A Step In Time: A feel-good read, perfect for fans of Strictly Come Dancing!. Kerry BarrettЧитать онлайн книгу.
hold him and kiss him.
‘Is he here?’ Audrey stood on her tiptoes to see through the curtain above my head.
I gave her a shove.
‘I’m trying to be discreet,’ I giggled. ‘Don’t make it so obvious that we’re looking.’
‘Girls,’ Henry, the entertainment officer, hissed at us from the side of the stage. ‘Places, please.’
The band struck up and, still laughing, Audrey and I ran to get into position for the opening number.
I loved being on stage. I liked everything about it – the costumes, make-up, the applause from the audience. I enjoyed singing, though I knew I wasn’t a natural singer, not like Audrey was. I did short skits with Nigel, a rotund actor who everyone adored and I liked those, too – it was fun making people laugh. But it was dancing that was my real love. I heard music in my head all the time, and so I danced all the time, when I was queuing for breakfast, or making my bed at whatever digs we were staying in that week. Sometimes I wondered how other people stayed so still.
And on stage – oh, that was where I really came alive. I didn’t care if I was dancing a solo or part of the chorus line, I loved it all. And frankly I was so glad to finally have been allowed to become part of the Entertainment National Service Association, now I’d turned eighteen, and to shake off the shackles of my overbearing mother, that I always made the effort to enjoy every single part of a performance.
But not tonight.
Tonight, I was distracted. I barely registered the first few numbers, I performed my solo – which was my favourite part of the show – as if in a dream, and though I tried to throw myself into my comic scenes with Nigel, I knew I wasn’t really firing on all cylinders. Because of Donnie. He was all I could think about, and for the first time since I’d joined up, I just wanted the show to be over.
As soon as the curtain fell on the grand finale, I scarpered. I raced to the tent the girls in the company used as a dressing room and stripped off my costume. It was an adapted showgirl outfit commandeered from a London theatre and, though it looked wonderful under the lights, up close it was shabby and losing its sheen.
I pulled it off and instead put on my uniform, wishing I had something else to wear. I brushed my blonde hair until it shone, and pinned it up, then I pinched my cheeks to give them some colour, thanking my lucky stars that, unlike some of my friends back home, who were working in factories and kitchens and hospitals, I still had make-up. I spat on my mascara and slicked it onto my lashes and smoothed on a tiny amount of red lipstick. I may have had make-up but who knew how long it would last? Then I checked my appearance in the mirror and grinned.
‘Not bad, Cora,’ I said.
Audrey appeared in the doorway of the tent.
‘Blimey, you were off that stage at a fair old whack,’ she said. She straightened my skirt over my hips and kissed me on the cheek.
‘You look beautiful,’ she said. ‘I hope he’s bloody worth it?’
I gave her a poke.
‘I think so,’ I said. ‘Which is all that matters.’
Audrey rolled her eyes at me.
‘Just be careful, Cora,’ she said. ‘The one thing blokes are good at is lying.’
I poked her again.
‘Don’t be so miserable,’ I said. ‘Have you seen him?’
Audrey scowled at me, then her face softened.
‘He’s waiting for you out the back, you soppy cow. I saw him just now. Go on, if you really have to. Go!’
I gave a small squeal and rushed off to find Donnie.
He was waiting exactly where Audrey said he would be, behind the mess hall where the performance had been. He was watching some bags being loaded onto trucks and he had his back to me.
Suddenly shy, I paused, but he turned and saw me, and opened his arms, and all my shyness was forgotten as I ran to him.
We walked round the edge of the camp, hand in hand. It was dark there and away from the shouts and engine noises. You could even hear the wind in the trees on the other side of the fence, if you listened hard enough. It wasn’t the most romantic location but just being with Donnie made it perfect.
‘How long are you staying this time?’ Donnie said as they strolled. His soft American accent made me shiver with pleasure. I’d found myself forgetting his voice over the months since I’d seen him last and so it was wonderful to hear him again.
I groaned.
‘Only a few nights,’ I said. ‘Nothing like as long as last time.’
When we’d been at the camp before we’d stayed for a month, doing shows on a rotation to the GIs stationed there. With so much time together, my romance with Donnie had blossomed and our letters had kept things going while I toured Britain with the ENSA.
But there weren’t many troops left now. Donnie would be headed back to France before too long, and this time we only had a few days.
‘Tell me again,’ I said now. ‘Tell me the plan.’
Donnie had mapped out our future while we’d been apart, spelling it all out in his letters. But I’d never heard him actually say the words.
‘When this damn war finally ends, and the Americans send those Germans packing,’ he began.
I giggled and pulled his arm round my shoulders, grateful of his warmth on this cold, clear night.
‘Not just the Americans,’ I said.
Donnie chuckled.
‘Whatever you say, honey,’ he drawled in an over-the-top accent.
‘So when the war is over …’ I prompted, giving him a fake-stern look.
‘We’ll ship out of England and head back to the States,’ Donnie said. ‘Soon as we can.’
‘And where will we go?’ I said, knowing the answer but wanting him to say it.
‘Well, I guess we should call in on my folks,’ Donnie said. ‘Mom’s desperate to meet you.’
‘She is?’
‘Sure she is. I got a letter from her just the other day asking to know more about you.’
I blinked. This was all news to me.
‘More?’ she said. ‘What have you told her already?’
‘That you’re beautiful, funny, talented and you’ve made me the happiest man in England,’ Donnie said.
‘Sounds about right,’ I said, striking a pose.
‘Have you told your mom about me?’ Donnie asked.
Up ahead was a parked jeep. Not wanting to answer Donnie’s question, I saw my chance to distract him, so I bounced over to the car and climbed up onto the bonnet.
‘Come on,’ I said. I lay back against the windscreen and looked up at the stars, bright in the clear December sky. Donnie climbed up next to me and gripped my hand.
‘So we’ll call in on the folks in Connecticut and then we’ll get on a train,’ he continued.
‘A train,’ I said. ‘That’s good. I like trains.’
‘We’ll go all the way cross country. We’ll go to Chicago – I love Chicago. And to Las Vegas – take in a few shows.’
I was getting impatient.
‘And where then?’ I said.
‘And then we’ll go to Hollywood,’ said Donnie, propping himself up on his elbow and looking down at me. ‘And you’ll be snapped up by some big movie producer and you’ll dance