A Mother Forever by Elaine Everest (free children's online books txt) ๐
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- Author: Elaine Everest
Read book online ยซA Mother Forever by Elaine Everest (free children's online books txt) ๐ยป. Author - Elaine Everest
Elaine Everest
A Mother Forever
Contents
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Epilogue
Acknowledgements
A Letter from Elaine
Dedicated to the memory of the twelve women and their foreman who died in the explosion at the W. V. Gilbert munition works, on the banks of the Thames between Erith and Slades Green, on 18th February 1924.
Edna Allen, aged seventeen, of Alexandra Road.
Alice Craddock, aged eighteen, of Arthur Street.
Elizabeth Dalton, aged twenty-four, of Lewis Road, Welling.
Alice Harvey, aged forty, of Arthur Street.
Gladys Herbert, aged twenty-three, of Bexley Road.
Stella Huntley, aged twenty, of Corinthian Road.
Edith Lamb, aged twenty-three, of Upper Road, Belvedere.
Ethel Pullen, aged eighteen, of Bexley Road.
Polly Smith, aged eighteen, of Powell Street.
Doris Sturtevant, aged eighteen, of Manor Road.
Alice Sweeney, aged seventeen, of St Francis Road.
Irene Turtle, aged twenty-two, of Maxim Road.
Mr T. Jones, from East Dulwich
1
Erith, Kent
August 1905
โYouโve got ideas above your station, my girl. If your father was alive now, heโd want nothing to do with you. The Tomkins family have always known their place in life; he wouldnโt want us rubbing shoulders with those who think theyโre better than us,โ Milly Tomkins said to her daughter.
Ruby Caselton gave a big sigh and continued to pull a heavy rug from the back of the draymanโs cart, while he held the horseโs head steady. โItโs just a street of houses with hard-working people living in them. Could you take the other end of this please, Mum?โ
โWhat, with my bad ticker? Youโll see me into my grave, young lady. But then, perhaps thatโs what you want โ then thereโll be no one left to remind you of where you come from,โ Milly sniffed, folding her arms over her ample chest and turning away to look at the house the family were about to move into. โThose windows need a clean and the doorstep a good scrub.โ
โI can help you, Mum,โ George said, reaching up to help Ruby pull at the rug. It came tumbling off the cart, almost flattening him as he staggered back under its weight.
Ruby couldnโt help but laugh as she watched her five-year-old son disappearing under the rug. โLord love you, George. Thank you for helping all the same. Why donโt you carry that basket of groceries into the kitchen? Then I can get some food on the table as soon as we have this load inside. Your dad may be home by then, and heโll be shouting for his dinner.โ She didnโt add that he never turned up until her work was done and he had no need to roll up his sleeves and help her.
โHeโs running true to form, I see,โ Milly snorted as she pulled her knitted shawl tighter around her shoulders. โThat Eddie Caselton has a gift for sniffing out hard work and disappearing in the opposite direction. Now, your dad . . .โ
Ruby knew her mum was about to lead off about her dad being an angel amongst all men, and she just didnโt have the time or the inclination to listen. The drizzling rain had started again, and there was a definite nip in the air coming off the nearby River Thames. Added to that, the child she was carrying in her swollen belly would be entering the world within weeks. โMum, leave it to another time, will you? I never knew Dad, and I have other things on my mind at the moment. I could kill a cuppa, so why donโt you go in and see to the kitchen, eh? Youโll find a meat and potato pie in that basket our George carried in. We can eat once this load is off the cart.โ She knew her mum was partial to a pie and noticed her eyes light up at once.
โIโll get cracking,โ Milly replied, licking her lips as she headed up the short path to the front door, her hands empty. โItโs no place for me out in this rain โ not at my time of life, anyroad.โ
โYouโve got yer hands full there, love,โ a friendly voice called out from over the road.
Ruby looked up from where she was examining the rug lying in a heap in the dust. She wasnโt sure if the woman watching from her gate was referring to her mum, or the furniture waiting to be unloaded and taken into the house. She stood up straight, wincing as a pain shot across the lower part of her back. As much as sheโd been warned to take things easy, sheโd gone against advice and insisted she could move the family into their new home without paying for hired help. It was their first proper home, as up to now theyโd lived in rooms in a house shared with three other families near the river in Woolwich. There wasnโt a lot of money spare to pay for such things as moving men.
Smiling at the ruddy-faced neighbour, she replied, โYou could say that,โ and then grimaced as another pain consumed her. She reached out to hang on to the side of the cart to help her stay upright.
โMy Lord, you shouldnโt be up on your feet in your condition. When are you due?โ the woman asked as she hurried to Rubyโs side and supported her. โYouโre coming with me,โ she added, not waiting for an answer as she guided Ruby towards her own open front door.
โNot for another month โ but my furniture . . .โ Ruby gasped, unable to say much more.
โDonโt worry your head about that. It looks to me as though thereโs a baby wanting to be born. Sometimes they just canโt wait,โ her new neighbour advised. She paused to take in Ruby, who was so thin that she looked no more than a child herself. Her face was far too pale, and her blue eyes were circled in black shadows. She didnโt look well enough to deliver a healthy baby. โMy oldest two are home from work for their dinner soon
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