And Mary seems to be off on a cloud. She forgot it was her turn to help with the childrenâs breakfast, which is quite uncharacteristic. What a family ⦠Sometimes Iâm glad Iâm not really part of it. Arenât you?â
Norah nodded. At least Aunt Catherine was once again confiding in her like an equal.
âI donât think Andrewâs been very happy lately either,â mused Aunt Catherine. âPoor lad. Iâm so very fond of him and I canât abide the idea of him going off to this monstrous war.â
Norahâs skin prickled with alertness. âBut that wonât be for a few years, not until he finishes university,â she said. âMaybe the war will be over by then.â
âLetâs hope so. If it isnât, heâs going to be doing something thatâs against his natureâI feel sorry for boys like him.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âI mean heâs not cut out to be a soldier. They all want him to be like the other men in the familyâlike Hugh. Now Hugh was a dear, but he was a completely different sort from Andrew.â
Norah was puzzled. âBut he must want to be a soldier. He should join the war.â She shuddered. âNot until he has to, of course.â
âShould he?â Aunt Catherineâs lined face looked tired. âI lost a father, a brother and a nephewâHughâin wars, Norah. Itâs a wicked waste.â
âBut we have to beat Hitler!â
âI donât know how to answer that, Norah. Yes, we have to beat him. But what a price weâre paying! Not just our sideâthink of what the German people are enduring. Weâre bombing them just as heavily as theyâve been bombing Britain.â She broke off a piece of wool angrily. âItâs all so senseless ! Do you know what we called the last war? âThe war to end all wars.â Huh! â
Then she sighed. âPoor Andrew. He was born at the wrong time. Letâs just hope your little brother will be luckier.â
Norah couldnât bear to think of Gavin fighting in a war. But if he did, heâd be doing it because he had no choice. Like Andrew. Surely Aunt Catherine was wrong. Andrew must want to fight Hitler. If he didnât, heâd be a cowardâwouldnât he?
âI shouldnât burden you with all these sombre thoughts, Norah. Are you sure thereâs nothing troubling you?â Aunt Catherine peered at her and Norah looked away. âLately you havenât seemed yourself.â
âIâm all right,â mumbled Norah. It was tempting to tell Aunt Catherine about her feelings for Andrew, but after all she was an Elder. And she wouldnât understand,anyway. Sheâd never married and sheâd probably never even been in love.
âAh, well,â said Aunt Catherine, pulling out her knitting. âItâs just being thirteen. Iâd never want to be thirteen againâa miserable, muddled age.â
Surprisingly, this cheered Norah. She wouldnât always be thirteen, she thought suddenlyâthere was a light at the end of the tunnel. One day sheâd be eighty-three and looking back on herself as calmly as Aunt Catherine was doing. But the thought of being as old as Aunt Catherine was too slippery to hang on to.
T HAT EVENING the air outside still crackled with impending fury. Inside, the atmosphere was the same: a cloud of discord hung over the family.
During the childrenâs dinner, Norah sat as far away from Clare as she could and tried not to look at her. Janet, on the other hand, glared at her cousin all through the meal. Clare made spiteful comments to her brothers for getting her into trouble. After both meals were over, the family sat woodenly in the living room, someone occasionally making a stiff remark about the weather.
Aunt Mar and Aunt Dorothy were glaring at each other as much as their daughters. âWhy arenât you girls doing
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