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Home Front Girls

Home Front Girls

Titel: Home Front Girls Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Rosie Goodwin
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Were it not for little Mary, she was sure she would have gone stark staring mad. She had been used to the small house teeming with kids and noise, and laughter bouncing off the walls, but now the quietness often threatened to choke her. And she was painfully aware that things could get much worse. All the young men, including her oldest son, Freddy, had already been called up, but if the war didn’t end soon then there was a faint chance that her husband might be called too, even if he was working in a munitions factory and was a bit long in the tooth. It just didn’t bear thinking about.
    She put Mary down and struggled out of the easy chair at the side of the fireplace. A fire was licking up the chimney and despite the fact that the furniture had seen better days, the room was cosy and welcoming.
    ‘I’ll make us a nice cuppa,’ she declared as she headed for the kettle, then on a more serious note she confided, ‘I’ve half a mind to get the kids back from the country. I mean, there ain’t nothin’ happened here as yet, is there? An’ so they might as well be at home, the way I see it.’
    ‘That doesn’t mean that nothing will happen though, Mrs P,’ Lucy pointed out. ‘And at least you know they’re safer there.’
    ‘Yes – but what if they ain’t bein’ properly looked after?’ the woman fretted as she rinsed the heavy brown teapot and carefully spooned tea leaves into it.
    ‘I’m sure they are.’ Lucy’s heart went out to her. Mrs P adored her family and she could well imagine how hard being separated from them all must be for her.
    In no time at all, she and Mrs P were sitting at the kitchen table enjoying a cup of Typhoo as Mary played with a pile of brightly painted wooden bricks on the hearthrug. She’d had a beaker of milk and a Royal Scot biscuit from Mrs P’s polkadot biscuit barrel.
    ‘Now then,’ Mrs P took a noisy slurp of her tea before asking, ‘What are you to wear for work then? Do you have to wear a uniform?’
    ‘Not a uniform exactly but a white blouse, a black skirt and sensible black shoes.’ Lucy hadn’t given it much thought up until now, but she suddenly realised that she didn’t possess such a thing as a white blouse, and with funds being as tight as they were, how was she going to afford one?
    ‘I’ve got the shoes and a suitable skirt, but I don’t know what I’m going to do about a blouse,’ she said worriedly.
    Mrs P chuckled. ‘Well, you’ve no need to worry on that score. I just happen to have two good white linen pillowcases that would make a lovely blouse, and thank Gawd I’m a dab hand wi’ a needle an’ thread. I’ve had to be, wi’ my tribe over the years. I’ll get me old Singer sewin’ machine out from under the stairs an’ I’ll run you one up in no time.’
    ‘But I couldn’t let you do that,’ Lucy objected. ‘You do more than enough for me already.’
    ‘Rubbish!’ Mrs P topped their cups up and stirred in another spoon of sugar each, saying sagely, ‘I dare say this is somethin’ else we’ll have to get used to doin’ wi’out soon. My Fred loves his sweet cuppa, but the ration we’ll be allowed won’t last a day, let alone a week. Still, on a more cheerful note I heard from our Freddy today. Now that he’s done his trainin’ he’s been sent to Preston an’ he thinks they’ll be shippin’ ’em over to France any day.’
    Seeing the deep concern on the older woman’s face, Lucy’s heart went out to her. She knew how much she worried about Freddy, but then most women with sons the same age were in the same position. Each of them dreaded seeing the telegraph boy cycling towards their house and prayed that he would pass them by. Freddy was actually a very nice young man and had made it more than clear that he liked Lucy, but the girl wasn’t interested in having a boyfriend, much to Mrs P’s disappointment. Her boy could have done a lot worse than take up with young Lucy as far as she was concerned, but then who knew what might happen when the war was over? She could live in hope.
    ‘I’m sure he’ll be fine,’ Lucy said as she patted Mrs P’s hand. The words sounded so inadequate even to her own ears, but what else could she say? Rising from her seat, she began to gather Mary’s things together now, and once they were ready to leave, she gave Mrs P an affectionate hug.
    ‘Thanks so much for having Mary and I’ll see you tomorrow, shall I?’
    ‘You will that, luvvie.’ The woman forced a

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