Chapter
17
Doubts and Fears
“Quick Ginny – there’s one
coming. We can get it if we run.”
Breathless and giggling we clambered up the steps of the double-decker bus.
“Did you have to come up stairs,” grumbled
Ginny “I’ve been on duty all night and it stinks of fags.”
“You can see more up here,” I
reasoned.
“Stunning Salford
scenery- not quite the Lakes is it,” she snorted.
In spite of the badinage it was a
rare treat for us to be out together so we were off for a morning in Manchester .
“What’s on your list Ginny?”
“I want to get a top that’s
glamorous, colourful and cheap. Ooh and
warm so I can wear it at the Ice Rink. How about you Pat?”
“Actually a coffee at Sisson’s will
be my limit. You know that pretty silver
grey beanie I bought? I got a lecture
from Jamie about spending – we are supposed to be saving.”
I wished I could tell her – and all the family
- that we were secretly engaged but I had promised Jamie to keep it between
ourselves. Later in Sisson's when we
were sharing a delicious slice of Fullers Iced Walnut Cake Ginny asked me if
everything was alright and I assured her it was. I had lost my heart to Jamie but somehow he
had got inside my head and our relationship was off balance. It was that damned seesaw of love again but
this time I was way up in the clouds; losing control and totally dependent on
his smile or nod of approval. We had to
make do with fleeting visits when Jamie would try to hitch hike – sometimes
with Paul who was back in Oxford . These had to coincide with my days off. It
was a long way to come for such a short time.
Things didn’t always go to plan – sometimes I was kept on duty and Jamie
would be left twiddling his thumbs in Rossendale. My next holiday was some months off in
February and we planned that I should join him in Oxford then.
“When does Jamie take his
Finals,” Ginny asked.
“Next year and then just one more
year and I’ll be through.”
“It’s a shame you have to stay on
longer because you’re 6 months younger than everybody else,” commiserated
Ginny.
“My own fault for leaving school at
sixteen.”
We called in at a posh
hairdresser's as Ginny wanted to know how much it would cost to have her hair
cut and styled. The Salon was named
‘Louis and Barnard’ and reeked of mink and Wilmslow.
“Who would Modom like to style
Modom’s hair?”
“Oh - Louis or Barnard,” Ginny drawled. I exploded with giggles and we had to beat a
hasty retreat. How I missed the fun we
used to have. I seemed to just live for
the next letter or phone call. The only
link was Paul and I received odd snippets of news from him via Maddie which -
rather than being reassuring were vaguely disquieting. Maddie and I weren’t getting on too
well. I realise now that life wasn’t too
easy for her at this time; I seemed to be having all the fun whilst she was
stuck at home with the baby. She coveted
a Prince of Wales check suit I had and wanted to borrow it for a trip to Oxford . In return she would lend me her black
suit. Clothes were still very precious
in the forties. I kept my side of the
bargain but Maddie changed her mind when it came to the black suit. I think possibly the aunts didn’t approve but
I was horrified and flew off the handle.
Maddie cried and I ended up in the dog house. Normally this would be part and parcel of
sibling rivalry but I earned Jamie’s disapproval and was shattered. I knew exactly how Jane Austen’s Emma felt
when she earned Mr Knightley’s displeasure.
I did behave badly but I thought I had reason to. I have since learned to always ‘try to rise
above it.’
Jamie was still very loving but I
began to feel I was walking on egg shells and my spirits would plummet if I saw
his frown.
The monthly dances started and as my room was close to the phone room I
answered it one evening and it was Andrew.
As Entertainment’s Officer of the Naval Camp he was phoning to liaise
with one of our Dance Organisers. I
longed to ask him how he was but a shutter came down in my brain. He said he was coming to the next dance in
his role of E.O. so I reassured him that I wouldn’t be there.
“How are you Pat? Have you changed your mind?”
I had enough problems – I couldn’t
risk complications so I told him I hadn’t changed my mind and promised not to
be at the dance.
Over a week elapsed before I heard from Jamie and he said he was coming
up. I started to get pre-visit
nerves. I was at home on my day off and
when I got violent stomach pains Mum got the doctor. I remembered him from school - his sister had
been in the same form and his father had put sutures above my eye when I was
bashed with a hockey stick.
“Oh what are you reading,” he asked
examining my poetry book? Then he
examined me and NAD. Nothing abnormal
was discovered. Just part and parcel of
Jamie nerves. I was excited about Jamie’s
visit but scared of anything going wrong.
My spirits alternated between elation and desolation. I longed to be on an even keel once
more. Sometimes I would say something
that made him laugh and he would look at me with love and I would be happy again. I told him about Andrew- I told him
everything – there had to be complete trust.
Maddie went down to Oxford
to join Paul for her birthday and when she came back I asked her about Jamie
looking to her for reassurance and there was none forthcoming- just vague
worrying hints.
“He’s waiting for you to grow up,”
she said dismissively.
Jamie’s birthday was coming
up. We had a colour that was special to
us - a soft coral tan that was the shade of lipstick I used - Tangee. Jamie had bought me a beautiful mohair scarf
in the same hue and I found some wool in the same colour and as a real labour
of love (I was a rubbish knitter) I decided to knit him some socks. On four needles. Maddie was an ace knitter- her needles would
fly through the air whilst the garment grew at an alarming rate. It was torture and everybody ribbed me but
eventually the socks were finished with just one small hole where there
shouldn’t have been. Once I had darned
it you would never have known.
I took Jamie to meet the Millers whilst we were in Manchester and they were – as usual – very
warm and welcoming. That night Jamie
wanted us to stay in Manchester
but we couldn’t afford it and it seemed silly to stay in a sleazy B& B on a
freezing cold night when we could have warm and cosy beds at home – to say
nothing of Mum’s food. Was I being
selfish? I could tell he wasn’t pleased
and I sobbed silently in bed so as not to disturb Gran.
The next hospital dance I peeked
through the windows and saw Andrew. He
looked a bit drunkish. He didn’t come to
another dance after that and it was the last time I ever saw him.
One night Jamie phoned twice and didn’t get me. When I got the message I phoned back and he
wasn’t there. I spoke to his landlord –
who I had met – and he sounded strange.
Eventually I had a letter saying it would be better not to phone him as
he had to be out a lot and he would phone me.
My state of mind was beginning to be affected. Carelessly I put my hand in Oxalic which was
very painful but did no lasting damage. One
of our long standing older patients was threshing about a lot whilst I was
changing her and bashed my face with her fist.
She couldn’t help it of course but to my shame I burst into tears. We all dreaded going to work in theatre for
the first time and sure enough that was gong to be my next assignment. The pressure was high and the two Sisters –
excellent at their job - took no prisoners.
One was a sporty looking Amazon and the other was how I imagined an
adult Violet Elizabeth Bott of ‘Just
William’ fame to look: slender, petite, curly hair, long lashed deep blue eyes
and slightly protruding teeth. She could
totally demoralise you at six paces without ever raising her petulant little
voice. The first few days went well and
then we had to autoclave rubber gloves to sterilise them. The gloves were in the dangerous drugs
cupboard and the keys were missing. The
engineer was called to break open the cupboard and there were the keys locked
inside. I had been the last person to
have them. I had been looking forward to
seeing Matron because I had had an excellent report from Monsall Fever
Hospital . It was the custom for Matron to read reports
aloud for one’s benefit. Now I was going
to see her for quite a different reason.
My health was suffering, my work was suffering – I couldn’t go one like
this. Something had to give.
14 comments:
Such a good story - however badly it ended. Looking forward to the next part!
Aaaaarrrghhhh.... you can't leave it there!!! Oh, you have....
I want to see this on the telly.
I remember that out of control love thing. I think I prefer being on an even keel.
Next post please :-)
Sx
NO NO NO NO ! do not leave us like this !
Oh My Goodness I do not like where this is heading.
Is it true you never saw Andrew again ? so sad.
cheers, parsnip
I am with all the above comments, YOU CAN'T leave it there. :D
Oh Pat! Young love, and desperately over-analysing every twitch of the eyebrow. I can't help but be reminded of the "his and hers diary entries":
http://jokemail.blogspot.co.uk/2006/06/his-and-hers-diary-entries.html
A glib response, I know, especially has a have a rough notion of what happened next.
xxx
Another cliffhanger..............
BRILLIANT his and hers diary entries!
Sounds like you had a troubled mind and it began to physically manifest. What I read is that Jamie was one way on vacation and another when marriage was on the table. Was this a surprise or did you see hints of those things (impatience, annoyance, disapproving) while you were on your trek?
Judy: I'll try to be faster:-)
Scarlet: definitely an even keel for me every time.
Parsnip: yes sadly it is true: I never saw Andrew again.
Helen: I'll try to continue ASAP.
Kim: I forgive you for the laugh :-)
AndrewM: as long as you keep reading!
SDC: what made it harder to bear was that previously and especially in the Lakes there was nothing but an all encompassing gentle love. Later in the story it becomes more understandable if not forgiveable.
Oh, you have written a perfect portrait of him. Your miseries have left my stomach in a knot. Nervous hugs from here.
Mage: it took a while but be assured it all came good in the end.
These stories make me glad I'm through with young love. It's such an all-consuming distraction. My daughter is 14 and I don't envy what she's in for. I don't envy her.
Another satisfying chapter. Next...
Exile: yes young love can be a killer. As for off-spring- we just have to hope and pray and be there.
Yikes! Cliffhanger ending...
And a few clues embedded for the next part?
Rashbre: it was a bit of a cliff hanger time. I must get on with it before the Christmas rush really takes over.
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