For the first couple of days, Joe found plenty of things to occupy him: he listened to the wireless; he cleaned all of Granddadâs pipes and organised them in the rack; he painted a shoebox stage, made some pipe cleaner figures and started to write a play to perform with them â he wanted to cheer Nelly up. He had tried not to think about her, but the image of her sitting all alone on the steps, wondering if sheâd ever be reunited with her parents, was always with him. By the third day, he couldnât stop fidgeting.
Nan insisted that he spend some time in Granddadâs armchair, resting his sore ankle on a footstool, which she made higher with a cushion she had plumped up to within a whisker of its life. Sharp points of feathers prickled his calf every time he moved. He couldnât make up his mind what was worse: the feathers or the pins and needles that took over if he didnât flex his leg every now and again. He asked for Granddadâs old walking stick, the one he used when he returned from the Great War with shrapnel injuries in his leg. Granddad hadnât used it in a long time and it was handy for hooking things Joe couldnât reach, as well as for getting out to the lavatory when he needed it. Afterwards, he leaned on the stick, watching pigeons and sparrows fly in and out of the back yard, picking at the little, overcrowded veg and flower bed and pulling up the occasional worm, until Nan made him come in again.
Granddad had been down to the local pub and collected a pile of second-hand childrenâs books and comics, donated by the regulars. Joe spent half the morning reading and the other half thinking. After dinner he settled back down in the armchair with a book â but only turned the pages for five minutes.
âNan,â he said, putting down a dog-eared copy of .
Nanâs damp, pink face appeared in the door to the kitchen, where she was boiling tea towels in a huge metal pot of soapy water on the stove. Shimmering rainbow bubbles floated in with her. Normally, Joe would chase and burst the bubbles. Now he just stared at one hovering above her head.
âWhen youâve finished with the tea towels, would you please help me draw a map?â he asked.
âWhat kind of map? A treasure map?â Nan nodded at the book on the arm of the chair.
âOh no, nothing like that,â said Joe. âI need a proper, accurate map of the area, one that shows the exact position of Nellyâs house and our house before the Blitz - and the other buildings and streets around them. Youâve lived here all your life, so I think youâre the best person to help me.â
A smile spread across Nanâs face. She could be useful in the search for Nelly after all. She wiped her hands in a business-like manner on a dry tea towel, which she then shoved into the pocket of her apron. After returning to the kitchen to turn off the stove, she joined Joe in the parlour.
âWeâll have to sit at the table,â she said, âso that we have a good, flat surface and room to spread out. Iâll fetch paper and pencils while you make yourself comfortable. If you need it, we can move the footstool and cushion under the table, close to your chair.â
Joe used all of his strength to push himself out of the armchair and hobble over to the table. He wrestled with one of the hefty dining chairs until it was far enough out to squeeze onto. Once he was sitting up straight, with his foot on the cross rail, it was better than the armchair; there was no pressure on his ankle as long as he didnât dangle or swing his foot. When Nan returned with some large sheets of paper and a box of pencils, Joe shot out his hand to grab some.
âMind your manners, Joe! Polite people donât snatch,â said Nan in a sharp tone like an angry teacher.
Joe had forgotten that Nan could be strict. He handed back the paper and stared hard at the embroidery on the table cloth. The flowers and leaves were made up of hundreds of neat little cross stitches, all in brightly coloured silk thread. Joe remembered that it was Nanâs handiwork. She was a patient woman and never angry for long. He looked up and gave her a lopsided smile.
âIâm sorry, Nan. I didnât mean to be rude. Iâm just eager to get on with the map.â
It was forgotten as soon as they removed and folded the table cloth. They laid two pieces of paper on the table, one on top of the other, so as not to mark the surface. Then they straightened the paper out and smoothed it out, weighing it down with a brass bullet case in each corner. It was proper white paper, not the ironed, used brown paper bags that Nan usually gave him to draw on. He smiled. It was a sure sign that she was taking his map seriously too.
They started by sketching a pair of parallel lines to represent Lovegrove Street, with a dead-end where Nellyâs house used to be. They drew in all the houses and labelled them with the names of the people who lived in them. Joe coloured the houses that were still standing in yellow and those that were destroyed in the Blitz or other raids in red. They joined Lovegrove Street with the Old Kent Road, added the local swimming baths and then drew in Rolls Road parallel to the Old Kent Road, with Marlborough Grove running in between. They added Rolls Road School and the one near Avondale Square, and sketched in Rotherhithe New Road and Verney Road, and then all the streets in between. As the map started to take shape, Joe used a green pencil to shade in areas where they might find Nellyâs body, including gardens and back alleys. But he didnât tell Nan that â she thought it was grass.
By the time Granddad came home, Joe and Nan had a detailed, coloured and labelled map. Joe had also started a list of places to search. Granddad patted him on the shoulder and smiled at Nan.
âYouâve made a good job of that map between you. I suppose weâd better start searching as soon as your ankle has healed up, Joe. How about Monday morning? Thereâll be a lot of walking but Nellyâs body has been missing for a long time, so I donât think itâll make any difference if we take it slowly. We can plan a route in the meantime.â
Granddad pulled a twisted paper bag out of his pocket.
âHere you go, Joe. Youâve earned these.â
Joe untwisted the paper to find tuppence haâpenny worth of pear drops. He breathed in the aroma of them - a bit like Mumâs pink nail varnish, only fruitier. He offered the bag to Nan and Granddad, but they shook their heads.
âTheyâre for you, Joe,â said Nan. âBesides, Iâve got to catch up with my housework. It takes a lot longer without your help.â She returned to the kitchen and shut the door.
âYou go ahead, Joe, and enjoy your sweets. Iâm going to fill up a pipe and have some thinking time of my own,â said Granddad, taking a briar from the rack and his tobacco tin from his pocket. âDo you think I could have my armchair back?â
Joe sucked on a pink pear drop and grinned.
âOf course you can have your chair back, Granddad. Iâm staying here so I can add some more details to the map.â
He remained at the table, working on the map, until it was time for Nan to lay out the supper things. That was his signal to take up his position on the stairs, to wait for Mum to come home from work.
He didnât have to wait long before the front door opened and everyone arrived at once: Mum in her clippieâs uniform; Uncle Tom and Mr Davies in their overalls; and Auntie Margaret and Mrs Davies in their smart civvies. Mum and Joe went straight upstairs.
Joe waited on the landing outside their room while Mum removed her uniform and slipped into a skirt and blouse. She poured water from the jug into the basin and they washed their hands together, Mum blowing huge soap bubbles through the ring made by her forefinger and thumb, waving her hand like a magician and letting the soapy orbs float up to the ceiling. Joe tried too, with both hands forming an O, but his bubbles burst before they were big enough to float away.
While Mum brushed her hair, she told him about her day on the buses. She made him laugh with jokes she heard from other conductors and drivers at the bus station, as well as anecdotes about her passengers. She was good at telling stories and was a natural mimic, pulling faces and putting on voices. He wished he could tell her about his day, but it was still a secret, even though Nan, Granddad and Uncle Bill were all in on it.
After tea, Joe showed Mum the pile of books Granddad had brought home.
âWonderful,â said Mum. âHow about you choose a book to read before we go to sleep?â
âI donât even need to think about it. Iâve saved this one especially,â Joe said as he held out a copy of .
âThatâs my favourite!â said Mum.
âAnd mine,â said Joe, hobbling up the stairs as fast as his ankle would let him.