Author note: This is my entry for the
Valentine's Day Story Contest 2024
.
Sunday, 14th February 1943
Day of St. Valentine, Martyr at Rome, c.269
"Are you okay, hen?" a Georgie voice asked me, sympathetically tugging gently at the corner of my woollen blanket. It belonged to a girl called Jennifer, although everyone called her Tooley for some reason which had never been explained and might possibly have been forgotten. She was waif-thin and when she sat on the corner of my bed there was barely a protest from the mattress.
I sniffed, hard, and dabbed my eyes with the opposite corner of the blanket. "Yes, I'm okay," I lied, rolling onto my side to look at Tooley through blurry lids. "Just rereading an old letter."
Tooley's tiny arm reached out and patted where she thought my knee was through the blanket, but which was really more like the middle of my thigh. "Today is a tough day for quite a few of us, love." Tooley said with a thin smile. "We need to stick together, us girls."
I nodded, sniffed again and then rooted around in the sleeve of my nightgown for my handkerchief, which I pretended to daintily wipe my eyes with but really I was wiping my nose. I felt a little ridiculous, crying like a child in front of Tooley. She was in her mid-thirties and had lost her husband of fifteen years at Tobruk eighteen months ago. They had never been able to have children, but that only added to her sadness, and through still-wet eyes I watched her changing out of her nightdress and into her Sunday best with renewed admiration for her tough spirit.
Johnny Young, officially missing in action in the North Atlantic, had only been my boyfriend for about six months. He'd finished his pilot training in the summer and we'd begun going steady in the two weeks we'd had together before his posting to HMS Swan. Since then, we'd exchanged letters and met twice, when he was on leave, but in the period between Christmas and New Year his parents had received a telegram notifying them of his disappearance. I knew these telegrams were being received up and down Britain and the women's programme on the wireless was constantly reminding us to have a stiff lip and keep on going, no matter what the bad news was. But somehow, six weeks later, the loss of Johnny felt just as raw as the day the telegram arrived. I fervently and frequently wished we'd transacted one of those impulsive war marriages (after all, I was twenty-one and he would have been almost twenty-two, we weren't teenagers) since being a war widow like Tooley seemed more respectable than merely being the moping girlfriend of a dead man.
I had made the mistake, this Valentine's morning, of re-reading Johnny's final letter to me. It felt unbelievable that this would have been our first Valentine's Day together, and I just wanted to feel close to him, lying there in the thin light of the morning before everyone got up, and seeing the words he wrote on the paper.
Darling Ava...
...There's something about the dawn, the icy darkness thawing to an unsteady blue, all manner of shades, which leaves me thinking of you. I know that one of those shades of the sky must match your eyes exactly...
...I've been doing plenty of flying and the captain of the Swan always gets me back down safely. I think the crew have a soft spot for my aircraft because in it I keep those two swan feathers we found in the park by the Dragonfly lake. Do you remember? Whenever I see them I secretly remember that kiss you gave me that day...
...I've got to wrap up, I'm 'on readiness' in ten minutes. Give my love to your parents and I'll let you know about my next leave. All of my love and kisses from
Johnny.
But of course, I just started weeping before I'd read two words, and I'd blotched part of his signature by dropping a tear on it. Stupid.
"Let's keep it moving, ladies," bawled Mrs Lawson, the section head of the Women's Land Army. She was one of those institutional types who come crawling out of the woodwork whenever there's a war on, and then seem to disappear just as quickly afterwards. The wife of a local landowner, she dedicated all of her energy into turning her group of twenty soft, city-living urban girls into a fighting-fit labour force feeding the nation. She stuck her head into our room, her grey curls already jammed into her cap. "Church at eight and then we're over at Mr. Linton's farm, digging drainage."
There was a low, collective groan from the girls. Digging was the worst of all jobs, and after the unbelievably wet January we'd had, everything was soaking, muddy and cold.
"No complaints!" Mrs Lawson went on, moving on to the next room. "There's roast lunch, or whatever we can put together out of the rations, to cheer you up."
"Won't cheer me up, much. You just can't make a decent Yorkshire pudding out of a powdered egg," sniffed Lucy, a brunette girl from Bradford who'd worked in a factory before the war and had a boyfriend away in the Middle East somewhere. Something about the dour way she said it made me smile for the first time that day.
Finally finding the energy in me, I stopped thinking about Johnny, climbed out of bed and set my feet down on the icy cold floor, shivering. Kelmingsdale Hall, where we were billeted, was grand-sounding but was in fact a crumbling Victorian pile that had belonged to some old country squire. It was draughty, perpetually cold, and when the wind blew from the east any room with a fire burning would have smoke belched back out of the flues. And in this part of Northumberland, five miles from the coast, the wind was almost always blowing from the east.
"Lend me some stockings, Lucy," said the final occupant of the room, a Glaswegian named Dolly who'd grown up in a tenement with four siblings and chain-smoked whenever she could find a free moment. "Can't find mine." Her accent was so thick that Lucy had to squint for a moment and decipher it in her head.
"Mine will be loose on you," Lucy pointed out. "Ava, can you lend her? You're almost the same size."
This was a little bit unfair. Dolly was a great big girl, almost six feet tall and broad. She ate every scrap of food she could get her hands on and wore a men's set of overalls. Most of us girls had joined the Land Army to feel useful and earn a bit of a living, whereas Dolly was so strong that she'd practically been conscripted. I, on the other hand, was merely on the tall side at five feet seven inches. My figure, which I'd inherited from my mother along with my blonde curls, was like an hourglass, with wide hips and great big breasts which I hated. My legs were nowhere near the size of Dolly's, but Lucy and Tooley shared the narrow, boyish figures that were so popular and clearly Dolly would never fit into their clothes. I'd recently read with great interest of an American innovation, whereby women's breasts were measured by volume and categorised into letter grades: A being the smallest and D being the largest. I dreamed of the day I could walk into a department store in my hometown of Birmingham and buy a 'D-cup' brassiere which would actually fit, instead of endlessly forcing my bust into the assortment of ill-fitting corsets and girdles I'd wrestled with since I had started to develop.
I handed my oldest and most hated pair of stockings over to Dolly with pleasure. They'd belonged to my mother, first, and were desperately uncomfortable. But beggars can't be choosers and Dolly was just grateful not to be late for breakfast.
Technically, Sunday morning church was optional. My father had been a committed Methodist his whole life, but Mother was indifferent to religion and I'd followed her path. However, Mrs Lawson was a force of nature and, to be honest, spending a couple of hours in the company of the kindly Reverend Hawkswell and then being plied with tea by the church ladies afterwards wasn't a bad way to spend the morning. The alternative, free time at Kelmingsdale Hall, usually just depressed me, especially as other girls used it to read or write love letters. This was a popular option this morning of Valentine's Day, so it was a reduced cohort of us who walked the half mile along a footpath from the Hall to the church, a picturesque country edifice with mediaeval stonework and sheep grazing in the churchyard, which was the absolute opposite of the sturdy brick non--conformist building Father always went to in Castle Bromwich.
"Ava," Rev. Hawkswell said gently, putting his teacup down in his saucer and gently taking my elbow after the service. "So lovely to see you again this morning."
"Hello, vicar," I replied, putting on a cheerful attitude. "Thank you for your sermon."
The vicar smiled. "Well, with a congregation full of women it was just too tempting to expand upon poor old martyred Valentine this morning. In any case, I was wondering whether I might call upon you to assist the flower guild in preparing the Easter flowers for church this year? Mrs Lawson thought you might be interested."
I had no idea where Mrs Lawson had got the notion that I knew anything about flowers from.