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The Land Girls: As war rages, can love survive? A heart-warming family saga about the women of war
The Land Girls: As war rages, can love survive? A heart-warming family saga about the women of war
The Land Girls: As war rages, can love survive? A heart-warming family saga about the women of war
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The Land Girls: As war rages, can love survive? A heart-warming family saga about the women of war

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A heart-wrenching and nostalgic family saga from acclaimed author Annie WilkinsonPerfect for fans of Katie Flynn and Margaret Dickinson

AS WAR RAGES, CAN LOVE SURVIVE?

Hull, 1943


17-year-old Muriel Dearlove has weathered the Blitz unscathed, but with her sweetheart Bill away fighting and her friends conscripted into the WRENs and WAAF, life has become tedious for Muriel. So when an old friend returns from the Land Army, rosy-cheeked and looking healthier than ever, Muriel decides to sign up and become a Land Girl.

Despite being desperate for the chance to broaden her horizons, Muriel quickly realises that her new job involves more than just making hay in the sunshine and dancing with the troops stationed nearby, especially under the watchful eyes of their hard-nosed warden, Mrs Hubbard. Then Muriel meets Ernst, a German prisoner of war, and is faced with a life-changing decision: in fraternizing with the enemy, Muriel is breaking the law, but to never see Ernst again would break her heart.

As tensions between the Land girls and the locals grow, so does Muriel's forbidden love for Ernst, and soon must decide whether love really can conquer all . . .
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 25, 2014
ISBN9781471115417
The Land Girls: As war rages, can love survive? A heart-warming family saga about the women of war
Author

Annie Wilkinson

The daughter of a Durham miner, Annie Wilkinson now lives in Hull where she divides her time between supporting her father and helping with grandchildren.

Read more from Annie Wilkinson

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  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    It's been a while since I genuinely considered stopping reading a book. I felt like it was fairly poor young adult novel or maybe chick lit and was very disappointed - I thought I'd enjoy it as I usually like historical fiction but this was uninteresting and trivial. Not that long a book but it dragged. Should have done a bit more research before buying it! Muriel a thoroughly uninteresting character. Barbara and Miss Chapman the only ones I didn't despise.

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The Land Girls - Annie Wilkinson

Chapter 1

From her vantage point behind the polished oak counter of the Maypole grocer’s and confectioner’s in Holderness Road, young Muriel Dearlove was taking a moment to admire her own reflection in the plate-glass window, darkened by the billboard leaning up against it. Dark eyes, strongish nose, generous mouth. Abundant dark hair, tied back in a bun. Wispy corkscrew curls that always escaped the little cap she had to wear. Not bad-looking, as a matter of fact. She had to admit it herself. She breathed in, squeezing in a waist that measured just an inch or two more than she would have liked, and gave herself a smile of approval. The smile died as, beyond her reflection, Muriel spied old Mrs Musgrave looming out of the shadows of a January late afternoon.

‘Four farthing buns,’ Muriel muttered to herself.

At a minute before closing time, the bell above the shop door tinkled the alarm and Mrs Musgrave came out of the greyness and into the light – and presented herself at the counter.

‘Four farthing buns,’ she demanded.

One by one, Muriel carefully lifted four farthing buns with the tongs out of the glass-fronted display and put them in a paper bag, wondering how many times she must have served this self-same customer with these self-same bloody farthing buns. Must be fifty thousand, at least.

‘You’re a bit late,’ she remarked. ‘You’re lucky we’ve got four left. It’s only half a minute to closing time, and it’s only five minutes to blackout time.’

Mrs Musgrave gave her a malevolent stare. ‘You’ve got six left, and I don’t want no rudeness,’ she said.

Miss Chapman, the blonde, plump manageress of about fifty summers, looked up from her task of cashing up, glanced at the clock and went to lock the shop door.

‘Don’t be rude to the customers, Muriel,’ she said, on her return to the till.

‘No rudeness intended, I’m sure,’ Muriel said, with a shrug and a pert toss of her head. For the fifty-thousandth time she held the two top corners of the paper bag and swung it round to twist the ends to hold the buns in. Her mild irritation gave the movement just enough added velocity to burst the bottom of the bag and send the buns bouncing across the tiled floor. The manageress looked, but said nothing.

With profuse and insincere apologies, Muriel emerged from behind the counter to pick them up, sauntering towards them with a careless, intensely feminine swing of the hips.

Mrs Musgrave glared at her. ‘You’ve done that on purpose! I’m not having them now. Don’t think I’m having them, after they’ve been on the floor.’

Muriel put the offending buns at the back of the counter. ‘Would you like the other two?’

‘I suppose I’ll have to, now.’

Muriel put the two remaining farthing buns into a clean bag and put them on the counter with a distinct lack of contrition. ‘That’ll be a halfpenny, please.’

‘Have you got any ham?’

‘No,’ Muriel lied. She’d already put the ham back in the cold room, and a customer who habitually walked into the shop half a minute before closing time on a Friday afternoon didn’t deserve to have it dragged out again.

For a fraction of a second Miss Chapman paused, and with an almost imperceptible twitch of her eyebrows she shot a fleeting glance in Muriel’s direction. Muriel held her breath, expecting an order to fetch the ham, but Miss Chapman was quietly concentrating on her cashing up as if the pause, the twitch and the glance had never happened. Keeping her own counsel, like all the three wise monkeys rolled into one, Muriel thought.

‘Any bacon?’

‘No, and the cheese ration’s down to an ounce a week,’ Muriel cheerfully announced.

Mrs Musgrave gave her a baleful stare. ‘An ounce of cheese, then, and don’t drop it on the floor.’

‘Have you got your ration book?’

Mrs Musgrave produced the book. ‘Don’t let your hand slip, will you, and give me a crumb more than I’m due to.’

Muriel carefully clipped out one cheese coupon and put it in the cheese coupon box, then handed the book back and cut an ounce of cheese from the seven-pound block at the back of the counter to wrap it in greaseproof paper.

Mrs Musgrave picked it up, her displeasure evident from the way she threw it in her shopping bag.

‘It’s measured out to us, Mrs Musgrave. We have to account for it all.’

Mrs Musgrave’s lip curled. ‘It’s a good job you’re not made out of chocolate,’ she sneered, ‘you’d eat yourself. And don’t sell them mucky buns to anybody else, either!’

‘I don’t think anybody else will be coming in, at this time. Anything else?’ Muriel trilled, with a bright and glassy smile.

‘I’ve a good mind to report you. That’s what else!’

Muriel took the money and then unlocked the door and bowed her out with insulting obsequiousness. Mrs Musgrave went off with a resentful glance at the very preoccupied manageress and dark mutterings about not wanting no cheek from that little madam. And they’d better watch out, because she knew someone who knew the managing director.

Muriel closed and locked the door and mopped Mrs Musgrave’s footprints off tiles which had been immaculate before her arrival.

Miss Chapman lowered the blackout blinds. ‘I wouldn’t put it past her to report you, either. Is it all back in the cold room?’ she asked, meaning the bacon, cooked meats, butter, lard, cheese and eggs, which were kept on a large and icy stone slab to keep them from going off.

‘All except the cheese.’

‘How far have you got with the coupons?’

‘All done, except the cheese.’

Muriel put the cheese in the cold room, emptied the mop bucket and got back to the coupons – butter coupons strictly for butter, bacon coupons for bacon, and never to be swapped for anything else. Every day they had to be counted and balanced up as if they were money, to be sent on to head office. Muriel noted the totals, then handed them over, wondering if she’d still be sane when she got to Miss Chapman’s ripe old age or whether she’d have gone completely crackers from the constant snipping and counting of coupons in this freezing food shop, with its tiled floor in the public areas and concrete floors at the back of the counter, and no warmth anywhere except for one tiny gas fire in the staff room.

Coupons done, she got the bucket of sawdust and spread a generous covering over the floor, to be swept up as soon as they opened the shop tomorrow morning. It would leave the tiles nice and shiny. Miss Chapman took a pride in shiny tiles.

‘There’s your wages, Muriel,’ said Miss Chapman, holding out ten shillings set aside from the day’s takings before cashing up.

Muriel put the money in her pocket. ‘Thanks. I’ll be counting coupons in my sleep,’ she said, pulling off her little white cap and shaking her dark hair loose.

They put on their coats. Miss Chapman switched off the light and they stepped out – out of the numbing cold of the Maypole Grocer’s and Confectioner’s and into the numbing cold of darkening, bomb-ravaged Holderness Road.

Miss Chapman locked the door. ‘I wish they’d let us wear trousers, and warm socks,’ she said. ‘My legs and feet are frozen, and I’ve got bad circulation at the best of times. I could cry with my chilblains. And when I get home beside the fire, they’ll feel even worse.’

‘My circulation must be good. I don’t get them.’

‘Wait till you’ve stood about in food shops for thirty years! Well, thank goodness the nights are getting lighter. With British Summertime all year long now there’s just enough daylight to see our way home.’

‘And not enough to see our way back in the mornings,’ Muriel said, lifting her small-boned, five-foot-and-a-peanut frame onto her bicycle. ‘I hate the dark mornings even more than the dark nights.’

Miss Chapman heaved her rather heavier body onto her bike. ‘Well, can’t have it all ways. Good night, then.’

‘Good night, Miss Chapman.’

Muriel rode up Holderness Road and along Sherburn Street to Morley Villas, a tiny side-street with its three houses either side separated only by a narrow footpath. Her mother had already drawn the blackout curtains. Not even to be able to peep through your curtains and see a friendly light from a neighbour’s house felt depressing. For the rest of the evening they would feel holed up in some sort of underground existence cut off from light, air, wind and stars, and the rest of mankind. All right for moles and badgers, but Nature never intended people to live like that, Muriel thought. She put her wages on the mantelpiece, took off her coat and sat down by the fire with the Hull Mail while her mother got the evening meal ready. It was Friday, so it would be herrings fried in oatmeal, with spuds and turnip mashed together with pepper and salt. The ration didn’t run to butter.

‘I’ve just been reading the paper,’ her mother called from the kitchen. ‘The government’s lowered the call-up age to nineteen now, for single girls. Thank goodness you’re only eighteen next birthday. I hope the war’s over before it’s your turn. That lass of Broadheads’ writes home telling them what she has to put up with in the Land Army. Out in the freezing cold every day, digging sugar beet up, working like a slave – and horrible sandwiches in her pack-up. They’ve got a Scotch matron at the hostel, and she’s real tight with the food. She gave them cold mashed potatoes in their sandwiches! And they were that hungry, they ate ’em! Ugh! I hope our Muriel never has to do anything like that, I told her mother. That’s a real nice job she’s got at the Maypole. She’ll probably be a manageress before long.

Muriel rolled her eyes and shook her head. To be trapped for life in the Maypole grocery, never going anywhere else, with sour old customers like Mrs Musgrave and nobody new or interesting to meet – perish the thought. ‘Freezing cold in the fields can’t be any worse than freezing cold in the Maypole,’ she said.

‘You want to look after that job; they’re few and far between, jobs like that; you ought to think yourself lucky. And that lass of Broadheads’ is out in the wind and rain, as well as the cold. Course it’s worse.’

‘They won’t work when it’s raining. And at least she’s got a chance of getting warm, if she’s digging sugar beets up. She probably gets a sweat on. We can’t, stuck behind that counter all day. The only chance we get to thaw out a bit is when we wrap our hands round a cup of tea and sit on top of the fire in the staff room.’

‘Maybe, but you get home every night, and you don’t have to eat cold mash in a sandwich,’ her mother said.

‘I want a bit more out of life than being manageress at the Maypole for donkey’s years. I want a bit more out of life than going to bed with a cat, and trotting off to the spiritualist church for a regular séance.’

‘You’re talking about Doris Chapman. Who’s asked you to go to bed with a cat? Or go to the spiritualist church?’

‘Nobody.’

‘Why don’t you get yourself out dancing, like you used to?’

‘Because I’ve nobody to go with, now. Barnacle Bill’s in the middle of the Atlantic somewhere, and Irene Reynolds has joined the WAAFs. Her dad gave his permission. I’ve already told you.’

‘Well, there’s no chance of your dad giving permission, nor me either! So you’ll have to make the best of it. And don’t call him Barnacle Bill. What’s wrong with Kathleen Moss, anyway? Why don’t you get out with her?’

‘If he can call me Podge and sing She’s Too Fat for Me – meaning me, every time he sees me, I can call him Barnacle Bill. And I’ve hardly seen Kathleen Moss since she started walking out with that fireman.’

‘Oh well, you could find someone to go out with if you tried hard enough, I’m sure. Nip across to Bill’s mother’s and tell the bairns their tea’s ready, will you?’

At ten past eight the sirens went. Muriel’s mother squeezed under the stairs with Arni and Doreen, the two youngest, while Muriel went to take refuge with the widow at number three. They’d all long since stopped going to the public shelters, since experience had shown that people were no more immune from being bombed to bits in them than anywhere else. On the contrary, public shelters seemed to be the bombers’ favourite targets – and they stank.

At around nine o’clock a couple of massive explosions gave them some nasty moments, but by half past nine the all-clear sounded, and Muriel crawled out from under the stairs and went home, thankfully stretching her cramped limbs.

Later on, curled round her hot water bottle in bed, she closed her eyes. There, dancing in front of them were – not bombs, but coupons. Stray bacon coupons jigging about among the egg coupons, and cheese coupons among the bacon.

What had Miss Chapman said? ‘Wait till you’ve stood about in food shops for thirty years . . .’

That thought was more horrifying than any air raid Muriel had ever experienced, and Hull had suffered plenty. The air raids were always terrifying, but she’d come out of them alive, and glad to be alive, along with everyone she cared about. But thirty years behind the counter in the Maypole seeing the same dreary old faces every day would be a living death. If she had to stand about in the Maypole counting coupons for the next thirty years, she’d have something a lot worse than chilblains – she’d be completely crazy. If life had nothing better to offer she might as well kill herself now.

She pictured herself thirty years hence, a finicky old spinster with precise, fussy little ways – like lonely, loveless Miss Chapman, who had been doomed to perpetual spinsterhood by the ‘War to End all Wars’. That Great War had robbed her of her fiancé by robbing him of his sanity and landing him in De la Pole lunatic asylum. Miss Chapman had visited him for years and had never had the heart to take up with any other man, or so Muriel’s mother always maintained. But even if she’d had the heart, other men were thin on the ground, after the Great War.

‘I sleep with Stanley,’ Miss Chapman had once jokingly admitted, referring to her neutered tom cat, the only male ever to have had the honour of sharing her bed. Muriel had sometimes wondered, but had never asked, whether Stanley had been her fiancé’s name.

Either way, if you wanted an example of a fate worse than death, you wouldn’t have to look much further than that, she thought.

Chapter 2

‘Thank goodness it wasn’t the shop,’ Miss Chapman said, as she unlocked the door the following morning and stood scanning the place for damage.

Muriel wasn’t so whole hearted. She was certainly glad there was none of the muck that often resulted from nearby explosions – windows smashed, ceilings down and tiles and plaster shaken off, making a mess that might take days of hard work to clean up. But would she have been sorry to see the place demolished beyond repair? Not really, she thought, with a smile – until the thought of being transferred to a branch further from home or missing the wages altogether wiped the smile off her face.

Miss Chapman locked the door behind them, took off her coat and handed it to Muriel. ‘Only the sawdust to sweep up, I’m glad to say.’

‘Bilton and Marfleet Lane, this time, according to our ARP warden,’ Muriel said, taking the coat and going to the back of the shop to hang up both coats and fetch the sweeping brush.

They worked together swiftly, until the sawdust was gone, the glass cleaned, counters polished, carving knives sharpened, coupon boxes at the ready and all the perishable food brought out of the cold room and placed conveniently at the back of the counter. At a quarter to nine, they opened for yet another day of slicing ham and bacon, cutting and weighing butter and cheese, counting coupons according to government regulations and all the other same-old, same-old jobs that added lustre to the days of manageress and assistant in the cold Maypole grocery.

After a busy Saturday morning Muriel was making a paper cone to contain an ounce of pepper she’d weighed for a customer when the shop bell tinkled and Gladys Broadhead herself walked in. Muriel knew her from school, but Gladys was a full two years older, so although they’d always been friendly, they’d never been friends. Muriel was struck by how fresh and vital she looked, how rosy-cheeked and glowing, as unlike her pallid, city-dwelling former self as cheese from chalk.

‘Well, fancy seeing you here!’

‘Yeah, a dozen incendiaries and a couple of high explosives to celebrate my homecoming – nearly as good as a twenty-one-gun salute! My dad says you hadn’t had a raid for ages before I came home. But nobody hurt, thankfully.’

‘Plenty of people’s houses demolished, though.’

‘Aye, and you can get back where you came from, if you’re bringing raids with you!’ the customer chimed in.

‘Not until I’ve had my holiday. I’m due a rest.’

‘You are. My mother’s been telling me what a rotten time you’re having, what with the sugar beet and the wurzels. You don’t look bad on it, though,’ Muriel remarked, putting the pepper into the customer’s shopping bag with her other groceries. ‘Anything else?’

‘No, thanks.’ The customer picked up her bag and her ration book and went, leaving Gladys the last customer in the shop at two minutes to lunchtime.

‘Are you sorry you joined, then?’ Muriel demanded.

‘Well, I’d have had to do something, wouldn’t I? I’d rather have gone into the forces, the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force, or the Women’s Royal Navy Service, where you’re paid by the government and get all sorts of perks, like free rail travel. But I couldn’t get my dad to give permission, so it was a toss-up between the Land Army and factory work, and I didn’t fancy staying at home and going into factory work. So it had to be the Land Army – plenty of back-breaking work, no perks, and mean little wages paid out of the farmers’ own pockets. We do all right for a social life, though, and the laugh of it is that the officers aren’t allowed to fraternise with the women in the ranks in the Women’s Services, but they can fraternise with us all right, so we have a whale of a time at their dances. I didn’t even wait for them to send me the official form – I was ready for off. I’d had about as much as I could stand of the grumpy old sod in the armchair.’

‘That would be your dad, I suppose,’ Muriel said.

‘You suppose right. I don’t say much about the dances and outings in my letters. With a Victorian throwback like him for a dad I don’t want them to think I’m having too much fun.’

‘Time for your break, Muriel,’ Miss Chapman said.

‘Come round to our house. We can have a natter,’ Gladys offered.

Muriel pulled a face. ‘What, and eat my pack-up with the grumpy old sod in the armchair watching me? I don’t fancy that.’

The doorbell jangled and Muriel’s twelve-year-old brother Arni burst into the shop dragging a go-cart he’d made out of old pram wheels and wooden lats and looking as if he’d won the pools. In the cart lay a heavy green silk parachute tied into a bundle with its own rope.

‘Why aren’t you at school?’

‘Been up to Bilton Grove, to make sure Grandma French was all right after the bombing. There was an unexploded parachute mine in one of the gardens, with the parachute still stuck to its rear end! So I beat it to my grandma’s with my heart in my mouth, in case someone else nabbed it before I could get back with the carving knife to slice the rope off. You and our Doreen can have it for a skipping rope,’ he said, magnanimously.

Miss Chapman looked horrified. ‘Going near unexploded bombs! You’ll get yourself killed one of these days, you silly boy.’

Muriel reiterated the warning. ‘You will, so be careful. But I’m a bit too old for skipping, Arni. I wouldn’t say no to the parachute, though. I could get a few pairs of French knickers and underskirts out of that,’ she said, casting a covetous eye on the bundle of green silk. Clothing coupons were in short supply and she had few to spare for underwear.

Miss Chapman nodded thoughtfully. ‘You could. I know a one or two who have.’

Arni’s eyes locked with those of Miss Chapman. His nodding kept perfect time with hers, and he gave her a knowing smile. ‘Aye, I know a lot of folk who wouldn’t say no to that,’ he said. ‘They’re worth some money on the black market, them. You can make all sorts from ’em: curtains, skirts, knickers, all sorts of stuff.’

‘What do you want for it, then, Arni?’ Gladys asked.

‘Oooh, ten bob, maybe.’

‘Ten bob! What about a price for pals?’

‘Look in my eye,’ Arni said, presenting his right eye for Gladys’s inspection, with a forefinger directing her gaze towards the dark brown iris. ‘See any green?’

‘No, you cheeky pup. Only on the parachute.’

‘I’ll give you five shillings for it, Arni. You can have it this minute,’ Miss Chapman offered, quietly. Muriel looked at her, aghast.

‘Done,’ said Arni.

Muriel recovered enough to round on him. ‘You’re heartless, you are. You’ve got no family loyalty at all.’

‘Business is business,’ Arni shrugged.

‘I’ll tell you what, Muriel,’ Miss Chapman said. ‘If you want to take Gladys for a cup of tea in the staff room, I’ll turn a blind eye.’

‘And we’ll turn a blind eye to you trading on the black market. I’m surprised at you, Miss Chapman,’ Gladys said, in mock reproach.

‘I’d say I’m surprised at you, Arni, but I’d be lying. You’ve always been a little Shylock,’ Muriel said, and the reproach in her dark eyes was genuine. ‘Come on, Gladys, I’ll give you a cup of tea, and you can tell me all about the Women’s Land Army.’ Without another glance either at Miss Chapman or her brother, she led the way to the staff room, closely followed by Gladys.

‘Did our Arni tell you he found a parachute?’ Muriel demanded that evening, as she stood at the mirror over the fireplace, examining her face. It was a pretty face, but her social circle was so limited it was tragic. Her youth and good looks were going completely to waste, she told herself, while squeezing her juiciest spot.

‘He never mentioned it.’

‘That’s because he sold it! For five bob, to Miss Chapman!’ Muriel exclaimed, watching a little worm of thick yellow pus extrude itself from the spot. She wiped it off with a wisp of cotton wool damped in witch hazel, and viewed the result with satisfaction.

Her mother smiled. ‘He’s got his head screwed on right, our Arni,’ she said, her voice laden with maternal pride.

‘You could have had a pair of curtains out of that, or I could have had some decent underwear. You can get a few pairs of French knickers out of one of them. Instead of that he goes and sells it to Miss Chapman.’

‘Well, it was his parachute,’ her mother shrugged.

‘Aye, well, it’s her parachute now. I’m surprised at her, encouraging him to risk life and limb. And what does she want with silk French knickers?’

If she was looking for sympathy, Muriel quickly realised there was none forthcoming.

‘What do you want with silk French knickers, come to that?’ her mother rasped.

Muriel turned from the mirror and looked her in the eye. ‘I haven’t got enough underwear, that’s what.’

‘Maybe she hasn’t, either.’

‘I know, but she’s old.’

Her mother’s eyes took on a dangerous light. ‘She’s the same age as me.’

Muriel turned back to the mirror. Well, you’re old, she thought, but she saw the wisdom of keeping that observation to herself. She changed the subject.

‘Gladys said she hated it at first. She was billeted in a farm, and the farmer’s wife never spoke a civil word to her. She likes it better in the hostel. And they got the rep from the War Ag to come and give the warden a good talking to, so the food’s not that bad now, except they get too much beetroot. And like she says, you’ve got to do something. The ATS, or the Wrens or something, and her dad wouldn’t stand for her going into the women’s forces.’

‘Neither would yours, so you can forget it,’ her mother said.

Muriel paused for a moment. ‘Gladys says she doesn’t know why any farmer grows sugar beet, it’s awful stuff to harvest, you have to dig it up, and bash two together to get as much muck off as you can, then lay them in rows, and then go along the rows cutting the tops off. She says it breaks your back, just about.’

‘You think yourself lucky, then, and stay where you are.’

‘But that’s only one side of it! Gladys says they’re near an airbase, and there’s plenty going on in some of the villages as well. She’s at a dance somewhere every week, with plenty of forces chaps to dance with. She says I should join them. I’d never be short of a partner.’

‘You’re never short of a partner at the dances here. There’s all the servicemen.’

‘Yes, but I’ve nobody to go with here. There, there’s always the other Land Army girls. And you’ve got more chance of meeting a good lad, going to forces dances. Meetings with these foreign servicemen don’t come to anything. They’re here today and gone tomorrow, like sailors, with a girl in every port. The lads in the forces though, there’s a fair proportion from round here. They understand us, we understand them, we know what we’re playing at, Gladys says.’

‘Hmph!’ her mother snorted. ‘Gladys has got a lot too much to say, if you ask me. But it’s what me and your dad say that counts.’

‘We’re going dancing tonight, me and Gladys.’

‘Well, that’s all right. Enjoy yourself, and make sure you’re back in this house for half past ten, and not a minute later.’

‘All in together girls, never mind the weather, girls . . .’

Arni had given their little sister Doreen the parachute rope, impressing her with his generosity by telling her it was pure silk, and fit to hang a peer. With the ends knotted, it made a good skipping rope, long enough to stretch all the way across Sherburn Street. On Sunday morning Muriel found herself at one side of the rope with Gladys at the other, turning it so that ten-year-old Doreen and Bill’s sister Betty could skip in it together, along with half a dozen other children who’d escaped evacuation.

‘You ought to see us in the Land Army hostel, Muriel,’ Gladys called across the street. ‘It really is all in together, girls there. There’s a rota for everything.’

‘When I count twenty the rope’s got to be empty!’ the girls chanted. ‘One! Two . . .’ and one by one they dodged out between turns of the rope.

‘I wouldn’t mind being on that rota,’ Muriel shouted, above their voices.

She was having the best weekend she’d had in weeks. Last night she and Gladys had been to the City Hall and danced their legs off, trying to do the ‘jitterbug’ with a couple of Canadian servicemen. This afternoon the Canadians were taking them to the pictures.

When they came out of the cinema, the Canadians walked with them to the station, carrying Gladys’s luggage like the gentlemen they were.

‘I’m glad I bumped into you,’ Gladys said, after they’d gone. ‘I’d have had nobody to go about with, otherwise, but I shan’t be sorry to get back; they’re a great bunch of girls in the hostel. I’ll be dancing to the Coldstream Guards’ band, doing their quicksteps and Military Two Steps next Saturday night.’

‘I’d rather do the jitterbug,’ Muriel said.

‘Well, we haven’t got round to that yet, in Malton. But we’ve got whist drives, and pictures – everything. And the best thing about it is there’s no heavy-handed father laying the law down, telling you what you can do and what you can’t do, and what time you’ve got to be in. I’m certainly glad to get away from that.’

Muriel listened, soaking it all up like a sponge. She waved Gladys off at the station for her journey back to Malton and the Coldstream Guards, and then set out on her own journey back home, more unsettled than ever. That welcome little flurry of dancing and pictures-going was over, and she had the prospect of another year of dreary routine facing her. She passed the Maypole at the railway crossing at the bottom of bomb-ravaged Holderness Road, despairing at the thought of another year filled with washing jam-jars and counting coupons and having to be in for ‘half past ten at the latest’. That’s if she ever went out – which she hadn’t done for weeks previous to Gladys’s arrival, and with Kathleen Moss walking out with a fireman, and Bill Peterson and Irene Reynolds gone, she would be staying in until someone like Gladys showed up again.

No! She could not, and would not stand another year working in the Maypole and sitting in the house with her mother every night while Gladys and almost everybody else she knew was off having a good time, Muriel thought. She would write her notice out as soon as she got home, and hand it in to Miss Chapman the minute she got to work on Monday morning. Then during her dinner break she would go straight into Hull and sign up for the Land Army. It might make her a bit late back, but what did that matter? She’d be leaving anyway.

The woman in the Land Army recruiting office told her they would need her parents’ permission, and handed her the form for her mother to sign. Muriel gave her a confident smile and took it, very tempted to sign it herself and avoid the row she knew would be coming at home, but she wouldn’t have put it past her mother to march straight down to the office and raise hell, so forging her signature would probably be going a step too far.

‘You’ve done what?’ her mother exploded, when Muriel presented her with the form. ‘Given your notice in? Have you gone daft? Well, you can take your notice back again. You’re keeping that job at the Maypole; it’ll keep you out of harm’s way for the duration. I’ll be down to see Doris Chapman tomorrow morning.’

Muriel dug her heels in. ‘It’s not up

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