She spotted a cluster a few feet away to her side. When she sat up straighter to try and peer over the top of the ditch she found that she was still too far down to see the lane but was just able to see the tops of the bicycle wheels that were still spinning. The spokes caught the sunlight and cast small shooting lights upwards.
“Nothing like announcing we’re here, Mr Jenkins of the Home Guard will have something to say about that,” she said, as she uncovered and boosted Maggie up onto the lane then reached out grasping a handful of doc leaves as she climbed up and out.
“Hey Maggie, it’s alright now,” Iris said calmly as the leaves instantly soothed her stings.
“You’ve been stung,” said Maggie, “does it hurt much?” She sniffed and brushed her long brown hair away from her face. “Do you want more doc leaves?”
“No, it’s all right now.” Iris reached into her skirt pocket and replaced the doc leaves for her handkerchief positioning it over Maggie’s nose. “Blow Maggie, come on, but not too hard, you don’t want to pop your ears.” She then gathered the end of her skirt and dabbed her daughter’s teary eyes.
Trial and error had proved that in the long run it was better to placate rather than shout and scald as it tended to stop Maggie’s snivelling much quicker.
“What a kerfuffle,” she said tickling Maggie’s tummy causing the youngster to giggle. A quick glance told her that the bicycle was not too damaged as she retrieved the now half empty bag of flour.
Maggie, ever resilient and realising the danger had passed, skipped after the ball of wool. “That was scary, but not as big as last time,” she announced, rolling the wool up as they made their way home. “The last one was really big.”
“You mean when we were at grandma’s?”
“Yes.”
They both looked at one another and burst out laughing at the memory of when they had cycled up to grandma’s house for tea. Iris hated her interfering mother-in-law but tolerated the odd afternoon there to keep the peace and it was during the last visit that the air-raid siren had sounded.
Iris had quickly ushered Maggie and her mother-in-law out of the kitchen and through the small door under the stairs. The three of them sat under the narrow staircase in silence on old creaky apple boxes, there for that very purpose. Their knees huddled together in the cramped space being mindful not to fidget too much to get any splinters from their makeshift seats.
Maggie knew that the raid was big because she could feel the vibration intensify. It seemed that hundreds of planes were continually flying overhead. She imagined that a huge monster had stomped into her grandma’s garden and was roaring down on the house to scare the people inside.
Afternoon sunlight had seeped underneath the little door because it was at least three inches short of the floor. From those shards of light all that Maggie could focus on was her grandma’s hair. The sheer vibration from the overhead had caused some plaster dust from the stair slats to land on top of her grandma’s bun and over her shoulders. Even though Maggie was terrified by the noise she was more mesmerised by her grandma who looked like she had been sprinkled with snow. Maggie had tugged lightly on her mother’s apron to bring it to her attention. Her mother didn’t say anything but nudged Maggie’s leg with hers and giggle-coughed a couple of times.
The reference to that afternoon was just the ticket Iris and Maggie needed to deal with today’s raid.
“Come on Maggie, let’s go home and find your father.” Iris suddenly felt the need to see William. Even though the air raid today was relatively small, compared to some, it still unnerved her. This had been the first time she had been out in the open, without the security of the Anderson shelter. She was also frightened because she wasn’t with William, and this made her realise that she didn’t want to die without him. So many confusing thoughts entered her head as she lay with Maggie waiting for the danger to pass. She honestly and truly believed that she would die today.
It suddenly dawned on Iris how much she took William for granted and how heavily she depended on him. She had never told him she loved him. Perhaps she did in her own way, but it was always conveniently avoided. Whenever William told her he loved her, she either smiled or said she knew or changed the subject completely. It was the way she had been brought up, as her parents had never told her they loved her, always stating that showing emotion was showing weakness.
Iris knew William, who was five years older than she was, had almost given up hope of them ever having a child. She had begrudgingly endured years of trying for a family until William had finally conceded that some things were just not meant to be. Iris knew as she got older that the chances were slimmer than slim and that made her inwardly jubilant. She welcomed her monthlies with open arms, however painful they were.
Then at forty-one years of age, the worst day of all happened when Iris discovered she was pregnant. Maggie arrived just three years before the start of the Second World War. Iris felt there was not a person on earth who she could share her deepest secret with.
Iris had married William for an escape; it was as simple as that. She had purposely omitted to tell him that she never wanted children in case he wouldn’t marry her. She believed children were too demanding and that she wouldn’t be able to do what she wanted. They seemed too much trouble and bloody hard work. But when she realised she was pregnant she knew she had to get on with it. She had considered an abortion but living in a small village where everyone knew everyone’s business she had decided it wasn’t worth the risk of being ostracised.
Life was damn cruel and unfair sometimes.
After so many years of trying for a family, she was unsure whether it had been a natural thing that she had taken so long to conceive with William or the likely possibility that her lover had fathered her unfortunate child.
She and William had been married for twenty years and lived in a tied cottage owned by the Squire of Primrose Farm Estate. William had come from generations of Kentish farm workers where, more often than not, the tied cottages stayed within the workers’ family and were passed down from generation to generation. Fifteen cottages were tied in with the estate and Iris and William lived at number 1 Primrose Cottage. William was the farm manager who took over the role upon his father’s death some years before.
Iris tolerated farm life. It was boring, hard work and rough on the hands, but she had to chip in and make the best of it. By nature, she was a lazy creature but accepted this was the life she had chosen. Given the alternative, Iris knew deep down that she was onto a good thing here although it didn’t stop her wanting more.
Tongues wagged, so to avoid unnecessary attention she excelled at putting on an act and became so good that at times she almost believed herself. Whenever she was particularly melancholy she admonished herself wishing that she had waited a little longer to capture a more upmarket man with better prospects then she wouldn’t have had to work at all.
In the beginning, she would have done anything to escape her childhood home. Home? It wasn’t a home, just four walls. The crux was that an abusive upbringing had disintegrated her heart and soul. As soon as she laid eyes on William she put her plan for freedom in place. It was all about freedom and escape, nothing more.
She had never felt love so wasn’t totally sure what it really was, although her lover made her feel alive and desirable. Over the years, she had grown fond of William and they did have some good times and outwardly they seemed relatively compatible.
They were married within five months of meeting much to William’s mother’s doubt of Iris’s intentions. Iris alienated William’s friends and pushed him to assist more in his father’s role while she waited patiently for his father to turn up his toes.
In the meantime, while his parents were out at work all day it sometimes enabled her to lie in bed