Authors: Annie Groves
Connie clutched the baby more tightly, as her heart started to beat too heavily.
Whether or not it's true ⦠Last night ⦠Well, when I said I wouldn't sell them this house no matter what, they said as how they knew about what Davie had done. How he'd started yelling something about murdering the Captain to them. Connie, I don't know if what they're saying is true or not, but what I do know is that they could get my poor Davie into a lot of trouble. “Mr Connolly said to tell you that iffen you don't sell him this house, he'll see to it that your Davie hangs for the Captain's murder,” those were their very words to me!'
Two things hit Connie one after the other; both equally shocking in their different ways. The first was the realisation that Davie could well have been bullied by the Captain to the point where he had attacked him, and the second was the acid fear that the Mr Connolly Nora was referring to, might be Kieron's Uncle Bill.
âMr Connolly?' she repeated through stiff lips. You've never mentioned him before. Who is he, Nora?'
âBill Connolly! Everyone around here is afraid of him, Connie, even the menfolk. A real nasty piece of work he is ⦠There's tales of all sorts of goings on to do wi' folks who've crossed him disappearing and never being found. No one will say so, but it's since he took up with the landlord that these bully boys have started coming round making decent folk pay money over, so as they won't have their shops and property attacked. Our Davie is terrified of him.'
Connie had to sit down.
Bill Connolly ⦠A chill of icy horror shot down Connie's spine.
She did her best to reassure and calm Nora, but the truth was that she herself felt almost as sick with fear as she could see her landlady was.
She knew that it was illogical for her to fear that somehow Bill Connolly could harm her now; after all she wasn't the vulnerable, abandoned girl she had been when he had hurt and threatened her. But still she was afraid.
âIt's no good, Connie. I'm going to have to let him have the house. I'll get no peace until I do, and I've got Davie to think of. Oh, Connie, if Davie did kill that man â¦
âYou mustn't think about that, Connie told her sharply. âTry not to worry, Nora.
But inwardly Connie was equally as worried herself. Worried and afraid.
Bill Connolly! Anger and fear gripped her. Why hadn't she ended his life when she had had the opportunity? She paced the floor with Georgie, trying to stop him crying, whilst she worried exhaustedly at the problems confronting her.
She would never find another landlady as accommodating as Nora, nor one whom she liked so much. And she wasn't just responsible for finding a home for herself now, she had Lydia and Georgie to think about. And then there was Nora herself, where would she go and what would she do? And Davie, what about him �
Her head was aching with the effort of trying to think. What would happen if she couldn't look after Georgie? She had promised Vera after all, that he would not end up in an orphanage with no one to care for him.
Connie frowned as an idea suddenly occurred to her. Thoughts and the plans formed swiftly inside her head.
By morning, after a virtually sleepless night, she felt both exhausted and yet, at the same time, dizzily elated.
âYou mean you'd look after other people's babies whilst they was working, and they'd pay you for it, like?' Nora demanded in disbelief when Connie told her what she was planning over breakfast.
Yes,' Connie agreed eagerly. I thought I'd never want to do anything but nursing, Nora,
but somehow having Lydia changed that. I still want to work, that's the way I am, but seeing all those motherless babies at the hospital ⦠She paused and shook her head. âI sort of thought then that it was a shame that the poor little souls couldn't have someone like you to look after them.
âLike me?
âYes ⦠If I was to do this, Nora, I'd need you to be part of it with me. You see what I was thinking was that, if we could get hold of a decent-sized house with plenty of room and a decent-sized garden, then we could take in a fair number of little âuns. We wouldn't need to charge their families very much, and if we had enough paying then we could take in a few whose families couldn't afford to pay. Give them a bit of proper mothering, and feed them up a bit. You'd be good at that,' she added coaxingly.
Nora's jaw had dropped and she was staring at Connie as though she had never seen her before.
âWell, I never did, she exclaimed breathlessly. âWhat on earth made you think of a thing like that!
Desperation, Connie wanted to reply, that and the feeling the sight of all those small cribs had given her.
âWell, it's all very well to talk of it, Connie, but if I have to give up this place, I can't see how we could ever afford to find somewhere else.'
âYou can leave that to me,' Connie assured her briskly. âI just want you to promise me that you and Davie will help me.'
âDavie?'
We'll need someone strong to help out, especially if we get somewhere with a garden,' Connie told her briskly, deliberately pretending not to notice the tears springing up in Nora's eyes.
âWell, I don't know, Connie. Of course me and Davie will help, but I have to say that I can't see folks paying someone else to mind their little âuns.'
âYes, they will,' Connie assured her firmly. âThis War has changed things, Nora. Women go out to work now just like men, and they'll be glad to pay someone a few pennies a week to take care of their babies. We can charge the better off ones a little bit more, and that way we'll have enough to take in some of those whose families can't afford to pay.'
Well I can see the sense in what you're saying, but we'll never be able to afford to rent the kind of place you're talking about.'
We
may not, but I know someone who can and will,' Connie informed her confidently.
She would talk to Iris first, and then, once she had her support, she would take her plan to Ellie and ask her sister to approach her husband for her.
In the meantime she had work to do! Josie was as nutty about children as Nora and might be tempted
to join them; Gideon owned property himself and would be able to put them in the right direction to find the right place â¦
âOh, Connie what a wonderful idea! Isn't it Gideon? Ellie appealed to her husband excitedly.
They, Connie, Iris, Ellie and Gideon were all sitting in Gideon's study, Connie having asked her brother-in-law if she might discuss a business proposition with him.
âIt could be, he agreed cautiously.
Ellie and Gideon with their family and, of course, baby Lyddy, had now returned to Preston. However, they were still taking every precaution against being infected by the influenza â as instructed by Connie. Connie and Iris too had taken steps to ensure they were not carrying infection with them on their visit.
âI think it's an excellent idea, Iris said now. âAnd it will certainly have my support in as many ways as I can give it. You are a budding philanthropist I think, Connie!
âShe'd better not be too much of one if this is going to be a business venture I'm investing my money in, Gideon mock-growled.
âOh, your money will be safe enough, Gideon, Iris assured him firmly. âThere's a real need for what Connie wants to provide. And as for her plan to take in some babies at no cost, that is most generous of you, Connie, she added warmly.
âI shall certainly want to sponsor some of those places myself!
âWell what I was hoping Iris is that when you are in Liverpool, if you have time, you could call at the nursery and look at the little ones, just to be sure that none of them have anything contagious. I know the symptoms for some things of course, but I am not a doctor, and after what I saw at the Maternity Hospital â¦'
âWait, Connie, you re trying to run before you can walk, Gideon protested. âYou re going to need somewhere to house this business before you go taking on a doctor.
âWell of course she does, Gideon, and that is where you come in, isn't it, Connie? Ellie put in. âAfter all, you already own a good deal of property, Gideon, so you will know what to look for and what to avoid. And once you have found one for Connie, your men can do whatever work needs to be done on it for her.
âCan they now! Gideon said drily, but Connie could see that there was a definite twinkle in his eye.
âIt is a wonderful idea, Connie, Ellie told Connie when Iris had left, âand for all that he pretends to be so stern, I know that Gideon feels the same way. After all, she said quietly, âall three of us know what it is like not to have a mother. And anything you can do to give those poor little motherless mites some love will always have mine and Gideon's support, isn't that true, Gideon?
Gideon looked at them both.
Yes,' he agreed. But,' he warned them both, this is a business venture and must be treated as such!'
I wouldn't want it any other way, Gideon,' Connie assured him â and meant it.
âRight then, we'd better start looking round for a suitable property for you, hadn't we!' Gideon responded calmly.
âBy Connie, when you first told me what you was thinking I never thought it âud be like this,' Nora confessed admiringly.
They had opened just over a week ago, and already they had enough fee-paying babies for Connie to have been able to take in six babies for free, much to the relief of their desperate families.
It had helped of course that Gideon had generously bought the house outright for them, as well as agreeing to sponsor at least two of the babies whose families could not afford to pay anything for their first year. But Connie still felt justifiably proud of herself as she surveyed the sparkling clean room filled with cribs of clean and fed babies.
Ellie had protested at first when Connie had told her where she planned to open her nursery, asking her if it wouldn't be better and healthier to find a house that wasn't in the heart of the city; but Connie had shaken her head pointing out firmly that people going out to work would want to
leave their babies somewhere within easy reach of their workplace, and to her relief Gideon had immediately backed her up.
Connie had her own rooms on the second floor of the large house, whilst Davie and Nora shared the large attic floor.
Josie, who Connie had persuaded to come and work for them, had kept her own house and Connie was already thinking about looking for another trained nurse to help out on a part-time basis.
âEeh, I still can't believe that the War is really over, Nora continued.
Connie looked at her. The War had officially ended on the 11th of November, the week after they had opened the nursery.
âFor some people it will never truly be over, Connie told her quietly.
The War was over and he was back in England. He and the Baron had parted more as friends than enemies, and Harry had left the older man looking forward to the return of his son.
The grim faces of the other men around him told him that they, like him, whilst thankful to be home, were thinking of their fallen comrades. He had been lucky, Harry told himself determinedly, even if England's damp weather was already making him aware of the dull ache in his injured arm.
Liverpool looked dirty and shabby after the green freshness of the mountains, but he still took
an appreciative and deep gulp of its salty, sooty air, already searching the busy crowds just in case he might somehow see Connie. It was ridiculous, of course, but ridiculous or not he could not help himself.
He had thought of her constantly on his way home, wishing beyond anything else, that he might be going home to her. If he had been, what a homecoming that would have been! But he had no right to have such thoughts, he reminded himself sharply. No right, at all! He had a wife and a child. The thought of having to spend the rest of his life with Rosa filled him with despair, and with guilt.
His natural inclination was to go first to New Brighton to see his family, but of course he must see Rosa first. He had heard nothing from Rosa himself, but Mavis had written to him to tell him that his wife and child were living with Rosa's cousins in Manchester.
There was no point in putting off the inevitable; Rosa was his wife no matter how much he might wish that she were not! Picking up his kitbag he climbed onto the waiting train which, like the one he had travelled up from the coast on, was packed with homecoming soldiers like himself.
For all those who had come home though, there were many thousands more who would not. All around him Harry could see that relief at the end of the War was tinged by disillusionment, and also bitterness as people counted the cost in the lost lives of their loved ones.
Harry wasn't particularly familiar with Manchester, but a fellow soldier gave him directions as to which bus he needed to take to get to the address he wanted. The mid-December day was fading into grey dusk when he finally walked up the steps of the terraced house facing onto the small park.
For some reason he had expected his knock to be answered by a maid, and so it came as a shock to see Rosa's shadowy face in the darkness of the hall as the door was pulled open. But it was not as much of a shock as his arrival obviously was to her.
âHarry!
It quite definitely wasn't pleasure or happiness he could hear in her voice, Harry recognised grimly. She turned back into the hallway and looked frantically toward the half-open door behind her.
âWho is it, Rosa?
Harry recognised her cousin Gerald's voice immediately, and he could see the sick panic in her eyes as she looked from him back into the house, and called out in a falsely bright voice, âGerald, it's Harry!
Harry could hear her cousin cursing, and then the sound of a child crying, followed by the noise of a blow and a savage, âShut it you, before Gerald himself emerged into the hallway.
Rosa's face was already crumpling, and she pushed impatiently at the howling child who had come into the hall and was trying to cling to her.