This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names,
characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the
author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons,
living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.
Ebook Published 2012
by Poolbeg Press Ltd
123 Grange Hill, Baldoyle
Dublin 13, Ireland
E-mail: [email protected]
© Geraldine O’Neill 2005
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
Typesetting, layout, design, ebook © Poolbeg Press Ltd.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN 9781781990858
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photography, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
www.poolbeg.com
About the Author
Geraldine O’Neill grew up in Lanarkshire, Scotland. She now lives in County Offaly with her husband Michael Brosnahan, and teaches in the local National School. She has two adult children, Christopher and Clare
Acknowledgements
I would like to give a big thanks to Paula, Kieran and Gaye and all the staff at Poolbeg for being so supportive and enthusiastic about my work.
Thanks to my agent, Sugra Zaman, of Watson, Little Ltd., London for all her guidance and advice and a special thanks to Mandy Little who worked admirably with me and
The Grace Girls
in Sugra’s absence.
A warm thanks to all my Scottish friends who help
ed with the research for
The Grace Girls,
including my nephew Nicky Mallaghan and Bob and Helen Orr, and also to my father who happily guided me through the dance-halls of the fifties.
Thanks also to my old teaching friend and fellow polio-survivor, Margaret Lafferty, for enlightening me about the ‘lacquer-bug’!
I’d also like to express gratitude to my Swanwick friend, renowned Scottish writer, Margaret Thompson Davis, who gave me great encouragement in the days before I was published.
Thanks to Patricia Dunne for accompanying me to Cavan amidst the ice and snow and for partnering me on the dance floor.
Thanks as always to Chris and Clare and to Mike for his unfailing love and support.
A final acknowledgement to all the polio survivors out there, especially those who did not escape as lightly as I did.
Also by Geraldine O’Neill
Tara Flynn
Tara’s Fortune
Aisling Gayle
This book is dedicated with love to
my father and mother, Teddy and Be-Be O’Neill,
who always encouraged me to
dance to my own music.
If a man does not keep pace with his companions,
Perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer.
Let him step to the music that he hears,
However measured or far away.
Henry David Thoreau
Chapter 1
Scotland, November 1955
It was raining. A thick, sleety sort of rain that could easily turn into snow. The first snow this winter. It had been cold enough for it the last few days, Heather Grace thought hopefully, having always retained a childish pleasure in snow. And it wouldn’t be that unusual – she often remembered walking to school in a late-November snow. But it wouldn’t be walking to school in the snow now, or catching the bus into the office in Wishaw. From now on it would be walking up to the old Victorian station to catch the train into Glasgow. Right into the middle of the city.
She sat sideways on the stool in front of the kidney-shaped, walnut dressing-table, in the bedroom she shared with her younger sister, Kirsty – her brown eyes gazing out into the dark, drizzly evening, and over the shadowy, square back gardens of her neighbours. But these were not gardens where frivolous flowers grew, as most of the men grew only the earnest potatoes and carrots, turnips and cabbages they had been reared with back in Ireland.
There were a few men like her father who grew roses or hydrangea bushes under the front windows, or straight lines of wallflowers or marigolds at either of the path leading to the front door of the house. Apart from those odd floral glimpses of colour in the summer, most of the houses in the mining village remained stoically grey or stony beige.
There was a slight knuckle-tap on the bedroom door, then Sophie Grace came in carrying a plain pink mug in one hand, and a china mug decorated with freesias and the word
Mother
in gold handwriting in the other. A short while before she had changed her knitted working jumper for a soft grey fitted cardigan with pearls, which showed off the trim figure that the bubbly Kirsty had inherited. Unlike her petite blonde sister, Heather had taken her mother’s height, but her Irish father’s stocky, more athletic build and his almost black, glossy hair.
‘I have the dinner nearly ready. We’ll have it the minute your father and Kirsty get in,’ Sophie announced, in her local Lanarkshire accent. Unlike her Irish-spoken husband who had come over from Ballygrace in County Offaly in his twenties, Sophie was more Scottish, having been born in Motherwell to an Irish father and Scottish mother. Her allegiance at times leaned more towards her birth country and, tellingly, she had picked traditional Scottish names for her daughters, unlike her in-laws who came down very firmly on the more Irish side. ‘What time did you say your film started?’
‘Twenty past seven,’ Heather said. ‘Thanks for hurryin
g everything up on account of me.’
‘Well,’ her mother said, smiling fondly at her, ‘it’s not often that you go out on a Thursday night so I suppose we can make a wee bit of an effort for you.’
‘I was just weighing up all this about Glasgow . . .’
‘Are you having any second thoughts?’ Sophie asked gently, jostling for a space on the busy dressing-table for the pink mug. She moved a small, navy glass bottle of Avon perfume and the turquoise plastic basket that held the hair-rollers and pins.
‘Nope.’ Heather smiled, catching her mother’s eye through the mirror. She reached over to the transistor radio on her bedside cabinet, to turn down Connie Francis. ‘I think . . . I’m definitely going to take it.’ She put the last spiky roller in her long dark hair, and deftly stuck a small plastic pin through it to secure it. ‘I’m going to hand my notice in at the office in the morning.’
Sophie patted her daughter’s shoulder then sat down on the end of Kirsty’s single bed.
‘As your father and I told you, hen, it’s your own decisi
on. We’re very proud of you getting such an important job – you’ve done well for yourself.’
Heather took a sip of the hot tea, enjoying the chance to talk things out with her mother on her own. ‘I’m really excited about it in one way, but if I was to tell the truth . . . I suppose I’m a wee bit nervous about it as well.’ Her newly plucked dark brows creased. ‘It’ll feel funny travelling all the way into Glasgow on the train every day,’ she said in a low voice, ‘but to be honest, I can’t stick the thought of snooty Mrs Anderson being my boss for ever and going on the same bus to the same office for the rest of my life.’
‘A lot of people do . . .’ Sophie said thoughtfully, ‘and
you’re still only nineteen.’ She took a mouthful of her tea.
‘I
know
.’ Heather swung around on the stool to face her mother. ‘But it’s too good a chance to miss – a job in a
big
office in Glasgow. It’s a real step up for me, and if I don’t take the chance of it now, I might never get it again.’
Sophie nodded her head. ‘Nothing ventured, nothing gained, as they say.’
‘My Auntie Mona wasn’t exactly enthusiastic when I showed her the letter last night, was she?’ Heather said, rolling her eyes. ‘Talk about doom and disaster.’ She gave a giggle now. ‘You’d think I was going to Sodom and Gomorrah the way she was goin’ on, instead of Glasgow.’
Sophie smiled now. ‘Och, don’t pay any heed to what she says. If I listened to everything your Auntie Mona says, I’d never put my nose outside the door. She’d have me tied to the sewing machine and if I ran out of work, she’d have me down on my knees scrubbing and cleaning all day. Then when my own house was spotless she’d expect me over in the chapel to start scrubbing there as well, or maybe polishing the brass on the altar.’
‘She doesn’t half go on when she gets the bit between h
er teeth, does she?’ Heather said tutting. ‘And she expe
cts
everybody
in our family to be right holy-willies just because she’s the priest’s housekeeper. She’d have us at early Mass every weekday before work if she had her way.’
‘Och, she doesn’t mean any harm. It’s the way she was brought up in Galway with her uncle a priest and her auntie a nun. She feels she’s got to keep up the family’s standards even though she hasn’t seen some of them for years.’ Sophie rolled her eyes now, looking exactly like an older version of her daughter. ‘She’s nearly worse about housekeeping than she is about religion. I was in trouble with her again this afternoon for forgetting to bring in the washing. She’d warned me several times that there was rain forecast, and there I was, sitting down and all relaxed listening to
The Afternoon Play
on the wireless when she landed at the back door carrying the basket and the washing, telling me how she’d saved it from getting a real soaking. You should have seen her face when she realised I was sitting down doing nothing.’