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The Fog of War

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Blurb

The quiet village of Bradfield should offer Dr Sylvia Marks the refuge she seeks when she returns home from her time in a field hospital in France in 1918. However, she is still haunted by the disappearance of her lover, ambulance driver Anna Masters, two years previously. Settling back in as the village doctor alone in her large family house is more difficult than she realised it would be after the excitement of front-line medicine. Then curious events at a local farm, mysterious lights, and a hallucinating patient’s strange illness make her revisit her assessment of Anna’s death on the battlefield.

Lucille Hall-Bridges is at a loose end now her nursing work is finished. Her Mama and Papa are perfectly happy for her to pursue any or no career or social round; but she felt useful as a nurse and now she really doesn’t know what to do with her life. She hopes going to stay with her friend Sylvia for a while will help her find a way forward. And if that involves staying at Bradfield with Sylvia ... then that’s fine with her.

But Sylvia is still focused on finding out what happened to her very good friend Anna three years ago; and the unbelievable events at a local farm over the course of the last year don’t seem to have helped her let that go.

Will the arrival of Lucy in Bradfield be the catalyst that allows both women to put their wartime stresses to rest? Can Sylvia move on from her love affair with Anna and find happiness again with Lucy, or is she still too entwined in the unresolved endings of the past?

NOTE: This story contains mention of domestic violence that happens to side characters off-screen.

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Chapter 1
Chapter 1“Do not,” said Sylvia Marks to Marcus Wright, the blacksmith’s son, “even think about leaving this waiting room before I’ve looked at your arm properly.” She pinned him with a gimlet gaze. “It will take me ten minutes to finish what I am doing with Mrs Lord and then I will call for you. You will still be here. Do you understand? If I have to come and find you…” she gestured out of the front door, “…if I have to waste my time, coming to find you, I will be extremely cross. And Marcus, you do not want me to be extremely cross.” Marcus hunched his fifteen-year-old shoulders down into his chair in the face of her intimidating five-foot eight frame and looked at his feet. His mother jabbed him in the ribs with her elbow and he muttered, “Yes, Dr Marks. I’ll be here.” His mother met Sylvia’s eye and nodded. That was all right then. She really didn’t want to have to be rushing all over the village chasing down recalcitrant patients. She dived back across the black-and-white tiled hall into her surgery, where Mrs Lord was now dressed and shoving her hatpin back in through the back of her hat in front of the mirror. “All right, Mrs Lord?” she asked. “Yes, doctor. Thank you.” She took a seat beside Sylvia’s desk again as Sylvia seated herself in her chair. “Although I suppose it’s my husband I should be thanking,” she said, slightly glumly. “I was really hoping we were done with this.” Sylvia looked at her sympathetically. “Well, one often slips through on the change,” she said, pragmatically. “And you’re healthy enough and so is the baby, from what I can make out. Is this number four?” Mrs Lord nodded. “And the next youngest is leaving school in the summer,” she said. “Mr Lord has been trying to be careful, but it’s not always possible, is it, Doctor?” She took out her handkerchief and dabbed at her eyes. “Anyway. We’ll manage. We always do.” She visibly pulled herself together. “Can you give me a date? I honestly have no idea myself what with everything stopping and starting now.” “You’re about four months in, I think,” said Sylvia. “So perhaps October-time?” She refrained from making a joke about the long winter nights, the woman was too upset. Sylvia reached out and patted her hand, instead. “And I have a book you can borrow, if you like,” she said. “For after? It’s called Married Love. About pacing your babies.” Mrs Lord looked slightly shocked. “I’ve heard of that,” she said. “I’m not sure Mr Lord would approve.” She bit her lip. “Perhaps I can read it when he’s at work.” She looked at Sylvia as she stood and pulled on her coat and gathered her handbag. “Thank you, Dr Marks. I’m pleased to have a doctor in the village again. Your father was a good man and is missed. It’s a wonderful thing that you’ve come back to take over. The things you must have seen in France…” She trailed off. Sylvia nodded and stood to escort her to the door. “It’s good to be back, Mrs Lord. And it’s extremely good to be practising village medicine rather than dealing with battlefield wounds. Come and see me in a couple of months; or before, if you feel you need to.” She departed with a nod and Sylvia fixed Marcus Wright with a stare. “Come in then, Marcus. Let’s look at what you’ve done to yourself this time.” * * * * Sylvia slumped into her chair at the kitchen table and reached for the cup of tea Walter pushed across to her. “Thank you,” she said, burying her face in it. “What a morning.” “It was busy,” Walter agreed. “I can’t believe young Marcus has broken his arm. He’s always in the wars.” He topped her cup up from the teapot and pushed the plate of biscuits over to her. “Have another one,” he said. “You’re still too thin.” He took his own advice and then said thoughtfully, “Was it his father?” Sylvia looked at him sharply. “What makes you say that?” she asked. “Just a feeling,” Walter said, reaching for the sugar bowl and spooning an obscene amount into his tea. “Just a feeling. He didn’t say anything to me. I’ll see if I can get anything out of him when he comes back to have it set once the swelling’s gone down. Poor little bastard. His mother did all the talking.” Sylvia nodded. “She always does,” she said. “You may be right.” Walter nodded placidly. “I’m always right, Dr Marks, you know I am.” He dropped a lubricious wink across the table at her and she retaliated by throwing a biscuit at him. He snatched it out of the air and dipped it into his tea. “What next?” he asked. “Nothing ‘til evening surgery,” Sylvia said. “I need to go to the butcher. And see if I can get someone to help in the house. We’re not managing very well, really.” She gestured, taking in the cluttered, warm kitchen, and then extending her gesture to encompass the rest of Courtfield House. “I take offence at that,” Walter said. “The surgery is spotless.” “Yes, yes,” Sylvia said. “You’re an excellent nurse. But you’re not a housekeeper and neither am I. We need to get someone to come and clean. I don’t mind cooking. Pa had four servants and three gardeners before the war.” “Do you want four servants and three gardeners?” Walt asked. “Not especially. But I don’t want to live in a mess, either. It’s all right for you out there in the coach-house. You can please yourself. Although if you want to move into the main house or have someone come and clean out there, that’s fine too.” Walter flinched. “I’m quite happy where I am,” he said. “And it’s not big enough to need help to keep clean.” He was quite right. He lived in the old coachman’s room over what was now the garage rather than the coach-house. Sylvia had only been over a couple of times and he kept it with military precision, which wasn’t surprising, given he’d been in the army for twenty years. She nodded. “It’s all right,” she said. “Whatever you prefer. I’m not going to force anything on you. I’m rather enjoying having my privacy myself after four years on duty. I can’t imagine what all that time in barracks would have been like.” “It was all right,” he said. “Companionable, you know? But I’m enjoying having a corner of my own now.” He nabbed another biscuit. “Better for you if I’m out there, too. It’ll set the tongues wagging if you’ve got a man in the house. They’re already all agog at the idea of a woman doctor and a man as a nurse.” She sighed. “Well, we knew they would be. It’s not like they didn’t know I’d gone off to medical school and was working as a hospital doctor. Or that I was working on the battlefields. I came back to see Papa often enough.” Her father had been the village doctor since before Sylvia was born and had always encouraged her in her desire to emulate him. Her mother had died when she was very young and she’d rather brought herself up, nose in a reference book, interested in the natural world around her rather than romance novels or the Girl’s Own Paper. When Papa died in 1916, she knew she’d come back for good after the war. So when the fighting ended in November, she’d packed up her things at Royaumont and come straight home. Over the years of the war, she’d specialised in surgery on gas-gangrene and amputations and once the flow of wounded stopped coming in waves, she felt she could leave her existing patients in the hands of her colleagues. Walter had followed her home when he’d got his discharge. They’d opened up Papa’s surgery in the front rooms of the big house again and she’d launched straight into being Young Dr Marks at the age of thirty-four, ministering to people who remembered her as a baby. It wasn’t as hard as she thought it might be. Although some of the older gentleman farmers insisted on Walter examining them if they had a problem down there, which they both found hilarious. They were getting on fine. It was just the house…It was a big, old Queen Anne era house that had been in her family for generations. She loved it with a passion, but it had grown a personality of its own over the years. She was struggling to keep on top of the cleaning, let alone sorting out the muddle that fifteen years of her father telling the servants to leave his collection of clocks alone had caused. And it had been only irregularly cleaned and aired in the three years between his funeral and Sylvia and Walter arriving home. She sighed again and Walter patted her hand briefly. “It’ll sort itself out. There’s plenty of people looking for work. Just put the word out that you want some help,” he said. She pulled a face. “But then I’ll have to talk to people and make decisions and…and…” She faked a dramatic moan, hand across her forehead. He laughed at her. “You’ll manage, Dr Marks,” he said, picking up their teacups and taking them to the sink. You concentrate on the doctoring and let’s find someone else to look after the house.

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