enquire for her at Bartsâ nursesâ home, and she was conscious of the fact that her room there was only temporary. Sheâd meant what sheâd said before she left when sheâd told her father that she didnât want anything to do with him in future â him or his new wife.
Chapter Three
âThe vicarâs wife has just told me that she thinks she knows someone whoâd be exactly right for a lodger,â Olive told Tilly as they walked home together arm in arm after the Sunday morning service. âI mentioned to her that I wanted to let a couple of rooms at our Womenâs Voluntary Service meeting on Wednesday night, and now it seems sheâs heard of a girl whoâs looking for a room.â
Despite the warm sunshine Tilly shivered as she glanced down a side street to see a convoy of army lorries loaded with men in uniform rumbling along the Strand. The signs of preparation for a war that Mr Chamberlain had assured them would not happen were all around them, from the sandbags piled up around buildings, to the men in ARP uniforms, and the ongoing work on preparing public bomb shelters. In Hyde Park work was underway to dig trenches for shelters and war defences, and Tilly and her mother were doing their own bit âjust in caseâ it came to war. Tilly had joined her local St John Ambulance brigade, and her mother had joined the local Womenâs Voluntary Service group â the WVS for short â run by Mrs Windle, the vicarâs wife.
Thereâd been a smattering of young men in uniform in church this morning, with their families, and Tilly had stopped to speak with one of them â a boy who had been ahead of her at school and who was home on leave from his obligatory six monthsâ military training.
The last time sheâd seen Bob had been early in the summer, before heâd started his training, and the difference in him had really struck her. Gone was the soft-featured, faintly shy boy she remembered and in his place was a thinner, fitter, tougher-looking young man who spoke proudly of his determination to do his bit for the country, and his belief that Hitler would not stop merely at invading Czechoslovakia, no matter what the Prime Minister might want to think.
After church the talk had all been of the prospect of war.
Now, though, feeling her motherâs slight squeeze on her arm beneath the smart little white boxy jacket trimmed with navy blue she was wearing over her Sunday best frock, Tilly turned to her to listen.
âThe girl Mrs Windle has in mind is your own age, Tilly, and an orphan. Apparently sheâs spent virtually all her life in an orphanage run by the Church, but now sheâs too old to stay there any more. Theyâve kept her on to help with the younger children but the Church has decided to evacuate the orphans to the country, they canât take her with them. Theyâve found her a job working on the ticket desk at Chancery Lane underground station and now she needs somewhere to live where sheâll feel comfortable and safe. Sheâll be coming round to look at the room at four oâclock this afternoon, after the nurse you were telling me about. They both sound ideal lodgers for us. Iâm looking forward to meeting them.â
âSally, the nurse, is a bit older than me, Mum, but I think youâll like her.â
Like Tilly, in her navy-blue, white-spotted dress, Olive was wearing her Sunday best outfit, an oatmeal linen two-piece of neatly waisted jacket and simple straight skirt, made for her by a local dressmaker from the Greek Cypriot community. Both women were wearing hats, a girlish white straw boater with navy-blue ribbons in Tillyâs case, a neat plain oatmeal straw hat for Olive, which she was wearing tilted slightly to one side, in the prevailing fashion.
âI feel sorry for the orphan girl, though. How awful never to have known her parents,â Tilly sympathised, earning herself