Homing
160 pages
English

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160 pages
English

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Description

This addition to the enormously popular Williamsburg series is set largely against the early part of the Second World War in England during the heroic, nerve-racking years prior to the USA's entry. The author amazingly and convincingly recaptures the mood and tempo of the times, as good a study of British and American morale as can be, the exuberance of spirit in which the challenge and the danger was met. And for the audience that has come to know the Day-Sprague family as familiar friends, with their network of inter-marriages, spanning two countries, this Volume 7 of the series is a most welcome read.

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Publié par
Date de parution 10 novembre 2021
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781774644256
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0050€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Homing
by Elswyth Thane

First published in 1957
This edition published by Rare Treasures
Victoria, BC Canada with branch offices in the Czech Republic and Germany
Trava2909@gmail.com
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, except in the case of excerpts by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.





















ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I am again grateful to many people in England who have gone to a great deal of trouble to answer questions regarding details of the war years and to send me notes and publications which were not available here; in particular, Derrick de Marney, Daphne Heard, Mary Clarke, Christine de Stadler, and Lt.-Colonel W. E. G. Ord-Statter. Alice Grant Rosman, whose enchanting book, Nine Lives, gives many a clue on the Animal A.R.P., put me in touch with M. O. Larwood of the National Register of Animals Service, who was most helpful, as was the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, and Mr. Carpmael of the Blue Cross, concerning an almost forgotten aspect of the blitz. The British Information Services rendered their usual prompt assistance. Miss Susan Armstrong of Colonial Williamsburg supplied maps and information. The chronological sequence and news details were drawn from my own extensive files of the British weekly periodicals and newspapers, for the war years.
E. T.
Homing


by Elswyth Thane











1957
I
CHRISTMAS AT WILLIAMSBURG
1938
1
“YOU scared?” Stephen suggested, glancing at her speechlessness and then attending again to the road ahead of the car.
Evadne smiled, and leaned a little towards him—an instinctive nestling movement which acknowledged her need of reassurance.
“I wouldn’t have been a good pioneer woman,” she murmured. “Every shadow would have been an Indian, every twig would have sounded like a rifle shot. I would have woken up screaming with nightmares about being scalped. Just think if those trees came right in on a narrow trail—just think if we were in a covered wagon with arrows zinging past our ears!”
“Honey, you’ve got it all wrong. No covered wagons in Virginia—that was Death Valley. I thought you’d like this road—there’s a sort of Feel to it, I always think.”
“You mean there’s another road?”
“Yes, the main highway’s over there. We always take this one, along the River.”
“Because of the Feel.”
“Mm-hm.”
It was the back way to Williamsburg, running behind the big houses which faced the East bank of the James. As the day drew in, the trees either side of the road stood tall and aloof, cutting off the setting sun, too close together to allow more than a suspicion of the river on the right. Little dusty lanes led off at angles, with obscure, tipsy signs. Almost uninhabited crossroads occurred at long intervals. You met nothing coming the other way. Very different from Highway 60.
But she had surprised him again, because it was not the kind of scare he had had in mind. They had been married about three months ago in London, and he was bringing her home for a Southern Christmas with his family. And now his English bride’s shyness of the first meeting with his parents was overlaid by her reaction to a back road at dusk in Virginia—an intuitive awareness of a wilderness which no longer existed.
He touched a button on the dashboard and their lights came on, barely visible yet in the waning daylight.
“That better? You want a drink maybe. That’ll pull civilization towards you.”
“I suppose they came this way on horseback,” she brooded. “With nothing but a sword.”
Again Stephen glanced at her over the wheel. Last September she was taking her First Aid and Air Raid Warden training in London for a Hitler war, while his own stomach fluttered fussily at what she must encounter during the course. Last September he had worked beside her in a dimly lit parish school while she fitted gasmasks on tense, well-behaved children and anxious, well-behaved old ladies, and her tact and composure had never wavered. He had listened and cued her while she recited to him the varieties of poison gas, their effects, and their detection—and her voice was as steady as though it read a bus schedule. The war hadn’t happened after all. Not yet. But now she jibbed at a shadowy road beside the River James. Women.
“They came this way for picnics,” he said cheerfully, and slowed the car as it emerged into a clearing with a grassy lane running off to the right. “That’s the road to Jamestown. There’s a museum there now, and a stone wall to keep the river from eating up the site of the town entirely. The old brick church is there still, what’s left of it, and the tombs—”
“Picnics at Jamestown,” she said thoughtfully, while the car slid on towards Williamsburg. “Amongst the tombs. I’m so ignorant. Who’s buried there? What’s Jamestown?”
“My dear girl!” said Stephen, registering marked horror. “Never let them hear you say that! How would you feel if I said, ‘Dover? Never heard of it!’”
“You’ll have to coach me,” she said comfortably.
“I should think so. Grandfather Julian won’t rest.”
“Oh, I do know something about him, vaguely. He was a Day, like Jeff, and his portrait hangs over the mantelpiece in Jeff’s house here in Williamsburg.”
“It’s in the front bedroom upstairs, as a matter of fact.”
“He came out from England while it was still colonies here didn’t he? Where do we come in—the Spragues, I mean?”
“The Spragues were here when he arrived,” said Stephen with some pride.
“The First Families.”
“Absolutely. Grandfather Julian Day and Grandfather St. John Sprague both fought in the Revolution—which you may have heard about too, vaguely,” said Stephen.
“Now I suppose we’ve come to Yorktown,” said English Evadne. “Go on. The British got beaten. For once.”
“Well, that depends how you look at it,” Stephen conceded cautiously. “The colonists were mostly British too. And half the British Army was German troops.”
“Oh. And the French, who turned up somewhere?”
“Yes, the French were in at the kill, on our side. But they weren’t at Valley Forge. Did you ever hear of Valley Forge?”
“Where’s that?” Evadne asked, and laughed, and nestled closer. “It was something about George Washington,” she decided shamelessly. “I’ll read up on it, truly I will. It’s really a new world for me, don’t forget. I never had any idea I’d come here.”
“Well, I warned you,” he reminded her, in view of his two years’ resolute courtship.
He drove on, reflecting happily on the baffling, delightful creature he had married. A year ago she would have stammered and apologized for her ignorance of Jamestown and Valley Forge, in the maddening state of humble anxiety to please everyone in which she had then existed. A year ago she would have been in a pitiable twitter of nerves for fear his people might not like her as his wife. But now Evadne had changed. Almost overnight she had changed from a defensive, apprehensive, intense young woman who always tried much too hard, into this incandescent, philosophical bride who never seemed to worry much about anything any more. It was a miracle. And it was his miracle. He, Stephen, had taught her to laugh at herself—and at him—after demonstrating to her with colossal patience and wisdom that nothing would induce him to think otherwise than idolatrously of her. And now here she was, on the way to Williamsburg with him, home for Christmas.
It came of so much love, he thought, the wheel under his hands, his eyes on the road. Nothing evil or unhappy could endure against love like his for Evadne. Since that first time he saw her in the lobby at the Savoy in London, not knowing who she was, not having the faintest idea that they were bound for the same party and were linked by distant cousinship. A hell of a thing, he had thought more than once since then, if she hadn’t got out of the lift at the same floor he meant to, and preceded him to the same door—she thought by then he was following her, and slew him with a glance—and then, when he made himself known, “Welcome to London, Stephen,” she said, with her radiant smile, and he had kissed her, because after all they were kissing kin….
“What are you thinking?” she asked, noticing his silence.
“Why?”
“You’ve got the most idiot grin on!”
It broadened.
“I was thinking about the Savoy—that first night we met.”
“Bracken’s party. How long ago it seems now!”
“You came marching into the lobby and pressed the bell for the lift, remember? I had already rung for the lift, or I wouldn’t have been standing there, would I? But you bustle up, smelling of flowers, and press the bell. And I thought, Women. And then I took another look and it was all over with me, boom! I haven’t been able to see straight ever since.”
“I didn’t know what to make of you that night.” They had been over it before, but it never palled. Discovery. Always a fresh marvel of discovery, with him so sure from the beginning, and herself so unaware, so obtuse, and so misguided. “You went so fast,” she mused, as she had done before. “But how you could fall in love with anybody so hopeless as I was then—”
“You were hopeless,” he agreed. “And lost—and off on the wrong foot. But you didn’t know. That was the hard part. You didn’t know from nothing. I just go on thanking God it was me that came along in time!”
“I gave you a bad run, didn’t I, Stephen?”
“Talk about wake up screaming!” He held out his right hand from the wheel, palm up, and she laid her left in it, warmly. “It will be years before I can be sure, in the dark, that you’ll be there if I put out my hand—”
“It’s all right, Stephen.” Her tone was motherly. “You’re in for it now. You’ll never be rid of me now.”
“For better, for worse.”
“Till death do us part,” said Evadne, and their fingers tightened with a swift, unspoken memory of last September’s portent, and the

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