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Authors: Mary Gibson

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The effect, though terrifying to Milly, seemed to steel the strikers, and that evening, when Bertie came home from distributing the strike bulletin, she asked him if he believed they had any chance of winning.

She was surprised when he said, ‘Not a chance in hell, love. They’ve got volunteers driving trains and buses; they’ve got the army delivering petrol and breaking the picket lines at the docks. Now they’ve even got the navy, so if they can’t reach the docks by land, they’ll go in by river. No, our mistake was thinking that once the country knew what the miners were being asked to agree to, they’d see it wasn’t fair. But unless you’ve tried to live on that wage, well... I suppose I might have been the same once, but I’ve seen the other side, haven’t I?’

‘Well then, what’s the point in going on with it?’

‘Because it’s still the right thing to do.’ His voice was firm, but she detected that the glow of his initial excitement had begun to fade. Then, on the following evening, hers vanished altogether.

She was upstairs, putting Marie into her cot, when she heard him come home. His usual call of ‘Where’s my beautiful girl?’ didn’t come. Running downstairs to greet him, Milly found the front door already wide open. She looked into the rather dirty face of Francis Beaumont, Elsie’s one-time lawyer and Florence Green’s fiancé. She stopped at the foot of the stairs, suddenly cold.

‘Bertie?’

‘He’s fine,’ Francis said, then turned quickly to help another man get Bertie into the house. The two men got beneath Bertie’s arms, taking his weight as he hobbled into the passage. His head was lowered, and he held a handkerchief tight to his forehead, trying to staunch blood which was already turning the white cotton into a red pulpy ball. The man nodded at Milly. ‘He’s been in a scrape, missus. He’s all right, though, ain’t you, Bert?’

‘Thanks, Sid, I’ll be fine.’

‘Don’t ’spect we’ll see you tomorrow. Have a blow,’ Sid said, tipping his hat to Milly.

Francis hovered, concerned. ‘I think it looks worse than it is, Mrs Hughes,’ he said uncertainly, ‘but if you’d like me to get a doctor...’

‘No, no...’ Bertie, pulling himself up straight, replied. ‘No need for that. Thanks for driving me home, Francis, g’night.’

As soon as Francis had left, Bertie lurched heavily against the passage wall and Milly rushed to help him.

‘Bertie! What’s happened to you? Oh, love, look at the state of you! Here, let me see.’

‘I daren’t move,’ he said, lifting the handkerchief. ‘I’ll get blood all over the show.’

She examined his forehead. A deep gash oozed blood, and he quickly stuffed the handkerchief back over the wound.

‘Come on, let me get you to the sink.’

She helped him through to the scullery, where she turned the tap full on. Soon the stone sink ran full of pink swirling water, as ruby lozenges continued to pool and drip heavily from his forehead. Lifting his chin to examine the wound, she grabbed a clean tea towel from the dresser drawer. ‘Keep this pressed hard on it, while I fetch the medicine tin.’

Fumbling through the small tin she kept in the dresser for emergencies, she found a few rolled-up bandages and some antiseptic cream, and placed them on the draining board. Then she gently began cleaning the wound.

‘Looks like you’ve got a load of grit in it. How the bloody hell did it happen?’ She tried to steady her hand, but the sight of so much blood scared her. It wasn’t just a surface graze – that much was obvious.

He tried to give his usual wry smile, but the gash cut right through his raised eyebrow, and he winced.

‘Ouch, it really does hurt to laugh!’ he said.

‘Well then, don’t laugh!’

While she removed bits of grit and made a padded bandage, he told her how he’d come by the wound.

‘It was our lot! Those stupid sods up by the barricade in Old Kent Road. Sid and his mates tried to turn Dr Salter’s car over and I went and got in the way!’

‘Sid? What, the one who brought you home?’

Bertie grimaced as she attempted to fasten the bandage. ‘Yes, the chump, I think he felt guilty.’

‘But why would they do that? Surely they’re not turning on their own now?’

‘Idiots didn’t recognize him, thought he was police, trying to break through the barricade. Mind you, the doctor should have had the
Council for Action
sticker on the windscreen and he didn’t, but you’d think they’d recognize the most famous strike supporter in Bermondsey!’

‘So how did you get the worst of it?’ She leaned down to see what damage he’d done to his leg. The ankle was swollen and turning a deep shade of plum. ‘This’ll need a compress, looks sprained.’

She helped him back to the kitchen, stopping as he swayed and almost toppled over. Then, easing him into his chair, she kneeled to gently wrap his ankle in a wet cloth.

‘I’d just finished delivering the bulletin along the Old Kent Road, and I hear this almighty row going on up by the Thomas A Becket. There’s about a dozen men at the barricade, surrounding some poor chap in a car. All I can hear is “Turn ’em over, turn ’em over!” And they start rocking it backwards and forwards. The chap’s still in there and I’m thinking, they’ll have it over with him inside, they could kill the poor feller. So I jump out of the van, grab one of them and try to talk sense, and of course it’s too late. Some bright spark picks up a bit of broken kerbing and lobs it at the windscreen. That’s when I recognized him. I mean, you can’t miss him, Milly, great bald head, round specs, always got the same mac on. I starts shouting at them, “It’s Dr Salter!” I’m hollering, but they’re so fired up they can’t hear, so the only thing I could think to do was jump up on the bonnet!’

Milly groaned. ‘Oh, Bertie, you soppy sod.’ She felt a mixture of anger and pride, but she only let him see the anger. ‘You could’ve got yourself killed, and not a thought for your family!’

‘Sorry, duck, but you’re always telling me I should be more impulsive,’ he said, shamefaced.

She got up to kiss him. ‘Not like that! Anyway, what happened next?’

‘Well, I got between Dr Salter and another lump of kerbstone that Sid tossed over. That one got me straight between the eyes and I tumbled off the bonnet, that’s when I did my ankle. But it gave the doctor a chance to get out and show the idiots who he was. He gave them a bit of a telling off, said we weren’t to resort to violence, but really, he took it in his stride. Thanked me and looked at the wound, said I should watch out for concussion and that he would drive me home himself, but he had to get to Westminster, find out what was going on. He writes the bulletins himself, you know.’

Milly was less interested in Dr Salter’s journalistic skills than in the concussion. ‘Well, you can’t go to bed yet, we’ll have to wait and see if you get sleepy.’

He reached for her. ‘Why can’t I go to bed? I think that would be a very good idea.’ He drew her on to his lap. ‘And I’m not at all sleepy!’

She smiled into his kiss and said, ‘No! You’re a wounded soldier and I’m the matron!’

‘Well, I quite like the sound of that!’

Beneath the bandage, she could imagine the raised eyebrow and she thumped him gently on the chest, laughing now with relief that he seemed fine and not, as she’d feared, about to collapse from loss of blood. Still, they sat up for a long time, with Milly unwilling to let Bertie sleep too soon. Eventually, with both their eyelids drooping, she helped him upstairs to bed.

She lay listening to his breathing, which seemed even and normal. But to his deep irritation, she insisted on waking him every other hour. The sight of him covered in blood had shocked her into the realization of how precious Bertie had become to her, and she would willingly suffer his barks of, ‘Strike me dumb, leave me alone, woman, I’m all right!’ if it meant keeping him safe.

But in spite of all her vigilance, by next morning his symptoms had worsened. She took him a cup of tea and his hand grasped her wrist instead.

‘Looks like there are two cups to me, just a bit of double vision from the knock.’

‘We’ll have to get you to Guy’s!’ was her immediate response, but he refused. ‘Don’t fuss, it’ll go away on its own.’

‘Don’t worry about the money, we’ll find it.’

‘Did I say anything about money?’

But he didn’t have to. Unforeseen medical bills were not in their budget, and usually anything that couldn’t be cured with home remedies had the ‘wait and see if it gets better’ treatment applied to it.

‘If only we hadn’t gone to Ramsgate...’

His face seemed to crumple and she wished she hadn’t voiced her regret. He’d been so proud to be able to take them on a proper holiday.

‘But anyway,’ she added quickly, ‘I’ve got a bit put by from the clothes.’ That wasn’t entirely true, but she hoped to God she would be earning a bit at the next market.

She only realized how ill he was feeling when he tried to get up to do the bulletin run. Trying to ease himself out of bed, he swayed and fell back on to the bolster. Splayed out, he could barely raise himself.

‘All right, love, I give in. I’m staying here today.’

She did not dare leave him, and spent a frantically anxious day, running upstairs to check on him every five minutes, while still trying to keep Jimmy occupied. As his second birthday approached, her lovely boy had been transformed into a biting, spitting little monkey. She was at a loss to know how her angel had been replaced by this demon changeling. She found herself longing for a knock on the door. Now she understood the value of Arnold’s Place. If she’d been living there, she could have popped next door, knowing her neighbour would watch the children while she went for a doctor. But Storks Road wasn’t like that. It was a respectable street and people were polite enough, but nothing like Arnold’s Place where the neighbours were like family.

When long hours passed and Bertie’s vision and balance still hadn’t improved, she began to seriously consider leaving him to call a doctor, and was about to put on her coat when the longed-for knock on the door came. Perhaps it was Florence Green, come to see why she hadn’t turned up for her stint at the Labour Institute today. She flew down the passage and flung open the door to be confronted by a large man wearing a long mac. He was striking to look at, with his domed bald head and round spectacles.

‘How’s the patient?’ he asked, holding up his medical bag.

‘Dr Salter! Oh I’m so glad you’re here! How did you know where we lived?’

The doctor smiled and said, ‘How could I not? I’m your neighbour!’

She couldn’t imagine how he’d managed to find time to come – according to Florence, he was spending hours canvassing support at Westminster, dashing back to give speeches at crowded town hall meetings, then often repeating his speeches late into the night, on the town hall steps, addressing the thousands who hadn’t been able to find a seat inside. Milly knew he’d been at the surgery less since he’d become an MP, but now he explained that he always had his medical bag in the boot of his car or strapped to his bicycle.

‘I couldn’t sleep easily in my bed till I’d checked on my gallant protector! I suppose he told you that the men were a little overzealous at the barricades yesterday evening?’

She nodded. ‘He said he thought you could’ve been injured!’ The doctor waved away her concern as he followed her into the front parlour.

‘Well, it must have been a near thing. It’s not like my Bertie to get involved in a fight... To be honest, Doctor, I’m more likely to get in a scrap than he is!’

The doctor threw back his head and gave a surprisingly loud laugh. ‘Well, I have a similarly fierce wife, though her scraps normally happen during the council meetings!’ He looked at Milly for a long moment. ‘But how are you, my dear? The strike is harder on the wives than on the men.’

‘Oh, I’m fine, Doctor. I’m doing what I can to help at the Labour Institute.’ He seemed pleased, then suddenly looked up. ‘And how’s the little chap?’

Milly paused, comprehending why the man had the reputation of a saint. He’d remembered! Out of all the thousands of mothers and babies who must have passed through his care in the past two years, he remembered that brief visit to her mother’s, and her own situation.

‘Oh, Jimmy is an angel... well, he was, until he started to use his teeth on everything but his food!’

Again came the hearty laugh, and picking up his bag, he said, ‘Ah, I’m afraid there’s only one remedy for that, let him know what it feels like, just a nip. You’ll cry longer than he does, but he’ll never do it again!’

Her own mother’s advice exactly, though she hadn’t had the heart to carry it out.

‘Now, let’s see the patient. How has he been?’

The doctor followed Milly upstairs as she recited the symptoms. She saw him into the bedroom and waited as he stood at the bedside, gently rousing Bertie. But after a while the doctor turned to her, his face suddenly serious. Bertie could not be wakened.

26
Absent Husbands

May 1926

The hours following Dr Salter’s arrival sped by in a gut-wrenching series of shocks. The doctor’s diagnosis was speedy and terrifying.

‘He has severe concussion. We must get him to hospital immediately.’

Milly’s strength seemed to melt away. She put out her hand, grasping empty air to keep her upright, and the doctor moved swiftly to her side. ‘Listen to me, Mrs Hughes, I am going home to telephone to Guy’s. Don’t leave Bertie for a minute. Talk to him – he may be able to hear you. I’ll be back shortly.’ He patted her hand. ‘Speed is of the essence, but be strong and try not to worry. These cases often right themselves.’

And he was gone, ramming his trilby on to his head, clattering down the stairs two at a time. He’d said he wouldn’t be long, but each silence between the ticks of the bedside clock stretched for an eternity. She pulled up a chair to Bertie’s bedside and took his hand. His face was pasty-grey, a film of sweat coating his forehead, his breathing so faint it barely moved the sheet covering him.

She lifted his hand to her lips and kissed it. ‘Bertie, love, can you hear me? You’ve got to wake up, darlin’. Dr Salter’s here, he says you’ve got to wake up.’

Milly felt that somehow the mention of the great doctor’s name would galvanize Bertie. He would want to get up, for pride’s sake. But he never stirred. She tried to swallow, but her tongue stuck to the roof of her mouth. She had seen her mother unconscious like this once, after a kick in the head from the old man, and though they hadn’t been able to rouse her at first, after a while she’d come round. But it had been almost two days since Bertie’s injury and now she blamed herself for not doing something earlier.

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