In the autumn of
1934, three very different girls sign up as trainee nurses at The Nightingale
Hospital in London’s East End.
Tough working class girl Dora is hoping for
a better life for herself, away from the clutches of her evil stepfather. But
she faces a different kind of hardship as she finds herself up against the
snobbery of her fellow students.
Helen has grown up doing everything her
overbearing mother expected of her – including becoming a nurse at the Nightingale.
But her life is changed when she falls in love with a very unsuitable young
man. Can she finally find the courage to stand up to the formidable Mrs
Tremayne?
Reluctant debutante Millie has everything
she wants in life – except freedom. Becoming a nurse is her last chance at
independence. But she soon finds that life on the wards is tougher than she’d
ever imagined.
Through bedpans and broken hearts, the
girls form an unlikely friendship. But which of them has what it takes to
become a Nightingale Girl?
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EXCERPT from Chapter One:
“Tell me, Miss Doyle. What makes you think
you could ever be a nurse here?”
After growing up in the slums of Bethnal
Green, not much frightened Dora Doyle. But her stomach was fluttering with
nerves as she faced the matron of the Nightingale Teaching Hospital in her
office on that warm September afternoon. She sat tall and upright behind a
heavy mahogany desk, an imposing figure in black, her face framed by an
elaborate white headdress, grey eyes fixed expectantly on Dora.
Dora wiped her damp palms on her skirt. She
was sweating inside her coat, but she didn’t dare take it off in case Matron
noticed the frayed cuffs of her blouse.
“Well – “
she began, then stopped. Why did she think she could ever be a nurse?
Living on the other side of Victoria Park from the Nightingale, she had often
seen the young women coming and going through the gates, dressed in their
red-lined cloaks. For as long as she could remember she’d dreamed of being one
of them.
But dreams like that didn’t come true for
the likes of Dora Doyle. Like any other East End girl, her destiny lay in the
sweatshops or one of the factories that lined the overcrowded stretch of the
Thames.
So she’d left school at fourteen to earn
her living at Gold’s Garments, and tried to make the best of it. But the dream
hadn’t gone away. It grew bigger and bigger inside her, until four years later
she had taken her courage in her hands and written a letter of application.
“What have you got to lose?” Mr Gold’s
daughter Esther had said. “You’ll never know if you don’t try, bubele.” She’d
even lent Dora her lucky necklace charm to wear for the interview. She could
feel the warm metal sticking to her damp skin beneath her blouse.
“It’s a hamsa,” Esther had explained, as
Dora admired the exquisite little silver hand on its delicate chain. “My people
believe it brings good fortune.”
Dora hoped the hamsa’s powers weren’t just
extended to Jews. She needed all the help she could get.
“I’m keen and I’m very hard working,” she
found the words at last. “And I’m a quick learner. I don’t need telling twice.”
“So your reference says.” Matron looked
down at the letter in front of her. “This Miss Gold clearly thinks a lot of
you.”
Dora blushed at the compliment. Esther had
taken a real chance, writing that reference behind her father’s back; old Jacob
would go mad if he found out his daughter was helping one of his employees to
find another job. “Miss Esther reckons I’m one of her best girls on the
machines. I’ve got the hands, she says.”
She saw Matron looking at her hands and
quickly knotted them in her lap so the woman wouldn’t see her bitten down
nails, or the calluses the size of mothballs that covered her fingers. ‘Grafter’s
hands’, her mother called them. But they didn’t look like the right kind of
hands to soothe a fevered brow.
“I have no doubt you’re a hard worker, Miss
Doyle,” Matron said. “But then so is every girl who comes in here. And most of
them are far better qualified than you.”
Dora’s chin lifted. “I’ve got my
certificates. I went back to night school to get them.”
“So I see.” Matron’s voice was soft, with
an underlying note of steel. “But, as you know, the Nightingale is one of the
best teaching hospitals in London. We have girls from all over the country
wanting to train here.” She met Dora’s eyes steadily across the desk. “So why
should we accept you and not them? What makes you so special, Miss Doyle?”
Dora dropped her gaze to stare at the
herringbone pattern of the polished parquet. She wanted to tell this woman how
she took care of her younger brothers and sisters, and had even helped bring
the youngest, Little Alfie, into the world two years ago. She wanted to explain
how she’d nursed Nanna Winnie through a bad bout of bronchitis last winter when
everyone thought she’d had it for sure.
Most of all, she wanted to talk about
Maggie, her beautiful sister who’d died when Dora was twelve years old. She’d
sat beside her bed for three days, watching her slip away. It was Maggie’s
death more than anything that had made her want to become a nurse and to stop
other families suffering the way hers had.
But her mother didn’t like them talking
about their personal business to anyone. And it probably wasn’t the clever
answer Matron was looking for anyway.
“Nothing,” she said, defeated. “I’m nothing
special.” Just plain Dora Doyle, the ginger haired girl from Griffin Street.
She wasn’t even special in her family.
Peter was the eldest, Little Alfie the youngest. Josie was the prettiest and
Bea was the naughtiest. And then there was Dora, stuck in the middle.
“I see.” Matron paused. She seemed almost
disappointed, Dora thought. “Well, in that case I don’t think there’s much more
to say.” She began gathering up her notes. “We will write to you and let you
know our decision in due course. Thank you, Miss Doyle…”
Dora felt a surge of panic. She’d let
herself down. She could feel the moment ebbing away, and with it all her
hopes. She would never wear the
red-lined cloak and walk with pride like those other girls. It would be back to
the machines at Gold’s Garments for her until her eyes went or her fingers
became so bent with rheumatism she couldn’t work any more.
Esther Gold’s words came back to her. What
have you got to lose?
“Give me a chance,” she blurted out.
Matron looked askance at her. “I beg your
pardon?”
Dora could feel her face flaming to the
roots of her hair, but she had to speak up. “I know I don’t have as much proper
schooling as the other girls, but I’ll work really hard, I promise.” The words
were falling over themselves as she tried to get them out before she lost her
nerve.
“Really, Miss Doyle, I hardly think – “
“You won’t regret it, I swear. I’ll be the best nurse this place has ever
seen. Just give me the chance.
Please?” she begged.
Matron’s brows lifted towards the starched
edge of her headdress. “And if I don’t?”
“I’ll apply again, here or somewhere else. And
I’ll keep on applying until someone says yes,” Dora declared defiantly. “I’ll
be a nurse one day. And I’ll be a good one, too.”
Matron stared at her so hard Dora felt her
heart sink to her borrowed shoes.
“Thank you, Miss Doyle,” she said. “I think
I’ve heard enough.”
If you’d told me this time two years ago
that I’d be writing a series of novels based on an East End hospital in the
1930s, I wouldn’t have believed you.
At that time I’d written eight contemporary
romantic novels under the name Donna Hay. One of them, Waiting in the Wings,
even won the RNA New Writers Award back in 1999.
I loved writing romance (I still do), but I
wanted more. Often in my previous novels, I’d found myself more interested in
the other relationships in my story. Sibling rivalry, the betrayal of best
friends, the complexities of the mother-daughter relationship, fascinated me
much more than boy meets girl.
I also longed to write something set in
another time period. Writing about the past opens up so many possibilities.
Imagine a time when life was full of taboos; when divorce could turn you into a
social outcast, and getting pregnant out of wedlock was just about the worst
thing a young girl could do. It might not have been much fun to live in, but
it’s great material for a writer!
But I really didn’t think I’d get the
chance, until the day my agent called and said that a publisher she knew was
looking for someone to write a series of books set in a hospital during the
early 20th century.
“Although it’s probably not your kind of
thing…” she added.
Was she kidding? I loved the idea! And the
more I researched the lives of nurses during that period, the more I knew I
wanted to write about them.
A nurses’ life was harsh, to say the least.
They trained for three years, during which time they ‘lived in’ under the
watchful eye of the Home Sister. They were not allowed visitors beyond the
front door of the nurses’ home, and they had to be in bed for lights out
(although they devised ingenious ways to get around this particular rule). In
some hospitals, a student faced instant dismissal for even speaking to a man
(they seemed to get round this one, too, as my own Nightingale Girls
demonstrate!). They worked 14 hour
shifts, and apart from three short breaks they were expected to be on their
feet the whole time. And woe betide a young nurse who broke a thermometer,
spoke back to a ward sister or even walked through a door before a senior
member of staff – she could expect a severe dressing down from Matron!
To write about young women living, loving
and having fun under this kind of strict regime was too good an opportunity to
miss. I’d already come up with my three main characters before I’d finished my
research. Not to mention the cast of sisters, staff nurses, porters and
cleaners who also made up the Nightingale Hospital.
Thanks to them, I have dozens of stories to
tell, and I’m really exciting about writing more Nightingale books (the second,
The Nightingale Sisters, is due out next spring). Who knows, one day I might be
tempted to write another contemporary romance. But for now, I’m very happy to
be living in the past!
Donna Douglas
www.donnadouglasauthor.wordpress.com
www.donnadouglas.co.uk
Donna Douglas
www.donnadouglasauthor.wordpress.com
www.donnadouglas.co.uk
2 comments:
I have four of your books, Donna. I started with Waiting in the Wings and then bought three others! I really enjoyed them. I have to admit, I don't have any interest in historical stories about nurses BUT - the fact that you've written them will encourage me to give this a try.
I admire you for taking on this difficult subject. I've read about those hospitals. They weren't easy. I'll be interested in how your society girl turns out. I have a novel tucked away on this period. Maybe I should drag it out andlook at it again.
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