Trio - [16]
‘Who?’
‘Roy Colby.’
‘Good God. And how long has this been going on?’
‘Nothing’s going on.’
‘Something must have.’
‘It was just one time. It was an accident.’
‘Oh, yes. An accident. He accidentally got you in this mess. Have you no decency, no pride?’
‘Mam, I’m sorry,’ she bawled, unhinged by the look on Mam’s face.
‘Do you want to marry him?’
‘No.’
‘I’ll not ask you again.’
‘No. I don’t want to marry anyone.’
‘Right. The Colby’s need never know. Nor anyone else.’
And so her mother had sorted it all out and told everyone that Caroline was helping with the twins in Sheffield. Now what would she tell them? When there was no Caroline at Grandma’s funeral? Another lie?
She bit on to the flesh of her cheek and sniffed hard.
‘It’s sad news but remember she is with Our Heavenly Father now. She’s at peace. Our blessed Lord has called her to him and has rewarded her.’
She would call the baby after Grandma if it was a girl, a way of remembering her. And she would tell him, or her, all about Grandma.
Joan
Joan dreaded the labour. How could something so large get out of her body without killing her? There was no one she could ask about it. The other girls were just like her, their ideas a mishmash of fact and fantasy. Matron never spoke about it, even though she would sit in on the medical checks when the doctor came.
She put the duster down and sat on the chair. The library. Fat lot to read in here. Religious texts ad nauseam and uplifting novels that were on the approved list from the Vatican. No romances and certainly nothing stronger. Out there in the real world they were selling Lady Chatterley’s Lover and you had naked people leaping around in the theatre. Four letter words and all. Elvis swivelling his hips in no uncertain way. Things were changing. The world was changing. But not here. Here it was ancient. She let her hand rest on her stomach, on the ledge at the top of her bump. The baby moved a lot now but when she tried to imagine it, to think of seeing it, of what sex it was, she failed completely. Maybe it would die, perhaps it was a sign. She didn’t even have a name. She knew she should think of something, but whatever she chose would be changed anyway. It felt hypocritical to pick a family name; her mother was Elizabeth, her father Edward after his father, grandmothers Irene and Patricia, her other grandfather John. But the child would never know them and they would never know of its existence. She wished it were all over and done with.
She hated the way her body had changed. She was like an elephant. Her belly button stuck out now, her breasts had ballooned, the discs around her nipples had gone a startling dark colour. Even her hair felt different, thicker and greasier. The endless heartburn kept her from sleep. She’d been invaded by this creature and she wanted rid. A stabbing pain forced her to her feet. She was running to the toilet every five minutes, too. After she’d been to empty her bladder she went to her room. Caroline was there, curled on her bed, crying.
‘What’s wrong?’ Joan sat beside her.
‘Everything,’ she wailed. ‘My Grandma’s died and they won’t even… I can’t go…’
‘Oh, Caroline. I am sorry.’ She let her hand rest on the other girl’s shoulder. On top of everything else, thought Joan. I’m three years older and I feel so lost she must be… She let her cry, listening to the gruff sobs, and when the sounds tailed off Joan fetched her a fresh hanky.
‘I’ve got one somewhere,’ Caroline said, her voice thick.
‘Don’t be silly, use this.’
‘I’ll make sure you get it back.’
‘Beware the laundry thief,’ Joan joked gently. Small items inevitably went missing with the sheer amount of laundry each day and were not always recovered. Caroline gave a small smile, wiped her eyes and blew her nose. Her face was shiny from crying, her nose and lips red and puffy.
‘Tell me about your Grandma,’ said Joan. ‘Unless you’d rather not.’
‘It’s OK,’ said Caroline. ‘She was a bit odd really. Eccentric. Always bursting into song and quoting from poems and plays and things. She read the library wall-to-wall and she would make up stories -’ Caroline’s eyes filled again – ‘adventures; and there was always a little girl…’ Her voice squeaked to a halt. She sniffed hard. ‘She’d been to lots of places. All over the world. She was an entertainer on the cruise liners, until she met Grandpa. She settled down with him.’
‘She sounds fabulous,’ said Joan.
‘I feel so rotten, not going.’
‘You haven't got a choice,’ Joan said gently.
The bell for lunch rang through the hallways.
‘Are you coming down?’
‘I don’t want any.’
‘I’ll bring you a cup of tea.’
‘I’m not allowed, am I?’
‘Oh, bother that,’ Joan said. Though when she did bring the tea upstairs she made sure that none of the sisters saw her.
Megan
‘Aaah!’ Megan gasped and clutched the table top, her ginger curls falling over her face. ‘Oh, god that hurts.’
‘Megan?’ Sister Giuseppe came over and placed a palm on Megan’s stomach, her lips moving as she counted. ‘Here, sit down.’ She moved the chair and Megan lowered herself on to it gingerly. ‘Aah,’ she gasped again.
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Single mother and private eye, Sal Kilkenny, has two very frightened clients on her hands. One, young mother Debbie Gosforth, is a victim; the other, Luke Wallace, is afraid he is a murderer. While Sal tries to protect Debbie from a stalker, she has to investigate the murder of Luke's best friend.
Your husband, your family, your freedom. What would you sacrifice for love? A love story, a modern nightmare and an honest and incisive portrayal of a woman who honours her husband's wish to die and finds herself in the dock for murder.When Deborah reluctantly helps her beloved husband Neil end his life and conceals the truth, she is charged with murder. As the trial unfolds and her daughter Sophie testifies against her, Deborah, still reeling with grief, fights to defend her actions. Twelve jurors hold her fate in their hands, if found guilty she will serve a life sentence.
From the author of LOOKING FOR TROUBLE, a further crime novel featuring private investigator Sal Kilkenny. When a man is distraught at his wife's apparent infidelity, he enlists the help of Sal to confirm his suspicions, only to find himself a widower soon afterwards. From there Sal's other case also begins to take a disturbing and violent turn.
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Крепкая дружба Глеба Никитина и Валеры Ульянова завязалась еще во время службы на яхте «Балтика», однако их жизненные пути разошлись: Глеб остался в России, а его товарищ — на Антигуа. Однажды Глеб получает странное электронное письмо, из которого узнает немыслимые вещи: его, казалось бы безобидный, надежный Валерка обвиняется в убийстве и объявлен в розыск. Глеб отправляется на Антигуа, чтобы доказать невиновность друга, и становится участником запутанного расследования…
Жанна убеждала себя: все происходящие неприятности временны. Но эти странные звонки и слежка… Кто-то явно решил превратить ее жизнь в кошмар. Она боялась обратиться за помощью. Боялась, что кто-то начнет копаться в ее прошлом. Следователь Катя Скрипковская решила помочь Жанне. Оказалось, что и звонит, и следит за своей жертвой женщина. Между ними есть некая связь, которую Жанна держит в тайне. Но почему? Катя жаждет понять, какую игру затеяла женщина. Что или кого так тщательно скрывает Жанна? И кто она на самом деле?…
Литературный клуб библиотеки имени Александра Грина славится активной литературно-светской жизнью: яркие презентации, встречи с незаурядными творческими личностями, бурные дискуссии, милейшие дружеские посиделки. На одном из таких вечеров происходит убийство. Личность погибшего, склочника и скандалиста, не вызывает особых симпатий тесного клубного кружка, однако какое несмываемое пятно на безупречной репутации библиотеки! Таня Нестерова, соратница, подруга и заместитель директора Бэллы Мироновой, понимает, что полиции с разгадкой не справиться: убийца не случайный гость «со стороны», а кто-то из ближнего круга, а причина убийства кроется в глубине запутанного клубка тайных любовных связей, ненависти, предательства и уязвленного самолюбия.
Детективная повесть “Тихий семейный отдых” будет интересна людям разных возрастов, это семейное чтение в самом прямом смысле слова. Захватывающий сюжет, ироничность автора, красота языка, — всё есть в этой книге. Приятного чтения!