Molly's War

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Authors: Maggie Hope

BOOK: Molly's War
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Contents

Cover

About the Book

About the Author

Also by Maggie Hope

Title Page

Dedication

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

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Copyright

About the Book

War, tragedy and a shameful secret …

When Molly Mason’s father dies in a pit accident, she is left penniless and alone.

She finds work in a local factory, and cheap lodgings. However, when Molly rejects her new landlord’s advances, his revenge is swift: she finds herself accused of theft and thrown in prison.

As the prospect of war grows ever close, Molly finds herself fighting a more personal battle, trying to find anyone willing to overlook her scandalous past …

About the Author

Maggie Hope was born and raised in County Durham. She worked as a nurse for many years, before giving up her career to raise her family.

Also by Maggie Hope:

A Wartime Nurse

A Mother’s Gift

A Nurse’s Duty

A Daughter’s Gift

To my aunt, Mary Walker, one of the Aycliffe Angels, who worked in the Royal Ordnance factory there. Also my uncle, the late Sergeant Joseph Howe, Croix de Guerre.

Though this book is a work of fiction I drew heavily on their experiences during World War II to create the atmosphere and background material.

Chapter One

1938

‘SING AS YOU
go and let the world go by …’

The high, sweet voice of Gracie Fields rang out over the clatter of the sewing machines on the factory floor and the girls in the long line on the belt bent over the cloth racing under the needles, singing along with her.

Molly Mason finished yet another side seam and flung the pieces in the bin at her side. She hardly lifted her head to look as she picked up two more pieces and deftly fitted them under the needle. Enid Parker, the line overseer, was nearby, walking up the line collecting the bins of finished work to take to the next line where the shoulder seams were sewn.

Molly’s fingers were a blur. She could sew this simple straight seam over and over, barely thinking what she was doing. Neither did she hear the wireless for she was thinking of clocking off time and if she would make her bonus this week. Oh, she needed it, it was the only way she could afford new winter shoes. The toes of her
stockings
were still damp and gritty because it had been raining at seven-thirty when she’d walked to the bus which took her to work and her old shoes let in the water.

Consequently, it was a minute or two before Molly realised that the music had stopped. She looked up in surprise. It was only a quarter to five, there were fifteen minutes left of the working day.

‘We are going over to our news room at Newcastle for an important announcement,’ said the radio announcer’s plummy disembodied voice. The girls looked at each other. Had the war started after all? But what about Chamberlain’s visit to Munich? Peace in our time and all that? The thoughts raced through Molly’s head while her fingers holding the cloth stilled on the machine.

There was a crackling noise from the wireless and all heads turned to the set, which was on a shelf on the wall above their heads.

‘This is John Grage, speaking from Newcastle. News is coming through of a major mining disaster,’ said another voice suddenly and Molly’s heart plummeted. It’s not likely to be Eden Hope, she told herself, we’re miles from Newcastle, even as the voice continued: ‘There has been an explosion at Eden Hope colliery, a mine near Bishop Auckland in County Durham.’ There was an audible intake of breath along the whole of the line. ‘A number of miners are trapped behind a roof cave-in. We are not at present able to ascertain the number of casualties. Further bulletins will be issued as more news comes in.’ After a moment the
music
started again, not Gracie now, more solemn, classical music.

Enid Parker was standing by Molly, one hand on the pieces bin. ‘Your dad works there, doesn’t he?’ she asked, in an interested, conversational sort of tone. Molly stared at her.

‘Mine an’ all,’ Joan Pendle chipped in from the next machine. One or two other voices joined hers. ‘My dad’s off shift, thank God,’ someone else said.

Mine isn’t. No, he’s not. He went to work this morning when I did. We left the house together, walked down the street, parted at the bus stop. For a second or so Molly didn’t know whether she had spoken aloud or not but then she realised the voice was in her head. The scene this morning ran through her mind. They had walked in silence as usual, Dad and her, a companionable silence, though.

‘Doesn’t he?’ Enid repeated, and this time Molly heard her. She nodded, but still didn’t speak. She had a feeling of unreality. Maybe this was just a dream, a nightmare. The classical piece was finished and Gracie was singing again, about her aspidistra.

Molly’s dad liked that song, always hummed snatches of it while he was shaving. She shook her head. No, nothing could have happened to him, of course not. This was the first year he was back at work, the first year after the long lay-off of the depression years. The depression which had killed her mother, or so he always said though the doctor maintained it was meningitis. The depression
which
had sent Harry, her brother, into the army to escape from it. Harry was in India now, he and his mate Jackson.

Dad’s hands had been too soft when he went back to work; they had blistered and bled and he had suffered intensely with them at first. Molly had treated them with methylated spirits to harden them. The cuts had healed now, in their place calluses. And Dad was bringing in a proper wage now, held his head high, even joked and laughed as he used to do. He was changing back from the dour, silent man he had become after her mother died.

The manager, Mr Bolton, came on to the floor. The girls turned back to their work as he spoke to Enid Parker. Molly looked down at the piece in her hand but she was moving so slowly she never actually got it under the needle. Then suddenly all was quiet, the power had been switched off.

‘Righto, girls, you can go now,’ Enid called though it was only five to the hour. There was a buzz of conversation as the women bustled about, collecting their bags, going to the cloakroom for their outdoor things. But it was subdued. There was no light-hearted relief that the day was over, just solemn glances at the girls from Eden Hope.

‘Your dad will be all right, I expect,’ said Enid. ‘Go on now, Molly, the factory bus is going five minutes early, you don’t want to miss it.’ The floor was almost empty. Joan Pendle hadn’t waited for Molly even though they were next-door neighbours. But then, thought Molly, with that
twinge
of hurt puzzlement which she always felt when the girl ignored her, Joan wouldn’t wait for her, they had never got on.

All the way home on the bus there was a ball of dread in the pit of Molly’s stomach. It was no good telling herself that her dad stood a good chance of not being caught in the fall – after all, the mine employed 700 men, there were different levels being worked, why should it be the one where Bill Mason was working? It was no use. When at last the bus reached the village and stopped close by the pityard gates, Molly was first off to join the knot of people standing there.

‘Any news?’ ‘Which face?’ ‘How bad is it?’ the newcomers questioned, but before they could be answered there was a buzz of activity around the shaft. The driver of the green Union ambulance which had been waiting by the offices drove forward.

‘They’ve got someone out alive!’

The cry went through the crowd, hope springing up in them all. Molly closed her eyes and prayed then tried to be glad that it was Mr Morley they were taking out of the cage, Mr Morley who lived in Eden Terrace. It was his son Jackson who was in India with Harry. Mrs Morley slipped through the gate and ran to the stretcher, went in the ambulance with him.

‘His back,’ the murmur went through the crowd as they made way for the gate to open fully and the ambulance to drive off. ‘His back and face cut open. His bonny looks
will
be gone now.’ The Morley men were famous for their good looks.

A few minutes later the manager appeared, a list in his hand. The crowd fell silent, watching him intently. He spoke to someone in an expensive suit who looked incongruous in the pit yard. ‘The owner,’ the whisper went round, and everyone gazed at this alien to their community. The man nodded and the manager, Mr Hill, walked towards the group by the gate. Halting, he cleared his throat before beginning the roll call of the dead. William Mason’s name was halfway down the list.

‘You get a good night’s sleep, lass, and you’ll feel better.’

‘I’ll try, Mrs Pendle.’

Molly closed the door after her neighbour and turned back to the empty house with a sigh of relief. She was grateful to Ann Pendle who’d done all she could for her in the days leading up to the mass funeral in Eden Hope Methodist Chapel, even gone to the inquest with her beforehand. (Accidental death, the coroner had said.) Ann had brought her broth afterwards which Molly had politely accepted but couldn’t eat.

This was the first time she had been on her own since the disaster. It was very quiet, the only sound the ticking of the marble clock which stood on the high mantel over the mantel frill which Mam had embroidered before she died, three years ago now. Molly’s thoughts touched on that and skimmed away. Not now, she wasn’t going to
think
of that now. Rising from her chair by the fire, she picked up the rake and pulled small coals from the shelf at the back of the fire on to the flames, banking it as her father had always done before bed. She turned the mat away from the range just in case anything spat out, seeing in her mind’s eye Dad doing it. She turned the key in the back door lock and climbed the stairs to bed.

‘I’ll not be able to sleep,’ she said aloud, more to break the silence which was so profound she could almost hear it than anything else. Dad had been the noisy one, always whistling or humming something. ‘Little Old Lady’ or ‘The Lambeth Walk’ or that Fred Astaire song from
Top Hat
. He liked keeping the wireless on until last thing at night or until the accumulator batteries ran down and had to be taken to Eldon to be recharged. Except when he was on night shift. That was it. Molly would pretend he was just on night shift. Illogically she was comforted by that. Her restless, rambling thoughts shut off and she drifted into sleep.

There was a letter from the manager of Eden Hope Colliery when she came downstairs next morning. It had a crest on the envelope and on the top of the single sheet of paper the words
Hope Estates
, all curlicues and fancy lines.

Dear Miss Mason,

On behalf of the owners and management of Eden
Hope
Colliery, I wish to convey the Company’s deepest sympathy for the loss of your father in the tragic accident which occurred last week.

The Company will pay in full any funeral expenses. As Mr Mason had no dependants, being a widower with grown-up children earning their own living, there will be no compensation payable according to law. However, the Company is prepared to offer you £25, without obligation, to help you with removal costs.

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