
I walked the rest of the way to the tube station with her to make sure she found her way, though it wasn’t that dark. The nearly full moon was up, and there was a fire still burning down by the docks from the raid of the night before.
“Thanks awfully,” the girl said, switching the hanger to her other hand so she could shake hands with me. She was much nicer-looking than Vi, with blonde, very curly hair. “I work for this old stewpot at John Lewis’s, and she won’t let me leave even a minute before closing, will she, even if the sirens have gone.”
I waited outside the station for a few minutes and then walked up to the Brompton Road, thinking Vi might have come in at South Kensington instead, but I didn’t see her, and she still wasn’t at the post when I got back.
“We’ve a new theory for why the sirens haven’t gone,” Swales said. “We’ve decided our Vi’s set her cap at the Luftwaffe, and they’ve surrendered.”
“Where’s Mrs Lucy?” I asked.
“Still in with the new man,” Twickenham said.
“I’d better tell Mrs Lucy I couldn’t find her,” I said and started for the pantry.
Halfway there the door opened, and Mrs Lucy and the new man came out. He was scarcely a replacement for the burly Olmwood. He was not much older than I was, slightly built, hardly the sort to lift house beams. His face was thin and rather pale, and I wondered if he was a student.
“This is our new part-timer, Mr Settle,” Mrs Lucy said. She pointed to each of us in turn. “Mr Morris, Mr Twickenham, Mr Swales, Mr Harker.” She smiled at the part-timer and then at me. “Mr Harker’s name is Jack, too,” she said. “I shall have to work at keeping you straight.”
“A pair of jacks,” Swales said. “Not a bad hand.”
The part-timer smiled.
“Cots are in there if you’d like to have a lie-down,” Mrs Lucy said, “and if the raids are close, the coal cellar’s reinforced.
