Chapter 12

Stephanie

Present day

Finn didn’t call, but he did message me. He said he was very excited about the mural and that he would help me in any way he could.

I read his message, gripping my phone tightly. I was relieved he’d not said it was a silly idea, or made excuses about why he couldn’t help.

I breathed out slowly. Maybe this could work, I thought. And probably I wouldn’t get the grant – I had no doubt there would be other more experienced artists applying – but I felt like even managing to get the grant application written and sent before the deadline would be a victory of sorts.

My phone buzzed in my hand again. It was another message from Finn.

He wouldn’t be around for a while because he was marking dissertations, he said. “But,” he added, “try this link.” Straightaway another message arrived with a password.

I was in the staffroom at Tall Trees because I’d been helping Tara with a stocktake at The Vine and there wasn’t time to go home before my shift. So now, intrigued to see what Finn had sent, I sat down on one of the saggy armchairs and clicked on the link.

It took me to a basic website, and after I’d typed in the password, it took me a moment to understand what I was seeing. It was the book – Elsie’s book of letters and messages and memories. All the pages that had been scanned in so far.

“This is amazing,” I replied to Finn. “Thank you.”

“Let me know if it sparks your creativity.”

“I will.”

It was infuriatingly hard to see on the tiny screen of my phone, so I got up and wandered to the main entrance of Tall Trees where Vanessa, one of the receptionists, was on duty.

‘Can I use the computer?’ I asked.

She dragged her eyes up from the book she was reading and gave me a hard stare. ‘Are you looking up something dodgy?’

‘No,’ I said, not sure if she was joking or not. ‘It’s about the history of Tall Trees.’

Vanessa raised an eyebrow and tilted her head towards the computer at the end of the desk. ‘Go for it.’

I pulled up a chair and sat down next to her. Then I opened the internet, typed in the link from Finn’s message, and entered the password.

On the bigger screen it was easier to see the pages. It was a real mishmash of different things. I got the impression that Elsie had simply handed over the notebook to the patients and told them to write whatever they wanted.

The first few pages were accounts of a bomb that had fallen at the air base at Biggin Hill. I hadn’t known about that before Finn mentioned it the other day, though I’d known it had been an RAF base before it became the busy airport for private jets that it was now. I zoomed in on a message and started to read, and once I’d got used to the old-fashioned handwriting, I was quickly engrossed.

The soldiers – airmen I guessed they would be called – had written all about how they’d been having their dinner when the bomb had dropped, with no warning. One of them had written a detailed description of what he’d eaten, which made me smile. Others listed the people who had died – lots of them women, to my surprise. One of them drew pictures of the friends they’d lost, which I found very moving. Another wrote a vivid account of dragging survivors from the rubble, rescuing them in daring and dramatic fashion. It was so thrilling, I found myself biting my lip as I read.

‘Interesting, is it?’ Vanessa said. I looked up from the screen and saw her watching me curiously.

Oddly, I found I was reluctant to share what I was reading. I felt a bit territorial over this book already. So instead I just shrugged. ‘Local history,’ I said.

‘Is that what that Finn’s doing?’

‘Sort of.’

Vanessa nodded. ‘He’s cute.’

I looked at her. She was younger than me and she was related to Blessing in some way – a niece, or a cousin, or something. I couldn’t remember the details. Vanessa was a student and working at Tall Trees on the side. She liked covering reception because she could do her uni work at the same time. I admired her work ethic, and I envied her stunning good looks, and I suddenly felt as territorial over Finn as I did over the book.

‘Cute?’ I said, ultra-casually. ‘You think?’

‘Hell yeah.’ Vanessa glanced at me sideways, pouting her lips like she was getting ready to snog an invisible Finn. ‘I love geeky men like that. They’re like Clark Kent.’

I laughed. ‘He’s a history teacher, Vanessa, not Superman.’

She raised one perfectly shaped eyebrow. ‘We’ll see.’

I felt a bit prickly, like she’d stolen something of mine. ‘He’s not going to be around much for the next few weeks anyway, because he’s busy at work,’ I said.

‘Shame.’

I shrugged, trying to show her that it didn’t matter to me what Finn did, and Vanessa gave me a little knowing half-smile and turned her attention back to her book.

The next few pages of Elsie’s book were hard to read. Not the writing – I’d got used to that now – but the words themselves. Some of the airmen had written letters to their families and sweethearts in case they didn’t come back.

“I wanted you to know that I treasure the time we spent together,” one man had written to someone called Ginny. I wondered if he and Ginny had ended up together or if they’d gone their separate ways.

“I hope you’ll be proud of me, Mum and Dad,” another wrote. “Because that’s all I ever wanted, you know. To make you proud.” He’d signed it, and added “age 19”.

I felt tears in my eyes, at the thought of this young man – just a few years older than Micah – who’d gone off to war, hoping to make his parents proud. Making my own parents proud had never been one of my goals. Mum was much prouder of Max – turning his back on “normal” life – than she’d ever been of me. And Dad, well … I usually just got the impression that he was a little confused by me. I always felt my presence made him feel guilty, as though I reminded him of his shortcomings somehow. And obviously that meant he didn’t want to spend much time with me. I wasn’t even sure if he’d told his new friends in Portugal that he had children. Mind you, on the odd occasions when someone asked me if I had any siblings now, I would always be a bit vague and say I had a brother but we weren’t really in touch.

I took a deep, slightly shuddering breath in and Vanessa looked up at me but didn’t say anything and I was glad.

Maybe this was too much for me, I thought as I clicked on the mouse to open the next page. I was definitely on the mend, but I wasn’t the same person I’d been before and I wasn’t sure I ever would be. Maybe this wasn’t the right project?

The next letter was a sweet note to a new wife, who was pregnant with the writer’s first baby.

“Please tell our son or daughter that they were so loved by me, their father,” he’d written. I pinched my lips together. “I hope you aren’t working too hard and please if you get the chance to be evacuated, you must go. It’s not safe for you to be in London when the bombs are dropping and things are so bad.”

Underneath the letter, someone else – Elsie, I assumed – had added a note: “AC1 Rogerson killed in action 19 December 1940”. And then, in a different colour of ink, there was another note adding: “wife killed in bomb in Stepney 11 December 1940”.

I covered my mouth with my hand, feeling the loss of this family like a sharp pain, all these years later. I wondered if he’d known his wife had died before he was killed. Perhaps not. I wasn’t sure how long news took to filter through in those days. It wasn’t as though people could just email.

‘Okay?’ Vanessa said, looking at me in concern. ‘What’s wrong?’

I shut the website down. ‘Fine.’ My voice was shaky. ‘It’s fine. I need to start my shift now. Thanks for letting me use the computer.’

She gave me a dazzling smile. ‘Any time.’

Feeling slightly wrung out, I hurried off to the staffroom to read the rota for my shift. I couldn’t do this, I thought. I was too fragile and wobbly. The idea of painting a mural about the history of Tall Trees was a good one, but not for me. Not when the history was so sad, and so raw.

I was on the late shift tonight, but though our residents went to bed early, it wasn’t time to start getting them into their night clothes quite yet. In fact, a lot of the people on my corridor were playing cards in the lounge. I left them to it and, grabbing a pile of information leaflets Blessing had asked me to make sure were given out, I went along the hall, just checking in on the ones who were settled in their rooms.

Val was one of the women who gave the card games a swerve. I couldn’t blame her really because they did get very raucous and extremely competitive. So I knocked on her door and went into her room, where she was watching Four in a Bed on the little portable television on her chest of drawers. Someone – probably Blessing – had told me Val had worked in hospitality when she was younger and I’d scoffed at the idea, because she was really very prickly and I couldn’t imagine her running a hotel. But perhaps I’d been wrong.

‘Blessing asked me to give these out to the right people,’ I said, putting down one of the leaflets. ‘Make sure you at least glance at it, won’t you? Or she’ll have my guts for garters.’

Val looked at the leaflet without interest, then at me, more carefully this time.

‘Are you all right, Stephanie?’ she said.

I eyed her with suspicion because she didn’t often enquire as to how I was. ‘I don’t have any teabags,’ I said.

Val tutted. ‘I didn’t ask.’

Immediately I felt guilty. ‘I know, I’m sorry. I’m a bit out of sorts.’

‘I can see that.’ She nodded to where I’d put the information leaflet, which I saw now was about prostate screening, down on the table at the end of her bed and I screwed up my nose, and scooped it up again into the pocket of my tunic.

‘What’s got you so rattled?’ Val asked.

‘Nothing.’ I smoothed out her bedspread, which was made from very pretty patchwork.

‘Liar.’ I stared at her in surprise, and she gave me a tight-lipped smile. ‘You’re obviously upset about something, and unless you want to give Mr Yin my osteoporosis medication, I suggest you get it off your chest.’

‘I don’t really want to talk about it,’ I muttered.

Val picked up the remote control and turned off Four in a Bed with a click. Then she turned her head, regally, so she could look straight at me.

‘Fair enough,’ she said. ‘Close the door on your way out, will you?’

I sat down on the pretty patchwork quilt. ‘Do you remember the war, Val?’

‘I thought you didn’t want to talk?’

‘Do you remember?’

She nodded. ‘I was still at school when the war started. By the time it ended I was virtually a grown woman.’

‘Did you …’ I swallowed. ‘Did you lose anyone?’

‘I was one of the lucky ones. I had three sisters. We all did our bit, but none of us were ever really in danger. And my poor old dad, he’d been in the trenches of course, first time round, but he was too old to enlist. My mother was pleased that he didn’t have to go.’

‘Did you have a boyfriend who was off fighting?’

Val winked at me. ‘I had several. But they all came back.’

‘You really were lucky,’ I said, more harshly than I’d intended. I ran my finger along the edge of one of the patchwork squares where I sat. ‘Tall Trees was a hospital during the war.’

‘I know.’

‘A nurse who worked here kept a book where the patients she looked after wrote messages for their families. In case they didn’t come back.’

‘That was kind.’

‘It was.’

Val looked far away for a moment. ‘I had a friend,’ she said eventually. ‘Well, he was more than a friend. I loved him very much. But he was married, and he had children. He had a very important job, and I worked odd hours, which didn’t fit with a conventional family life. So we had an arrangement that suited us both, you know?’

I wasn’t completely sure what she meant, but I thought I could get the gist. Was she telling me she had been someone’s mistress? A bit on the side? I nodded.

‘We were together for a long time. Years and years. Until his children were grown and had children of their own. But no one knew. And when he died, of course, no one told me. It took me a while to find out.’ She gave me a little sad smile. ‘That was back in the days before the internet. In the end, I saw his obituary in the Daily Telegraph, over someone’s shoulder on the tube.’

‘I’m sorry – that must have been very hard.’

She nodded. ‘I’d have liked to have had a message from him,’ she said. ‘One last message.’

‘He didn’t leave you anything?’

‘Nothing.’ A shadow crossed her face. ‘Though, I think his son always had an inkling about us, and it wouldn’t have surprised me if he’d kept anything he did leave from me.’ She gave me a little sad smile. ‘That was the decision I made when we met. I knew he wouldn’t choose me over his wife. He was very protective of her.’

Not that protective, I thought to myself, if he’d been carrying on with another woman the whole time. But who knew what went on in people’s marriages? So I simply nodded again, because I thought saying the right thing before someone went away was important.

‘My brother …’ I began slowly. It was always a bit nerve-racking, saying that my brother was behind bars. ‘He’s in prison. And I said some awful stuff to him, before he went.’

Val reached out and patted my hand and the simple, sympathetic gesture made tears spring into my eyes. I blinked them away and she pretended not to notice.

‘Perhaps he deserved it,’ she said.

‘I think he did.’ My voice was a little croaky. ‘But I still feel bad about it.’ I breathed in deeply. ‘I thought he’d died, you see? When the police turned up, I thought he was dead and the last things I’d said were horrible.’

Val gave me a long, steady look. ‘I think we all need one of those books to write in. In case we don’t come back.’

‘We really do,’ I said, picking at a loose thread on the quilt. Then I stopped still as an idea came to me, and I stared at Val. ‘That’s it.’

‘What’s what?’

‘Presents from the past,’ I said in excitement, ignoring her blank look. ‘I could do a book for the residents here. Everyone can write their own messages to special people. And I could use some of the words from Elsie’s book on the mural – base it all around the nurse and her idea.’

Val simply looked at me, but I thought I saw a spark of interest in her eyes.

‘And,’ I said, triumphantly, ‘I could find out what happened to Elsie. Make it part of the project. Imagine if I could track her down – that really would be a present from the past.’

‘I have absolutely no idea what you’re talking about,’ Val said. She picked up the remote control and turned Four in a Bed back on.

Dismissed, I slid off the patchwork quilt. ‘I’ll come back later and help you get ready for bed,’ I said.

Val nodded. And then, as I reached the door, she said: ‘Perhaps you could tell me more about this Elsie, too.’

I grinned. ‘Definitely.’