Poppy Day (22 page)

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Authors: Annie Murray

Tags: #Sagas, #Fiction, #Historical, #War & Military

BOOK: Poppy Day
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Twenty-Five

Weeks passed. Casualty lists kept on and on coming from the Somme. Each day they looked at the newspapers in silence, the long columns of names, seeking out, in dread, any that might be familiar. Polly had kept the little cutting of Ernie’s name, had stuck it into the frame of their wedding photograph. In August the name Bullivant appeared twice: this time Frederick, who had been the youngest to go, a bright-eyed, muscular sixteen-year-old, and their oldest son John, who was wounded. Olive steeled herself to call next door and see Mrs Bullivant.

‘I’ll come with yer,’ Polly said.

‘Oh no – yer awright. You stay ’ere with Gracie. I want to go now while ’
e
’s not there.’ She was none too keen on Mr Bullivant, a sullen man who was working in munitions.

‘I’ll bring the little’un with me – I want to come.’

Polly had scarcely been out since the news of Ernie’s death. Olive eyed her pinched face. She didn’t want to inflict any more misery on her, but thinking it might do her good to give sympathy to someone else, relented.

‘Awright. But none of that clap-trap you’ve been on about.’

Polly carried Grace next door, where they found the lady with her younger children. The house smelt of cabbage water. Mrs Bullivant was a quiet, stoical lady, broad in the beam, with a ruddy complexion and a mound of thick, dusty-looking hair fastened into a bun. She was trying to be brave, admiring little Grace and sitting them down while she made tea. But she was clearly not far from tears, and their sympathy started her off weeping.

‘I should never’ve let ’em go,’ she sobbed. ‘Not the two young’uns. Fred never said ’e was joining up, not before ’e’d gone and done it.’

‘You couldn’t’ve stopped ’im,’ Olive said, reaching over to pat her hand. ‘Not once ’e was signed up. And ’e thought ’e was doing the right thing . . . There’s no telling ’em, not at that age.’

Mrs Bullivant mopped her tears with a large crimson handkerchief.

‘Has ’e tried to get in touch with you at all?’


Don’t
, Poll,’ Olive seemed to swell with anger. ‘I told yer not to . . .’ Her eyes flashed fury at Polly, who ignored her. Since Ernie’s death she had started coming out with some notions which filled her mother with horror and distaste.

‘What d’yer mean?’ Mrs Bullivant sat turning the handkerchief round, kneading at it.

‘The day my Ernie died ’e tried to tell me – get in touch with me. I know ’e did.’ Polly spoke with great intensity. ‘All them boys dying out there – their souls don’t just disappear, you know. Not when they can’t rest. They’re all out there, round us, trying to find a way back to us . . .’

The woman stared hard, as if stunned. For a moment Olive thought she was going to lash out and hit Polly. But she said, ‘D’yer really think . . .?’ Mrs Bullivant wanted to believe it. She wanted desperately for her sons not to be gone from her forever.

‘I do,’ Polly sat with Grace in the crook of her arm, a fact which somehow increased the impact of her earnestness.

‘Stop it,’ Olive hissed at her. ‘I’ve had more than enough of yer nonsense and yer carrying on. You’ll only get ’er all upset!’

‘She ain’t upset, are yer, Mrs Bullivant? Least, not about that. Whatever you think, Mom, it’s a comfort to know we might not’ve heard from the ones we love for the last time. You wait and see, Mrs Bullivant, if your Stan and little Fred don’t send you a sign from where they’ve passed on to.’

Olive held on to herself until they got home. She closed the door and stood leaning against it as if in need of support or containment for her feelings.

‘Don’t you walk away from me, my girl!’

Polly turned by the door of the back room, still holding Grace. Her face held a kind of blank defiance.

‘You’ve got to stop this – stop it now! I can’t stand any more of it. You’re making yerself bad with it.’

Polly sensed the suppressed fear and panic in the way her mother was talking. What was the matter with her? Why couldn’t she see how simple, how beautiful it was that Ernie was taken from her but was still here, still loving her, watching over her?

‘I’m not making myself bad, Mom.’ She tried to sound reasonable and calm. She moved back along the half-lit hall. To Olive she looked like a ghost herself, her face long and white in the gloom. Olive shuddered. ‘I don’t know why yer getting in such a state. I just know Ernie’s still ’ere, somewhere, trying to get through to me.’

‘I wish
I
could bloody well get through to yer!’ Olive summoned her last shreds of patience and tried to speak gently. ‘I’m worried for yer, Poll. Girls sometimes turn funny after birthing a child. And now Ernie going too. Yer need to try and get hold of yerself, Poll, or people’ll start talking if they see yer acting peculiar . . .’

Polly gave a bitter laugh. ‘That’s a good’un coming from you!’ She backed away down the hall. ‘I’m not the one who’s peculiar, don’t you worry . . .’

‘Yer not the first woman to be left on ’er own, yer know!’ Olive couldn’t hold back her feelings any more, felt that if she raged and screamed loudly enough she could batter some sense into her daughter’s head, make her put a stop to all this nonsense. ‘I lost my husband and I weren’t going on the way you are! You ’ave to keep going – put it behind yer, or yer going to end up in the nut house, that you are!’

Appalled to find she was bawling along the hall at the top of her voice, she pressed a hand over her mouth to stop anything else escaping from it. Would they have heard next door? Her breath rasped unevenly in and out.

There was no response from Polly. As Olive stood there trying to collect herself, the door opened behind her and Jess and Sis came in.

‘What’s going on, Mom?’ Sis asked cautiously.

Olive tried to pull herself together. She jerked her head in the direction of the front room.

‘I was having words with Poll. More of ’er carry-on about spirits and ghosts and such. Came out with it to Mrs Bullivant. It’s got to stop.’

The atmosphere was uneasy as they sat down for tea that night. Polly had Grace on her lap.

‘Why don’t yer put ’er down while yer eating,’ Olive suggested brusquely.

‘She’s awright. She’ll only blart. It’s quieter keeping ’er here.’

Olive pursed her lips, carrying a pan to the table. In it were pieces of pig’s liver, onions gleaming in thick gravy, a great treat nowadays when things were short.

‘Ooh – liver!’ Sis cried. ‘Did yer have to queue long for it, Mom?’

‘Long enough.’

Jess took a potato to go with her liver and gravy, not looking at her aunt. She didn’t dare say anything about the latest row with Polly. Over the past weeks Olive’s temper had been even more uncertain than usual. Jess felt she had to be secretive about so many things so as not to provoke trouble: her visits to Iris, letters from Ned. One day, the week after Ernie was killed, Olive said to her, ‘So ’e’s awright, is ’e?’

Jess was startled. She had had a letter from Ned, but had not breathed a word about it.

‘Er – who?’

‘Who d’yer think?’

Somehow neither of them could speak Ned’s name in front of the other.

Olive was looking at her, waiting for an answer.

‘E’s awright, Auntie, yes. Says he’s . . .’

Olive held up a hand.

‘Yer can keep the detail to yerself. I don’t want news of adulterers in my ’ouse.’

They all ate in silence for a time, until Jess said,

‘We heard some sad news today, didn’t we, Sis?’

‘Oh ar – I’d forgotten . . .’

‘What?’ Polly was always interested to hear gossip from the factory.

‘Mr Stevenson’s wife died,’ Sis said.

Polly looked surprised. ‘I never knew ’e had one.’

‘Nor did we,’ Jess said. ‘Never thought about it, I s’pose. Apparently ’er’s been bad for months. ’E’s got a little lad an’ all, only two years of age, poor little lamb.’

‘Oh
dear
,’ Polly said, with genuine sympathy. ‘What a shame for ’im.’

‘No wonder ’e’s always looked so miserable,’ Sis said. ‘Poor thing. ’E’s probably quite a nice man really, under it all.’

Olive shook her head. ‘Bad thing, that, a man left on ’is own with a child. With all them dying over there you forget people’re still dying here like normal.’

Jess had felt shocked by the news, suddenly seeing her employer as a real person with a whole life outside the works.

‘He must’ve been going through hell, and never said a word,’ she said. She had found herself thinking about him all day, seeing him in a quite new light and moved by the sadness that she’d felt from him.

Two nights later, when Jess came home Polly beckoned her to go upstairs, peering round to see whether Olive was listening.

‘Go and see Mom for a minute,’ she whispered to Sis. ‘I’ve summat to say to Jess.’

Jess hung up her hat and went up to the room she shared with Sis. Polly slept in Bert’s room now, with Grace, and through the wall at night, they often heard Polly sobbing. Sometimes she went to her and tried to comfort her, other times just left her alone. Polly’s loss aroused strong, conflicting feelings in her: sorrow, helplessness that there was nothing any of them could do or say to ease her suffering, but along with these emotions also a tangled mix of relief and fear. Relief because she felt, superstitiously, that if death had come to them once, then Ned was the safer for it. Death should spread itself out fairly, should strike somewhere else. But fear also at the danger Ned was in, and at the violence of Polly’s grief and loss. Polly had crossed the black river into the land of mourning and it made her seem older and separate.

‘You awright, Poll?’

‘I’m awright. More than Mom thinks. Look, I wanted to ask if you’d mind Grace for me tonight. I want to go out.’

‘Course. Why’re you asking me though?’

‘I don’t want Mom knowing about it – not ’til I get back. I’m going to a meeting – she won’t like it.’

Jess sat down on the bed, her face serious. ‘What is it?’

Polly hesitated. ‘Look, I’ll tell yer if yer don’t start on me. They call themselves Spiritualists. There’s someone there, a Mrs Black, can get messages from – you know, the other side. Mrs Bullivant told me – she’s going as well.’

Jess looked closely at her. She knew Olive was worried Poll was going off her head, but Polly seemed calm enough.

‘Poll – after Mom died, for a long time after, I used to talk to ’er. I mean, there wasn’t anyone else I could talk to, ’cept sometimes Mrs Hunter at the farm. I used to tell ’er how I was feeling and that. And it felt as if she was still there, some of the time, close to me. I mean, I never heard her voice or nothing like that, but I thought she could hear me. So I know ’ow yer feel. It’s natural to feel like that. But d’yer really need to keep on about it so much – going to meetings? They’re most likely all barmy and if Auntie finds out you’ll be for it.’

‘I’m not going to hide it from ’er – I’ll tell ’er when I get back in. I just want the chance to go, find out. If I say beforehand she’ll kick up one ’ell of a fuss. I’m just going to slip out – tell ’er later. So will yer, Jess – please? If I give Grace a feed I’ll be back before she’s ready for the next one. It’s just if she cries . . .’

Jess could feel herself giving in. Polly didn’t seem any madder than the next person, she just wanted comfort. Who was she to stop her going out?

‘Awright then. But for ’eaven’s sake watch what yer getting into.’

After tea, Polly slipped out into the light, warm evening, without announcing she was leaving.

‘Where’s Poll?’ Olive said after a while. ‘She still in the lav?’

‘I think she went out – said she was going to see someone,’ Jess said, her heart thumping hard. She saw Sis frown. Polly hadn’t been out to see her friends for weeks.

‘She didn’t say.’ Olive wasn’t sure whether to be encouraged or worried. ‘What about Grace?’ Jess saw her aunt’s expression change and Olive was on her feet and across the room. ‘Grace – where is she? Has she taken the babby?’

‘No—’ Jess was bewildered. ‘She’s upstairs, asleep.’

They heard Olive’s frantic tread on the stairs.

‘Well where’s she gone?’ Sis demanded. ‘What’s all the flaming fuss about?’

‘To a meeting,’ Jess hissed. ‘Some Spiritualist thing or summat. For God’s sake don’t say nothing.’

Sis rolled her eyes to the ceiling. ‘Oh blimey – there’ll be all hell let loose.’

Olive came back, her face relaxed again, having found Grace splayed peacefully on the bed upstairs.

‘So why’d she go out and not say then?’

Polly came in at half past nine, her cheeks pinker than they’d been in weeks, and a slight smile on her lips.

‘Is Gracie awright?’

Jess smiled, holding Grace, who was staring mesmerized up at the sputtering gas mantle. ‘You can see.’

‘Well – where’ve yer been?’ Olive asked fairly cheerfully, but Jess and Sis eyed each other, both holding their breath.

Polly leaned over and lifted Grace off Jess’s lap. ‘’Ello, my pet! How’ve yer bin – awright?’ She rubbed noses with the baby and kissed her. ‘Ooh, I’ve missed yer, I ’ave!’ She turned to her mother. ‘I’ll tell yer, but yer not to bite my ’ead off.’

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