To Have and To Hold. Anne Bennett
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Название: To Have and To Hold

Автор: Anne Bennett

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия:

isbn: 9780007343454

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ girls’ nights out had been severely curtailed.

      Lois had told Paul this. Now he said, ‘Point is, a pantomime will be no fun on my own.’ He raised his eyes. ‘I don’t suppose that you…?’

      ‘No, Paul.’

      ‘Why not? Have you already seen it?’ he asked, knowing that she hadn’t.

      ‘I have never seen a pantomime in the whole of my life.’

      ‘Then why?’

      ‘I don’t think that it would be sensible.’

      Paul stared at Carmel for a minute or two and then said, ‘Can you tell me what is so unsensible about two friends, both at loose ends, going to the Alex together to see a pantomime?’

      ‘Two friends?’

      ‘Yes, friends,’ Paul said. ‘We’re sure as God aren’t enemies, are we? Unless I am missing something here, that is.’

      ‘No, of course not. It’s just…I don’t know. I mean, what if people sort of misconstrue the whole thing?’

      ‘What if they do?’ Paul said. ‘Do you give a tuppenny damn for what people might think?’

      ‘Not usually,’ Carmel admitted. ‘But, honest to God, Paul, you wouldn’t believe the nurses’ home. It’s a hotbed of rumour and speculation.’

      ‘So you’re passing up on something you want to do in case people tease you about it,’ Paul said. ‘I honestly didn’t think you were so feeble.’

      ‘I’m not feeble!’ Carmel cried. ‘Don’t you dare call me feeble!’

      ‘Prove that you are not then,’ Paul taunted.

      ‘Right, I’ll show you,’ Carmel said.

      ‘So you’ll come with me?’

      ‘Yes. Yes, I will.’

      Despite his weariness, Paul was in a jubilant mood as he returned to the ward, though he knew he would have to treat Carmel as the friend he had claimed to be and not the lover he hoped to become.

      The night was a magical one. Paul called for Carmel in the afternoon and, though the day was bleak and raw, with all the promise of snow from the leaden skies, they wandered around the shops first, all preparing for the January sales, the streets outside still festooned with Christmas lights.

      Before the pantomime, they went for a meal at Lyons Corner House and then on to the Alex. The pantomime was every bit as good as Carmel had hoped. She loved the glitz and glamour and sheer splendour of it all. She loved the audience participation too, and she booed, hissed and cheered with the best of them, laughed herself silly at the jokes and clapped until her hands were sore.

      Paul would have taken Carmel for a drink after the show, but she said she wasn’t keen on pubs and, anyway, it was late enough. Paul didn’t argue and as they walked back he said, ‘Did you enjoy it?’

      ‘Oh, Paul,’ Carmel said, ‘I can’t tell you how much. I have had such a wonderful time. I feel as if I’m still in it, you know? As if I could dance madly along this road now.’

      Paul laughed. ‘Shall I catch up your hand and we’ll cavort along together?’

      She gave him a push. ‘You’ll do no such thing. They’ll think the two of us crazy.’

      ‘I thought we weren’t going to care what people thought.’

      ‘Maybe not,’ Carmel said, ‘but I’d care very much if I was encased in a straitjacket.’

      ‘So if I promise to behave, could we, maybe, do this again?’

      ‘Yes,’ Carmel said. ‘I’d like that, but don’t forget my prelims are looming and I will have to get my head down to do some revision.’

      Still, Paul was amazed at the progress he had made in one evening.

      Carmel was right about one thing: nothing could be kept quiet in the nurses’ home. Though her room-mates knew she had gone out with Paul she had told no one else, but still they had been spotted. Aileen stopped Carmel and Lois when they came off duty the night after the pantomime.

      ‘Are you going out with Paul Connolly, Duffy?’ she demanded angrily.

      Carmel looked at Aileen’s angry face and she was irritated by the way the girl had spoken to her. ‘I don’t know what it has got to do with you, but, no, I am not “going out”,—not in that sense. We are just friends.’

      Aileen gave a sniff of derision. ‘Don’t give me that,’ she snapped. ‘Do you think I was born yesterday? The two of you were seen all very pally walking the town.’

      Later, up in their room, Lois said, ‘Is anything going on with you and Paul?’

      ‘No,’ Carmel said. ‘We’re just friends, like I told you.’

      ‘Hmm,’ Lois said. ‘Don’t play fast and loose with Paul’s feelings, will you? He is really gone on you.’

      ‘He might have been once,’ Carmel said, ‘but, he’s over that now and knows full well where he stands.’

      But Lois remembered that, less than half an hour before, she had seen Paul gazing at Carmel as she walked down the ward. Carmel had been unaware of his scrutiny and for a few moments Lois saw the naked love printed across Paul’s face. Then he seemed to remember where he was and the moment passed, but now Lois knew, whatever Carmel thought, that he wanted to be more than a friend and she just hoped he wasn’t heading straight for heartache.

      However, though they went out together again to see Cavalcade in mid-January, Carmel wasn’t able to see much of Paul at all after that, for the prelims, or mid-term exams, were early in February and any spare time was given over for revision, because if she failed she would be unable to continue nursing.

      Carmel and Lois received news that they had passed their prelims on Carmel’s birthday and were given different caps to denote their new status just two days before starting their annual three-month block of night duty.

      As before, Carmel felt as if her life was put on hold because she was so constantly tired. She saw Paul rarely, usually in the company of others and never for very long. Paul knew the stresses and strains of working long and unsociable hours and could quite appreciate Carmel’s exhaustion.

      Not everyone was as understanding. Lois’s boyfriend finished with her before the stint was over in mid-June and Lois was pretty miserable about it. Carmel suggested they go to the cinema together to see King Kong, which some of the others had been raving about. It was a long time since Lois and Carmel had been out together and at first, when Paul turned up with his friend and fellow medical student, Chris, Carmel was quite annoyed, but they could hardly let the two men sit on their own.

      Carmel was soon glad of Paul’s solid presence beside her because the film was more than just scary, and when his arm encircled her shaking form, she was too frightened to make any sort of protest. Anyway, she saw that Chris was comforting Lois the same way. Chris wanted to go for a drink afterwards, СКАЧАТЬ