Chapter One
News
When Mum first told us, I couldnât believe it. I just sat there, with my mouth hanging open. Everyone else was making lots of noise. Nana and Grandpa were saying, âThatâs wonderful,â and âYouâve waited so long,â while the Littlies, Shirley and Barbara, were shrieking their heads off just to join in. (Shirley is five and Barbara is one: they both make a lot of noise even when theyâre not excited.)
Mum sat at the table with Dadâs letter in her hand.
âI didnât want to tell you before,â she said. âBut now itâs all settled! Not long, and heâll be back for good.â
My dad is in Germany at the moment. Heâs an aircraft engineer in the Air Force, and heâs part of the Occupying Forces. Itâs their job to help get things straight, now that the War is ended, and help clear up the mess that Hitler left.
Mum and Shirley have moved around with Dad quite a bit â they even spent time in Germany. But Iâve always stayed in Wales, with Nana and Grandpa. This last year Mum has lived here too, so that Nana and Grandpa can help with the Littlies.
Now Dadâs leaving the Air Force and coming home for good.
I caught Nanaâs eye across the room. She said, âItâs
wonderful
news, isnât it, Megan?â
âOh, it is,â I agreed. âDefinitely.â
I was pleased. Really I was. I was relieved, too. You see, at first, when Mum said that she had something to tell us â big news from Dad â I had a horrible feeling that we might all be going out to Germany to live. Of course, I wouldnât have gone. Iâd have insisted on staying. And in fact Iâd never even have thought we might go, except that two days ago, my best friend, Pam, had said, âYouâll never leave me, will you, Megan?â
âOf course not,â Iâd said, surprised.
âBut what if your dad wants you all to go out to Germany?â
Iâd laughed. âThat wonât happen. I never went with them before, and I wonât this time either.â I pointed at our street sign (we were walking home from school at the time). âIâm Megan of Hardy Hill! And here I stay!â
Although it hadnât worried me at the time (Pam is a great one for dreaming up catastrophes that never happen), when Mum had said sheâd something to tell us, something amazing â that sheâd had a letter from Dad that morning â
well
. Suddenly Iâd been scared that Pam knew something I didnât.
But it turned out everything was fine after all.
âHooray!â Shirley yelled, jigging up and down. âDadâs coming home! Heâs coming home!â
She went dancing round the kitchen. Mum got up and I was going to grab her but Shirley got to her first, so Grandpa took a turn with me, and then even Nana got up and waltzed round the room, while Grandpa did a jig with Barbara gurgling on his shoulder. It was washing day, and there were folded towels and sheets hanging on the drying line above our heads, and at one point Barbara grabbed a sheet and pulled it down. But everyone just laughed.
âIâm
so
pleased weâre staying here!â I whispered to Nana. âIâm never going anywhere else!â
âBut, Megan â â Nana began.
âWhat?â
âOh, nothing. Just time for a cup of tea!â
Itâs always time for a cup of tea in our house: when something good happens, when something bad happens, or even just because, as Nana says, âitâs time for a nice sit downâ. Grandpa always says that however bad rationing was during the War (and itâs been worse since), Hitler would never have his way while the British could have their cuppa.
Nana took down the cake tin off the shelf. Itâs got a picture of Princess Elizabeth and her husband on the top, dressed in their wedding clothes. It said in the newsreel at the pictures