Read Between The Sheets Online

Authors: Colette Caddle

Tags: #FIC000000

Between The Sheets (25 page)

BOOK: Between The Sheets
2.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

They said goodbye to Sylvie's mother, and then Ian drove them to a coffee bar nearby. When they were sitting at a Formica-covered table drinking coffee out of cartons, Sylvie finally spoke. 'Well?' she said, her expression defiant.

'Nice people, your parents,' Ian said, deliberately misunderstanding her. 'But I can see why working from home is not an option. I do, however, have a solution.'

'You do?' she said doubtfully.

'You can work from my office.'

'But—' she started.

'No buts, it makes perfect sense. It's not exactly a palace and if you want a cuppa you have to go to the cafe at the corner, but it's home.' He hurried on, as already he could see the doubt in her eyes. 'We'd need to get you a desk and a chair—'

'And a computer and a phone line.' Sylvie shook her head. 'It's hopeless.'

'I told you, I have an old PC, and it will take no time to get an extra phone line — Dana has to pay for that.'

'I can't let you do all this for me.'

'Who says I'm doing it for you?' he said, with a scornful look, designed to stop her feeling like a charity case. 'It would be good for me too. You could answer my phone and take messages for me when I'm not around. I help you, you help me and, hopefully, between us we can help Dana finish this book.'

'I wouldn't bet on it,' Sylvie said grimly. 'But I'd be happy to hang on to this job for as long as possible.'

'So, do we have a deal?'

She smiled. 'Yeah. Yeah, we do.'

'Good.' The urge to kiss her was immense, but Ian knew she'd be horrified. Instead he stood up and held out his hand. 'Come on, let's go and sort out your office.'

Within a few hours, Ian had hooked up the old PC and added Sylvie as a user to his email account. 'You can use this while you're waiting for your own account to be set up,' he explained.

'Ian?'

He looked up from where he was fixing the old swivel chair that he'd charmed out of the solicitor from upstairs. 'Yeah?'

She smiled. 'Thanks for your help.'

He grinned, wondering if she realized that he'd scale Mount Everest in his underwear for a smile like that. 'Don't worry, you'll earn it.'

Dana had written fifteen hundred words of
The Mile High Club
and sent them off to Sylvie. She'd earned the right to a drink, a smoke and maybe even a few paragraphs of her autobiography. It was a chilly day and she had pulled on an ancient cashmere sweater, a pair of faded denims, and woolly socks. She'd better start paying more attention to her appearance, she thought as she caught a glimpse of herself in the hall mirror, or Ryan would soon lose interest. And, she realized, she didn't want that to happen. He cheered her up. He was easy to be with. And she found herself opening up to him in a way that was completely alien to her.

That could be down to him, or to the fact that she was feeling so vulnerable after Gus walked out. Or maybe it was down to the autobiography. Writing her story was having the strangest effect on her. Without it, she might have given up altogether and been discovered, sodden, at the bottom of a bottle by now. Gus had wanted her to talk to someone. Maybe this was the next best thing

On an impulse, she sent a text to Ryan asking him over for dinner the following evening. The reply was immediate.

YEAH, SURE; BET YOU STAND ME UP AGAIN!

She smiled. He kept going on about that night that she was supposed to go to his place to watch the football. That had been the day Sylvie and Iris had left. She had been so upset that she had forgotten even to call him.

She typed a message quickly into her phone.

I WON'T. PROMISE.

She sent the message and waited. When he sent his reply she laughed.

YEAH, YEAH, BELIEVE IT WHEN I SEE IT. C U AT 8. X

She would phone the bistro around the corner and arrange for a main course and dessert to be delivered. That would leave her time to give the house a good clean. Well, her bedroom, the bathrooms and the kitchen anyway. Phew, she was exhausted just thinking about it. And the house wasn't the only thing getting a makeover. She picked up the phone again and called the beauty salon to make an appointment. When she hung up, she poured a large glass of wine and carried it back into her office. She took a deep breath before opening the file on her laptop and starting to write.

I was right when I thought that life would never be the same again. Father kept me home from school for a full week after we returned from London. Then one morning as we sat at the table, eating breakfast, he announced that I was to start in a new school on Monday. It was thirty miles away and too far to commute so he said I was to become a boarder.

'I won't go,' I said immediately.

He didn't even look up. 'You'll do what you're told.'

'Conall, I don't think it's a good idea to send Dana away after ... everything.'

He shot her a cold look. 'What? After fornicating with a pimply youth, getting pregnant and then killing her own child?'

'Conall!'

'It's okay, Mum. Maybe it would be better if I went.'

'You've no choice,' he retorted. 'The convent won't have you back; you're a bad example to the other girls. Go and pack. I'll take you there on Sunday afternoon.'

My new school was a grey prison, and a narrow cell was to be my home for the next year.

'Then you can come back to me,' my mother said, hugging me tightly before they left.

All through that year, I kept to myself, I wrote long letters to Judy and my mother, and I studied hard. I needed to win a place at university in Dublin. I had to make sure that I would never have to depend on my father again. And maybe I could even liberate my mother.

In my daydreams, I saw myself arriving at the house in
Wexford in a flash car and whisking my mother off to live with me in my Dublin mansion. In my nightmares, I saw my father dragging my baby from my arms and walking away. I would scream and cry and beg him to bring it back, but he'd just keep walking. I would wake up with a jolt, my pillow soaked with tears.

When I wasn't studying, I was writing or walking. It struck me that I was behaving like my father. The realization made me nauseous. Once a week I'd phone my mother and we'd talk non-stop over each other, trying to make the most of our precious few minutes. Afterwards I'd lie on my bed and try to recapture the sound of her voice and hold it in my head and heart. I missed her so much, even more than I missed my brother. I lived for the Christmas holidays when I would see her again, but my father landed a bombshell. He'd arranged for me to stay on through the holiday and take extra maths lessons. Mother protested but I assured her it was what I wanted to do. It was all lies, of course. But she was alone in the house with my father now, and I didn't want her to do anything to antagonize him. Not now I wasn't there to watch over her.

I sailed through my exams in June and was confident that I'd won my place at university. I pre-empted my father's plans for my final break by securing a job helping out in my school's summer camp. My mother was disappointed that I wasn't coming home, but I knew that if I'd tried, he'd have found some way to stop me.

I only ever saw my mother once more. She took me up to Dublin before I started university, and we had three wonderful weeks together. She helped me find a reasonably clean bedsit that was only ten minutes' walk from Trinity College. She bought me a colourful duvet cover and curtains to liven up the drab room, and an electric fire to warm me in the winter nights ahead. We visited the cinema and shopped for clothes and even spent a day at the zoo. I had never seen my mother so gay and carefree. At least, not since Ed had left.

'Do you ever think of him?' I asked, the night before she went home.
We
were lying in our twin beds in the hotel room, turned towards each other.

'Every day,' she said.

I wish he'd come home.'

'He can't,' she said simply.

'Why don't you leave Dad, Mum?' I sat up. 'You could come to Dublin. We could set up house together.'

'I can't do that, love.'

'Why not, Mum? Why would you want to stay with him after everything he's done?'

'It's where I belong.'

'And what about me?' I said like an angry child. 'Where do I belong? Where does Ed belong?'

'You must make your own life, Dana. You must put everything behind you. This is your big chance, my darling. Take it with both hands.'

And I suppose, to a certain extent, that's what I'd done. I reinvented myself in Dublin. I was, on the face of it, a normal, happy arts student, and no one knew anything about me. And while I lived it up a little, I studied hard too. When I wasn't attending lectures or studying, I was scribbling — I couldn't believe how easily stories came to me. I filled notebooks with the words that tumbled from my mind.

I was flicking through a discarded magazine in the canteen one day when I realized that I could turn my talent into cash. Readers were invited to send in stories — both fiction and non-fiction — and if your piece was printed, you got fifty quid. I read two of the winning entries and knew I could do better. I went out and bought half a dozen more magazines and found they all made similar offers. This had the potential to be a nice little earner.

I got stuck in straight away, confident that I could do it. The money started to roll in almost immediately. Depending on my mood, I would write seriously about controversial subjects or, in contrast, churn out a romantic and slushy short story. I took a perverse pleasure in writing anything that I thought would upset my father. When I wrote non-fiction, I would take the opposing view to his. When I wrote fiction, it was the light, fluffy material he abhorred. The results were lapped up by the magazines and my bank balance grew. And while I was doing it merely to amuse myself, I felt proud of my prowess. I was able to look at a magazine, size up the type of reader it attracted, and produce a piece of bespoke fiction to match. I took an enormous amount of pleasure in watching some of my fellow students devour my stories, completely unaware that I was the author. I used a variety of pen names and told no one what I was up to.

And then one day, along with the cheque in the post, came a note from one of the editors telling me that I had 'some' talent and should think about writing a novel. I discounted the idea at first -1 didn't have time to produce such a large piece of work — but it planted the seed. My romantic stories were well received and were easy to write. Also, in this genre, novels were usually shorter than the average paperback. Over a weekend, I came up with a synopsis and two main characters and wrote the first pages of my debut novel.

At the end of eight months, I'd produced what I felt was a marketable seventy-thousand-word manuscript. I carefully chose six agents — two in Dublin and four in London — and sent it off to them. I heard nothing for weeks and grew quite disheartened. But then I got a letter from an agent in London that I had never even heard of. He wrote that my manuscript had been passed on to him by a colleague, and he was impressed by it. He didn't believe that it was suited to the UK market, but he thought a publisher in the US might be interested. The US! I almost fainted with happiness. Immediately I went to pick up the phone to call my mother. But no, it was premature. The agent could be useless; it might all come to nothing.

Determined not to get my hopes up, I threw myself back into my studies, and even went to some parties. And then the second, fatter envelope arrived. It was from the same agent but this time it included a letter and two contracts. He explained that I had received an offer from the US publisher and that the contract was enclosed. He asked me
to call him as soon as possible so that we could discuss the matter further. It was signed Walter Grimes, literary agent.

I couldn't believe my eyes as I read the contract. Happy? I was bloody ecstatic. Wait till I told my mother. I jumped up and down on my flimsy bed, squealing with delight. I was laughing so hard I didn't hear the phone ring in the hall below. Finally, my neighbour came up and banged loudly on the door. 'Phone!' he yelled.

'Coming.' I hurried down the stairs after him. 'Who is it?'

'Your old man.'

I froze on the spot and just stared at the dangling receiver that was banging against the wall. Slowly I went over and picked it up. 'Hello?'

'Dana?'

'Yes, Father, it's me.'

'Dana, you must come home.'

'What? But it's the middle of term. What is it? What's wrong?'

He didn't reply at first, and then when he spoke his voice was fainter. 'I'm sorry, Dana, but your mother has passed away.'

Her eyes full of tears, Dana pushed away her laptop and stood up. She was too emotional and drained to keep working; it was time for a break. She decided to take a bath, then have a healthy supper followed by an early night. She didn't want any bags under her eyes, not with Ryan coming. She smiled, her mood lightening at the thought. She was about to go upstairs when she remembered she hadn't checked the post box. Yet another thing Iris did that she had taken for granted. Going outside, she fetched her post and newspapers, tucking her empty glass under her arm as she flicked through the letters. Distracted, she didn't pay attention to where she was walking and stumbled over the kerb. She went down like a ton of bricks, the glass splintering into thousands of pieces around her. The last thing she remembered was a sharp pain in her arm, and then everything went black.

Chapter Twenty-Seven

'Dana?'

She opened her eyes and blinked. 'Dana, are you okay?'

She opened her mouth to reply but at that moment the world started to spin around her and once again she was falling.

When she came to a second time, she was lying on the sofa in the sitting room, a cold cloth on her forehead and a ferocious pain in her arm. She stared at the man leaning over her. 'Ed?'

BOOK: Between The Sheets
2.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Chasing Stanley by Deirdre Martin
Finders Keepers by Andrea Spalding
Lady Elizabeth's Comet by Sheila Simonson
Forging Divinity by Rowe, Andrew
Katie Opens Her Heart by Jerry S. Eicher
Asking For Trouble by Ann Granger