angelus.
‘The doctor came today. He said he wants her to be admitted into the sanatorium, over the water, in West Kirby, and she promised to think about it. He said he would move hell and high water to get her a bed. He’s a good man, you know.’
Emily nodded in agreement. She had met the specialist with her mother a number of times, and liked him a lot. It seemed to her as though he was kindness and concern itself.
‘How do I pay for your visit?’ she had heard Alfred ask, after his first call.
‘You don’t,’ the doctor replied. ‘The government cover this under a special scheme and even if they didn’t, you wouldn’t have to pay.’
After he left, Emily had read his list of instructions.
Bedroom window to remain open.
Complete bed rest elevated on five pillows for at least six months.
No bathing.
Nourishing diet.
No anxiety or excitement.
One visitor at a time only wearing a face mask of quadruple tightly folded muslin.
Hands of attendants and visitors to be washed in a diluted solution of Dettol before leaving the house.
Contact the hospital should symptoms worsen.
It was at that moment Emily had known her dreams of becoming a nurse were over.
‘She doesn’t want to leave the house or the kids, but whatever you said to her this morning, it’s had an effect,’ Alfred said. ‘Dr Gaskell wants her to have another X-ray and then he wants to collapse her bad lung, to rest it. He’s stuck as to what else to do, because the total bed rest doesn’t seem to be working. She can be so stubborn, your mam.’ As he spoke, he gazed down at his wife with a look so tender, it was painful for Emily to see. Emily knew what he meant. Only that morning she had asked him to call in the doctor again. She had been concerned at what had appeared to be a rapid deterioration. Instead of coughing up blood a few times a day, it seemed as though this morning it had been every five minutes.
‘At least she agreed to the total bed rest. She has stuck to that.’ Emily was clutching at straws and Alfred knew it.
‘She also agreed to go and visit Dr Gaskell at his St Angelus clinic tomorrow. He’s a good man, coming out here to the house to see her. She trusts him, and he’s the biggest man in Liverpool when it comes to this, you know. He knows what he’s doing all right. I think he’s going to try and persuade her, once she has had the X-ray, to be admitted straight to the sanatorium. He told me he’s worried now that the second lung is badly affected. The trouble is, so many of the sanatoriums have been shut down because of the war. The waiting list could be months. There may not be anywhere for her to go.’
Alfred’s voice trailed away. Both he and Emily knew that if her mother had agreed to consider leaving her young sons, she must be ill.
‘We have to be at St Angelus at ten in the morning,’ he said after a moment.
Emily squatted down and took her mother’s hand, bony and blue-veined, like a bird’s claw, and kissed the back. She hid her face. Alfred must not see her cry. He had enough to deal with and she must be his support, not a burden.
Emily’s parents laboured under the impression that she had no idea how bad things were. They were mistaken. She had heard them, in the dead of night, when they thought she and the younger children were asleep, talking, whispering, crying.
She had heard her mother’s coughing, seen her shiver and sweat, bring up blood, collapse into a chair, swamped with fatigue. The swollen ankles and the painful chest. She had seen enough people in the same condition while she was growing up on Liverpool’s dockside streets during the 1930s. She knew.
Early that morning, as Emily washed her mother and took her her morning tea, she had made her decision.
‘I’m going to stop work at the factory, Mam. Rita’s been great helping with the kids, but until you are better I think I had better stop here at home. After all, the doctor says you’re only allowed to get up to go to the toilet once a day. I have to be here, Mam.’
There was a catch in her breath. Emily was closer to tears than she had been aware. Her mother had tried to reply, but instead began a fresh bout of coughing. Emily saw the bright red frothing deposit that her mother did her best to conceal in her handkerchief.
‘I think that’s best too, love,’ her mother had said, grimacing through the pain, as Emily lifted her arms to wash them, gently taking the handkerchief from the thin fingers as she did so.
‘That’s not a good sign, I don’t think, is it?’ she said, inclining her head towards the crimson stain.
‘Oh, I don’t know, love. I think maybe it is a good sign, you know: get the badness out and then you can heal properly.’ Emily’s mother had no idea where the words came from as she tried to reassure her daughter. Put there by an ancient memory, or the ghost of a passed relative, or simply invented to help her in her hour of need as she struggled to reassure her family. To hold them together.
‘I’ll ask Da to call the doctor in, and I’ll let them know at the factory that I’m needed at home. Next Friday can be my last day. We have to get this better, Mam. Will you please go into the sanatorium?’
A weak smile passed between mother and daughter. Emily bent down and kissed her mother’s cheek. ‘I have to get on, Mam. Can you hear the kids?’
Again, they shared a glance of understanding tinged with affectionate exasperation as the sound of breakfast squabbles wafted up through the floorboards. ‘I’ll drop them at Rita’s on my way to work – that’s unless I drop them on their heads first, mind. I have to go in half an hour or I’ll be late. Alf and I are going to move the sofa into the kitchen, like you asked, and then Alf will help you down the stairs. You are right, you know: it is warmer down there, but you are not allowed to referee the boys.’ Emily knew that was exactly why her mother wanted to be moved downstairs, and that there was nothing she would enjoy more.
‘You go on, love, and thanks,’ said her mother. She squeezed Emily’s hand, but as Emily reached the door, she called her back. ‘Emily, come here.’
Emily slowly turned to the bed. Through her mind ran the words, ‘Don’t, Mam.’ She didn’t want her mother to tell her what was wrong. Much better that they both went on pretending that things would soon improve. For Emily, it was easier that way.
‘I know Alfred’s not your real dad, but you do know he loves you, don’t you? He thinks no less of you than of the boys. You have always been special to him.’
Emily let her breath go and sighed in relief. ‘God, Mam, of course I know that. I love him too. Alfred is my da and I don’t think of him as anything else. He’s been the best. You couldn’t have married a nicer person. I tell him every day he’s my Alfred the Great!’
Emily grinned at her mother, who looked like a doll lying in the bed, she was now so thin. She saw the tears welling in her mother’s eyes and knew that what had just passed between them was more than mere words of appreciation for the man who had provided them with a home, security and love. Her mother was looking for reassurance that Alfred would be cared for, should anything happen to her.
‘Don’t worry about Alfred, Mam; he will always be my number one. I will never let him down, I promise.’
Emily had lain awake the previous evening and heard the whispered exchange between her parents. ‘Too far gone. Both lungs now.’ Her mother sobbing, Alfred scrabbling for inadequate words of consolation. Alfred’s muffled voice and her mother never once failing to comfort him.
She had wanted to run into their room, slip into their bed and beg, ‘Please, tell me, what’s going on, because this can’t be true. I don’t understand what’s happening. Everything is changing and I’m so scared.’ She was filled with the fear of not fully knowing what was ahead, and the dread of being aware that worse was probably yet to come.
*
Now, at the other end of the day, it occurred to Emily that her mother had deteriorated after just a few hours. ‘She’s spent most of the day lying on the sofa. She refuses go back to bed now that she’s down,’ said her da. ‘Said she wanted to see you when you got in from work and the kids when they came home from school. You know your mam, she hates to miss anything.’
Emily smelt something that made her mouth water. Turning round, she saw that there was an earthenware pot on the kitchen table, covered by a tea towel, and instantly tears, which were never far from the surface, sprang to her eyes. She knew it was a donation from one of the neighbours; probably Mrs Simmonds, who often popped in and sat with her mother when her da did his rounds. If there was no meat to be seen she would take home with her whatever veg she could find in the Haycock kitchen, returning them hours later in a more edible state than when they left. On other days she would make double the scouse she needed for her own evening meal and then leave half on the table for Emily to heat up for the children when they arrived back from Rita’s house. Rita: yet another good neighbour they depended on. Emily felt as though Rita were her confidante, her best friend. More than that even, the older sister she had never had. Only a few years older than Emily, but already with a family of her own.
Emily’s mother opened her eyes and smiled at Alfred. Emily felt a twinge of jealousy. Her ma and Alfred loved each other so much that Emily often felt excluded by their private exchanges. She dropped back to her knees by the side of the sofa. ‘Mam, are you all right?’ She was vying for her mother’s attention, dragging her away from Alfred and feeling guilty for it.
‘Oh, there you are, queen,’ her mother whispered, with a hint of surprise. ‘I must have known you were home. I’m glad I woke up. Could you just grab the coupons, love, and go down to the shop for me before the kids come home?’
‘The kids are already home, love. They’ve gone straight to Rita’s,’ Alfred said, smiling at his wife. Rita’s little sons and their own were inseparable. ‘They’ll be back soon, queen. She took them straight from school.’
‘It’s like we have four little boys, or none at all,’ Emily said, extracting the ration books from the drawer in the wooden kitchen table. ‘One day we’ll find out which ones are ours, eh? When we can finally peel them apart.’ Even her mother laughed at that, although the effort made her cough.
There had been talk about the children in Arthur Street and George Street being evacuated. Too close to the docks for their own safety, the letter had said. Many of the children had already left, mostly to North Wales, but those whose parents refused to be parted from them, or believed the war would be over sometime soon, remained. ‘Our boys won’t be going anywhere,’ Alfred had said, when the letter arrived. ‘If a bomb gets us, we’ll go together.’
Emily had laughed. ‘A bomb won’t get us, Da, but still, it might be safer and easier for our mam if the children go. One of the women in the factory said that lots of the evacuees are being well fed. Those who have gone to North Wales are getting eggs and meat, and that’s as good a reason to agree to them going as anything else.’
Many of the children in Arthur Street had been evacuated to Rhyl the previous week and the women were still crying. Alfred had seen and heard them and he was adamant that he did not want the boys to be sent away, but Emily knew that perhaps the time was right. Maybe, now that her mother wasn’t coping at all any more and was no longer objecting to the idea of the sanatorium, it was time for Emily’s young siblings to join their peers. The thought of life without the boys at home and her mam away in a sanatorium made her feel she was falling into a pit of loneliness.
‘The war will be over before the kids even reach Wales,’ Alfred had said. ‘It’ll be a waste of a journey and besides, I don’t want no strangers looking after our kids. Yer ma wouldn’t sleep at night. Worried sick she would be.’
There was some truth in what Alfred said. Emily knew that this evening the kids were at Rita’s and having a great time, but she also knew that Rita was thinking of doing exactly the same thing. Her husband Jack was on the front line and he had written home weeks ago, instructing her to do just that. Rita hadn’t said anything yet, but Emily had seen the woman who organized the evacuee transport leaving her friend’s back yard only yesterday morning.
She had no idea how she and her da would manage without Rita. If her own children were evacuated, how could they accept her help? Rita struggled every day, but she never failed to help out, and in return Emily did what she could for her, including watching her boys while Rita did shifts down at the munitions factory at the weekends. No doubt, if Rita’s children were away, she would increase her shifts to full time, and why shouldn’t she? But it would mean she would no longer be there when they needed her. These troubled thoughts had run through Emily’s mind since yesterday, but now she needed to run to the shop and collect up the kids before dark fell.
‘I’ll run for the messages quick, Mam. I’ll be back in half an hour.’
Her mother smiled weakly. ‘You’re a good girl, Emily, the best. I’m lucky to have you.’ Emily kissed her on the brow and stood for a moment, breathing in the smell of hair that she dared not wash.
Before she left for the shop, she popped her head round Rita’s back door. ‘Give me your coupons, quick. The shop has butter in.’
‘God, you’re a love,’ said Rita, taking the coupons out of a drawer. ‘How’s yer mam? I took her some pearl barley soup in at lunch time, but she didn’t want it.’ Her face was full of concern for Emily, whose two young brothers had run over and grabbed her knees as soon as she walked into the kitchen.
‘We’re having the best fun here, Emily. Do you want to play too? Rita says we have to listen to the radio later, because there is going to be news about the war and she wants to know where Uncle Jack is. Are you coming to listen?’ Richard jumped up and down and looked up at her with eager eyes.
‘I will when I’ve done the jobs, love,’ Emily said, smiling at Rita. ‘And once the tea is cleared away we can play a game ourselves tonight, at home. As long as we are not too noisy. Mam is on the sofa we moved into the kitchen this morning, and she would love that.’
‘Mammy’s on the sofa. Mammy’s getting better,’ shouted Richard as he jumped up and down in excitement. Satisfied, he ran back off to play with the other boys.
‘I was there when Dr Gaskell came, Emily,’ said Rita. ‘Your da asked me to sit in, when he had to pop into the club to get his rota for the blackout. He said your mam had been pretty bad this morning. The doctor gave her an injection for the pain and he left some medicine in a brown bottle on the dresser. She’s to have it when the pain gets too bad. He said he wants to talk to your mam and da in the morning and they have to meet him at St Angelus. I was thinking, perhaps you might want me to go with him if you can’t?’ Emily was about to protest, but Rita went on, ‘Maisie Tanner has offered to take the boys to school. She loves your little Richard, thinks he’s a dote, and if she does that I can easily go to St Angelus. The doctor said he wants someone to be with your mam and da to listen to what he has to say and remember for them afterwards, and I said well that’s not a problem, it will be Emily or me. What do you think, love? Can you go? Or shall I? I think the doctor wants yer mam to be looked after by the St Angelus nurses and I know there are none better. My own mam was in St Angelus and she loved those nurses. Angels from Lovely Lane she called them. They all live in that big white house opposite the park gates. You know the one?’
Emily nodded. She herself had seen the nurses in their long skirts and capes and frilly hats, and when she was a little girl she thought she had never seen such pretty ladies. She had confided in no one, but all she had ever wanted to do was to become one of the angels. To wear the uniform and to look after people who were sick. But the war, Alfred’s being called up and then so badly wounded, her mother’s illness, two little boys to care for, her nursing duties at home, had all put a stop to that.
‘I’m going to leave work for good next Friday, Rita. I have to stay at home now. If Mam is taken into hospital, I can’t be at the factory all day. Can you go tomorrow and I’ll work out a week’s notice?’
‘Of course I can, love. If the doctor suggests she stays at St Angelus, I think it will be for the best. Your mam is going to need more help than we can give her soon. She will need those angels.’
Tears welled up in Emily’s eyes. ‘Rita, is my mam going to die?’
Rita dried her hands on her apron as she walked over to Emily. ‘Die? Of course not, love.’ She put her arms around the younger woman’s shoulders and hugged her. ‘She will be staying in St Angelus to be made better, just until there is a place in the sanatorium over the water, like Maisie Tanner’s mam. Now, come on, we have no time for crying, you and me. We have too much to do. Look, I’ve washed yer mam’s best nightie here and I’ve washed me own for her to take, too, for a spare. Pack those in her bag with some wash things and a headscarf to keep her hair nice. I was going to wash it for her – Alf and I, we had the range pumping out to keep the room warm, so the water was hot – but she wouldn’t let me. Truth is, I don’t think she could be bothered. Told us off for wasting the coke, she did. Wanted to save it until you kids got home to feel the benefit. Here’s me coupons; I’ll look after the kids. You go and get that bloody butter.’
She handed over the ration books and gave Emily another hug. ‘Go on now. I’ll have some soup ready for when you get back. Then you can crack on next door.’
*
When Emily reached the shop, she found Maisie Tanner in the queue in front of her. Emily knew she had been at school with Rita and was now married to Stan Tanner, who was away fighting the war, and they had a little girl who was about five or six years old. The family lived with Maisie’s mam and dad, and Emily was both touched and grateful that she had offered to look after the boys.
‘Hiya, Emily. How’s yer mam, love?’ Maisie greeted her warmly. ‘I’ve told Rita, I can do anything you want to help, queen. It’ll be no problem. Me mam was only saying tonight, she remembers the time your mam took a load of the kids to the shore at Crosby with Betty. Half a streetful they took. You remember yer mam’s mate Betty? She’s in Wales now, you know, sitting out the war.’
Emily did know. The Haycocks received a letter from Betty once a week, telling them they were mad for remaining in Liverpool and that the sea air in Trearddur Bay would be just what was needed for her mam’s chest to improve. Emily was beginning to wonder if she was right.
‘They pushed five kids in each pram and took them on and off the train. I’ll never know how they did it. God, it was a laugh. Our Brenda was one of the kids and she still remembers it. She’s never been since. Said she’ll never forget that day. I loved your mam, the poor thing.’
Emily couldn’t answer. Maisie’s use of the past tense was all she heard. Loved? It seemed to her that Maisie, who wasn’t very much older than herself, was wiser than she could ever be. Maisie made Emily feel as though she knew nothing. Is that what marriage and children do to you, make you older and wiser?
‘Rita is going with Mam to see the doctor at St Angelus tomorrow,’ she said instead. ‘I’ve decided to work out my notice at the factory. I need to be at home. I can’t keep depending on others to help out.’
‘Well, it’s no trouble, but that’s smashing for your dad,’ Maisie replied. ‘You’re a good girl, Emily. Don’t you worry about a thing. It’s a great hospital, that St Angelus, you know. Some of the women on our street have started having their babies in there. My mam says they only go for the rest in bed. Seven days they make you stay, and they wash the baby and everything. You don’t have to lift a finger. The Angels’ Hotel, me mam calls it. She loved it in there, once she began to get better. I’d love our little Pammy to become one of those angels from Lovely Lane. God, I would be so proud I would burst if that happened. I think this one’s a lad, though. Never stops kicking, he doesn’t.’ Maisie laughed as she rubbed her belly. ‘I’m going to tell them to stop sending Stan home on leave. I don’t want another until this bloody war is over. Mind you, I suppose a year without is too long for any man and I don’t want our Stan getting wandering eyes, now do I?’
Emily blushed to the roots of her hair, but even as she did so it occurred to her that her street was full of angels.
The neighbours were wonderful. They took it in turns to sit with her ma, cook for her, bathe her, nurse her. The entire neighbourhood was full of angels and one of the best was Maisie Tanner.
The noise of the air-raid siren ripped through the air without any warning.
‘Run,’ screamed Maisie, as the sickening sound of an explosion made their ears ring as the shop window shattered and shards of glass filled the air. They had never heard or witnessed anything so terrifyingly close and for a split second everyone in the queue dropped their bags and, covering their faces with their hands, froze to the spot. A moment of silence followed as the last splinter of falling glass dropped to the floor. The shopkeeper was the first to move, yelling for everyone to leave.
‘We’re too close to the bloody docks here,’ Maisie said breathlessly as they ran back towards the street.
‘Here, into the shelter, Emily. Maisie, come on,’ shouted a neighbour. It was the man who partnered up with Emily’s da in the Home Guard, checking every house at night to ensure that everyone had shut their blackout curtains properly. Not a shaft of light passed either of them by. He was standing at the entrance to the communal shelter, already joking with the children as they ran in.
‘I can’t. I need to get back to the kids and me mam,’ Emily shouted back.
‘Wait, Emily.’ Maisie grabbed her by her hand. ‘Rita will take the kids to the shelter at the other end of Arthur Street and your da will get your mam down somehow. He’ll carry her if he has to. Me mam will take our Pammy, so we’re safest here. Come on, queen – it sounds really close this time, the little bastards.’
Emily looked towards the shelter and then back down the street towards home. The bombs were falling early. She knew, if she sprinted fast, she would be home in less than three minutes.
‘They will all be under cover in a min. Best we do what Tom here says.’ The siren continued and Emily could hardly hear Maisie above the noise, but when the older woman suddenly grabbed her by the arm again she knew that this time it was not to reason with her. The grip was too hard and urgent. Maisie Tanner’s face was distorted in pain.
‘Is it the baby?’ asked Emily in alarm.
Maisie nodded, and Emily watched the pain fade from her face as quickly as it had come. ‘It can’t be, though. I’m only seven months, and I know that’s right because I know when Stan was on leave. I’ll be all right. It will stop.’
Emily had taken part in the street rehearsals run by the Home Guard half a dozen times. She knew that Rita and the boys would be stumbling along George Street towards the communal shelter any second now. Rita had a routine practised with the kids and they would probably already be on their way, the two younger boys piled into the pram with Richard and Henry standing on the carriage holding on to the handlebar while Rita pushed. They would be heading away from where she now stood. Rita would encourage the children to pretend that they were playing the train game. ‘Choo choo,’ the children’s voices would whisper into the dark. ‘All aboard the shelter train,’ Rita’s voice would ring back.
Before they ducked into the entrance Maisie and Emily turned towards the sound of another explosion and looked down towards the river’s edge. The skyline was a vivid red from the flames which leapt into the air.
‘Oh my God,’ said Emily, clasping her hand to her mouth. ‘It looks like one of the ships has been hit. The sky is on fire.’
Maisie followed her gaze down towards the Mersey and was speechless.
‘Come on, girls. You coming in or what?’ Tom sounded nervous and was becoming impatient.
And then came the stillness. The heavy, oppressive stillness during which no one spoke. The hairs on the back of Emily’s neck rose in fear as her skin tightened, and as she looked around her she saw that everyone had stopped and was standing, dead still, waiting. Then it came. The whistling sound that pierced her ears and an explosion so loud it deafened her, as George Street took a direct hit.
*
It was morning, cold and misty, and the fires still burned as she walked down the street she no longer recognized. In a daze, she refused to allow panic to take hold and tried her best to remain calm as she took deep breaths, in and out, in and out. The woman who had delivered Maisie’s baby girl – not the boy Maisie was convinced she was carrying – had run on ahead to Arthur Street, calling the name of Maisie’s mam, just as Maisie herself had done for most of the night. She had tried her hardest not to scream out in pain as they heard the bombs continually falling. Fear had gripped Emily’s heart during the long night while she sat holding Maisie’s hand. ‘It’s bad out there,’ one of the women had said.
Tom, whose duty shelter they were in, replied, ‘It is, it’s bad.’
Even though it was now daylight, the sky glowed a deep burnt orange through the airborne dust and smoke. The noise of a solitary woman shouting and running was surreal and confusing.
‘Where are the houses and the shop? Where has the shop gone?’ said Emily to no one. The fire tenders blocked her way down the street and the men working on the gas main shouted to her to stop.
‘Where are you going, love?’ a young man called out to her as she squeezed through the barrier which had already been erected. ‘Oi, stop. Are you mad or what? You can’t go down there.’
‘But I have to. I live there. I have to go home,’ Emily replied, in a daze. ‘Rita has the kids.’
‘You can’t do that, love. There’s been a direct hit on the street. It’s too dangerous.’ The man took her arm, looking at her with eyes loaded with sympathy. ‘Which side of the street did you live on, love?’ he went on.
Emily turned to face him. ‘We live on our side,’ she said, confused. ‘This side.’ She was looking at where the houses had once stood, where now there seemed to be nothing but rubble, and that was when she saw her mother. She shook her head in disbelief. Her mind refused to accept what her eyes could see although it was there before her, as clear as the flames leaping from the pile of rubble that had once been their home. She rubbed her eyes. The dust and smoke were distorting her vision. This was a nightmare. She would wake. This could not be true. It could not be real, but it was. It was real. It was her mother.
‘Oh, God, no, no,’ Emily screamed, and a man she had never seen before, his face covered with dirt, emerged through the smoke and ran towards them.
‘Are you all right, love?’ he shouted. ‘You need to get away from here. We have to make the gas mains secure first before anyone can go down the street. Does she live here?’ he asked the fireman who was holding Emily’s arm.
Emily wasn’t listening. She was looking at the face of her mother, who was lying on the roof of the house opposite where their own had once stood. Her arm dangling, she was looking directly into the street, her eyes open, free of pain at last.
‘You all right, love? Seriously, I’m going to have to move you away from the gas.’ The man was in front of her now, but she could not turn her head to look at him.
‘Mam,’ she whispered.
His eyes followed her own. ‘Jesus! Fecking hell,’ he muttered, putting his arm across her shoulder and trying to lead her away.
‘We have to get my mam. I’m coming, Mam,’ she shouted at the top of her voice. ‘Richard! Henry! Richard!’ she screamed into the heap of dust and rubble. ‘Rita!’
She tried to move forward, but now more hands were pulling her back.
‘Get her to the end of the street. Her da’s there, he’s still alive,’ she heard a voice say. ‘They won’t let him down here because of the gas.’
‘But Rita has the kids. She has to go with Mam to the hospital today. I’m coming, Mam. We’ll get you down now.’
‘Come on, love,’ said a man she recognized from the Home Guard. He put his arm around her, holding her tight, so she couldn’t move. ‘No one can do anything. You don’t need to go to any hospital now. No doctor can help. They’re all gone, love. Everyone in that row of houses. We’ve been searching through the rubble all night. There’s no one left except your da. He was on his way to fetch you when the bomb came down. Let’s get you back to your da.’
She heard the conversations of firemen nearby, oblivious of her presence. The voices came from somewhere within the dust and flames, from the men searching the rubble.
‘It was a bad one. A big bastard. Reckon there’s a woman in here and maybe four or five kids, could be more, all dead.’ For a moment the smoke cleared, and Emily saw that the speaker was standing in what had only the previous evening been Rita’s kitchen.
‘I have her coupons,’ Emily whispered through her tears, knowing that, of the children he referred to, two were her own little brothers. ‘I have her coupons,’ she sobbed again.
St Angelus Hospital, Liverpool, December 1951
St Angelus had begun life as a workhouse, proudly facing out towards the Mersey and across the Atlantic. It was built of a dark sandstone brick which had long since succumbed to smog and smoke and the dribbling black soot that ran down the exterior walls like icing on a cake. The many tall chimneys spewed out their lung-clogging smoulder from the basement furnaces which heated the Florence Nightingale wards.
Through the centre of the hospital ran a long, polished corridor that began at the main entrance and ended at the back door. The theatre block, the school of nursing, the medical school, the mortuary and the kitchens were housed in separate buildings dotted around the grounds and had been built at varying times over the past two hundred years. Some were constructed of brick, some more recent post-war additions, such as the prosthetics clinic erected to meet the upsurge in demand for false limbs, had been hurriedly thrown together from prefabricated units and covered with tin roofs.
Each area of the hospital, except those where patients slept, was scrubbed by an army of night cleaners, who shuffled along on housemaid’s knees with metal buckets and brushes. They worked from dusk until dawn for five shillings a shift. St Angelus gleamed brightly and smelt strongly of Lysol, a smell so distinctive it struck fear into the hearts of the weak and anxious.
*
Martha O’Brien was the maid in the consultants’ day sitting room at St Angelus and therefore, to anyone of any significance, was entirely invisible.
Martha knew it was her own fault.
That’s what they would say, anyway. She had broken the rules. What did she expect? A person of no consequence. Laying the fire, clearing away the newspapers, plumping up the cushions and preparing the consultants’ lunches for one o’clock on the dot. That was her job. She was meant to serve tea, not sympathy, they would tell her. But she had done it because she had felt sorry for him, not because she knew what the effect would be. If she had known, she would have run a mile in the opposite direction as fast as her legs would carry her, or better still, just kept her mouth shut. She had watched him, day after day, sitting in the chair, troubled and worried, and had wondered what it was that ailed him. It wasn’t until Mr Mabbutt popped in for a cuppa and goaded him that the mystery was revealed.
‘So, there are to be two consultants on gynae. Well, that’s something. Yours will be the only department in the hospital with two firms.’
Mr Mabbutt, the orthopaedic surgeon, was addressing Mr Scriven, the obstetrician and gynaecologist. Mr Scriven shuffled in his chair and turned the page of the newspaper he was reading so sharply that it almost ripped. Martha knew all their names and what they specialized in, and given that she was a bright girl and they talked a lot when they met in the sitting room she knew far more about their personal lives than they might have imagined. Apart from Dr Gaskell, who had been at St Angelus for so long no one could remember a time when he was not there, Mr Mabbutt and Mr Scriven were the two longest-serving consultants. The reverence in which they were held by every nurse and doctor in the hospital conferred a godlike status upon both men.
They played golf together on Thursday afternoons, when they had finished their rounds on the private wing, otherwise known as ward five. Once a month, they also took turns to host a dinner, for other hand-picked surgeons, aspiring doctors and their ambitious wives. Due to the length of his tenure and his position on the hospital board, Mr Scriven was regarded as the senior consultant, second only to Dr Gaskell, who was chair of the board. Dr Gaskell sat on the regional TB committee and was respected and revered by all, and his word with regard to St Angelus was law. Mr Scriven had reach, undoubtedly, but not long enough to ensure that the board consulted him before deciding he must share the base of his power and source of unceasing adoration, otherwise known as ward two.
Neither man batted an eyelid while Martha wheeled over the tea trolley, or even appeared to notice her as they waited for a cup and saucer to be placed in their outstretched hands. There were nine consultants at St Angelus and Martha had only ever needed to be told once how many sugars they took, or how they liked their tea. Martha took her job very seriously. She dressed with care, her apron and frilled cap always spotlessly clean. Her long dark hair was coiled carefully and tightly into a bun, with every strand tucked neatly under her cap.
‘Anyone would think you were the one operating yourself, you’re that fussy,’ her mother Elsie often shouted as she left the house to catch the ten past six bus every morning. It was true: Martha was as proud of the sitting room as her ma was of the parlour back at home.
Mr Mabbutt had collapsed into the comfortable brown leather armchair in front of the fire, opposite Mr Scriven, who, much to Martha’s dismay, still wore his wraparound operating robe, instead of the day suit he wore for clinics and ward rounds. There were two theatres on the top floor of St Angelus, and the two men had been operating simultaneously before finishing for the afternoon, leaving the registrars and housemen to deal with the post-operative checks on the wards.
Mr Scriven’s gown remained gruesomely spattered with blood. None of the other doctors arrived to take their tea in blood-spattered gowns and Martha lived in hope that one day, maybe, one of the consultants would find the habit as offensive as she did and mention that he might like to be a little more respectful towards the room she spent her life polishing and cleaning and making comfortable. Not that she had ever said anything; that was not her place.
If only she had remembered just where her place was. How different things would be. She sometimes wondered if he was showing off when he strutted through the door wearing his theatre gown, when the other consultants took such care to remove their own. She was only a maid, but it seemed to Martha as though Mr Scriven liked to impress, or rather needed to impress, and even someone as humble as she was a worthy audience of one.
Educated by the nuns at St Chad’s, she had learnt well and was a clever girl. Following the war, there were only the two of them at home and so the need to secure work with regular hours and pay was uppermost in her mind when the job vacancy arose. Both her da and her brother had been lost in action and Martha felt a strong responsibility to start earning for her mam and their home as soon as she could, even though it meant abandoning her dream of attending the new secretarial college in town and becoming a secretary in one of the shipping offices.
There were moments when she stopped scrubbing and cleaning and knelt with a cloth in her hand, letting the mixture of gloopy pink Aunt Sally and dark green Lysol drip on to the floor. With a sigh, she imagined herself setting off to work in the morning carrying a handbag, smartly dressed wearing kitten heels and a swing coat, on her way to run a smart office down on the waterfront. She felt no resentment. She and Mam were happy and Jake Berry, her childhood sweetheart, also worked at St Angelus, as a junior porter. Not that they were a couple officially. No, Martha would not allow Jake to assume that. Besides, they had only been on two dates since leaving St Chad’s and they had been nothing more than to take a turn around the lake in Sefton Park on a Sunday afternoon after the roast dinner. On the last occasion, Jake had taken Martha’s hand and slipped it through his arm.
‘You will be my girl soon, won’t you?’ he had said. ‘You’re seventeen now. We could walk like this every day.’
Martha’s blushes were saved by the musicians on the bandstand striking up a tune. Instead of replying, she gave Jake a shy smile and his arm a little squeeze. It was enough for Jake, who felt as though he would burst with pride, having by his side the girl he had adored since they were both children playing out on the street in rags and tags and shoes with holes.
Martha poured the consultants’ tea and listened closely. She knew Mr Mabbutt’s tone well. He hadn’t finished with Mr Scriven, she was sure.
Mr Scriven fixed a rigid smile on to his face. ‘Yes, Matron told me last week, after the board meeting.’ Martha could tell that he was trying his best to sound casual. ‘I can barely manage the numbers being referred to my clinic as it is. Emergencies are arriving via the receiving ward in their droves. The women in Liverpool are producing more babies than St Angelus can deliver, along with all the associated problems that can present later, as you know.’
Martha had read as much herself in the Echo, so she knew that wasn’t a lie. Babies were booming in Liverpool. However, after a year of observing Mr Scriven at her leisure, she could also tell this was not a conversation he was enjoying.
She placed the cup and saucer on his upturned palm, but he neither acknowledged her nor said thank you as he picked up the spoon from the saucer and began to stir.
Mr Mabbutt appeared to have spotted a weakness and was openly enjoying himself. He was not about to let the wriggling Mr Scriven off the hook.
‘Hmm, that’s as maybe. Still, not sure I would like it much. My ward is my ward. Sister and the nursing staff know my ways and how I like things done. No, it wouldn’t do for me, I’m afraid. Besides, we have all these new mad keen doctors now. The chaps who interrupted their training to fight in the war. The board favour them, of course, and they’re flying up the ladder. Dr Gaskell’s own son is one of them. He has an impressive war record, so I hear. God, no. I wouldn’t want one of those hungry types working alongside me, trying to jump on my back and take my ward out from under me.’
Mr Mabbutt gave a fake shudder and then grinned. Mr Scriven struggled and failed to smile back. Mr Mabbutt had beaten Mr Scriven at golf four weeks on the run. This latest piece of information was yet another move on the chessboard in the battle for superiority and the unspoken acknowledgement of the position of senior consultant under Dr Gaskell. Mr Scriven took a long and carefully controlled breath. He knew perfectly well that his colleague had not yet finished taunting him.
‘We are busy too, you know. They have allocated me an extra registrar and a houseman. It seems even the working classes are buying motors now. Just operated on a young lad with bilateral femoral shaft fractures from a scooter accident. Reckon there’s going to be a lot more of that in the future. I wonder why they didn’t just increase the size of your firm? Why bring in a new consultant? Regardless of how busy you are, it makes it look as though they don’t trust your opinion, or the quality of your work.’
Bang. It was a direct shot and had hit its mark. Mr Scriven flinched.
He drank his tea to delay answering, because he had no idea what to say. He had asked himself the same question. He almost gave a sigh of relief as the call bell rang. Mr Mabbutt looked up at the consultants’ alert board on the wall and saw it was his light flashing just as the telephone rang. He leapt up from the chair, splashing his tea all over his knee as he did so.
‘Yes, on my way back up,’ he barked down the receiver before slamming it down. ‘Right, that was a short break. My last one is throwing an extended rigor in the recovery room and the anaesthetist can’t raise his blood pressure out of his boots. Neither houseman nor theatre sister is happy. Poor lad, he’s only sixteen. I feared he might not survive the shock. I didn’t even touch the fractures. I was saving them until he was stable. All I did was sew up what cuts I could manage. l must have cleared half the dock road out of his wounds.’
He picked up his cup and swallowed what remained of his tea. As he walked towards the door he couldn’t resist a parting shot. ‘Anyway, do you know if you will be sharing a team, or will the new chap have his own housemen and registrar?’
Even in the midst of an emergency, he was not going to allow his advantage to slip away. He stood holding the door open, waiting for a reply.
‘His own, of course. I told Matron I can’t spare any of my team. We’re working flat out as it is.’
‘Ah, that’s even worse, if you ask me. Competing teams on one ward, who needs it?’
His words hung in the air as the door swung shut.
Martha may have worked at the hospital since she was fourteen, but she was far from stupid. Mr Scriven had attempted to present a brave face to Mr Mabbutt, but Martha could tell he was both seething and miserable. She noticed that his hair, which a year ago had been grey only at the temples, was now grey all over. He had taken to wearing glasses, and she had thought it strange that, if anything, the dark glasses and greying hair had added to his attractiveness.
‘Bastard,’ she heard him mutter under his breath.
Without being asked, she refilled his cup and put two arrowroot biscuits on a plate for him. ‘Nothing like a cup of tea and an arrowroot biscuit to cheer you up,’ her mother had said every time an air raid was over and they slipped back into the house after a night in the shelter. It had seemed to work for her mam.
Mr Scriven was deep in thought. Leaning forward now in his chair, elbows on knees, fingers interlinked before him, he tapped his straightened index fingers repeatedly against his pursed lips.
‘A penny for your thoughts,’ she said, as he automatically reached up to relieve her of the tea.