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Authors: Kate Lord Brown

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‘On the verge between here and White Waltham.’

He frowned. ‘I’ll send Cullen in the morning.’

‘Sorry, Daddy.’ Evie bit her lip.

‘What am I going to do with you?’ As Leo embraced her, Evie saw the scowl on Virginia’s face and raised a triumphant eyebrow.

‘Happy New Year.’ She planted a quick kiss on his cheek before he bustled back into the party. Her father’s cocksure, springing step reminded her of a Jack Russell out on the
razzle, up to no good.

‘I don’t know how you do it.’ Peter shook his head.

Evie watched her father in his element, surrounded by friends and hangers-on, and that old familiar loneliness crept in. ‘Years of practice. So,’ she said briskly, ‘what have I
missed?’

‘It’s been marvellous!’ the drunken girl trilled. ‘Lucky always throws the most wonderful parties. Tonight you’d never know there was a war on!’ A young
soldier grabbed her hand and pulled her onto the dance floor as the big band struck up ‘In the Mood’.

Evie shook her head. ‘Silly girl.’

‘Come on old thing!’ Peter laughed. ‘You’re only twenty yourself! Have some fun.’

She shook her head. ‘No. I’m tired of …’ She waved her hand. ‘All this. Talking to Mary tonight, I felt I must do something. Even the Countess of Wharncliffe is
running a bomb factory, and I heard the Duchess of Norfolk is breeding rabbits.’

‘What do you know about bombs and rabbits?’

‘Nothing, but I could learn.’ Evie frowned.

Peter tilted his head, gently took her in his arms. ‘Don’t be blue. Charlie …’ He sighed. ‘It’s just awful bad luck, but if we let every death get to us,
we’ll never win this bloody war. We’ve got to be strong.’ His voice shook slightly. ‘Besides which, this is my last night of freedom, and I at least deserve to have some
fun.’

‘I’m sorry, Peter.’ Evie shivered as she pulled the blanket around her. ‘I’d forgotten. When are you leaving?’

‘I have to be at Debden first thing.’

‘When I see all you chaps going off to fly, I wish—’

‘You’re a more natural pilot than I’ll ever be!’ Peter cut in. His gaze settled on a table of men in uniform on the other side of the dance floor. ‘Are you
serious?’

‘About what?’

‘Doing something useful.’

‘Absolutely!’

‘Come on then.’ He took her arm and steered her through the crowd, stopping at the table. ‘Excuse me, sir.’ He leant down to talk to the distinguished-looking grey-haired
officer smoking a pipe. ‘Squadron Leader Peter Taylor.’

The officer stood and shook his hand. ‘Pleased to meet you.’ He turned to Evie. ‘And this lovely young lady is Miss Chase, if I am not mistaken?’ He kissed her hand.

‘Evie, this is Captain Eric Bailey.’

‘But you can call me Badger, everyone does.’ He smiled as he smoothed the white streak in his hair. ‘At least behind my back.’

‘Miss Chase is a pilot, sir,’ Peter said.

Bailey eyed her wet dress. ‘Really? I’d have had you down as a sailor.’

‘Most amusing, sir.’

‘How many hours have you got?’ Bailey sucked at his pipe.

‘Oh, not—’ Evie’s eyes opened wide.

‘She’s a very good pilot,’ Peter interrupted. Turning to Evie he said pointedly, ‘Captain Bailey helps run the Air Transport Auxiliary at White Waltham.’

‘The ferry pilots?’ She held Peter’s gaze. He nodded.

‘What have you flown?’ Bailey folded his arms.

‘Tiger Moths mainly.’ She tried to sound confident.
Tiger Moths only
, she thought,
and a couple of hundred hours at that.

‘Well, Miss Chase, we need good pilots. Why don’t you come over to White Waltham one morning and see what you think?’

‘Really?’

‘It’s not what you’re used to. But we need all the chaps …’ he corrected himself, ‘and gals we can get our hands on. In fact, we have some new recruits
arriving tomorrow. Why don’t you join them, come along for a test flight and see what you think? Ask for Commander Pauline Gower.’ He shook their hands and rejoined his table.

‘Why didn’t Daddy tell me he was going to be here?’ she said to Peter as they stepped onto the dance floor.

Peter laughed as he swung her around to the music. ‘Probably because he knew you’d jump at the chance of signing up.’

In the early hours, as dawn broke over the frozen fields and cars negotiated their way up the driveway, thin beams of blacked-out headlights guiding the way, Evie and Peter
stood in the porch. He tucked his cap under his arm. ‘Well, old girl, here we are again.’ He forced a smile. ‘I’ll see you in the spring, if I’m lucky.’

She screwed her eyes tight shut as she embraced him. ‘Silly boy, of course you will.’

His lips brushed her hairline. ‘You remember our promise? If you’re not married by your twenty-first …’

Evie laughed as she stepped back. ‘Oh, Peter, we were just children.’ She saw the pain in his eyes, and pulled her fur coat close around her. ‘You’re serious,
aren’t you?’ she said, as Leo and Virginia showed the last guests to their cars.

‘I adore you, Evie, I always have.’ He took her hand. ‘No, don’t say anything, please. I know we had fun, deb’s delight and all that, but you mean more than that to
me. I just wanted you to know, that’s all, in case—’

‘Don’t.’ She touched his lips. ‘I’ll see you in the spring.’

‘Are you off now, Peter?’ As Leo strode over, they moved apart.

‘Yes, sir. Thank you for a marvellous send-off.’

‘You be safe now.’ Leo shook his hand. ‘Go give Jerry what for!’

‘Good luck, Evie.’ Peter turned towards her as he walked away, his footsteps crunching along the dark driveway. ‘You will write and let me know how you get on tomorrow?’
he called.

‘What are you doing tomorrow?’ Leo slipped his arm around Virginia’s waist.

‘I’ve a test flight with the ATA at White Waltham.’ Evie waited for the explosion.

‘Over my dead body!’

‘Daddy, I’m twenty years old, you can’t stop me.’

‘If you go I’ll cut off your allowance.’

As Ross closed the heavy wooden door behind them, he coughed discreetly. ‘Will that be all, sir?’

‘Yes thank you, Ross,’ Leo said. ‘The Aston’s stranded on the White Waltham road. Would you ask Cullen to pick it up in the morning?’

‘Yes, sir.’

The moment the kitchen door swung closed, Leo turned on his daughter. ‘Right. What’s all this nonsense?’ The colour rose in his cheeks. ‘What do you think you’re
going to do? Deliver planes around the country in all weathers, with no guns?’

‘I think it’s a marvellous idea.’ Virginia folded her arms.

‘What?’ Leo and Evie said simultaneously.

‘Lucky, darling, Evie’s been saying for months she wants to do something to help the war effort, and she does love to fly.’

‘No!’ Leo clenched his fists. ‘I’m not having it. We’ll talk about this in the morning.’

Virginia calmly reached for a cigarette from the silver box on the hall table as he stormed upstairs. ‘I’ll talk to him.’ She leant against the table as she exhaled a plume of
blue smoke.

‘Why are you being so reasonable about this?’ Evie said.

‘Why do you think? I want you out of our house.’

Evie’s temper flared. ‘Your house? Since when? This is my father’s house, I have every right—’

‘Oh, Evie, of course you do.’ Virginia’s voice was sweet, cajoling. With Evie, she often felt like she was talking to a petulant toddler. At least once a day Virginia found
herself clinging, white-knuckled, to her patience. She smiled sweetly as she counted to ten. ‘But think of your father. You know how hard he’s been working, how tired he
is—’

‘Tired? Daddy? What rot.’ Evie shook her head as she laughed.

‘You’re always gadding around here with your friends, you won’t have noticed.’ Virginia smiled sweetly. ‘It would be so much better for your father to have some
peace and quiet for a change. Quite frankly, you want to fly, and I want you to fly the nest.’ She flapped her hands. ‘Do we have a deal?’

‘Where do the ATA girls stay anyway?’ Evie bit the inside of her cheek.

‘Oh, I don’t know.’ Virginia stifled a yawn. ‘No doubt there are some ghastly barracks or something. It will do you good to rough it for a change.’ Her eyes glinted
as Evie headed towards the stairs. ‘I bet you won’t last a day.’

On the first step, Evie paused and turned, the light of the chandelier catching on the rope of diamonds at her throat. She walked back towards her stepmother. ‘You want to bet?’

‘What’s the wager?’

‘If I win,’ she said, ‘if I don’t get bumped off before this horrible war is over, you leave.’

Virginia gazed down at her, an amused smile twitching on her lips. ‘And if I win? If you give up?’

‘Then I’ll move out anyway, join the Red Cross in town or something.’

‘You have a deal,’ she said as she stubbed out her cigarette. ‘Not that I can imagine you folding bandages for a moment.’ She clicked her fingers. ‘The diamonds,
please.’

‘These were my mother’s!’

‘If Leo’s going to cut you off I don’t want them ending up at some dreadful pawn shop.’

‘I don’t want the diamonds, or the money. You’re welcome to them.’ Evie yanked off the jewels and thrust them into Virginia’s waiting hand. She watched as her
stepmother looped the glittering necklace around her wrist and held it to the light. As the diamonds gleamed coldly against her skin, Virginia wondered if it had all been worth it. Once, jewels,
money had been all she had ever wanted. Now they were all she had. It seemed to her that her life as Mrs Leo Chase was like a clock slowly winding down. These days he came home at night less and
less. Even her attempts to make him jealous went unnoticed now. She had tried with Lucky, she
really
had – and with Evie for that matter. She saw the angry defiance in Evie’s
face and wondered whether she had ever really given her a chance.

Virginia pressed her lips into a tight smile and patted Evie’s cheek slowly – once, twice. ‘Now, run along. You’ll need a good night’s sleep.’ She watched as
Evie turned on her heel and stalked up the stairs. ‘Sweet dreams,’ she called, her smile fading as she turned out the lights.

 

2

Stella had been making bread in the cramped kitchen of her aunt’s flat when the siren went off. She hadn’t noticed, just went on pounding the dough again and again,
tears running silently down her cheeks. Her aunt had taken her gently by the arm, led her out onto Oxford Street, where people scurried, hunch-shouldered, heads down beneath the sweeping
searchlights, to the shelters.

In the crush of bodies, they were separated. Stella found herself swept along in the darkness, down makeshift steps to a crowded chamber where people were already settling down for the night.
She squeezed onto a bench and closed her eyes, hoping no one would talk to her as she tried to calm the panic rising in her. In spite of the cold, her hands were clammy with sweat.

For hours she sat feigning sleep as the bombardment continued, willing the claustrophobia to subside. The cry of a baby finally roused her, and her eyes flickered open, focusing on the little
group of cradles beneath a forlorn Christmas tree decked with pink lights.

‘Hush,’ the woman sitting beside Stella cooed, tucking one of the babies in. She glanced at Stella. ‘You’re new aren’t you, dear? Haven’t seen you in our
shelter before.’ As she settled back and shook out her knitting, a powdery scent of violets and stale sweat escaped the tight embrace of her tweed coat.

Stella blinked. ‘Yes, yes I am.’ At the sound of her voice, so unlike theirs, several people looked up. Cut-glass, that’s what they called it around there.

‘Visiting family?’ the woman probed, needles flashing in the light of the paraffin lamp.

She nodded. ‘My aunt—’ At the sound of another bomb overhead she broke off. Those awake held their breath, mentally tracing the path of the bomber, the rat-tat-tat of the
anti-aircraft guns. The breath caught in Stella’s throat, she gagged slightly.

‘Oh I know,’ the woman whispered. ‘You get used to it. I’ve complained to the warden about the stink down here. Oxford Street, I ask you, and here we are living like rats
with the chemical closets overflowing.’ A muffled moan came from the furthest bunk and she tutted again. ‘Those two should get themselves off to the courting shelter. Don’t want
that sort of goings-on in here.’

As the bomb exploded, everyone exhaled. Not them this time. A muffled cheer filtered through from the next-door shelter and Stella heard a Glenn Miller record strike up.

‘Your aunt you say?’

‘Sorry?’ She pulled her attention back to the woman’s tired, puffy face. ‘Yes.’ She ran a hand through the waves of her blonde, newly bobbed hair. There was a
bruise on her forehead. In the confusion as the warden ushered her into the shelter, she hadn’t ducked low enough for the door, had banged her head on the way in. ‘I’m staying the
night with Dorothy, Dorothy Blower.’

‘Well you picked a good one!’ A man laughed from the shadows. ‘Worst so far. The last few nights it’s been like the Great Fire all over again.’

‘You’re Dot’s niece? Fancy that,’ the woman said. ‘We’re in the flats opposite. Where is she? Surely she’s not at home in the middle of all
this?’

‘No, I lost her on the street. It was all such a rush.’

The woman laughed indulgently. ‘She’ll be fine, don’t you worry. Dot likes the shelter down the road a bit – you know how she likes her cards.’

Stella didn’t know that. She had only met her a few hours before. She jumped as another bomb exploded. Dust motes drifted down from the ceiling, hissing in the flame of the paraffin
lamp.

‘Not used to this are you?’

‘No.’ Stella instinctively looked up as the baby whimpered again. She longed to hold the child, just for a moment, to feel the weight of him in her arms, the warm, soft skin.

‘Hush.’ The woman reached over, smoothed the baby’s blanket.

‘Is he yours?’ Stella asked.

‘This little one?’ The woman shook her head. ‘His dad was killed at Dunkirk, and his mum …’ Her eyes clouded for a moment. ‘Well, that last raid got her.
Bless her, she was only nineteen. Worked in the munitions factory with me. I’ll look out for him until her family turn up from Kent.’ She carried on knitting. ‘Do you have
children?’

BOOK: Beauty Chorus, The
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