night out together, Lizzie.â
âWell, we have to help out with making the sandwiches and serving the men, but we shanât be working all the time and it is a way of getting outâ¦â
âWeâll do it,â Beth said and laughed in relief. âI thought sheâd come to have a row with you â she looked so angry.â
âAngry with her husband, not me,â Lizzie said. âPerhaps things will start to get better now. She said Bert Oliver had a shock when the police went there so perhaps he might stop telling lies about meâ¦â
*
âIt will do the pair of you the world of good,â Bethâs mother said when they told her about Aunt Miriam coming to babysit one evening a week. âYou know Iâd have done it if I could, Beth, but I couldnât manage evenings or weekends.â
âWe wouldnât dream of asking,â Lizzie told her. âWe are so grateful for all you do, and I know I would prefer you to anyone else â but Aunt Miriam is to be trusted. She wanted children but couldnât have them and she adores Betty â sheâs more likely to spoil them than neglect them.â
âWell, that would be easy enough to do,â Mrs Court said and smiled at her. âI popped in with the children to see Mary this afternoon. She was just sitting there staring at the wall, but she cheered up when she saw the children.â
âThat must have been hard work for you â pushing all three in the pram together?â Beth said and frowned.
âI used to have three of mine in together when the twins were babies.â
âYou were younger then,â Beth objected. âYou shouldnât wear yourself out like that, Mum.â
âWell Mary carried Matt home in her arms because he was screaming,â her mother said, âit wasnât so bad â and it cheered your sister up a bit. You mustnât grudge her a little happiness, Beth.â
âI donât,â Beth replied but she was uneasy.
Lizzie looked at her anxiously as they fed the children and then popped them into the bath before taking them up to bed.
âYouâre worried about Mary, arenât you?â Lizzie asked.
âYes, because⦠sheâs not right,â Beth said and shook her head. âI donât mind her helping Mum with the children sometimes, but Iâm nervous of what she might do if she was alone with them. Sheâs so intense, Lizzie.â
âBeth! You canât think she would hurt your babies? Sheâs grieving because she lost hers, but that doesnât make her a monster.â
Beth nodded but she turned away and didnât answer.
Later, when she was in bed she dwelled on the answers both Lizzie and her mother had given her. They both seemed to think she was being unfair to Mary, even though Lizzie had understood how she felt. Bethâs mum was bound to feel for Mary, because sheâd lost her baby â Beth was sorry for her too, but she didnât quite trust her sister. She couldnât have said why, but when Aunt Miriam came to babysit for the evening, she would make certain she knew never to leave Mary alone with them. If her sister called round on some pretext, she wasnât to be left with the childrenâ¦
*
âWhy donât we ask Mary if sheâd like to come to the social club too?â Lizzie said as they travelled to work the next morning, after a night that had been remarkably quiet. The sirens had gone but they hadnât heard any bombing and then the all-clear had sounded. No one believed it meant the blitz was over, but perhaps they were going to get a bit of a rest; it was certainly needed, because the fires were still burning from one of the worst nights London had ever seen. âIt might take her mind off her loss and perhaps she would enjoy it⦠it could be her salvation, being around men whoâve endured hellâ¦â
âWe could ask her
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