Chapter 109

Tea was sausages, boiled potatoes, and baked beans. Frankie’s favourite. They ate at the kitchen table, a full house. Mum stood at the stove, Uncle Nob kept to his armchair by the fire, watching silently.

‘Will you stay long?’ Mum asked Ruby. She’d been desperate to ask, for her own sake as much as for Frankie. Visions of a young woman to brighten the house, help keep Frankie out of trouble. Someone Elizabeth, their other evacuee, could look up to.

‘I’ll go back tomorrow,’ Ruby said, between mouthfuls of food. Mum put another couple of sausages into the pan. The girl wanted feeding.

‘Can’t let Hitler drive us all away,’ Ruby continued. ‘Those boys’ll be working the docks day and night, working up a thirst. Me and Mum’ll be there to give them a pint.’

‘Cook said you’ve got a chap,’ Mum said.

Ruby nodded. ‘He took the amnesty. Gone back in. Up north for training but he reckons he’ll get leave soon.’

The army had a new policy. A blind eye to the thousands of men who’d given themselves unofficial leave after Dunkirk.

An act of expediency – they needed the men.

Besides, it would have been a bad look to prosecute, and execute if the letter of the law was followed, so many of Britain’s returning heroes.

The music programme on the wireless finished, and they heard Big Ben chiming six.

‘This is the BBC,’ the newsreader announced sombrely.

‘In the early hours of this morning, Buckingham Palace was hit by two bombs. The King and Queen are safe, and in good spirits. A palace spokesman observed that nobody is safe from the terror raids sent by Hitler. Today, the King and Queen visited other parts of London hit by German bombs. We’re all in it together was the message from the cheering crowds. ’

Cook looked at Margaret, a question on the tip of his tongue. She smiled.

There was just enough light in the sky for a walk across the fields, the nights drawing in, Frankie keen to show Ruby everything. The rabbit warren at the far end of Dadswell’s Flat, the glade in the woods, the cricket pitch he’d marked out behind the barn.

Cook took Margaret’s hand.

‘How long can you stay?’ he asked.

‘How long will you have me?’

Cook didn’t answer. Easier to walk in silence.

A swarm of bombers appeared on the horizon, over the Downs. Specks in the dark sky.

‘Looks like London’s in for it again,’ she said.

‘Margaret,’ Cook said. ‘I need to ask you a question.’

She kissed him, and he slipped his arms around her. She looked up at him, vulnerable. Someone he could protect. Someone he could keep safe from all that was coming. To live in peace, to work the land, until the day came that peace was no longer an option.

‘It’s complicated,’ she said, kissing him as the bombers rumbled overhead, and a distant siren wailed into life.

She looked him in the eye, her hand on his as it cupped her face.

‘But then, the things worth fighting for usually are.’

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