Nothing untoward just as friends, she said most of them were not much older than her and were terrible homesick and very scared and just wanted some company. They used to leave something behind like a scarf or a pair of gloves ect, the idea being it was a sort of good luck charm meaning they had to come back to collect it. This air gunner left my mum a beautiful pair of silk under gloves that he said he wore inside his fur flying gloves. When she went to catch the truck to take them to the next dance on the American base a friend of his was there waiting for her and told her this lads aircraft had blown up over Germany and there were no survivors. Knowing how keen his friend was on her he'd come out to tell her the tragic news personally. She didn't say what happened to the gloves but even upto her death 70 years later she would still remember him and cry for him and the futility of it all.
I believe she turned 16 in 1944, she left school at 15 and her first job was building radio components at a Philips factory. She went on to work in a factory where they built sections for the Horsa glider. They only built fuselage sections, her job being to help skin the completed airframe, the sections were then taken away for further assembly else where. They use to chalk personal messages of good luck inside the glider fuselage for the boys who would eventually use them, my mums message was -
"If your lonely feeling blue, Write to me and I'll write to you"
"If your single drop a line But if your married never mind"