Women and War

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Women and War Page 1

by Janet Tanner




  Bello:

  hidden talent rediscovered

  Bello is a digital only imprint of Pan Macmillan, established to breathe life into previously published classic books.

  At Bello we believe in the timeless power of the imagination, of good story, narrative and entertainment and we want to use digital technology to ensure that many more readers can enjoy these books into the future.

  We publish in ebook and Print on Demand formats to bring these wonderful books to new audiences.

  www.panmacmillan.co.uk/bello

  Contents

  Janet Tanner

  Dedication

  OVERTURE . . .

  . . . AND BEGINNERS

  ACT I

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  ACT II

  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

  ACT III

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  FINALE

  Janet Tanner

  Women and War

  Janet Tanner is a prolific and well-loved author and has twice been shortlisted for RNA awards. Many of her novels are multi-generational sagas, and some – in particular the Hillsbridge Quartet – are based on her own working class background in a Somerset mining community. More recently, she has been writing historical and well-received Gothic novels for Severn House – a reviewer for Booklist, a trade publication in the United States, calls her “ a master of the Gothic genre”.

  Besides publication in the UK and US, Janet’s books have also been translated into dozens of languages and published all over the world. Before turning to novels she was a prolific writer of short stories and serials, with hundreds of stories appearing in various magazines and publications worldwide.

  Janet Tanner lives in Radstock, Somerset.

  Dedication

  For my Aunt and Uncle, Nora and Alec Mundy.

  OVERTURE . . .

  Tara was crouching behind the chair in the corner when Maggie and the man came into the room. She heard their voices – Maggie’s soft Irish lilt and the man’s coarse drawl – and tucked in as tightly as she could to avoid being seen. Like the rest of the furniture in the room it had seen better days – stuffing leaked out from the seat and hung in stringy streamers on the linoleum which covered the floorboards – but it was big enough to hide behind and Tara was glad. She should not be here, she knew, Maggie had given her a sixpenny bit and told her to go out for an hour as she always did when the men came to visit, but today Tara had not wanted to go. It was raining, soft flurries blowing ceaselessly against the windows of the cramped two room apartment she shared with Maggie in Darlinghurst, Sydney, and as she watched Maggie pull a comb through her mane of red hair and paint her lips to the bright scarlet slash that left stains on cups and cigarette ends, Tara had made up her mind. She would hide when they came back. With any luck Maggie would take the man straight through to the bedroom and they would never know she was there.

  The door slammed shut. Tara held her breath. ‘Wait here a minute and I’ll slip into something more comfortable,’ Maggie said.

  ‘No need for that.’ The man sounded impatient. ‘It doesn’t bother me.’

  ‘It bothers me, dear,’ Maggie said.

  Tara peeped around the wing of the chair. The man was big, swarthy and untidy with a beer gut swelling above the leather belt which held up his trousers and tattoos up his arms. Tara surveyed him without much interest. He was like all the men who came to visit Maggie, more or less, and she hated all of them, partly because of the way she’d seen them paw Maggie and partly because when they came she was made to go out.

  Maggie came back into the room. Tara caught a glimpse of her green art silk dressing gown, the one which showed every contour of her breasts.

  ‘All ready then,’ she said.

  ‘Just a minute – what’s that?’ the man asked.

  Tara squeezed tighter against the chair. A bit of fluff from the stuffing got into her nose and she was quite unable to suppress a sneeze.

  ‘Tara – is that you?’ Maggie’s voice was harsh. Tara had no choice but to emerge. ‘ By all that’s holy what do you think you are doing?’ Maggie demanded.

  ‘I didn’t want to go out,’ Tara began, then broke off. The man was looking at her, a strange and frighteningly unpleasant expression curling his poorly shaven face.

  ‘Hey – who’s she?’ There was suppressed excitement in his voice. He took a step towards her.

  ‘Never mind who she is,’ Maggie said. And to Tara: ‘Get out now, like you were told!’

  ‘Wait a bit – how much?’ He jerked his thumb in Tara’s direction. ‘I’ll pay well …’

  Maggie moved like lightning between Tara and the man. Her hand shot out gripping Tara’s arm so tightly that the fingermarks stood out like red weals on her flesh.

  ‘Out, Tara! Go on out!’ she bundled her across the room, half threw her through the door. Tara stood on the stairs for a moment rubbing her arm. Then disconsolately she made her way down the stairs and into the street. The rain hit her like a soft veil. She had no coat, but at least it was not cold. Just as well. She would have to stay out for at least an hour. She certainly did not want to risk going back while the man was there.

  Tara wandered aimlessly up the alley and started down the hill towards the centre of Sydney, a skinny eight-year-old in a faded print frock and sandals. The rain had made her hair cluster in tiny jet-black curls around her heart-shaped face but her cornflower blue eyes were clouded and there was no sign of the dimples that Mammy had used to say were there because the faeries had touched her cheeks with their little fingers.

  She passed a corner bar and the jangling sound of a piano wafted out to her. Tara’s footsteps faltered. She recognized that tune – ‘When Irish Eyes Are Smiling’. Mammy had used to sing it to her, leaning over her bed, her lovely lilting voice all mixed up somehow with the smell of her perfume and something else, something Maggie said was whisky, blending and wafting Tara to the very edges of sleep … Suddenly the pain was very sharp in Tara. She crept closer to the door, peeping inside. The cigarette smoke hung thickly so that she saw the people inside through a haze. But there was a woman with her back to the door, a woman in a red dress just like Mammy used to wear. Tara pressed closer, her heart beating in her throat so hard she could scarcely breathe. Could it be? This time, could it really be … Mammy?

  The woman turned and as Tara saw her face the disappointment came rushing in, making her sick. A stranger with a garishly painted face. Not Mammy. Never Mammy. So many times Tara had thought she had seen her but it never was. At first when Mammy had gone she had walked the steep alleys of Darlinghurst until her feet were covered with blisters, waited outside the sly grog shops in Woolloomooloo and Kings Cross, haunted the taverns in the Rocks where Mammy used to sing for the sailors, but she had never come. />
  Tears pricked Tara’s eyes and she turned away. It wasn’t fair. It was not fair! Why had Mammy gone? Why, after all the wonderful dreams they had shared? They had come all the way from Ireland to Australia on the boat because Mammy had said that Daddy would be there waiting for them – the Daddy she had never seen – and they could make a new life in a land full of opportunities. But no Daddy had been there to meet them. Only Auntie Maggie who was not really an aunt at all but a friend of Mammy’s and from the Emerald Isle herself. Tara had not minded about not finding Daddy. What you had never had you did not miss. And they were all right, the three of them, she and Mammy and Auntie Maggie. But Mammy had minded. She had grown thinner and older and though she still sang like all the larks in the air whenever anyone would listen, more and more often Tara had smelled that something which mingled with her cheap perfume and which Auntie Maggie said was whisky.

  And then one night Mammy had gone away. Dimly, as if it were part of a dream, Tara thought she remembered her bending over the bed where she was sleeping, remembered Mammy’s tears falling wet onto her cheek and heard her soft brogue, so slurred it was difficult to make out her words. ‘This is the best way, Tara me darlin’. You’ll be better off without me.’ But she could never be sure whether that part was just wishful thinking. Mammy had gone and though she had searched the highways and byways, Tara had never seen her again.

  She loved Maggie of course, loved her with all her eight-year-old heart. Maggie was all she had. Maggie was kind and warm, all hugs and kisses. Sometimes Maggie would cry with her. Sometimes she would sing her to sleep. But she couldn’t sing like Mammy. More often than not she would go out of tune and Tara itched to tell her so.

  And too often – like today – the men would come and Maggie would send her out.

  The tears pricked more insistently and as if she could out-pace them Tara began to run. Oh Mammy, oh Mammy, you used to tell me I looked as if I’d been left behind by the faeries, but it was you that left me. Oh Mammy.…

  She ran blindly with no clear thought as to where she was going but her feet needed no telling. There was one place in all of Sydney that she loved above all others, one place where she could forget the heartache and loneliness, forget the feel of the pavement through the thin places in the soles of her sandals and the wet cling of her dress to her legs. As it came into view she caught her breath and felt the little twist of excitement shiver pleasurably through her.

  The Capitol. Sydney’s great variety theatre. Its light blazed out into the night and drew her like a magnet. Oh the hours she had spent here, eyes shining with wonder as she gazed at the imposing facade, at the portraits of the artistes in their glass fronted showcases, and peeped through the glass panels at the ornate gilded balcony and the staircases which swept down from it on either side between the tall lamps standing sentinel. Oh, the dreams that were bound up with the glamour and colour of it!

  At first she had come here in her search for Mammy, hanging around the stage door and watching the comings and goings of the theatre people. It was a bit grand for Mammy, she supposed, but Mammy was a singer and perhaps she had come up in the world. That could be the reason why she had left Tara – because she was ashamed of her. Tara had thrust that thought aside swiftly. The days had passed and Mammy had not come out of the stage door, nor was her picture ever amongst those outside the main entrance, but still Tara went to the theatre whenever she could.

  Tonight the magic of it was stronger than ever. Music wafted out through the partly opened door and with it the soaring voice of a woman singing. Tara looked at the portraits wondering which of the artistes it belonged to. One of the women was very beautiful, a lovely tilted face above bare shoulders. It was probably she who was singing, Tara decided, and as the excitement stirred in her again it seemed that the features transmuted and changed so that they were no longer the features of a stranger but her own, grown older and more beautiful.

  Mammy might never have sung here but one day I will, Tara promised herself. One day it will be my picture up there, just see if it’s not. And Mammy will come back to see me and I’ll make her so proud of me. Oh I will, I will.…

  She lifted her chin and felt the rain mingling with the tears on her cheeks. With the back of her hand she brushed them away and turned to walk back to Darlinghurst.

  . . . AND BEGINNERS

  The Rolls Royce purred up the wide tree-lined street in Toorak, Melbourne, turned in at a gateway marked out in the camphor laurel hedge by a pair of well-shaped cypress trees and came to a stop on the laundered gravel drive which curved between velvet lawns and flowerbeds bright with spring flowers.

  From her vantage point hidden behind the rhododendron bushes Alys Peterson saw the chauffeur open the rear doors for the well-heeled occupant to disembark, and pulled a face.

  Mrs Ahearne-Smythe, leading light amongst the English community in Melbourne, come to visit Mother. She had been expected, of course. An hour ago Alys and Beverley, her elder sister, had been instructed to wash and change into their best dresses and Alys had been treated to a lecture on how to behave herself like a young lady. Such lectures were totally unnecessary as far as Beverley was concerned. From her superior age of eleven Beverley was totally incapable of behaving any other way, Alys thought with disgust, while she herself seemed to roll from one scrape to another.

  ‘You are clean and tidy, Alys, please endeavour to stay that way,’ her mother had pleaded. ‘And try to behave in a manner which will not make your father and I ashamed of you.’

  Alys had scuffed the toe of her sandal against the leg of an exquisite Chippendale chair and said nothing. She did not know how she managed to get into so much trouble. She always set out with the intention of being good and modelling herself on Beverley. But somewhere along the way something always went wrong.

  Perhaps it was because she was so easily bored. She couldn’t content herself to play with dolls as Beverley did when there were so many other far more exciting things to do. Or had been, before they moved to Toorak.

  Alys squirmed a little further under the rhododendron bush watching Mrs Ahearne-Smythe’s plump feet, encased in their tight fitting and slightly old fashioned looking black leather shoes, move away from the car and suppressed the urge to call out something very loud and very shocking. In their old house Alys had often hidden behind the hedge and made weird noises as people passed by, stifling her laughter as they looked around to try to discover where the sound had come from. That sort of thing could not be done in Toorak, especially if your father was Daniel Peterson, banker and businessman extraordinaire, and your house was the grandest in a street of grand houses.

  Toorak was the most select suburb of Melbourne, Mother said, and she was probably right. The houses here had been built in the heady days when fortunes were being made in the Victorian goldfields, she had explained to the children, and each one reflected the taste – or the homeland – of the man who had built it. For a while the fantasy of that idea had fascinated Alys and she had explored eagerly, stopping to look at a hacienda-style house with flowers in stone pots to provide bright splashes of colour against the glaring white walls, an eccentric ‘wedding cake’ house so fragile looking that Alys imagined the winds sweeping in from Port Phillip Bay could blow it away, and a turretted mini-castle. But Mother had not approved of Alys standing on the pavements where the cherry trees drifted pink and white blossoms like so much confetti, gazing in at the houses between the shielding spruce and chestnut, laburnum and sycamore. People were entitled to their privacy, she said. And little ladies who knew their mannners did not stare. So Alys had had to content herself with inspecting the gargoyles wearing mitres who guarded the Church of St John in Toorak Road – a much less interesting occupation.

  Today, however, she was confined to the house – and now, into her prison, had come this big gleaming Rolls. Motor cars fascinated Alys even more than the fantastic array of houses had done. She could not understand that while the few boys she knew were allowed t
o play with cars and engines she was expected to make do with dolls. Last Christmas all she had wanted – begged for – was a toy garage, but instead she had been given a life size baby doll with a china face, a lace-hung cradle and a workbox. She still smarted from the injustice of it.

  From the rhododendron bushes she watched now as Mrs Ahearne-Smythe’s chauffeur lifted the bonnet of the Rolls and fiddled for a moment or two. Then he collected a large container from the boot and set out around the side of the house in the direction of the servants’ entrance.

  The car was unattended now, the bonnet still raised. Alys crept out from behind the rhododendron, heedless of the dirt on her knees and the bits of twig sticking to her best dress. Nobody was in sight. She could take a peep under the bonnet of the Rolls.

  She gazed at the intricacies of the engine in undisguised wonder. So many parts! Carefully she leaned inside and touched one of them. Black grease came off onto her finger.

  ‘Hey what do you think you’re doing?’ The chauffeur had returned, unnoticed by Alys. She jumped and her greasy fingers brushed against her skirt.

  ‘Oh, I only wanted to look …’

  A grin spread across his leathery features. ‘You’re the Peterson kid aren’t you?’

  ‘I’m Alys. Yes.’

  ‘You like cars?’

  She nodded enthusiastically, her bright gold hair bouncing round her face.

  ‘Yes. But I’ve never seen inside one before.’

  ‘Well, now’s your chance.’

  ‘You mean you’ll show me?’

  ‘No worries. Here, hold onto this for me …’ He handed her the container of water, leaned inside the bonnet and fiddled. ‘Now look, this is where the water goes. It keeps the engine cool …’

  She craned closer, excitement bubbling in her, as he pointed out the workings of the engine.

  ‘Alys!’ Her mother’s voice called to her from the front porch. She jumped. Water slurped from the container onto her skirt and socks.

 

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