Evie shook her head. “Oh no, I was
just watching the children.”
The
woman, a teacher, Evie guessed, frowned. “You really shouldn’t do that, you
know. Not that I think you’re a danger, but we have to be so careful these
days, I’m sure you understand.”
“Of
course,” said Evie, “But I wasn’t doing anything-” she paused, then continued
after finding the right word, “Strange. I used to go to school here, during the
war. I was just having a look, to see how it had changed. I don’t live far but
I haven’t been here for decades. I’m Evie, by the way.” She held her hand out.
The
younger woman smiled. “I’m Ivy. I get so used to using my last name around here
I almost forget I have a first.” She laughed lightly, shaking Evie’s hand.
Definitely
a teacher then, thought Evie. “I’d better be going anyway,” she told Ivy. “It’s
about time I got back home.”
Ivy
thought for a moment. “Where are you going to?”
Evie
told her and Ivy smiled once again. “If you like, I can walk with you for a
little of the way. I live in that direction too and I was only on until break
today.” Evie nodded gratefully. She enjoyed walking, but walking with a
companion was so much more entertaining. On the journey the two women discussed
many things; Ivy seemed to have a store of knowledge about World War Two, and
Evie felt as though she was talking to an old friend rather than someone she
had met only a few bright minutes before. Evie could not help but admire the
lovely dress that Ivy was wearing. “Where did you get it from?” she asked, half
tempted to get one for herself although not sure it would really suit her.
“This?”
Ivy said, looking down, smoothing out the material; “Oh, I made this at home. I
make a lot of my own clothes, it’s cheaper that way, and at least you know
they’ll be one offs.”
As
they neared the corner of Evie’s road, Ivy slowed and stopped. “I’ll leave you
here, if that’s all right. I’m in the other direction, really.”
Reluctant
to say goodbye, Evie spoke; “Perhaps you’ll come over later? That’s my house,
the red brick one with the magnolia tree outside. We’re having a barbecue, and
I’d love you to meet my family. The way I’ve been rambling on, I expect you
feel as though you know them already!”
Ivy
smiled. “Well, perhaps I will pop
round later. Thank you for the invite.” And, waving and smiling, Ivy trotted
away.
***
At six o’clock that evening, the
family get together was underway. Everyone was interested in Evie’s long walk,
and were hoping that Ivy would arrive; she sounded lovely.
Going
inside to bring out some more condiments, Evie heard a slight knock at the
front door. When she opened it, there was no one there, and at first she
thought it was some children playing a prank. But as she stepped back into the
house, she looked down and saw a parcel on the ground by the step up into her
front porch. It was wrapped in brown paper and tied with string. Picking it up
gingerly, she took it inside and placed it on the kitchen table.
“You
all right in there?” called Jim from outside. “Where’ve you got to?”
“I’m
just in the kitchen,” Evie answered. She poked at the parcel. “I’ve got a
present.”
Jim
popped his head around the door. “A present?”
Evie
gestured to the brown package as though it were a dog threatening to bite. “One
of your favourite things?” asked her husband. “A brown paper package tied up
with string,” he explained when Evie looked blank. “Never mind. Are you going
to open it then?”
Biting
her tongue, Evie cut the string and the loose ends flopped sideways onto the
table. As nothing dreadful had happened, she began to gain a little more
confidence, and began to undo the rest of the parcel. As the folds of paper
were carefully left to rest on the table, a scrap of blue could just be seen.
Evie caught her breath. It looked so similar, but really, it couldn’t be, could
it? The parcel was open and there, lying on the kitchen table, was Ivy’s
beautiful blue dress. A copy? Perhaps, but hadn’t the teacher said she made her
garments to be one of a kind? Evie was lost for words.
“Oh,
that’s lovely, Eve,” Jim said, looking down. “Your colour, too. Who’s it from?”
There was no card, no note of any kind, but
Evie knew. “Ivy.”
“Oh?
That teacher?” Jim seemed pleased. “Maybe next time she’ll come in.” With that
he left, going back into the garden to enjoy the sun and his family.
Evie could not be so dismissive of
what had happened. She would have to go back to the school next week, Monday
morning, and ask to see Ivy, to at least thank her. It was a beautiful present.
***
Monday
morning rushed in with unstoppable force. The weekend was over and the usual
routine would begin again. But Evie, wearing her new blue dress – a perfect fit
for her, and flattering - was going to leave the housework this morning, and
instead go for another walk. This time, however, she knew exactly where she was
going.
The
school was quiet now. The lessons had just started and Evie could imagine what
the children were thinking; break time was a million long years away. She
wanted to tell them not to wish time gone, but they wouldn’t understand, thinking
themselves immortal. So she paused at the gates, wondering whether, in the
twenty-first century when the human race was supposed to be civilised, the
entrance to the school would be locked to prevent any strangers from intruding.
She pushed tentatively, her fingers brushing the cold steel as though it were
burning, and the left-hand gate moved. She pushed again, harder, and the gate
opened all the way. Evie, making sure to close the gate behind her, walked
purposefully towards the front door of her old school. If anybody saw her they
said nothing.
She
remembered exactly where the headmaster’s office had been, perhaps not
surprising since she had spent many hours there being punished either with the
slipper or the threat of letting her mother know what she had been up to, and
made her way there. But when she got there she discovered that what had been an
office, functional and feared, was now a cloakroom. She turned, looking for any
recognisable landmarks but everything inside the familiar building had changed.
Evie could have cried as her memories of how things had been were slowly and
methodically replaced with the knowledge of what things were now. The only
thing that was the same was the smell – disinfectant, poster paint, plimsolls,
chalk… That at least hadn’t failed her. Tears pushed themselves into her eyes
and she angrily wiped them away, telling herself not to be so sentimental. She
was here for a reason.
Evie
stared down the hollow corridor with its strip lighting and shiny floors dulled
by the dirt of hundreds of small feet, black scuff marks on the skirting board
still in evidence. She heard the unmistakable sound of high heels on school
surfaces and rushed towards the woman heading in her direction. “Can you please
tell me how to find the headmaster?” Evie asked, knowing she sounded desperate
but not caring.
The
woman raised one carefully plucked eyebrow, looking Evie up and down. “There is
no headmaster, I’m afraid, madam. But I’m the headmistress, Mrs. Warren. Will I
do?”
Evie
blushed, embarrassed by her old-fashioned views and memories. “I’m sorry, Mrs.
Warren,” she said, feeling exactly like a contrite schoolgirl which, she
reflected, was most likely how she was supposed to be feeling. “When I was here
we had a headmaster, and I suppose I just assumed.”
Mrs.
Warren nodded, smiled, realising she had treated the woman like a wayward
pupil; “You came here? When was that?”
“During
the war.”
“Really?
Would you mind following me to my office? I know you wanted to speak with the
person in charge, and I have a favour to ask of you too, since you’re here.”
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