law.â
âBut I know I can handle the extra work. Even when school starts in September. I can handle it. Iâve only a year left, anyway.â Emmyâs voice was rising in pitch and volume, and she tempered it to prove she was the rational adult she was claiming to be. âItâs not going to be a problem, Mum.â
âSchool isnât starting in September.â
âWhat do you mean? Of course it is,â Emmy said.
Mum picked up the other envelope that had come in the dayâs post and held it out.
Emmy wiped her hands on a dish towel and then took it.
The stationery was crisp and smelled of ink and importance. The return address was the schoolâs. Emmy sensed as soon as her fingers touched the paper that the letter would change everything that had happened that day. Her eyes caught the words âinvasionâ and âsafety.â
âYou and Julia are being evacuated to the countryside, Emmy,â Mum said. âTheyâre serious about it this time. Youâre leaving London next week. All the children are.â
Seven
THE first time Londonâs children had been evacuated, nearly a year earlier, Mum had flat-out refused to send Emmy and Julia away. Her attitude then had been that there wasnât a war, not on English soil, anyway, and she was not going to put her daughters on a train to God-knows-where. Emmy remembered her saying as much to their teachers at school, Thea next door, and anyone else who asked why Julia and Emmy were still in London. Emmy also remembered seeing something else in Mumâs eyes besides the defiance. Mum had felt it wasnât in her best interest to send them off into the countryside, but for reasons Emmy was unsure of. There seemed to be more to Mumâs refusal than just outward unwillingness to be parted from her daughters.
There was no precedent for London being emptied of her children; no previous war had demanded it. Thelast time there had been an exodus for safer homes was during the plagues, and then it was only the rich who fled the cities. The adversary this go-around was not a disease but legions of army planes carrying bombs. It was an astounding concept that Germany could strike England by air and subdue her without even setting foot on her soil. But Mum had scoffed at the idea that the only way to ensure Emmyâs and Juliaâs safety was to entrust them to strangers.
âYou and Julia arenât going anywhere,â she had said when the letter had arrived in August 1939, advising her to prepare her daughters for evacuation. When the other children in the neighborhood trudged to school carrying suitcases and gas masks, their weeping mothers trailing after them, Emmy and Julia had stayed home and played checkers. Some mothers, who had looked down their noses at Mum the day before, apparently hopped over the police cordon at the train station and snatched their children back before they boarded. Those who bravely waved good-bye got postcards from billeting officials a week later advising them of where and with whom their children were living. Emmy found out after many of her classmates started coming back to the city that foster parents arrived at designated churches and community centers in rural villages to look over the trainloads of London children and then they chose the ones they wanted like buyers at an auction. One of Juliaâs six-year-old friends had been parted from her older brother because, so the story went, he could work a field and she could not. That little girl still had nightmares six months later. In the end, it had all been for nothing. The doomsayers who foretold that the Luftwaffe would flatten London had been wrong.
Emmy and Julia werenât the only children whose parents could not or would not bow to the notion that evacuation was the only course of action that made any sense. There was a set of parents just down the street from the Downtrees who kept their children back,