Chapter One
PUTTING HER FEET on the brake and clutch, Josephine Margaret Brogan, known to everyone as Jo, stuck her right hand out of the driverās side window of the five-year-old Morris 8 delivery van, then, seeing the road was clear, turned across Melton Winchet High Street into Garfield General Storeās back yard.
Bringing it to a halt by the side wall, she pulled on the handbrake and switched off the engine. Jutting out her lower lip, she blew upwards to dislodge a brunette curl resting over her left eyebrow but the lock refused to budge. She wasnāt surprised.
It was the first Friday in September and with the hot early-autumn sun blasting fully through the vanās windows, the inside of the vehicle was like an oven and Jo was perspiring accordingly.
It might not have been so bad if sheād been able to deliver the shopās weekend orders in the sleeveless frock and cotton underslip sheād put on that morning, but no. Mrs Garfield was having none of it. Despite the BBC forecasting that the afternoon temperatures would nudge at 70 degrees Fahrenheit, the shopkeeper had insisted that Jo wear her regular dull green rayon overall so she looked ātidyā, which was a cheek as the blooming thing fitted her like a sack and had to be turned at the cuff so the sleeves didnāt cover her hands.
Jo got out of the green van and swinging the keys back and forth around her fingers she walked between the stacked crates into the storeroom that was connected to the side of the shop.
Mrs Garfield, who was flitting a duster over a card of girlsā pastel-coloured hairslides hung on the wall behind the counter, looked around from her task as Jo walked in.
The owner of Melton Winchetās general store was a woman on the wrong side of forty, with hips so extensive she had difficulty turning around in the space behind the counter. She stood a little over five foot and had frizzy grey hair and an expression that would lead you to believe she sucked lemons as a hobby. As her deep-set eyes alighted on Jo, her lips pulled into a tight bud.
āWhere have you been?ā she asked, scrutinising Jo through the lenses of her spectacles.
āI was held up at Riderās Bridge,ā Jo replied, strolling behind the counter to hook the keys on the nail in the wall. āAnd Mrs Veres asked me to tell you sheās got some cooking apples from her orchard; theyāre two shillings a crate, if youāre interested.ā
āTwo shilling!ā snapped the shopkeeper. āThey were half that last season.ā
Jo smiled sweetly. āWell, there is a war on, you know.ā
Mrs Garfield gave her a sour look. āI donāt suppose youāve seen that brother of yours on your travels, have you?ā
āCanāt say I have,ā Jo replied.
The shopkeeper tutted. āProbably in detention again.ā
āOr playing football in the meadow with the other lads,ā Jo countered.
āWell, Iāve got a shop to run so if heās not here soon heāll have to go without lunch,ā said the shopkeeper. āAnd heād better not come home with mud all over his trousers either, like he did last week. I wouldnāt have volunteered to take in evacuees if Iād realised Iād have to skivvy for them. And tidy your hair,ā she continued, waving a couple of fat bluebottles away from the loaves on the counter. āI know youāre not used to such things in East London but out here weāre very particular about cleanliness.ā
The shopkeeperās gaze flickered disapprovingly over Jo again and then she disappeared through the door behind her into the small parlour.
Although it wasnāt the sort of thing a seventeen-year-old young woman whoād just gained a merit on her matriculation should do, Jo stuck out her tongue at the closed door.
Tucking the offending curl back behind her ear, she stepped behind the counter to mind the shop until Mrs Garfield reappeared.
Garfield General Store was a double-fronted affair with two large windows and a central door. It sat like a well-worn and overloaded portmanteau halfway up Melton Winchetās High Street and supplied the inhabitants of the small village ten miles east of Colchester with most of their day-to-day household needs. On the left as you entered the store was a serving counter, scrubbed smooth by Mrs Garfield and her mother before her, on which the baker deposited what remained of his morning stock when he closed at midday. Alongside the bread basket was a block of cheddar on a marble slab, protected by a glass dome, and a ham draped with a muslin on a china plinth, from which Mrs Garfield carved her customersā requirements. On the floor in front of the counter were artistically stacked tins of pilchards, pease pudding and Carnation milk, along with square boxes of fig rolls, garibaldi, arrowroot biscuit and a selection of all three in the broken biscuit box at the end. On the shelves behind the counter were packets of tea, tins of custard, Ovaltine and tins of National Milk, hermetically sealed to preserve it against gas attack. In a small section tucked in the corner were tins of condensed milk for babies, nappy pins and, in discreet grey striped packets, Dr Whiteās sanitary pads.
The household items such as carbolic soap, washing soda, candles and horse embrocation, metal polish, starch and blacking for the fire grates were stacked on the other side of the shop along with brooms, shovels and zinc buckets.
The bell above the door tinkled as Mrs Toffs, wife of the village doctor, strode in. She was a well-groomed woman with a massive bosom and an opinion of herself to match. While most women wore a frock and modest headgear to run their daily errands, Mrs Toffs had decided a navy suit with a red velvet collar and cuffs plus a wide-brimmed feather-laden hat would be more appropriate attire for a visit to the village shop.
āCan I help you?ā asked Jo.
āI hardly think so,ā Mrs Toffs replied, running her critical gaze over her. āIs Mrs Garfield in?ā
Before Jo could reply, the door behind the counter opened again and Mrs Garfield bustled out.
āMrs Toffs, what a pleasure,ā said Mrs Garfield, her sharp features lifting into an ingratiating smile. āWhat can I do for you?ā
āWeāre having a few friends over next Saturday,ā Mrs Toffs replied. āNothing grand, you understand, and Footmanās delicatessen department has sent most of whatās needed butā ā slipping her hand into her pocket she withdrew a sheet of paper ā āthere are a few things Cook still requires, so if you would be so kind.ā
Mrs Garfield pushed her spectacles back up her nose and looked at the proffered list.
āA dozen eggs!ā A worried expression pulled the shopkeeperās heavy eyebrows together.
āI hope I can rely on you, Mrs Garfield,ā Mrs Toffs cut in. āAfter all, my husband does buy all the surgeryās surgical and methylated spirits through you rather than the wholesalers in Colchester.ā
Mrs Garfield paused for a second then folded the list and shoved it in her overall pocket. Her beady eyes shifted to Jo. āDonāt stand there eavesdropping. Get on with the rest of the deliveries.ā
Biting back a retort, Jo went back into the storeroom and took the list pinned to the corkboard. She collected together the half a dozen bulging brown-paper bags, placed them in one of the spare fruit boxes stacked on the floor and carried it out to the van.
Balancing the load on one arm, she opened one of the vanās back doors and slid the box onto the floor of the van. Holding the list in her right hand, she walked the fingers of her left over the twisted-topped brown-paper bags as she checked off Mrs Benboe in High Meadow Lane, Mrs Pedder, The Green, and Mrs Adams at Pucks Farm. Reaching the last name, Jo realised sheād left the Tillet sistersā order in the storeroom.
Shoving the scrap of paper in her overall pocket, Jo retraced her steps and re-entered the storeroom.
Spotting the overlooked brown-paper bag containing the spinster sistersā provisions still on the order shelf, Jo walked between the stacks of boxes and jars to get it. Sheād just grasped the order when Mrs Garfieldās voice drifted in from the shop.
āI tell you, Mrs Toffs,ā said the shopkeeper, āI donāt care if Rev Farrow preaches on about giving succour to orphans and widows from now to doomsday, if Iād known the trouble theyād both be, I wouldnāt have said yes to the placement officer.ā
āMy husband says itās a disgrace,ā said the doctorās wife. āAll the evacuees heās had the misfortune to have in his surgery are running alive with nits.ā
āTheir mothers ought to be ashamed of themselves for sending their offspring in such a condition and raising children with such terrible manners,ā the shopkeeper went on.
āNo manners, donāt you mean,ā said Mrs Toffs.
āAs you say,ā agreed Mrs Garfield. āYou give them a roof over their heads and are they grateful?ā
āGrateful!ā echoed the doctorās wife. āThey donāt know the meaning of the word. The scruffy lad Mrs Yates at Three Trees Farm got saddled with compl...