Authors: Janet Tanner
She tackled Jenny that same evening â no sense letting things go on any longer. David was out with his friends â since his lonely Christmas, which, to Carrie's surprise seemed to have done him good, he'd taken to going out on a Friday night with the same crowd he used to get about with before he married Linda â and when Joe put on his muffler and went out for his pint at the Working Men's Club, she and Jenny were alone.
Carrie pulled up the fireside chair so she was facing the one where Jenny was supposedly reading â supposedly since Carrie hadn't seen her turn the page once. She got her knitting out of her tapestry work bag and clicked her needles for a few moments. Jenny was staring down at her book, chewing her lips. Her eyes flicked up once, and when they met Carrie's she looked quickly away.
âIs there something you want to talk to me about, Jenny?'
Jenny's eyes flicked up again, full of apprehension.
âWhat do you mean?'
âI think it's time you and I had a little chat, don't you? Come on, Jenny, you might as well tell me the truth.'
Jenny had gone very red.
âYou ⦠know?'
âI've got a fair idea.'
âDid Heather tell you?'
âHeather?' Carrie was shocked. âDoes
Heather
know about this?' Jenny did not answer and Carrie thought quickly. She didn't like the idea that Jenny had talked to Heather behind her back, but if she had and if she thought Heather had talked to her, then she wouldn't wonder how Carrie had known. âI want to hear it from you,' she said.
âOh, Mum, I'm so sorry â¦'
âYou're in trouble, aren't you? You're going to have a baby.' Jenny nodded.
âOh, Jenny, how could you let yourself down like that?'
âI'm really sorry â¦'
âIt's a bit late for sorry, isn't it? I tried and tried to stop something like this happening. I've seen it coming ever since you â¦' She broke off. There was no way she could say what she meant â ever since Jenny had lost her puppy fat and turned into an attractive young woman. To say that would be to admit she had been something of an ugly duckling before, something Carrie had always strenuously denied. And in any case, it wasn't strictly true. She'd seen it coming for much longer than that. Getting pregnant outside marriage wasn't the prerogative of attractive girls. Quite often it was the plain ones, the fat ones, the ones with low self-esteem who wanted so desperately to be loved that they fell into the trap of giving themselves to the first man who paid attention to them. No, it had nothing to do with looks and everything to do with personality and character, and right from the word go Jenny had been a prime candidate, even leaving aside the wild streak that must be in her genes as it was in Heather's.
âWell, it's no use crying over spilt milk,' Carrie said shortly. âWhat's done is done. But we'd better get some plans made â and made soon. You don't want to be still round here when you start to show.'
âBut â¦'
âYou don't want to get yourself talked about, do you? You want to be able to walk down the street with your head held high. You've done so well and everybody round here thinks you're a nice girl. We don't want them knowing any different, do we? Then, when it's all over, you can come back and go on as if nothing had happened. That's much the best thing.'
Jenny wanted to argue, wanted to demand some say in what happened. It was her body, after all, her baby. But the habit of the years was too strong. Carrie had always been the one who made the decisions. She knew best, or so she thought, and the rest of the family accepted her own valuation.
Besides ⦠if Bryn were here, Jenny thought, she'd find the strength from somewhere to fight her mother. But Bryn wasn't here. He had deserted her when she needed him most. The only person she could rely on to help her sort out this whole terrible mess was Carrie.
âIs that you, Joe?' Carrie called out as she heard the front door closing. She knew it was, of course â who else would it be at this time of night? â David was usually much later than this. In any case, Sally had been waiting by the door for the last five minutes â she always seemed to know instinctively when Joe turned the corner of the road.
âIt's me, m'dear,' yes.' Joe came in, unbuttoning his sports coat â he had already taken off his overcoat in the hall and hung it on the bannister.
âOh, I'm so glad you're home,' Carrie said. She was sitting in the fireside chair, but her knitting lay in the tapestry bag beside her, the needles sticking out untidily, and a ball of wool had rolled out on to the floor unnoticed.
âWhatever is the matter?' Joe asked.
Carrie shook her head in distress. âSomething terrible's happened, Joe. I don't know how to tell you. It's our Jenny. She's got herself in trouble.'
âOur Jenny? No!' Joe's placid face furrowed.
âYes. I got it out of her tonight. That RAF boy's the father.'
âOh dear, oh dear!' He could see now why Carrie was so upset â he was upset, too. Jenny was the apple of his eye; this was the last thing he'd have expected.
âShe'll have to have it adopted,' Carrie said. âThere's nothing else we can do.'
âD'you really think so? Couldn't we ⦠?'
âNo!' Carrie said shortly. âI've been thinking about it ever since I found out, and it's the only way. But oh, my goodness, this is something I could have done without!'
âWhat about the boy? Perhaps if he knew he'd â¦'
âMarry her? Is that what you want for her, Joe? I know I don't! No, it's far the best that she has it adopted and tries to make a fresh start.'
âWell, I suppose you know the best, m'dear,' Joe said. He was too shaken by the news to argue with Carrie. Truth to tell, he didn't even want to think about it. His little Jenny â pregnant at sixteen. He'd seen her blossom, taken a quiet pride in the way she'd turned out, but he'd never thought it would turn out like this, not even knowing as he did what boys that age were like. He'd thought his Jenny was too special for something like this to happen. Now the taste of the beer he'd drunk at the club turned sour in his mouth, making him feel sick.
âI'll start sorting it out tomorrow,' Carrie said. âIt's not going to be any picnic, mind. Not for any of us.'
Joe said nothing. He couldn't bring himself to. But Carrie was certainly right there â this certainly wasn't going to be any picnic.
As good as her word, next day Carrie made an appointment to see Helen to discuss options. The day after that she contacted a social worker. By the time the week was out she had arranged for Jenny to go to a Catholic-run mother and baby home, not six weeks before the birth, but three months. Jenny would work there, helping out in the kitchen and doing domestic chores. The Church would arrange an immediate adoption so that Jenny could be back in Hillsbridge within two weeks of the birth. The home was within the catchment area for a secretarial college â if she could manage to continue her studies on her own initiative, she would be able to sit her examinations there.
Jenny went along with it all, numbed by the enormity of what was happening to her, regressing, almost, to the child she had so recently been â submissive, anxious to make amends, wanting only to be told what she should do. Heather made no further mention of taking on the baby herself but the fact that she had suggested it and Jenny's violent reaction to the plan made an awkwardness between the sisters for a while.
As for Joe, he withdrew into himself, spending more time than ever pottering in the garden and in his shed. At the moment, it upset him just to look at Jenny, for seeing her reminded him that his innocent little girl had gone for ever. Jenny found his absence hurtful, but instinctively she understood, and was almost grateful, for she was as embarrassed in his presence as he was in hers. They both needed time to come to terms with what had happened â was happening â but she was in no doubt but that when the chips were down he would be there for her as he always had been. For the moment, he needed to do nothing. Carrie had taken charge, as she always did.
âHaven't you done with those steps yet, Jennifer?'
Jenny sat back on her heels, tucking a strand of hair behind her ear with damp puffy fingers as Sister Anne bore down on her. The strand of hair felt lank and needed cutting but she had resisted letting the sisters get their hands on it. She'd seen how they âbarbered' the other girls'hair â a pair of scissors that were practically shears and a pudding basin. A visit to a proper hairdresser was out of the question, so she scraped it back with a rubber band and hoped they wouldn't notice it was longer than the regulations insisted upon.
âI've nearly finished, Sister.'
âGet on with it then. That's the trouble with you girls â you're born lazy. If you'd been brought up properly and taught how to keep yourselves busy you wouldn't be in the mess you're in now.'
Jenny wished she dared answer back, retort that she wasn't lazy, just tired, tired, tired â more drained and exhausted than she'd ever been in her life â and bending double over a scrubbing brush gave her a cramp in the stomach, but she knew better than to argue. It did more harm than good. The sisters â especially Sister Anne â had ways of punishing girls who were insubordinate or cheeky and the sisters were all-powerful. The best course of action was to remain meekly silent and try to ignore the unfair and hurtful things they said. But inwardly Jenny burned with resentment.
Though her family hadn't been practising Catholics for years she had been brought up to respect the Church and to think of nuns as gentle, kindly creatures who spent their days on good works or in prayer. As far as this lot were concerned nothing could be further from the truth. Most of them were hard and cold, embittered perhaps by their proximity with a procession of young girls who had achieved what they never could â motherhood.
To them, these girls were sinners, wild girls, wicked girls, girls with no morals, girls who had brought disgrace on themselves and their families. They had cheapened themselves, desecrated the temple of their bodies, lost the precious gift of their virginity in some back alley for a few moments'pleasure â or because they were so lacking in moral fibre they had been unable to refuse some greedy man his pleasure. They had not only let themselves and their families down, they had let down their sex, if not the whole of humanity. They were the damned, and the Sisters were determined not to let them forget it.
The penances they extracted were harsh. To those who complained they would reply, with the fierce zeal of the evangelist, that they were saving souls. And perhaps they believed they were doing just that, Jenny thought â but oh! how they enjoyed the process! Jenny hated them, every one, with the possible exception of Sister Agnes, old and wrinkled as a walnut, frail as a sparrow, who worked in the kitchen and seemed kindly. But Jenny didn't think Sister Agnes would be at the home much longer. The others were impatient with her, and Jenny guessed they thought she lacked the authority to deal with the constant stream of fallen girls. If she didn't die first, Sister Agnes would probably be sent off to a convent before long. And then there would be only the wardress nuns, as Jenny thought of them, for they reminded her more than anything of prison warders.
She had been here now for a month and hated every last moment of it. Up until that time she had continued going to college, wearing a tight strapping under bloused dresses that Carrie made for her to hide what there was of her bulge. Not that there
was
much, just a thickening around her waist, too high to shout pregnant from the roof tops, and on her mother's instructions Jenny simply moaned to everyone that she was getting fat. Whether the deception had worked she wasn't sure â Marilyn in particular, had given her some odd looks â and she wondered if when she had disappeared suddenly from the scene on the pretext of illness and a necessary recuperation with relatives at Bournemouth, they had guessed the real reason. But it scarcely mattered. Bath was eight miles away from Hillsbridge and it was very unlikely that anyone would ever know for sure.
And so she had come to the home, driven there by Steve and accompanied by Carrie. Jenny thought that the loneliest moment of her life had been when she had watched them drive away, leaving her with her pitifully small attaché case in the echoey entrance hall.
Sister Anne had been briskly reassuring whilst Carrie was still there.
âDon't worry about her, Mrs Simmons. She'll be all right with us.'
But the moment they had gone her manner changed.
âRight then, Miss. I'll lay down the ground rules for you. We stand no nonsense here, and the sooner you realise that the better.'
Jenny shared a dormitory with three other girls. One, Lisbee Smith, cried herself to sleep each night; another, Pauline Warren, was what Carrie would have described as hard as nails; and the third, Myra Cottle, gave birth to her baby a week after Jenny arrived at the home. As long as she lived, she would never forget Myra's moans, and the cruel way Sister Anne spoke to her.
âNow you see what you get for being wicked. The pains of hell. All I hope and pray is that you have learned your lesson.'
Myra was left for hours in the dormitory, examined from time to time (unnecessarily roughly, Jenny thought) by Sister Claude, who was supposed to be a midwife, but who reminded Jenny of a man in drag. Jenny suspected it was done on purpose to frighten the other three girls as much as to punish Myra and if this was indeed the case, the nuns succeeded. Eventually, in the small hours, Sister Claude pronounced the time right and Myra was made to walk to the waiting ambulance carrying her own bag and stopping every few paces to double up in pain. Then days later she was back â alone. Sister Anne never left her side whilst she fetched her belongings and waited for her parents to collect her, and there was no opportunity for any of the girls to talk to her. But word was that the baby had been taken by his new adoptive parents direct from the hospital.