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Free Today! An engaging and ultimately devastating disaster novel…
David Sachs’s epic thriller The Flood

 How many Kindle thrillers do you read in the course of a month? It could get expensive were it not for magical search tools like these:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are brought to you by our brand new Thriller of the Week, The Flood by David Sachs. Please check it out!

The Flood

by David Sachs

The Flood
4.8 stars – 20 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

Recommended by Kirkus Reviews

For those that escaped the Flood, the nightmare is just beginning.

For three years, Travis Cooke has dreamed of reuniting his family, but not like this.

When the Flood hit, America’s East Coast was evacuated by every means possible, by air, land and sea.

Hours later, a cruise ship assisting in the rescue lies dead in the water: no power, no communications, and nowhere near enough food. Thousands of refugees on board, including Travis, his young son, the ex-wife he still loves, and her husband, find themselves alone in a big ocean.

As days pass, some wonder if all of them can live long enough for a rescue to come. With two guns aboard, some wonder how to improve their odds. Desperate to protect his family as the panic rises, Travis finds behind each door an unexpected new side to the Festival, but no way out. How far will a good man go to save the people he loves and has lost once before? How far would YOU go?

An electrifying debut novel that is thriller and mythic tragedy, and forces you into the minds and choices of people trapped.

You’ll remember where you were when the Flood hit.

Reviews:

“Sachs keeps the story moving full-steam-ahead, balancing his fleshed-out portraits of memorable characters with visceral action scenes… …An engaging and ultimately devastating disaster novel.”-Kirkus Reviews

“The Flood is an epic thriller and a remarkable work of art–you’ll read it fast, but think (and dream) about it for a long time.” -Matthew Mather, bestselling author of CyberStorm

Click here to visit David Sachs’s Amazon author page

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Last chance to discover KND Thriller of The Week! Don’t miss MC Browne’s Second Life: Losing You Saving Me

Last call for KND Free Thriller excerpt:

Second Life: Losing You Saving Me

by MC Browne

Second Life: Losing You Saving Me
 5.0 stars – 1 Reviews
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Second Life Losing You – Saving Me is a contemporary romantic thriller – with edge. A triangle of grief, obsession and unrequited love. It is the summer of 2014. Juliet tells of leading a duplicitous life of appearing to be in a happy, successful marriage with the seemingly steady Mark, while beginning to obsess about her ex – lover, Luka.

Flashback to when Juliet and her identical twin, Grace, survive a childhood of chaos being brought up by their emotionally absent alcoholic mother, who often can’t find her way to return home, or by people paid to care.

Then Grace, tragically, dies of cancer and leaves behind a son, aged four. Throughout the book Juliet tells of how she is haunted by the death of her twin. Alone and not knowing how to deal with her grief, Juliet immerses herself into a career, her behaviour mirroring the brutality of her life lived to date, just in a more refined setting. When promoted into the boardroom, Juliet begins to hallucinate, seeing and hearing what she believes is her sister’s voice and image. Whether real or imagined, Juliet believes the voice represents her sister’s love being reciprocated. The book then takes a dark and twisty path, as Juliet travels around the globe to try and escape her grief where she meets and falls in love with Luka. Juliet finds herself not knowing who is telling the truth? Who can she trust?

Interspersed throughout the book are the perspective of Juliet’s husband Mark, and the object of her obsession, Luka. Filling in the parts of Juliet’s life that she cannot see or understand.

Can Juliet trust herself? Events unfold that change everyone’s lives forever. Ultimately she has to make a choice: to accept the ultimatum of a life with Mark and medical intervention, or lose everything and remain living in her own world, accompanied by the voices in her head.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Chapter 1

Irresistible 2014

 

It was irresistible, the notion. That airbrushed upon my life was a gentle watercolour image of us, together. The day we met, we were both searching for something else entirely, and it became that we could not be without each other. We were as one. Then someone I had considered a friend came along and took what we had. Over time, I tried many different ways to erase the image. Of us. Forever. There were even times when it momentarily vanished. Only to return with a vengeance. When something inconsequential would release a trigger, my emotional safety valve would ‘pop’ and, once again, I would be consumed and troubled.

I had left work early, citing a headache. It was the anniversary of my twin sister’s death. Grace. Identical in every way except that she was dead. Ten years. I remembered the moment when the medics offered her the opportunity to participate in a trial of new drugs, which had some successes on patients with advanced cancer. The words ‘opportunity‘ and ‘advanced’ were used by the medics as a perverse, ‘Ying‘ and ‘Yang.’ I remember the day as if it were yesterday, only today the memory is blacker.

Driving home, I flicked through the channels between listening to a fierce debate about Gaza and a high pitched shriek of, ‘One less problem without you.’

I switched the radio off and pulled over to allow the car roof to open when I spotted him. Walking along into Kentish Town Underground, it was him. Luka.

How could I be sure? That slow walk of his. The slight turning of his head to follow my car with his eyes. We both did a double take. His face. Irresistible.

I would have recognised him anywhere. I got out and turned around. Too late. He had disappeared. I whispered to myself, ‘It can’t have been him.’

After that moment, I just couldn’t shake his image out of my head.

I whizzed through the afternoon like I had somewhere to be. My evening routine transformed. After putting our Baby Girl to bed, I poured a large glass of wine for Mark, my husband, whilst mine remained untouched. Then I ran a warm candle lit bath, filled with relaxing oils to help us both unwind. Mark was delighted at my renewed interest, showing my commitment to us.

I laid back, with my arms above my head, as he stroked my face and told me in earnest that he loved me more than life itself. I should have felt guilty though, shouldn’t I? As my thoughts lingered on my first love.

Later, I stayed awake and waited for Mark’s descent into a deep sleep. Like cream silk rippling in the breeze, I slipped out of bed and slowly opened our bedroom door, whilst looking over to ensure I hadn’t woken him. I tip-toed along the hallway, down the stairs into the study. As the Apple logo flashed on my laptop screen, it reminded me of the first time I saw him. Shamefully, I had visualised taking his clothes off with my teeth. I typed his name, a brief Google search. Minuscule. Innocent. Once. Just once. Harmless. Searching. 0 – 60 with Chrome. Where did he live? Was he working in London? Did he remain married? I found images of him everywhere. Endless pictures of him at award ceremonies and black tie events. The camera still shared my love of him.

The next morning I met with girlfriends for coffee in Costa.

I mentioned my guilty pleasure of searching the internet. We laughed. Each of us had, at some time or another, sought out an ex-boyfriend.

If only to reassure ourselves, we agreed we were now in a better place. I relaxed in silence as they shared, with loud mocking laughter, their reunited stories.

One warned me though: ‘Be careful. There are horror stories, and Mark doesn’t strike me as forgiving type.’

After that, I felt compelled to type Luka’s name and press return every time I logged on. Why? I can’t offer an explanation.

A few nights later, there was the answer to a big question. The one burning right into my gut. He remained married. It was painful, you know, but more than that, it offended me. That he had stayed with her. I felt waves of resentment I thought had dissipated long ago.

I tried to find an image of her. The wife.

I spent hours searching, trawling databases, delving into dark cavernous parts of the web. Nothing. Where was she? Where were the pictures of her? As the darkness lifted outside, with the birds yawning, I would give up and slip back into bed and sleep, a deep immovable sleep.

Weeks later I decided to call him. Right out of the blue. I searched and discovered his ex-directory telephone number. I found it listed on a US website, paid 24 US dollars Inc. sales tax and there it was. Obtaining it actually made me laugh. I felt like I had won an award. I know. I heard words softly in my head, repeating, encouraging me.

‘Wonder what he’s doing? The gorgeous Luka? You have his number, why don’t you give him a call?’ I smiled and thought – Why not?

You do agree, you would have done the same. Wouldn’t you?

That was how it began. My Limerence.

 

Chapter 2

Born Lucky 2000

 

I was born lucky, everyone told me so. With an identical twin – Grace. As soon as we could reach out and touch, we formed the habit of reaching across and touching each other’s heart. We took consolation in the feel of the rhythmic thud against each other’s palms. It reminded us that we always had each other.

My earliest memory is of being woken up by a loud indistinguishable curse as our stepfather’s key had refused, once again, to surrender itself from the sticky lock. I heard a soft jingle as the bunch was left dangling on the outside, followed by the noise of the door slamming shut, the echo travelling in waves around the stairwell, drawing out the sound. His main challenge was habitual and specific. It was one of walking. I remember rubbing my eyes and tightening my ponytail as I pulled at Grace, asleep on the other bed, to wake up as I heard the sounds of him stumbling around, oblivious to the blackness. He carried with him his smell of stale unfiltered cigarettes and beer. I heard the sound of my heart beating as he coughed in and out. The heavy creak of the bedsprings as he sat down at the end of my bed, immense like a sack of wet sand, then almost falling off. As his tongue slurred, I heard his words, but at the time I just didn’t fully understand.

‘You are lovely, you two, every man’s fantaseee.’

I saw the shadow of Mum at the door as she wrapped her flimsy nightgown around her. I held my hands to my ears as they shouted obscenities at each other. Mum’s tone getting louder and higher.

Her challenging him, over and over, the shouts of ‘Just leave her alone.’ Our routine was fixed.

He stood up and staggered towards her voice and we heard his muffled, ‘Get out,’ followed by a thud and more slurring. As Grace jumped out of her bed, we could both hear what was happening outside our door and we started to get dressed.

Knowing we needed to be quick, knowing the drill, the inevitable. We had been here before. The unforgettable sounds as he punched her, like a whip cracking over and over, repeatedly—one, two, three. Grace and I decided to do something new. Thinking about it, maybe we didn’t decide, maybe we just didn’t have an option. We pulled him off Mum, who was lying on the ground curled in the corner, silently, like a puppy in training. She hadn’t even raised her hands to defend her face. Mum, Grace and I managed to grab our shoes as we ran out of the apartment and down the stairwell. We huddled in the hallway outside our neighbour’s. Mum held her finger against the doorbell. When there was no answer, she began to bang on the door with her fist. Grace and I stood behind her and at the same time we reached across and touched each other’s hearts. It reminded us that our bodies belonged to us and us alone.

Our neighbour, Mrs. Dixon, finally opened the door, a fractional crack of light in the shadowy darkness, her craggy face just visible between the three thick chains. Each chain seemed to endorse her fragility.

I can still remember the sickly feeling we had when, with light in her eyes, she undid them, slowly, one by one, the sound of the scraping metal sliding across as she ushered, ‘Come in, come in.’

Her once white dressing gown was always the colour of greyhound, matching her hair and her skin.

We waited in her sitting room, three of us squashed onto the lace covered sofa, staring quietly at the tiny silhouette of our rescuer outlined in her Parker Knoll chair.

The light from the nightlight disguised the misery of our plights. No one moved or spoke. We could hear him shouting from above us, standing in our doorway, his threats and promises in broken slur, his menace diminishing as the words echoed up and down the hallway. We sat there, the four of us and looked out of the single Crittall window at the lights in the tower opposite, waiting for them to fade and go out, one by one. Until that day, life had played on repeat. The same swelling, the same blackness. This time, though, the signs were different. Our ritual had changed. Grace and I were top and tailed on the sofa.             A swirly patterned polyester eiderdown was produced by Mrs. Dixon, who announced, ‘When I saw it the Oxfam shop just before Christmas I thought of you all. Isn’t this a find?’

Mum cried silently, trying to cover her intakes of breath with shaking hands. I guess that was the moment she realised that this is what she was settling for. Thankful for the darkness, Grace and I were able to whisper confidences to each other, hoping that this time, please God, this time, things would be different. But our problem remained. Our real dad had disappeared and our mum was a drunk.

The next morning, Mrs. Dixon’s son, Reggie, arrived in his black hackney cab to drive us to St Albans. The car sped along as we shared our excitement, Grace and me, that the sky had become larger and the spaces between the lamp posts wider.

Mum stared ahead, not seeming to hear. Breaking her silence with, ‘It will be a lovely treat for us to stay with my parents.’

Spoken as if to herself, and then she returned to gazing intently at something neither of us could see.

Grace and I looked at her lopsided bruised face and back at each other as Mum examined her eyes in a tiny cracked compact mirror.

She tried to cover the red and black marks with an orangey coloured make-up stick Mrs. Dixon had given to her. As we left, with a clasped hand, Mrs. Dixon whispered, ‘It’s from the 60’s.’

Finally, the car pulled off the new M25 motorway and Mum exhausted everyone saying, ‘Right, no sorry left, no, I meant right.’

The driver made funny faces in the mirror at her each time she spoke, which she didn’t seem to mind. It helped us all laugh.

When she changed her directions, he exaggerated his driving so that we giggled even more and I imagined we were at a funfair on a roller coaster ride.

Then he stopped the car in the middle of the road, ignoring the beeping of other cars from behind us as he turned to us in the back and said, ‘No disrespect intended love, but if you could name a pub or a park or something? We might have a better chance of finding the house.’

Mum answered in her easy voice, the one we recognised from when she didn’t have the rent for the council or when she was making up a story about why she was buying sherry and a packet of biscuits at ten o’clock on a Saturday morning.

‘I am so sorry. I am silly; it’s opposite Rothamsted Park, the North entrance off Ambury Lane. Here’s me trying to direct you – and you a professional driver. Silly me.’

She smiled at him, a wonky smile that looked painful, and he set off, this time with purpose. Us laughing with him as he gave a two-fingered salute out the window to the drivers behind us. He dropped us outside a moss-covered terrace at the end of the row, overlooking a park.

Our collective euphoria was short lived. We stood as instructed by Mum, beside a red letterbox a little way from a moss covered end of terrace house, watching as Mum rang the brass doorbell, knocked the smart black door and then started shouting, ‘Hello,’ through the letter box.

With one arm wrapped around her body, to keep her red tartan coat from flying open, she said with sudden enthusiasm, ‘Come along, there’s a corner shop. I have enough for a box of Tunnock’s teacakes and you can eat all of them in one go.’

We hadn’t inherited the specific gene that seemed to allow Mum to survive on air most of the time.

As we wandered down streets, clutching our belongings, Grace and I threw a silent caution at each other, walking past rows of red brick houses which all merged into each other until we got to an open park.

The well-beaten path was covered in squishy brown mud, the texture like wet meringue that tugged at our shoes as we navigated our way to a rough wooden bench. We sat together, our Woolworths bags piled up at the end.

Mum leaned in and gave us instructions. ‘Stay together, and don’t speak to anyone.’

We must have looked worried because as she got up to go, she stopped and said, ‘I’ll only be gone a little while, I have to find your granddad. It will be great for us to finally meet and be together. I just need to speak to him first and check that it’s okay.’ She turned and waved to us as she left.

Grace made a point of her being ‘first out’ which automatically afforded her certain rights. She opened the bright yellow box and pulled out the six red and silver foil covered marshmallows encased in chocolate. She divided them equally and as we unwrapped the first one, without speaking we both held one in our hands, closed our eyes and counted, ‘one, two, three.’ We both laughed big open-mouthed guffaws as we tapped the teacake on our foreheads and opened our eyes to see how many cracks appeared all over the top of the marshmallow mound.

Grace had a theory that each crack represented a year of your life. After vigorously counting to twenty something and then skipping directly to one-hundred, we could start our ritual of slowly peeling the chocolate off, segment by segment, then wolfing the rest whole. Which we always tried to do without licking our lips.

Years later; too late, I realised that I was the one who set up our rituals and Grace was in charge of the accompanying theory.

When the pigeons disappeared and no one had passed us for a while, Grace and I sat together on the bench in silence.

Grace kept wrapping her arms around me saying, ‘It’s okay Baby Girl, Mum will be back soon, you’ll see.’

That was the first time Mum left and couldn’t find her way to return.

Eventually, the park warden came and called the police, who then called social services. We were driven back to London and placed with our first foster family and we returned to school the next day – another normal Monday. And my life went on.

Grace liked to pretend we were on holiday and every few months would become ecstatic when Mum appeared, flanked by social workers. Initially, Mum was always fit and healthy, declaring sobriety. We would be rehomed together, anywhere up to three bus rides away from our school, until the next time.   The next time Mum walked out and just couldn’t find her way back.

Then we returned to the treadmill of people paid to care. Grace and I recognised a new routine had been set. A new low.

We left our final foster placement at the age of eighteen. I was off to university. Our form tutor had called my offer of a university place, ‘A gift from God.’ Once again, all of my effort marginalised and awarded to someone else.

University was our first proper separation, for Grace and me. It was never really properly discussed. Just long pauses as I carefully spoon fed information about the media course to Grace, who nodded and then changed the subject. Grace dreamt of something else. A fairy-tale. The handsome prince, beautiful children, preferably one of each.

We stood at the station; me with an oversized backpack strapped to my back, waiting for the platform number to flash up on the overhead screen, when Grace announced she was pregnant. We hugged each other, accompanied by loud shrieks, both sounding the same but with very different meanings. I placed my palm softly against her tummy. It was washboard flat. I boarded the train and waved at her through the thick opaque glass as it pulled out of the station.

I leaned forward, kissing the glass, with my lips flat against the window, using my tongue so that she laughed even more as she tried to run along the platform, waving as the train pulled away.

When I couldn’t see her any longer, I sat down while the other passengers in the carriage turned away from me, and no matter how many times I wiped my face it just remained wet.

Her pregnancy had only been a matter of time. I guessed it was a miracle she had made it to eighteen without being caught.

The next time I saw Grace, we were running barefoot through the dew covered grass in the park, picking petals off the perfect rose bushes to use as confetti for her marriage ceremony that afternoon. When the petals flew up and around, cascading in swirls of soft velvety pastel over Grace, as she stood clutching Brendon, her new husband, under the archway of Ealing town hall. Although there were only a few of us, we smiled and waved at each other.

Grace had a real daisy chain on her head and her long blonde hair with its soft waves tumbled untamed around her. Tiny ankle bracelets combined with thin flat leather sandals and with a long white cotton flowing dress, she was the definition of blooming and beautiful. We laughed and joked about being hungry and looking forward to our, ‘two for one’ meal deal at the local Pizza Express. Mum was smiling, smelling of her own unique combination of too much perfume mixed with alcohol, but at least she had found her way to the venue.

Mark was there. Our first love from our foster home before last. As always, that foster family had three of their, ‘own’ children. Two girls and a boy, all a year or so apart and a similar age to us. They were lined up in the hall, bored, like a mini set of Russian dolls, ordered to stand up straight and meet the new arrivals. Black hair, small framed and perfectly formed. Grace and I were like giraffes penned into a cage. Each of us worth £160.00 a week to the family. Then Mark arrived, brought by another set of faceless social workers moments after us. Another charge.

He kept saying, ‘We were promised I would be with my brother and sisters.’

A social worker’s reply was delivered in a pass me the salt kind of way, ‘This is the best we can do, Mark. Be grateful.’

Our affinity with Mark was instant, shared broken hearts and a sense of confusion, hidden behind a big smile and bigger laughter. He was as I imagined an Italian to be. His extra-large physique betrayed a softness Grace and I could see, but for some reason the others chose not to, as they pushed past us to get the last seats in the living room.                                                                                                                              Mark came into our allocated pink and white fluffy bedroom and sat on a pink plastic box in the corner. His head was pointing towards something on the floor, but we could see he was watching us from under uplifted eyelashes. We spent hours that night exaggerating poses in front of him, delighted to have an audience while we examined ourselves from every angle in front of the mirror.

Our silhouette remained long and lean and we yearned to have enough to be able to fill a bra. Even a tiny one. Our hair was the same, always cut almost in a straight line, when Mum had been sober enough to be trusted with a pair of scissors, sitting blunt on our shoulders.

‘What colour do you think our hair is? Mark?’

‘Dirty blonde.’ He smiled.

Grace punched him lightly on the arm and as he rubbed it in fey agony, he said, ‘Blonde. Sorry, I mean blonde.’

Grace spent the evening, while I remained quiet, firing questions about every part of our appearance at him and made him answer again and again until she was satisfied. He agreed our eyes were only just too far apart and our noses maybe too small, but identical and, ‘cute.’

He said, ‘You’re attractive – in a fresh, girlfriend material, seeing double way. You even laugh the same, big open-mouthed guffaws that you cover with both hands, left over right.’

That made us laugh even more.

Later that night Grace was crying, and Mark crept into our room and sat on the carpet, silent. His large shadow dominated the wall.

He just sat there. I found his presence comforting. After a while, we pointed out the stars in the sky to him. We knew all of them off by heart. We explained our tale, in whispers, of the hours spent looking out windows waiting for our mother to decide if she could find her way home.

For a few months, we would find Mark sitting on the wall outside school, always offering to carry our bags home, one over each shoulder. Grace devised a sketch of him bowing to us as we sat on our beds and pretended to be royalty, deferring our hands to be kissed by him. It made us all laugh in such a way that downstairs always guessed we were together in our bedroom.

Our foster dad would shout up the stairs, ‘Is that you, Mark? You’re not allowed in the girls’ bedroom.’

Mark would then lean over and whisper, ‘Hide, it’s the butler.’ We would scramble into wardrobes and under beds, always getting us in to more trouble.

Some mornings I would wake up in the bedroom and stare at the stars painted on our ceiling and I had a consuming feeling that I would never belong anywhere. Grace would see my face and throw herself on the bed and drag me out of my darkness, with tales made up from her imagination. Where the male monster always died in a horrible, gruesome way, right at the end.

I would go downstairs and look across at Mark, with his bulk, hunched behind the tiny kitchen table and it reminded me that I wasn’t the only one trying to fit in.

I was glad that Mark was there, at the wedding, smiling and laughing. Grace kept taking pictures of us, Mark and me. He took loads of Grace and me. He looked less awkward, like he had grown into himself. I suppose we all had grown up.

Someone managed to take a picture of Mark with us on either side of him. The next day we parted again, Grace to a bedsit in Ealing with her new husband Brendon, and me to a coveted place at Birmingham University.

Mark gave me his number on a scrap of paper as I left for the train station and, of course, I lost it somewhere between Ealing and Birmingham.

Chapter 3

Losing You 2007

 

My life was summed up by The Scissor Sisters lyric, ‘I don’t feel like dancing.’ I carried a large invisible object strapped to my back, full of grief. The size of a king sized mattress but stuffed with confused undetonated emotions. Sometimes I would pass a stranger and guess they had the same weight strapped to them, it was a look that passed over their eyes, nothing more.

After the memorial service for Grace, I returned to my job at an advertising agency. It was a great place to hide, behind a pastel tissue wrapped marshmallow of creativity; no thudding heartbeat required. A few weeks later, a group of us from university were having a catch up, all penned into the corner of a heaving pub in Soho, drinking wine like we had just returned from a month in the desert.

I tried to explain, whilst shouting over the sound of the music, ‘I arrive home from work, lay in bed and gaze at the walls, running through the last few years, over and over again. Just as my eyelids become heavy and my eyes start to close, my alarm clock goes off and it’s time to get up and start all over again.’

Her response was to stare at me for a second too long and then she said, ‘Trust me. It will get better. I promise.’

But it didn’t.

Every morning, I reversed back into my memories of my twin Grace; a single mother trying her best. When she died, her son was almost four. Little Bobby.

The flashbacks continued daily. Arriving like an unexpected twister, spinning my life around bringing a primal fury and darkness. Reminding me of sickness without grounds or reason, my memories were always accompanied by the chemical smell of the hospital, right up inside my nose.

Sepia images played on repeat, like a video shot in super 8mm, of Bobby, speaking in his tiny wispy voice, who kept asking, ‘Mummy – Why are you in bed?’

It was a big question. I visited the hospital every afternoon and they were always sat, Grace and Bobby, squashed, arms wrapped around each other like honeysuckle, whilst she read to him and he listened silently with occasional deep breaths. Then she would sleep whilst he sat doing colourful crayon drawings on a small A5 pad.

My memories were filled with Bobby, obediently moving to the end of her bed when the nurses needed her arm, or another body part to stick more needles in, so they could continue to practice their art. I would fast forward in my mind, past the smell of burning skin from her radiation treatment and the long strands of blonde hair left on the pillow when she needed to make the short, slow walk to the toilet.

I always pause at the part where my sister’s ex-husband, Brendon, came and stayed in her house. Weeks of hell when, in a stonewashed attempt, he worked towards getting to know his son and we all sat back and pretended that the moment was normal. I tried to camouflage my surprise that he didn’t arrive wearing a black cloak and carrying a scythe. I really did.

I remembered one of our last conversations. Grace and I. Just before she died. I was sitting on the end of her bed cutting grapes in half, handing them to her one at a time and we were talking. As if arranging the detail of a forthcoming holiday.

I said, ‘Bobby should live with me. I’ll move back to St Albans to be near Mum.’

‘It’s arranged – he’s going to live with his Dad. Brendon.’

‘Brendon? But Brendon doesn’t even know him. In the last three years, how often has Brendon seen him?’

‘He needs his father. I trust Brendon. Don’t forget, I cheated on him. His new wife is lovely, she is. You just haven’t bothered to get to know her.’

‘She’s an airhead. Manchester? Grace, Bobby will have to start over again. His home is here.’

‘I’ll be watching – you think I’m going to die and that’s it? I intend to watch over you all.’

‘Grace – don’t say that.’ I reached over and touched her heart. She tried to sit up and, as I helped her, she touched mine.

I couldn’t feel her heartbeat; it was a sign, but instead I said, ‘Why can’t Brendon move down here?’

‘Juliet. It’s agreed. Please? He’s a good guy. He will be a great dad and he loves Bobby. Promise me? Promise me you won’t interfere? Just promise me you will live life enough for both of us.’

She was five and a half stone when she died. It was six months and two days from the initial diagnosis of cervical cancer. I cry briefly every morning, just before I get out of bed, at the memory. Of a few days after the cremation, carrying Bobby’s things to the car and dragging him off my leg and persuading him to go live with his dad. Waving them off, to a new life in Manchester. Without his mum, without my other half, without my sister Grace.

If I had remained in that state, I would have either killed myself or someone else.

Instead, I threw my attention into my work and every day it was like finishing the London marathon for the first time. The joyous relief of getting to the end of the day without having collapsed in a heap.

If I had remained in that state, I would have either killed myself or someone else.

Instead, I threw my attention into my work and every day it was like finishing the London marathon for the first time. The joyous relief of getting to the end of the day without having collapsed in a heap. If everything and everyone had been nice and cosy, it would have been easy. I could have thrown myself off a bridge.

I went to work every day and built a barrier to anything soft. I became known for unnecessary sparring and confrontation. Generally, I won the argument, if not the friends. After losing Grace, I had to win. I constantly created an atmosphere right on the edge of ugly. It sated my mood and satisfied a need for brutality. Replicating my experience of life, just in a different setting.

For over a year, I had a boyfriend who was also Head of Human Resource. It was against both of our terms of employment to sleep with colleagues.

I didn’t care. He was so refined sometimes I couldn’t understand what he was saying, but I stayed with him anyway. Did I mention he was the Head of Human Resource?

There were quite a few of us working alongside each other while concealing our fierce ambition. I was promoted to Account Director, with a small team. I wanted more. My competitors within the agency didn’t know how far I would go. How could they? You see, I had nothing to lose. I guess only those touched understand the impact of grief upon person’s moral compass. Being a woman helped. I played my feminine charm for all it was worth. I know. I enticed the staff to pick a side, my side, and help me. If you wanted to be on my team, everyone else was the enemy.

If you didn’t like it, I suggested a career change. Never to your face, always via the head of Human Resource. I veneered my approach with expense-account fuelled laughter, always paying with a company credit card.

And all of my hard work paid off. Despite vicious competition, the board promoted me to Client Service Director of the agency. My reward for screwing everyone over. Happy? I didn’t feel a thing. Nothing. I should have though, shouldn’t I? I began to relax and rather than get stuck in, I rode along on the crest of office politics.

Then my Head of Human Resources boyfriend dumped me. I won’t even bother to tell you his name. I came home from work to find my ‘emergency’ key on the table and his toothbrush gone.

Continued….

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Second Life: Losing You Saving Me

Discover MC Browne’s contemporary romantic thriller Second Life: Losing You Saving Me – FREE excerpt!

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Second Life: Losing You Saving Me

by MC Browne

Second Life: Losing You Saving Me
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Here’s the set-up:

Second Life Losing You – Saving Me is a contemporary romantic thriller – with edge. A triangle of grief, obsession and unrequited love. It is the summer of 2014. Juliet tells of leading a duplicitous life of appearing to be in a happy, successful marriage with the seemingly steady Mark, while beginning to obsess about her ex – lover, Luka.

Flashback to when Juliet and her identical twin, Grace, survive a childhood of chaos being brought up by their emotionally absent alcoholic mother, who often can’t find her way to return home, or by people paid to care.

Then Grace, tragically, dies of cancer and leaves behind a son, aged four. Throughout the book Juliet tells of how she is haunted by the death of her twin. Alone and not knowing how to deal with her grief, Juliet immerses herself into a career, her behaviour mirroring the brutality of her life lived to date, just in a more refined setting. When promoted into the boardroom, Juliet begins to hallucinate, seeing and hearing what she believes is her sister’s voice and image. Whether real or imagined, Juliet believes the voice represents her sister’s love being reciprocated. The book then takes a dark and twisty path, as Juliet travels around the globe to try and escape her grief where she meets and falls in love with Luka. Juliet finds herself not knowing who is telling the truth? Who can she trust?

Interspersed throughout the book are the perspective of Juliet’s husband Mark, and the object of her obsession, Luka. Filling in the parts of Juliet’s life that she cannot see or understand.

Can Juliet trust herself? Events unfold that change everyone’s lives forever. Ultimately she has to make a choice: to accept the ultimatum of a life with Mark and medical intervention, or lose everything and remain living in her own world, accompanied by the voices in her head.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Chapter 1

Irresistible 2014

 

It was irresistible, the notion. That airbrushed upon my life was a gentle watercolour image of us, together. The day we met, we were both searching for something else entirely, and it became that we could not be without each other. We were as one. Then someone I had considered a friend came along and took what we had. Over time, I tried many different ways to erase the image. Of us. Forever. There were even times when it momentarily vanished. Only to return with a vengeance. When something inconsequential would release a trigger, my emotional safety valve would ‘pop’ and, once again, I would be consumed and troubled.

I had left work early, citing a headache. It was the anniversary of my twin sister’s death. Grace. Identical in every way except that she was dead. Ten years. I remembered the moment when the medics offered her the opportunity to participate in a trial of new drugs, which had some successes on patients with advanced cancer. The words ‘opportunity‘ and ‘advanced’ were used by the medics as a perverse, ‘Ying‘ and ‘Yang.’ I remember the day as if it were yesterday, only today the memory is blacker.

Driving home, I flicked through the channels between listening to a fierce debate about Gaza and a high pitched shriek of, ‘One less problem without you.’

I switched the radio off and pulled over to allow the car roof to open when I spotted him. Walking along into Kentish Town Underground, it was him. Luka.

How could I be sure? That slow walk of his. The slight turning of his head to follow my car with his eyes. We both did a double take. His face. Irresistible.

I would have recognised him anywhere. I got out and turned around. Too late. He had disappeared. I whispered to myself, ‘It can’t have been him.’

After that moment, I just couldn’t shake his image out of my head.

I whizzed through the afternoon like I had somewhere to be. My evening routine transformed. After putting our Baby Girl to bed, I poured a large glass of wine for Mark, my husband, whilst mine remained untouched. Then I ran a warm candle lit bath, filled with relaxing oils to help us both unwind. Mark was delighted at my renewed interest, showing my commitment to us.

I laid back, with my arms above my head, as he stroked my face and told me in earnest that he loved me more than life itself. I should have felt guilty though, shouldn’t I? As my thoughts lingered on my first love.

Later, I stayed awake and waited for Mark’s descent into a deep sleep. Like cream silk rippling in the breeze, I slipped out of bed and slowly opened our bedroom door, whilst looking over to ensure I hadn’t woken him. I tip-toed along the hallway, down the stairs into the study. As the Apple logo flashed on my laptop screen, it reminded me of the first time I saw him. Shamefully, I had visualised taking his clothes off with my teeth. I typed his name, a brief Google search. Minuscule. Innocent. Once. Just once. Harmless. Searching. 0 – 60 with Chrome. Where did he live? Was he working in London? Did he remain married? I found images of him everywhere. Endless pictures of him at award ceremonies and black tie events. The camera still shared my love of him.

The next morning I met with girlfriends for coffee in Costa.

I mentioned my guilty pleasure of searching the internet. We laughed. Each of us had, at some time or another, sought out an ex-boyfriend.

If only to reassure ourselves, we agreed we were now in a better place. I relaxed in silence as they shared, with loud mocking laughter, their reunited stories.

One warned me though: ‘Be careful. There are horror stories, and Mark doesn’t strike me as forgiving type.’

After that, I felt compelled to type Luka’s name and press return every time I logged on. Why? I can’t offer an explanation.

A few nights later, there was the answer to a big question. The one burning right into my gut. He remained married. It was painful, you know, but more than that, it offended me. That he had stayed with her. I felt waves of resentment I thought had dissipated long ago.

I tried to find an image of her. The wife.

I spent hours searching, trawling databases, delving into dark cavernous parts of the web. Nothing. Where was she? Where were the pictures of her? As the darkness lifted outside, with the birds yawning, I would give up and slip back into bed and sleep, a deep immovable sleep.

Weeks later I decided to call him. Right out of the blue. I searched and discovered his ex-directory telephone number. I found it listed on a US website, paid 24 US dollars Inc. sales tax and there it was. Obtaining it actually made me laugh. I felt like I had won an award. I know. I heard words softly in my head, repeating, encouraging me.

‘Wonder what he’s doing? The gorgeous Luka? You have his number, why don’t you give him a call?’ I smiled and thought – Why not?

You do agree, you would have done the same. Wouldn’t you?

That was how it began. My Limerence.

 

Chapter 2

Born Lucky 2000

 

I was born lucky, everyone told me so. With an identical twin – Grace. As soon as we could reach out and touch, we formed the habit of reaching across and touching each other’s heart. We took consolation in the feel of the rhythmic thud against each other’s palms. It reminded us that we always had each other.

My earliest memory is of being woken up by a loud indistinguishable curse as our stepfather’s key had refused, once again, to surrender itself from the sticky lock. I heard a soft jingle as the bunch was left dangling on the outside, followed by the noise of the door slamming shut, the echo travelling in waves around the stairwell, drawing out the sound. His main challenge was habitual and specific. It was one of walking. I remember rubbing my eyes and tightening my ponytail as I pulled at Grace, asleep on the other bed, to wake up as I heard the sounds of him stumbling around, oblivious to the blackness. He carried with him his smell of stale unfiltered cigarettes and beer. I heard the sound of my heart beating as he coughed in and out. The heavy creak of the bedsprings as he sat down at the end of my bed, immense like a sack of wet sand, then almost falling off. As his tongue slurred, I heard his words, but at the time I just didn’t fully understand.

‘You are lovely, you two, every man’s fantaseee.’

I saw the shadow of Mum at the door as she wrapped her flimsy nightgown around her. I held my hands to my ears as they shouted obscenities at each other. Mum’s tone getting louder and higher.

Her challenging him, over and over, the shouts of ‘Just leave her alone.’ Our routine was fixed.

He stood up and staggered towards her voice and we heard his muffled, ‘Get out,’ followed by a thud and more slurring. As Grace jumped out of her bed, we could both hear what was happening outside our door and we started to get dressed.

Knowing we needed to be quick, knowing the drill, the inevitable. We had been here before. The unforgettable sounds as he punched her, like a whip cracking over and over, repeatedly—one, two, three. Grace and I decided to do something new. Thinking about it, maybe we didn’t decide, maybe we just didn’t have an option. We pulled him off Mum, who was lying on the ground curled in the corner, silently, like a puppy in training. She hadn’t even raised her hands to defend her face. Mum, Grace and I managed to grab our shoes as we ran out of the apartment and down the stairwell. We huddled in the hallway outside our neighbour’s. Mum held her finger against the doorbell. When there was no answer, she began to bang on the door with her fist. Grace and I stood behind her and at the same time we reached across and touched each other’s hearts. It reminded us that our bodies belonged to us and us alone.

Our neighbour, Mrs. Dixon, finally opened the door, a fractional crack of light in the shadowy darkness, her craggy face just visible between the three thick chains. Each chain seemed to endorse her fragility.

I can still remember the sickly feeling we had when, with light in her eyes, she undid them, slowly, one by one, the sound of the scraping metal sliding across as she ushered, ‘Come in, come in.’

Her once white dressing gown was always the colour of greyhound, matching her hair and her skin.

We waited in her sitting room, three of us squashed onto the lace covered sofa, staring quietly at the tiny silhouette of our rescuer outlined in her Parker Knoll chair.

The light from the nightlight disguised the misery of our plights. No one moved or spoke. We could hear him shouting from above us, standing in our doorway, his threats and promises in broken slur, his menace diminishing as the words echoed up and down the hallway. We sat there, the four of us and looked out of the single Crittall window at the lights in the tower opposite, waiting for them to fade and go out, one by one. Until that day, life had played on repeat. The same swelling, the same blackness. This time, though, the signs were different. Our ritual had changed. Grace and I were top and tailed on the sofa.             A swirly patterned polyester eiderdown was produced by Mrs. Dixon, who announced, ‘When I saw it the Oxfam shop just before Christmas I thought of you all. Isn’t this a find?’

Mum cried silently, trying to cover her intakes of breath with shaking hands. I guess that was the moment she realised that this is what she was settling for. Thankful for the darkness, Grace and I were able to whisper confidences to each other, hoping that this time, please God, this time, things would be different. But our problem remained. Our real dad had disappeared and our mum was a drunk.

The next morning, Mrs. Dixon’s son, Reggie, arrived in his black hackney cab to drive us to St Albans. The car sped along as we shared our excitement, Grace and me, that the sky had become larger and the spaces between the lamp posts wider.

Mum stared ahead, not seeming to hear. Breaking her silence with, ‘It will be a lovely treat for us to stay with my parents.’

Spoken as if to herself, and then she returned to gazing intently at something neither of us could see.

Grace and I looked at her lopsided bruised face and back at each other as Mum examined her eyes in a tiny cracked compact mirror.

She tried to cover the red and black marks with an orangey coloured make-up stick Mrs. Dixon had given to her. As we left, with a clasped hand, Mrs. Dixon whispered, ‘It’s from the 60’s.’

Finally, the car pulled off the new M25 motorway and Mum exhausted everyone saying, ‘Right, no sorry left, no, I meant right.’

The driver made funny faces in the mirror at her each time she spoke, which she didn’t seem to mind. It helped us all laugh.

When she changed her directions, he exaggerated his driving so that we giggled even more and I imagined we were at a funfair on a roller coaster ride.

Then he stopped the car in the middle of the road, ignoring the beeping of other cars from behind us as he turned to us in the back and said, ‘No disrespect intended love, but if you could name a pub or a park or something? We might have a better chance of finding the house.’

Mum answered in her easy voice, the one we recognised from when she didn’t have the rent for the council or when she was making up a story about why she was buying sherry and a packet of biscuits at ten o’clock on a Saturday morning.

‘I am so sorry. I am silly; it’s opposite Rothamsted Park, the North entrance off Ambury Lane. Here’s me trying to direct you – and you a professional driver. Silly me.’

She smiled at him, a wonky smile that looked painful, and he set off, this time with purpose. Us laughing with him as he gave a two-fingered salute out the window to the drivers behind us. He dropped us outside a moss-covered terrace at the end of the row, overlooking a park.

Our collective euphoria was short lived. We stood as instructed by Mum, beside a red letterbox a little way from a moss covered end of terrace house, watching as Mum rang the brass doorbell, knocked the smart black door and then started shouting, ‘Hello,’ through the letter box.

With one arm wrapped around her body, to keep her red tartan coat from flying open, she said with sudden enthusiasm, ‘Come along, there’s a corner shop. I have enough for a box of Tunnock’s teacakes and you can eat all of them in one go.’

We hadn’t inherited the specific gene that seemed to allow Mum to survive on air most of the time.

As we wandered down streets, clutching our belongings, Grace and I threw a silent caution at each other, walking past rows of red brick houses which all merged into each other until we got to an open park.

The well-beaten path was covered in squishy brown mud, the texture like wet meringue that tugged at our shoes as we navigated our way to a rough wooden bench. We sat together, our Woolworths bags piled up at the end.

Mum leaned in and gave us instructions. ‘Stay together, and don’t speak to anyone.’

We must have looked worried because as she got up to go, she stopped and said, ‘I’ll only be gone a little while, I have to find your granddad. It will be great for us to finally meet and be together. I just need to speak to him first and check that it’s okay.’ She turned and waved to us as she left.

Grace made a point of her being ‘first out’ which automatically afforded her certain rights. She opened the bright yellow box and pulled out the six red and silver foil covered marshmallows encased in chocolate. She divided them equally and as we unwrapped the first one, without speaking we both held one in our hands, closed our eyes and counted, ‘one, two, three.’ We both laughed big open-mouthed guffaws as we tapped the teacake on our foreheads and opened our eyes to see how many cracks appeared all over the top of the marshmallow mound.

Grace had a theory that each crack represented a year of your life. After vigorously counting to twenty something and then skipping directly to one-hundred, we could start our ritual of slowly peeling the chocolate off, segment by segment, then wolfing the rest whole. Which we always tried to do without licking our lips.

Years later; too late, I realised that I was the one who set up our rituals and Grace was in charge of the accompanying theory.

When the pigeons disappeared and no one had passed us for a while, Grace and I sat together on the bench in silence.

Grace kept wrapping her arms around me saying, ‘It’s okay Baby Girl, Mum will be back soon, you’ll see.’

That was the first time Mum left and couldn’t find her way to return.

Eventually, the park warden came and called the police, who then called social services. We were driven back to London and placed with our first foster family and we returned to school the next day – another normal Monday. And my life went on.

Grace liked to pretend we were on holiday and every few months would become ecstatic when Mum appeared, flanked by social workers. Initially, Mum was always fit and healthy, declaring sobriety. We would be rehomed together, anywhere up to three bus rides away from our school, until the next time.   The next time Mum walked out and just couldn’t find her way back.

Then we returned to the treadmill of people paid to care. Grace and I recognised a new routine had been set. A new low.

We left our final foster placement at the age of eighteen. I was off to university. Our form tutor had called my offer of a university place, ‘A gift from God.’ Once again, all of my effort marginalised and awarded to someone else.

University was our first proper separation, for Grace and me. It was never really properly discussed. Just long pauses as I carefully spoon fed information about the media course to Grace, who nodded and then changed the subject. Grace dreamt of something else. A fairy-tale. The handsome prince, beautiful children, preferably one of each.

We stood at the station; me with an oversized backpack strapped to my back, waiting for the platform number to flash up on the overhead screen, when Grace announced she was pregnant. We hugged each other, accompanied by loud shrieks, both sounding the same but with very different meanings. I placed my palm softly against her tummy. It was washboard flat. I boarded the train and waved at her through the thick opaque glass as it pulled out of the station.

I leaned forward, kissing the glass, with my lips flat against the window, using my tongue so that she laughed even more as she tried to run along the platform, waving as the train pulled away.

When I couldn’t see her any longer, I sat down while the other passengers in the carriage turned away from me, and no matter how many times I wiped my face it just remained wet.

Her pregnancy had only been a matter of time. I guessed it was a miracle she had made it to eighteen without being caught.

The next time I saw Grace, we were running barefoot through the dew covered grass in the park, picking petals off the perfect rose bushes to use as confetti for her marriage ceremony that afternoon. When the petals flew up and around, cascading in swirls of soft velvety pastel over Grace, as she stood clutching Brendon, her new husband, under the archway of Ealing town hall. Although there were only a few of us, we smiled and waved at each other.

Grace had a real daisy chain on her head and her long blonde hair with its soft waves tumbled untamed around her. Tiny ankle bracelets combined with thin flat leather sandals and with a long white cotton flowing dress, she was the definition of blooming and beautiful. We laughed and joked about being hungry and looking forward to our, ‘two for one’ meal deal at the local Pizza Express. Mum was smiling, smelling of her own unique combination of too much perfume mixed with alcohol, but at least she had found her way to the venue.

Mark was there. Our first love from our foster home before last. As always, that foster family had three of their, ‘own’ children. Two girls and a boy, all a year or so apart and a similar age to us. They were lined up in the hall, bored, like a mini set of Russian dolls, ordered to stand up straight and meet the new arrivals. Black hair, small framed and perfectly formed. Grace and I were like giraffes penned into a cage. Each of us worth £160.00 a week to the family. Then Mark arrived, brought by another set of faceless social workers moments after us. Another charge.

He kept saying, ‘We were promised I would be with my brother and sisters.’

A social worker’s reply was delivered in a pass me the salt kind of way, ‘This is the best we can do, Mark. Be grateful.’

Our affinity with Mark was instant, shared broken hearts and a sense of confusion, hidden behind a big smile and bigger laughter. He was as I imagined an Italian to be. His extra-large physique betrayed a softness Grace and I could see, but for some reason the others chose not to, as they pushed past us to get the last seats in the living room.                                                                                                                              Mark came into our allocated pink and white fluffy bedroom and sat on a pink plastic box in the corner. His head was pointing towards something on the floor, but we could see he was watching us from under uplifted eyelashes. We spent hours that night exaggerating poses in front of him, delighted to have an audience while we examined ourselves from every angle in front of the mirror.

Our silhouette remained long and lean and we yearned to have enough to be able to fill a bra. Even a tiny one. Our hair was the same, always cut almost in a straight line, when Mum had been sober enough to be trusted with a pair of scissors, sitting blunt on our shoulders.

‘What colour do you think our hair is? Mark?’

‘Dirty blonde.’ He smiled.

Grace punched him lightly on the arm and as he rubbed it in fey agony, he said, ‘Blonde. Sorry, I mean blonde.’

Grace spent the evening, while I remained quiet, firing questions about every part of our appearance at him and made him answer again and again until she was satisfied. He agreed our eyes were only just too far apart and our noses maybe too small, but identical and, ‘cute.’

He said, ‘You’re attractive – in a fresh, girlfriend material, seeing double way. You even laugh the same, big open-mouthed guffaws that you cover with both hands, left over right.’

That made us laugh even more.

Later that night Grace was crying, and Mark crept into our room and sat on the carpet, silent. His large shadow dominated the wall.

He just sat there. I found his presence comforting. After a while, we pointed out the stars in the sky to him. We knew all of them off by heart. We explained our tale, in whispers, of the hours spent looking out windows waiting for our mother to decide if she could find her way home.

For a few months, we would find Mark sitting on the wall outside school, always offering to carry our bags home, one over each shoulder. Grace devised a sketch of him bowing to us as we sat on our beds and pretended to be royalty, deferring our hands to be kissed by him. It made us all laugh in such a way that downstairs always guessed we were together in our bedroom.

Our foster dad would shout up the stairs, ‘Is that you, Mark? You’re not allowed in the girls’ bedroom.’

Mark would then lean over and whisper, ‘Hide, it’s the butler.’ We would scramble into wardrobes and under beds, always getting us in to more trouble.

Some mornings I would wake up in the bedroom and stare at the stars painted on our ceiling and I had a consuming feeling that I would never belong anywhere. Grace would see my face and throw herself on the bed and drag me out of my darkness, with tales made up from her imagination. Where the male monster always died in a horrible, gruesome way, right at the end.

I would go downstairs and look across at Mark, with his bulk, hunched behind the tiny kitchen table and it reminded me that I wasn’t the only one trying to fit in.

I was glad that Mark was there, at the wedding, smiling and laughing. Grace kept taking pictures of us, Mark and me. He took loads of Grace and me. He looked less awkward, like he had grown into himself. I suppose we all had grown up.

Someone managed to take a picture of Mark with us on either side of him. The next day we parted again, Grace to a bedsit in Ealing with her new husband Brendon, and me to a coveted place at Birmingham University.

Mark gave me his number on a scrap of paper as I left for the train station and, of course, I lost it somewhere between Ealing and Birmingham.

Chapter 3

Losing You 2007

 

My life was summed up by The Scissor Sisters lyric, ‘I don’t feel like dancing.’ I carried a large invisible object strapped to my back, full of grief. The size of a king sized mattress but stuffed with confused undetonated emotions. Sometimes I would pass a stranger and guess they had the same weight strapped to them, it was a look that passed over their eyes, nothing more.

After the memorial service for Grace, I returned to my job at an advertising agency. It was a great place to hide, behind a pastel tissue wrapped marshmallow of creativity; no thudding heartbeat required. A few weeks later, a group of us from university were having a catch up, all penned into the corner of a heaving pub in Soho, drinking wine like we had just returned from a month in the desert.

I tried to explain, whilst shouting over the sound of the music, ‘I arrive home from work, lay in bed and gaze at the walls, running through the last few years, over and over again. Just as my eyelids become heavy and my eyes start to close, my alarm clock goes off and it’s time to get up and start all over again.’

Her response was to stare at me for a second too long and then she said, ‘Trust me. It will get better. I promise.’

But it didn’t.

Every morning, I reversed back into my memories of my twin Grace; a single mother trying her best. When she died, her son was almost four. Little Bobby.

The flashbacks continued daily. Arriving like an unexpected twister, spinning my life around bringing a primal fury and darkness. Reminding me of sickness without grounds or reason, my memories were always accompanied by the chemical smell of the hospital, right up inside my nose.

Sepia images played on repeat, like a video shot in super 8mm, of Bobby, speaking in his tiny wispy voice, who kept asking, ‘Mummy – Why are you in bed?’

It was a big question. I visited the hospital every afternoon and they were always sat, Grace and Bobby, squashed, arms wrapped around each other like honeysuckle, whilst she read to him and he listened silently with occasional deep breaths. Then she would sleep whilst he sat doing colourful crayon drawings on a small A5 pad.

My memories were filled with Bobby, obediently moving to the end of her bed when the nurses needed her arm, or another body part to stick more needles in, so they could continue to practice their art. I would fast forward in my mind, past the smell of burning skin from her radiation treatment and the long strands of blonde hair left on the pillow when she needed to make the short, slow walk to the toilet.

I always pause at the part where my sister’s ex-husband, Brendon, came and stayed in her house. Weeks of hell when, in a stonewashed attempt, he worked towards getting to know his son and we all sat back and pretended that the moment was normal. I tried to camouflage my surprise that he didn’t arrive wearing a black cloak and carrying a scythe. I really did.

I remembered one of our last conversations. Grace and I. Just before she died. I was sitting on the end of her bed cutting grapes in half, handing them to her one at a time and we were talking. As if arranging the detail of a forthcoming holiday.

I said, ‘Bobby should live with me. I’ll move back to St Albans to be near Mum.’

‘It’s arranged – he’s going to live with his Dad. Brendon.’

‘Brendon? But Brendon doesn’t even know him. In the last three years, how often has Brendon seen him?’

‘He needs his father. I trust Brendon. Don’t forget, I cheated on him. His new wife is lovely, she is. You just haven’t bothered to get to know her.’

‘She’s an airhead. Manchester? Grace, Bobby will have to start over again. His home is here.’

‘I’ll be watching – you think I’m going to die and that’s it? I intend to watch over you all.’

‘Grace – don’t say that.’ I reached over and touched her heart. She tried to sit up and, as I helped her, she touched mine.

I couldn’t feel her heartbeat; it was a sign, but instead I said, ‘Why can’t Brendon move down here?’

‘Juliet. It’s agreed. Please? He’s a good guy. He will be a great dad and he loves Bobby. Promise me? Promise me you won’t interfere? Just promise me you will live life enough for both of us.’

She was five and a half stone when she died. It was six months and two days from the initial diagnosis of cervical cancer. I cry briefly every morning, just before I get out of bed, at the memory. Of a few days after the cremation, carrying Bobby’s things to the car and dragging him off my leg and persuading him to go live with his dad. Waving them off, to a new life in Manchester. Without his mum, without my other half, without my sister Grace.

If I had remained in that state, I would have either killed myself or someone else.

Instead, I threw my attention into my work and every day it was like finishing the London marathon for the first time. The joyous relief of getting to the end of the day without having collapsed in a heap.

If I had remained in that state, I would have either killed myself or someone else.

Instead, I threw my attention into my work and every day it was like finishing the London marathon for the first time. The joyous relief of getting to the end of the day without having collapsed in a heap. If everything and everyone had been nice and cosy, it would have been easy. I could have thrown myself off a bridge.

I went to work every day and built a barrier to anything soft. I became known for unnecessary sparring and confrontation. Generally, I won the argument, if not the friends. After losing Grace, I had to win. I constantly created an atmosphere right on the edge of ugly. It sated my mood and satisfied a need for brutality. Replicating my experience of life, just in a different setting.

For over a year, I had a boyfriend who was also Head of Human Resource. It was against both of our terms of employment to sleep with colleagues.

I didn’t care. He was so refined sometimes I couldn’t understand what he was saying, but I stayed with him anyway. Did I mention he was the Head of Human Resource?

There were quite a few of us working alongside each other while concealing our fierce ambition. I was promoted to Account Director, with a small team. I wanted more. My competitors within the agency didn’t know how far I would go. How could they? You see, I had nothing to lose. I guess only those touched understand the impact of grief upon person’s moral compass. Being a woman helped. I played my feminine charm for all it was worth. I know. I enticed the staff to pick a side, my side, and help me. If you wanted to be on my team, everyone else was the enemy.

If you didn’t like it, I suggested a career change. Never to your face, always via the head of Human Resource. I veneered my approach with expense-account fuelled laughter, always paying with a company credit card.

And all of my hard work paid off. Despite vicious competition, the board promoted me to Client Service Director of the agency. My reward for screwing everyone over. Happy? I didn’t feel a thing. Nothing. I should have though, shouldn’t I? I began to relax and rather than get stuck in, I rode along on the crest of office politics.

Then my Head of Human Resources boyfriend dumped me. I won’t even bother to tell you his name. I came home from work to find my ’emergency’ key on the table and his toothbrush gone.

Continued….

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Second Life: Losing You Saving Me

A contemporary romantic thriller – with edge… MC Browne’s Second Life: Losing You Saving Me

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Second Life: Losing You Saving Me

by MC Browne

Second Life: Losing You Saving Me
 5.0 stars – 1 Reviews
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

Second Life Losing You – Saving Me is a contemporary romantic thriller – with edge. A triangle of grief, obsession and unrequited love. It is the summer of 2014. Juliet tells of leading a duplicitous life of appearing to be in a happy, successful marriage with the seemingly steady Mark, while beginning to obsess about her ex – lover, Luka.

Flashback to when Juliet and her identical twin, Grace, survive a childhood of chaos being brought up by their emotionally absent alcoholic mother, who often can’t find her way to return home, or by people paid to care.

Then Grace, tragically, dies of cancer and leaves behind a son, aged four. Throughout the book Juliet tells of how she is haunted by the death of her twin. Alone and not knowing how to deal with her grief, Juliet immerses herself into a career, her behaviour mirroring the brutality of her life lived to date, just in a more refined setting. When promoted into the boardroom, Juliet begins to hallucinate, seeing and hearing what she believes is her sister’s voice and image. Whether real or imagined, Juliet believes the voice represents her sister’s love being reciprocated. The book then takes a dark and twisty path, as Juliet travels around the globe to try and escape her grief where she meets and falls in love with Luka. Juliet finds herself not knowing who is telling the truth? Who can she trust?

Interspersed throughout the book are the perspective of Juliet’s husband Mark, and the object of her obsession, Luka. Filling in the parts of Juliet’s life that she cannot see or understand.

Can Juliet trust herself? Events unfold that change everyone’s lives forever. Ultimately she has to make a choice: to accept the ultimatum of a life with Mark and medical intervention, or lose everything and remain living in her own world, accompanied by the voices in her head.

Reviews:

5 Stars – “A Damn Good Read: you won’t be disappointed” 16th March 2015

5 Stars – “Couldn’t – put it down” – 3rd March 2015

5 Stars – “High Recommend” – 22nd February

5 Stars – “Five Stars” – 21st February

5 Stars – “Excellent – Awesome twists” – 21st February

Click here to visit MC Browne’s Amazon author page

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Last chance to download Carrion by Betsy Reavley, 67% off the everyday price!

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CARRION

by Betsy Reavley

CARRION: a psychological thriller you won
4.5 stars – 13 Reviews
On Sale! Everyday price: $2.99
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Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

“Carrion is a dark, edgy read”
“Perfect for fans of Stephen King”
“Fast paced… kept me on my toes”

After surviving a fatal accident Monica is left wondering what happened to her life.Why did the car crash and why is she being haunted by a crow?Unable to remember the events that led to that fateful day and plagued by frightening visions Monica is determined to get some answers.But sometimes the truth is best left buried.From the bestselling psychological thriller writer comes Betsy Reavley’s chilling second novel.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

When I looked into those eyes I knew nothing would be the same again. The blackness from within the stare was spellbinding. It was an echo of something long forgotten, something dangerous and pure. It spoke of horrors beyond my wildest nightmare and I doubted the fabric of my existence.

But I told myself I was being stupid. It was just a bird, a harmless bird. Then I came back. I looked past the shattered windscreen and the spatters of blood and brains that decorated the world. All I saw was the crow. He sat on the wire, watching. Perfectly still, like our car.

The smell of petrol mixed with burnt rubber mingled with the stench of fear and caught in my throat. I stopped looking at the bird and remembered where I was. I could feel shards of glass sticking into my face. The seatbelt was tight around my torso, making it hard to breath. My neck ached. I looked down at my trembling hands and felt the warm blood drip off the end of my nose.

I looked to my right. It was like I wasn’t there. This was not happening. I watched myself examine reality with a detached calm. I could not see the face. The body was hunched, lifeless, over the steering wheel. A mass of bloody hair covered a smashed skull. I could see the inside of the head. It was pink and messy, like a child’s first attempt at decorating a cake. Until I could lift the head and see the face it would remain unreal.

My ears were ringing. Smoke poured from the collapsed bonnet. Above us stood the solid trunk of a tree. This was not where I was supposed to be. And then I felt a kick. I glanced down at my round belly and remembered the life growing inside me. A lump was pushing out of my pregnant bulge, a lump that had not been there when we left. The muscles were contracting around my belly. This is a mistake, I thought, staring around at the mess of crunched metal and glass and blood.

I willed myself to move but my legs were trapped, pinned down under the weight of the car bonnet, which had been crushed in on itself. I tried to wriggle free. I could not see my feet or ankles. I thought they were moving. I thought they were.

The car felt hot. The slimy fabric of the seatbelt cut into my neck. I needed to release it, and I fiddled with the button but it wouldn’t come out. It was stuck.

I looked over to the driver’s side again. The body hadn’t moved. Wake up, I thought. Come on, wake up. It looked bad. There hadn’t been any movement. I sat very still and watched for signs of life, the rise and fall of the chest. There was nothing. I felt frantic as I stared at the wrist, hoping to see a pulse. The flesh looked alive and warm but I could not bring myself to reach out and touch it.

My head was spinning. More smoke poured from the front of our silver car. Panic surged through my body with the speed of the crash. And then I remembered my mobile. I felt about for my bag. Where was it? Oh shit, it was trapped along with my legs. If I could have got my fingers through the contorted metal then maybe…

Then I felt those eyes on me again, piercing my soul with a deadly grimace. And I looked up to see it was closer. Standing only a few feet away. It sat on a branch of the tree we’d collided with. It was looking down at us. Emptiness surrounded everything. The world had decided to hide and all that was left was the blood, the crow and me.

 

 

CHAPTER 1

 

 

When I arrived at the hospital I thought I might be sick. I had known something was wrong. It was a feeling that I’d woken up with and had been unable to shake. Walking along the corridor towards the intensive care unit I focused on the echo of my footsteps. For a hospital it seemed very quiet. I passed a nurse in a blue uniform alongside a young man, her hand around his shoulder. He sobbed. I walked faster.

Pushing open the heavy swinging doors, I ignored the sign that told me to wash my hands. I didn’t have time for that now. My daughter was in there along with my grandchild, and I needed to get to them.

An elderly Nigerian nurse with grey hair around her temples stood up from behind a desk at smiled at me. I gave my name, Ingrid, and my daughter’s, Monica. The nurse stopped smiling. The matron nodded gravely and whisked me towards one of the closed doors. My stomach did a flip.

‘You’s can’t go in dares. Wet for dem dactars. Day will tell you’s what’s is happenin’. Sit yourself dawn and I’lls get you a nice hat cap of some din to help steady dem nerves.’

I did as she was told and perched down on a plastic chair by the door. I didn’t want tea. All I wanted was to be with my daughter. I fiddled with my keys, busying my hands. Glancing at a clock on the wall I saw that it was nearly five o’clock. Then I remembered I was meant to be at the hairdresser getting my roots done. I should not have been sitting outside a room waiting to hear the fate of my family.

The nurse turned and slid away to fetch me a drink as I sat in the eerie silence of the ward. All I could hear was the beeping from life support machines and it made me want to cry. I am meant to die first, I thought to myself. I hoped and pleaded I would never have to bury my child.

For the first time since I was a little girl, I prayed. As a young teenager I’d lost my faith, much to the disapproval of my pious parents. I closed my tired eyes and imagined my daughter recovering. Suddenly I felt old, as I looked down at my hands and noticed the ageing skin. They were not soft like Monica’s hands. Monica had lovely soft white skin and long delicate fingers. I wished I could hold my daughter’s hand in my own.

As I got up out of my seat deciding I would seek out a doctor and demand to be told what was happening, the doors into the ward swung open and I saw Mary and Richard approaching.

Richard was a short, portly man who was balding and always appeared to be frowning. He had deep lines around his eyes and on his forehead. From behind him appeared Mary, who looked ashen white. Her hazel eyes were sunk back into her skull and her dyed strawberry blonde hair looked dry and brittle. She was a bony woman with a large nose and plump mouth. I liked them both but we had nothing in common apart from the marriage of our children. We shared a friendly but formal relationship. I suspect I was too bohemian for them. Mary and Richard were nice enough, but square.

Suddenly I felt very guilty. I hadn’t given much thought to the wellbeing of Tom. The couple approached me, and Mary and I hugged. Mary began to cry while Richard walked over to the door and tried to peer through the frosted glass to see inside. It was hopeless.

‘Hello, Ingrid. What have they told you?’ Richard was brisk and to the point. No time for niceties.

‘Nothing as of yet. I’m waiting to see a doctor.’

I held tightly onto Mary’s skeletal hand. Mary’s eyes were pricked with tears and she couldn’t bring herself to speak. Her husband looked around furiously as though he was hoping to find a more satisfactory answer.

‘I’m sure they will all be all right. We would have heard if…’ My words trailed off as the kindly nurse reappeared holding a steaming polystyrene cup. ‘Richard Bowness, Tom’s father,’ he said, extending a hand formally as though it was a business meeting. The nurse, who wore a badge bearing the name Denise, handed the cup of beige liquid to me.

‘You’s need to come wit’ me,’ she addressed the couple, ‘Dis way, please.’

Mary turned and I saw the horror that filled her eyes. I gestured encouragingly and sat back down as my in-laws were led away down the corridor. I was alone again and could not shake the feeling in the pit of my stomach that something was seriously wrong. All I wanted was to be close to my daughter. With sudden urgency, I stood up and pushed open the door into my daughter’s room.

It was a small sterile space filled with machines and wires and tubes. The room smelt of disinfectant. I held my breath as I took a few tentative steps towards the large mechanical bed. The woman lying in front of me, purple and swollen, did not look like my daughter. Suddenly I felt giddy and reached out a hand to steady myself.

Monica was attached to various machines and had a large tube coming out of her mouth. Her face was covered in splintered cuts and there was a large gash over her left eyebrow that had been recently stitched. It looked sore and raw and I wanted to stroke it and sooth her pain away.

I inched closer and gently rested my hand on top of Monica’s. It felt small and warm. There was no response from my daughter. I hung my head and let out a long sigh. At times like this I wished my husband were still alive.

Jim had died nearly three years earlier. When playing tennis at his club, he had suffered a fatal and unexpected heart attack. Both Monica and I had been devastated. He was a wonderful father and a doting husband. I had gone to Addenbrooke’s hospital in Cambridge to identify his body. Now I was there in the Whittington Hospital in Archway, this time standing over the battered figure of my daughter. My stomach did a somersault.

I jumped as the door opened behind me. A young male doctor with trendy glasses glanced down at the notes that hung on a board at the end of Monica’s bed. A freckled nurse with a short boyish haircut and a number of stud earrings in her lobes stood inspecting the various monitors.

‘I’m her mother,’ I said, stepping out of the nurse’s way while she read long reels of paper decorated with indecipherable charts.

‘Ah, yes, Mrs?’

‘Whitman,’ I answered.

‘Mrs Whitman, you’ll be glad to hear the operation was a success.’

The doctor fiddled with a biro, repeatedly clicking the end.

‘Operation? What operation?’

From where I stood by the machines I could feel the nurse glaring at the doctor, who moved uncomfortably on the spot.

‘The hysterectomy.’ The young doctor looked grave. I looked down at my daughter. None of it made sense.

‘Hysterectomy? But she is pregnant…’

The words echoed around the room. The doctor looked down at his tan loafers and I noticed how tall he was. I could see that, although he was young, his mousy hair was thinning. He stopped playing with his pen and lifted his face to look at me.

‘What do you mean?’ I grew aware of the high pitch of my voice. ‘The baby … her baby … what about the baby?’ my words lost momentum.

‘I am very sorry.’ The words travelled through me like a bullet. Monica was only thirty-one years old. Her whole life should have been ahead of her.

The nurse in blue overalls approached and put her hand on my shoulder.

‘Can I get you a cup of tea?’

I sank into a grey chair and put my head in my hands.

‘No. No thank you. I don’t want any more tea.’

The nurse addressed the doctor, ‘Her stats look normal.’ He gave a small nod of satisfaction as she excused herself and left the room. I remained slumped in the chair and could feel the doctor’s eyes burning into the top of my head. Slowly he approached and pulled up an orange plastic chair close beside me.

‘Mrs Whitman, I am Dr Frampton, your daughter’s consultant.’ He had a soothing voice.

‘I suppose Tom gave you the go-ahead?’ I sounded defeated.

‘We had no choice. She lost the child in the crash. She was bleeding heavily. The operation saved her life. She should make a full recovery.’ The doctor paused. I could see he was struggling with something else he wished to say.

‘I’m afraid I have to inform you that your son-in-law passed away. His side of the car took the brunt of the impact. He was brought to us with severe head injuries. He suffered a fatal brain haemorrhage. There was nothing we could do. I am very sorry.’

I shook my head. This could not be happening. All the information that I needed to absorb swirled around my head. My daughter had lost everything: her husband, her child, her womb. As I looked over at the small skeletal figure that lay lifeless in the bed, my eyes filled with tears.

‘Oh, dear God, my baby.’ I squeezed my daughter’s hand tightly.

‘For the moment we are keeping her heavily sedated. As I say, she has lost a lot of blood and sustained some quite serious injuries. She has two cracked ribs, damage to her neck and has broken one of her legs. We have put pins in it and she will be able to walk without any problems but she’ll need weeks of bed rest. For the moment we are going to keep her here in intensive care but she should be moved to one of the other wards in the next twenty-four hours. If you would like to stay, we have a relatives’ room. Do you live nearby?’

‘No. No, I’ve come from Cambridge.’

Dr Frampton looked at my face. He looked at me as though I reminded him of a favourite teacher who had taught him at school.

The young doctor stood up and edged towards the door. My gaze was fixed on my daughter’s wounded face.

‘I have other patients to see.’ He was apologetic.

‘Yes, of course. Thank you.’

‘Denise, the ward matron, will be doing her rounds and can be found at the reception desk any time. I appreciate this must be a very difficult time for you but your daughter will be all right.’

He slipped away quietly, pulling the door closed behind him.

‘My poor darling. My poor, poor darling.’

I tucked my daughter’s white bedsheet up under her chin and felt a wave of exhaustion swell along with a gush of tears. The moment I received the news, I’d driven as fast as my ageing red Volvo would go. I had come home that afternoon to discover a number of messages from both Mary and the hospital on my answering machine. I cursed myself for not having a mobile. I’d been convinced that owning one was unnecessary and now I bitterly regretted it.

My fingers gently brushed the dark fringe off Monica’s brow, as I used to when she was tucked up in bed before I told my little girl I loved her and kissed her goodnight. Her pale forehead felt clammy to the touch. She looked much the same now as she had done as a child. I remembered her as a ten-year-old, in bed with flu. I was glad to be able to touch my daughter and thought of Tom. Poor Richard and Mary. I felt torn. Part of me wanted to stay with my daughter but I knew I should go and be with the grieving parents. I crossed my arms on the bed and rested my forehead. The sheets felt cool and smelt clean. I wanted to go to sleep and for it all to be just a bad dream.

The noise from the various machines whirled around my head. I felt sick and watched as my hands began to shake. How was I going to tell Monica that she had lost her baby and her husband? My brow furrowed with pain as I looked at my child.

‘Sleep now, my darling, sleep. I need to be with Richard and Mary. I will be back soon, I promise. I love you.’

I kissed my child’s fingers and touched the top of her head as I got up out of my seat. Before leaving the room I took a last look at my delicate girl lying in the hospital bed. Then I closed my eyes and quietly said to myself, ‘Dad is going to look after you, my angel. He will watch over you while I’m gone.’ Although I have no faith in religion I believe strongly in the spirit world. I left the room and made my way back towards where I had met Tom’s parents.

Returning to the waiting room, I looked around, not knowing where to go. A young Indian man was pushing a mop around the vinyl floor, listening to an MP3 player and bopping his head. I shifted in my boots and rubbed my heels together. What could I say when I saw them? What should I say? I remained there locked inside my own thoughts when I noticed that the hospital worker had stopped mopping and stood with his head cocked to one side, watching me.

‘Is you all right?’ the young man asked.

‘No, not really.’ I responded with more honesty than I intended. The tall slender man rubbed his forehead and looked at the floor.

‘I need to find a couple who are here. I saw them earlier. They’re not ill, they are relatives. Where might they be?’

‘All depends where de patient is, like.’ He rubbed the mop between the palms of his hands. I ruffled my blonde hair and tried to think.

‘I need to find them now. They aren’t here to see a patient. It’s their son. He’s dead. He died.’

My eyes began to fill with tears. It suddenly hit me that the death of my son-in-law would have a momentous effect on me too. I had only been thinking of Monica before and the emotional impact it would have on her. Now in the stark waiting room the sadness of it all hit me. Losing all control I crumpled to my knees, while the young man stood helplessly in front on me. I could feel his awkwardness but was unable to restrain myself. The floor felt hard and cold through my trousers. I realised it was still damp from mopping.

After a few moments the young man bent down.

‘Can I do some fink for you?’ He was kinder than his rough exterior appeared.

‘I … I …’ I blubbed. The man inched closer.

‘I can take you’s to the relatives’ room if you like.’

My shoulders shook but no sound came out. I felt like a fool. How dare I react like this? I still had my child, unlike Monica. Unlike Richard and Mary. That thought snapped me out of the misery.

‘Do you think that’s where they’ll be?’ I wiped my eyes with the sleeves from my jumper, smudging mascara down my cheeks. A small drip of snot hung from the end of my nose and I gave a quick deliberate sniff.

‘Well I can’t be sure but it’s worth a go.’

I nodded silently and got up off the floor and gestured with my hand for him to lead the way. He put his mop back in the bucket and pushed it against the cream-coloured wall. Then the man sunk his hands deep into his overall pockets and headed along a corridor I had not been down. He took long quick strides and I tottered along behind, struggling to keep up on my chunky high heels. The sound of us walking echoed around and bounced off walls that were decorated with various murals intended to inspire peace and tranquillity.

After working our way through a maze of corridors that all looked the same, we came upon a door marked ‘Relatives’ Room’. I felt lost, both physically and mentally. The cleaner who had been so kind took a step back and waited for me to enter. I stood still, holding my breath. I needed to be ready and wanted to be strong for them. A rush of cold ran over my body and I hugged myself.

‘Good luck.’ The young man with dark eyes stepped away and hurried off back in the direction from which we came. The solid door was all that stood between death and I. It was an unusual feeling. I pictured Mary inside and it pulled my heartstrings. I straightened myself and lifted my head up. Then, holding my breath, I slowly pushed open the laminate beech door. In doing so, I noticed my knuckles turn white.

 

 

 

CHAPTER 2

 

 

When I woke up, the first thing I noticed was how dry my throat felt. It took a few minutes before I realised I was in a hospital bed. Gradually my circumstances became clear. My leg was in plaster and my body in a brace. The needle from a drip was sticking into my right arm, secured by medical tape. A blue paper curtain was pulled around my bed. On a table next to me stood a get-well card, a potted azalea and a vase of yellow lilies. Mum had been here. I knew that much. Yellow lilies meant my mum had come.

I tried to swallow but found the pain too much. My throat felt like a cheese grater. The rest of my body felt numb. It was a strange sensation. I couldn’t really move, although if I had been able, I am not sure where I would have gone. I looked down at my static frame and wondered whether I was paralysed. And then I began to think. How had I got here?

It took a moment for my memory to order the events and begin to process my reality. I was in hospital. I felt battered and bruised. I was scared. I was alone. Panic started to set in when I realised I couldn’t remember how I had ended up there. And then the sudden memory flashed across me like a comet. Being in the car. The crash. And Tom.

I tried to move. I hadn’t believed I was capable of it at first but the thought of Tom, the sense of him, made me try. I wriggled in my cast. My leg swung about as though it belonged to a puppet. Claustrophobia set in out of nowhere and I tried to scratch the drip out of my arm.

Someone must have heard me struggle because it was at that point that a fresh-faced nurse arrived and efficiently pulled the curtain back.

‘Well, Hello!’ She spoke as if we knew each other. ‘We’ve been waiting for you to wake up, love.’

I hated that expression. How could she call me love? What did it even mean? All I wanted was answers. I didn’t require her patronising kindness.

‘Tom,’ I croaked. ‘Where is Tom?’

By now she had a hand on my shoulder and was forcefully guiding me back into a lying position. She had more strength than I expected. Her narrow face and dirty scraped back blonde hair gave the impression of someone weak and naïve. From a glance into her eyes I established I was wrong. She was a strong young woman in every sense. It had been a mistake to underestimate her.

‘You need to lie back. I am going to get the doctor. You’ve been in an accident. The doctor will be along to explain. Just lie back please.’ By then she had restrained me and I was helpless once again, a victim in a hospital bed.

Once she was satisfied that I was going to obey her, she stood back and straightened her uniform and then my bedsheets. Her glare held the authority of a true professional and I accepted I was powerless. I let my chin drop to my chest and gave a loud sigh of acceptance as she pulled back the curtain. It sounded like a zip being fastened and my eyes flashed open with surprise. Noises sounded strange, like they were one-dimensional. Perhaps it was the drugs they had me on.

As the short blonde nurse disappeared, I looked around the ward I was in. It was a large room with five other beds. Only three were occupied. The other patients were so different from one another. There was an old boy, who must have been in his eighties, who lay motionless staring into space on his bed. His body was skeletal and his skin was so thin and frail it was almost translucent.

On the bed opposite him was a young man with both arms in casts. He had a thick dark beard and long dark hair he wore in a ponytail. His face was round and chubby and his cheeks glowed pink. He was wearing an AC/DC T-shirt instead of hospital robes. As I glanced at him, he offered me a friendly smile. I didn’t feel like smiling back.

On the other side of him was a bed surrounded by people. I could just make out a woman in her fifties lying there. She was ghostlike, her skin was so pale. Her lips looked blue and her hair was colourless. I was sure she was dying.

I was snatched away from absorbing my surrounding when Mum appeared in the ward and rushed towards me, arms outstretched.

‘Oh, my darling girl!’ she whimpered. I surprised myself by smiling.

‘Mum.’ The word sounded good to my ears.

‘God damn bloody bad luck. I’ve been here for hours! I wanted to be here when you woke up but I needed to pee, and oh, it’s just typical.’

She parked her bony frame down on the bed and somehow managed to jolt it.

‘Mum…’ My voice was distant. She immediately reached for a jug of water and poured some into a small plastic tumbler.

‘Here, shhhh,’ she said, ‘drink, sweetheart,’ and held the cup to my lips.

Since my body was confined to the brace, it made drinking difficult. She did her best to help but most of the lukewarm water ended up dribbling down my chin. Still, it felt good.

‘Mum, Tom…’ I managed to say more clearly. ‘Where…?’ The words petered off. My mother couldn’t look at me. She silently put the cup back down on the bedside table and looked down at her feet. It seemed like an eternity before she spoke.

‘Monica, darling…’ Her words trembled and it seemed that time stood still. ‘The accident. Sweetheart, what do you remember?’

I clenched my fists and tried hard to get to grips with a memory that danced just beyond my reach.

‘We were driving along … the car.’

The pictures were jumbled up in my brain and the memory was a mess. Mum had hold of my hand. Her grip was firm. ‘Tom was taking us … we were going out…’

Mum’s eyes were wide and searching my face. Surely she was the one with the answers.

‘Yes, you were in the car…’ She let the statement hang unfinished in the air. And then like a tidal wave it hit me.

‘The crow! I remember. The blood … Tom. Oh fuck, Jesus, the crow!’

The vision came pouring back over me, like photographs from the past. I felt my body tense and my heart rate increase. I remembered those dark eyes staring into me, cold and unforgiving. My mother looked confused.

‘No Monica, calm down. The accident, darling … you were in an accident.’ Her words were restrained and calming. She brushed my brow and I felt like a child again. I sank back into the bed. Everything was muddy. ‘Shhh.’

Her mouth sung the sound and I noticed how busy her mouth was with teeth. ‘Shhh now.’ She repeated the words over and over until I had relaxed again. Her fingers brushed my hair again. I noticed that although she did have make-up on, her hair was unkempt. It was so unlike her.

‘Monica,’ she said gravely, looking me right in the eye, ‘I have some terrible news. It is not going to be easy for you to hear but I’d rather you heard it from me. It’s Tom.’ By then my heart was in my throat. ‘Darling, he’s gone. I’m so sorry. He’s gone.’ It took a while for the words to compute. My face must have given away my lack of belief. ‘Monica, sweetheart, I am so, so sorry.’ I looked around the room again. I thought maybe I would find him there in one of the beds. ‘You were in a car accident. We don’t know exactly what happened but you crashed. The car hit a tree and Tom…’ She didn’t need to say anymore.

I think I stared blankly at my leg in its cast. That’s all I can remember from that moment – the sight of my broken, bandaged leg. I didn’t say anything. I couldn’t.

‘There’s more,’ my mother added, but I doubted there was anything else that could be worth mentioning.

‘The baby…’ Just those words were enough to snap me out of my daze. The baby. I tried to sit up, forgetting I was held down by the brace around my torso. My baby. I looked frantically at my stomach. I could find nothing.

‘My poor girl.’ She gripped my hand in between hers. ‘The baby didn’t make it.’ By this point it all became too much for her. Her resolve crumbled and her mask fell away. She hung her head so that I couldn’t see her face but I watched as her shoulders shook up and down.

I instantly felt sick. The hollow space, which had once been home to my unborn child, began to ache. I’d been thrown onto a violent rollercoaster that would not stop. I closed my eyes to try to escape the nausea but it was pointless. The entire bed began to shake with the tremor that travelled through my body. I don’t know where it came from or why. Something alien had hold of me and I needed to expel it.

Mum jumped up off of the bed and brought her hands up to her mouth. I watched as her lips formed the words ‘N-U-R-S-E!’ but I heard nothing. A woman in uniform appeared and began pressing buttons on the machine next to me. I felt my eyes go back into my head and then there was darkness.

 

***

 

When I came too, the first thing I saw was my mother sitting at the end of my bed reading a book. Her trendy red glasses were perched on the end of her strong nose. She’s in her mid-sixties and has steely eyes. Her hair is shoulder length now, peroxide blonde and wavy. It frames her narrow face. A charcoal-grey mohair jumper hung loosely from her slender frame and she was wearing tight black jeans. She is a slight woman who looks like she knows how to enjoy herself. She always wears chunky silver rings on her fingers and that day had deep brown painted nails

I didn’t speak. I just watched her for a while. During that time I had forgotten what I had been told moments before. The only thing in the world I thought about was my mother. I watched her silently as she thumbed through each page she read. She had no idea I was awake; her book had total control of her concentration. I was glad she had some way of losing herself. Looking at my beaten-up body, I wished I did too. And then I remembered. I remembered what my mother had told me about Tom and the baby.

My skull began to ache. For a second I entertained the idea that perhaps it was just a sick joke or a nightmare. I closed my tired green eyes and let out a long breath. Just then I felt Mum’s movement on the bed and my eyes sprung open. She smiled as she closed her book and removed her glasses. Lightly, she placed her hand on the sheet which covered my leg and gave a squeeze. She didn’t speak. Clearly she didn’t know what to say. But I wanted her to say something. I wanted her to tell me that everything would be fine and that nothing bad was going to happen, but the worst had already happened and there was nothing in the world either she or I could say to change it. We just looked at one another for what seemed like an eternity. For the first time, my mother looked old to me. It was as if the news of the accident and everything that came with it had aged her ten years.

My mind felt heavy with medication. All I wanted to do was sleep again. I felt like I’d done ten rounds with Mike Tyson. Suddenly the world felt like a very unfair place. I tried not to think about Tom. I couldn’t deal with it. It was too raw. It made no sense. I hadn’t had a chance to say goodbye. What had my last words been to him? What were we talking about before the crash?

And then I remembered the crow; its black eyes staring into me. In that moment I knew it was the crow that caused the accident. I couldn’t explain how it did it but I knew it was responsible. And it had been deliberate. The crow had taken my life away from me but left my body behind.

My mother cleared her throat and asked if I was hungry. I shook my head. What was the point in eating? I wanted to die, to be with Tom and our child.

‘Was it a boy or a girl?’ I asked urgently.

‘What are you talking about, darling?’

‘My baby. Was it a boy or a girl? I want to know.’

‘I…’ The confusion swept across her face. ‘I-I don’t know darling, but I can find out for you.’

The words were helpless and hung in the air along with the smell of the yellow lilies. It seemed morbidly appropriate that they were Mum’s favourite flower.

‘Yes, please.’

My mother patted my leg and got up off of the bed. Before leaving the room she turned,

‘Would you like me to get you a magazine from the shop or something?’

‘Quite frankly I don’t give a fuck what William, Kate and George are doing in their happy bubble. Thanks anyway.’

‘Sorry.’ My mother blushed and looked embarrassed.

‘No Mum, I’m sorry. I just don’t fancy reading at the moment. I can’t take in any more words. I have enough going round my head at the moment.’

‘I know, darling, I know.’ And she slipped out of the room.

I lay static, staring at the card my mother had brought. It featured a large bunch of watercolour flowers lying on a sun-drenched table. It was a warm scene but I felt cold. I only had a sheet over my body and outside the grey October wind clattered the world. I remembered it had been windy on the day of the accident. I wondered how long I had been in hospital. My head ached as I tried to search my memory for answers. Why had we crashed? I couldn’t remember. It seemed so unkind of my brain to withhold this information. I had nothing left. My husband and my child had both been taken from me and I needed answers.

Continued….

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CARRION

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Carrion by Betsy Reavley

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CARRION

by Betsy Reavley

CARRION: a psychological thriller you won
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“Carrion is a dark, edgy read”
“Perfect for fans of Stephen King”
“Fast paced… kept me on my toes”

After surviving a fatal accident Monica is left wondering what happened to her life.Why did the car crash and why is she being haunted by a crow?Unable to remember the events that led to that fateful day and plagued by frightening visions Monica is determined to get some answers.But sometimes the truth is best left buried.From the bestselling psychological thriller writer comes Betsy Reavley’s chilling second novel.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

When I looked into those eyes I knew nothing would be the same again. The blackness from within the stare was spellbinding. It was an echo of something long forgotten, something dangerous and pure. It spoke of horrors beyond my wildest nightmare and I doubted the fabric of my existence.

But I told myself I was being stupid. It was just a bird, a harmless bird. Then I came back. I looked past the shattered windscreen and the spatters of blood and brains that decorated the world. All I saw was the crow. He sat on the wire, watching. Perfectly still, like our car.

The smell of petrol mixed with burnt rubber mingled with the stench of fear and caught in my throat. I stopped looking at the bird and remembered where I was. I could feel shards of glass sticking into my face. The seatbelt was tight around my torso, making it hard to breath. My neck ached. I looked down at my trembling hands and felt the warm blood drip off the end of my nose.

I looked to my right. It was like I wasn’t there. This was not happening. I watched myself examine reality with a detached calm. I could not see the face. The body was hunched, lifeless, over the steering wheel. A mass of bloody hair covered a smashed skull. I could see the inside of the head. It was pink and messy, like a child’s first attempt at decorating a cake. Until I could lift the head and see the face it would remain unreal.

My ears were ringing. Smoke poured from the collapsed bonnet. Above us stood the solid trunk of a tree. This was not where I was supposed to be. And then I felt a kick. I glanced down at my round belly and remembered the life growing inside me. A lump was pushing out of my pregnant bulge, a lump that had not been there when we left. The muscles were contracting around my belly. This is a mistake, I thought, staring around at the mess of crunched metal and glass and blood.

I willed myself to move but my legs were trapped, pinned down under the weight of the car bonnet, which had been crushed in on itself. I tried to wriggle free. I could not see my feet or ankles. I thought they were moving. I thought they were.

The car felt hot. The slimy fabric of the seatbelt cut into my neck. I needed to release it, and I fiddled with the button but it wouldn’t come out. It was stuck.

I looked over to the driver’s side again. The body hadn’t moved. Wake up, I thought. Come on, wake up. It looked bad. There hadn’t been any movement. I sat very still and watched for signs of life, the rise and fall of the chest. There was nothing. I felt frantic as I stared at the wrist, hoping to see a pulse. The flesh looked alive and warm but I could not bring myself to reach out and touch it.

My head was spinning. More smoke poured from the front of our silver car. Panic surged through my body with the speed of the crash. And then I remembered my mobile. I felt about for my bag. Where was it? Oh shit, it was trapped along with my legs. If I could have got my fingers through the contorted metal then maybe…

Then I felt those eyes on me again, piercing my soul with a deadly grimace. And I looked up to see it was closer. Standing only a few feet away. It sat on a branch of the tree we’d collided with. It was looking down at us. Emptiness surrounded everything. The world had decided to hide and all that was left was the blood, the crow and me.

 

 

CHAPTER 1

 

 

When I arrived at the hospital I thought I might be sick. I had known something was wrong. It was a feeling that I’d woken up with and had been unable to shake. Walking along the corridor towards the intensive care unit I focused on the echo of my footsteps. For a hospital it seemed very quiet. I passed a nurse in a blue uniform alongside a young man, her hand around his shoulder. He sobbed. I walked faster.

Pushing open the heavy swinging doors, I ignored the sign that told me to wash my hands. I didn’t have time for that now. My daughter was in there along with my grandchild, and I needed to get to them.

An elderly Nigerian nurse with grey hair around her temples stood up from behind a desk at smiled at me. I gave my name, Ingrid, and my daughter’s, Monica. The nurse stopped smiling. The matron nodded gravely and whisked me towards one of the closed doors. My stomach did a flip.

‘You’s can’t go in dares. Wet for dem dactars. Day will tell you’s what’s is happenin’. Sit yourself dawn and I’lls get you a nice hat cap of some din to help steady dem nerves.’

I did as she was told and perched down on a plastic chair by the door. I didn’t want tea. All I wanted was to be with my daughter. I fiddled with my keys, busying my hands. Glancing at a clock on the wall I saw that it was nearly five o’clock. Then I remembered I was meant to be at the hairdresser getting my roots done. I should not have been sitting outside a room waiting to hear the fate of my family.

The nurse turned and slid away to fetch me a drink as I sat in the eerie silence of the ward. All I could hear was the beeping from life support machines and it made me want to cry. I am meant to die first, I thought to myself. I hoped and pleaded I would never have to bury my child.

For the first time since I was a little girl, I prayed. As a young teenager I’d lost my faith, much to the disapproval of my pious parents. I closed my tired eyes and imagined my daughter recovering. Suddenly I felt old, as I looked down at my hands and noticed the ageing skin. They were not soft like Monica’s hands. Monica had lovely soft white skin and long delicate fingers. I wished I could hold my daughter’s hand in my own.

As I got up out of my seat deciding I would seek out a doctor and demand to be told what was happening, the doors into the ward swung open and I saw Mary and Richard approaching.

Richard was a short, portly man who was balding and always appeared to be frowning. He had deep lines around his eyes and on his forehead. From behind him appeared Mary, who looked ashen white. Her hazel eyes were sunk back into her skull and her dyed strawberry blonde hair looked dry and brittle. She was a bony woman with a large nose and plump mouth. I liked them both but we had nothing in common apart from the marriage of our children. We shared a friendly but formal relationship. I suspect I was too bohemian for them. Mary and Richard were nice enough, but square.

Suddenly I felt very guilty. I hadn’t given much thought to the wellbeing of Tom. The couple approached me, and Mary and I hugged. Mary began to cry while Richard walked over to the door and tried to peer through the frosted glass to see inside. It was hopeless.

‘Hello, Ingrid. What have they told you?’ Richard was brisk and to the point. No time for niceties.

‘Nothing as of yet. I’m waiting to see a doctor.’

I held tightly onto Mary’s skeletal hand. Mary’s eyes were pricked with tears and she couldn’t bring herself to speak. Her husband looked around furiously as though he was hoping to find a more satisfactory answer.

‘I’m sure they will all be all right. We would have heard if…’ My words trailed off as the kindly nurse reappeared holding a steaming polystyrene cup. ‘Richard Bowness, Tom’s father,’ he said, extending a hand formally as though it was a business meeting. The nurse, who wore a badge bearing the name Denise, handed the cup of beige liquid to me.

‘You’s need to come wit’ me,’ she addressed the couple, ‘Dis way, please.’

Mary turned and I saw the horror that filled her eyes. I gestured encouragingly and sat back down as my in-laws were led away down the corridor. I was alone again and could not shake the feeling in the pit of my stomach that something was seriously wrong. All I wanted was to be close to my daughter. With sudden urgency, I stood up and pushed open the door into my daughter’s room.

It was a small sterile space filled with machines and wires and tubes. The room smelt of disinfectant. I held my breath as I took a few tentative steps towards the large mechanical bed. The woman lying in front of me, purple and swollen, did not look like my daughter. Suddenly I felt giddy and reached out a hand to steady myself.

Monica was attached to various machines and had a large tube coming out of her mouth. Her face was covered in splintered cuts and there was a large gash over her left eyebrow that had been recently stitched. It looked sore and raw and I wanted to stroke it and sooth her pain away.

I inched closer and gently rested my hand on top of Monica’s. It felt small and warm. There was no response from my daughter. I hung my head and let out a long sigh. At times like this I wished my husband were still alive.

Jim had died nearly three years earlier. When playing tennis at his club, he had suffered a fatal and unexpected heart attack. Both Monica and I had been devastated. He was a wonderful father and a doting husband. I had gone to Addenbrooke’s hospital in Cambridge to identify his body. Now I was there in the Whittington Hospital in Archway, this time standing over the battered figure of my daughter. My stomach did a somersault.

I jumped as the door opened behind me. A young male doctor with trendy glasses glanced down at the notes that hung on a board at the end of Monica’s bed. A freckled nurse with a short boyish haircut and a number of stud earrings in her lobes stood inspecting the various monitors.

‘I’m her mother,’ I said, stepping out of the nurse’s way while she read long reels of paper decorated with indecipherable charts.

‘Ah, yes, Mrs?’

‘Whitman,’ I answered.

‘Mrs Whitman, you’ll be glad to hear the operation was a success.’

The doctor fiddled with a biro, repeatedly clicking the end.

‘Operation? What operation?’

From where I stood by the machines I could feel the nurse glaring at the doctor, who moved uncomfortably on the spot.

‘The hysterectomy.’ The young doctor looked grave. I looked down at my daughter. None of it made sense.

‘Hysterectomy? But she is pregnant…’

The words echoed around the room. The doctor looked down at his tan loafers and I noticed how tall he was. I could see that, although he was young, his mousy hair was thinning. He stopped playing with his pen and lifted his face to look at me.

‘What do you mean?’ I grew aware of the high pitch of my voice. ‘The baby … her baby … what about the baby?’ my words lost momentum.

‘I am very sorry.’ The words travelled through me like a bullet. Monica was only thirty-one years old. Her whole life should have been ahead of her.

The nurse in blue overalls approached and put her hand on my shoulder.

‘Can I get you a cup of tea?’

I sank into a grey chair and put my head in my hands.

‘No. No thank you. I don’t want any more tea.’

The nurse addressed the doctor, ‘Her stats look normal.’ He gave a small nod of satisfaction as she excused herself and left the room. I remained slumped in the chair and could feel the doctor’s eyes burning into the top of my head. Slowly he approached and pulled up an orange plastic chair close beside me.

‘Mrs Whitman, I am Dr Frampton, your daughter’s consultant.’ He had a soothing voice.

‘I suppose Tom gave you the go-ahead?’ I sounded defeated.

‘We had no choice. She lost the child in the crash. She was bleeding heavily. The operation saved her life. She should make a full recovery.’ The doctor paused. I could see he was struggling with something else he wished to say.

‘I’m afraid I have to inform you that your son-in-law passed away. His side of the car took the brunt of the impact. He was brought to us with severe head injuries. He suffered a fatal brain haemorrhage. There was nothing we could do. I am very sorry.’

I shook my head. This could not be happening. All the information that I needed to absorb swirled around my head. My daughter had lost everything: her husband, her child, her womb. As I looked over at the small skeletal figure that lay lifeless in the bed, my eyes filled with tears.

‘Oh, dear God, my baby.’ I squeezed my daughter’s hand tightly.

‘For the moment we are keeping her heavily sedated. As I say, she has lost a lot of blood and sustained some quite serious injuries. She has two cracked ribs, damage to her neck and has broken one of her legs. We have put pins in it and she will be able to walk without any problems but she’ll need weeks of bed rest. For the moment we are going to keep her here in intensive care but she should be moved to one of the other wards in the next twenty-four hours. If you would like to stay, we have a relatives’ room. Do you live nearby?’

‘No. No, I’ve come from Cambridge.’

Dr Frampton looked at my face. He looked at me as though I reminded him of a favourite teacher who had taught him at school.

The young doctor stood up and edged towards the door. My gaze was fixed on my daughter’s wounded face.

‘I have other patients to see.’ He was apologetic.

‘Yes, of course. Thank you.’

‘Denise, the ward matron, will be doing her rounds and can be found at the reception desk any time. I appreciate this must be a very difficult time for you but your daughter will be all right.’

He slipped away quietly, pulling the door closed behind him.

‘My poor darling. My poor, poor darling.’

I tucked my daughter’s white bedsheet up under her chin and felt a wave of exhaustion swell along with a gush of tears. The moment I received the news, I’d driven as fast as my ageing red Volvo would go. I had come home that afternoon to discover a number of messages from both Mary and the hospital on my answering machine. I cursed myself for not having a mobile. I’d been convinced that owning one was unnecessary and now I bitterly regretted it.

My fingers gently brushed the dark fringe off Monica’s brow, as I used to when she was tucked up in bed before I told my little girl I loved her and kissed her goodnight. Her pale forehead felt clammy to the touch. She looked much the same now as she had done as a child. I remembered her as a ten-year-old, in bed with flu. I was glad to be able to touch my daughter and thought of Tom. Poor Richard and Mary. I felt torn. Part of me wanted to stay with my daughter but I knew I should go and be with the grieving parents. I crossed my arms on the bed and rested my forehead. The sheets felt cool and smelt clean. I wanted to go to sleep and for it all to be just a bad dream.

The noise from the various machines whirled around my head. I felt sick and watched as my hands began to shake. How was I going to tell Monica that she had lost her baby and her husband? My brow furrowed with pain as I looked at my child.

‘Sleep now, my darling, sleep. I need to be with Richard and Mary. I will be back soon, I promise. I love you.’

I kissed my child’s fingers and touched the top of her head as I got up out of my seat. Before leaving the room I took a last look at my delicate girl lying in the hospital bed. Then I closed my eyes and quietly said to myself, ‘Dad is going to look after you, my angel. He will watch over you while I’m gone.’ Although I have no faith in religion I believe strongly in the spirit world. I left the room and made my way back towards where I had met Tom’s parents.

Returning to the waiting room, I looked around, not knowing where to go. A young Indian man was pushing a mop around the vinyl floor, listening to an MP3 player and bopping his head. I shifted in my boots and rubbed my heels together. What could I say when I saw them? What should I say? I remained there locked inside my own thoughts when I noticed that the hospital worker had stopped mopping and stood with his head cocked to one side, watching me.

‘Is you all right?’ the young man asked.

‘No, not really.’ I responded with more honesty than I intended. The tall slender man rubbed his forehead and looked at the floor.

‘I need to find a couple who are here. I saw them earlier. They’re not ill, they are relatives. Where might they be?’

‘All depends where de patient is, like.’ He rubbed the mop between the palms of his hands. I ruffled my blonde hair and tried to think.

‘I need to find them now. They aren’t here to see a patient. It’s their son. He’s dead. He died.’

My eyes began to fill with tears. It suddenly hit me that the death of my son-in-law would have a momentous effect on me too. I had only been thinking of Monica before and the emotional impact it would have on her. Now in the stark waiting room the sadness of it all hit me. Losing all control I crumpled to my knees, while the young man stood helplessly in front on me. I could feel his awkwardness but was unable to restrain myself. The floor felt hard and cold through my trousers. I realised it was still damp from mopping.

After a few moments the young man bent down.

‘Can I do some fink for you?’ He was kinder than his rough exterior appeared.

‘I … I …’ I blubbed. The man inched closer.

‘I can take you’s to the relatives’ room if you like.’

My shoulders shook but no sound came out. I felt like a fool. How dare I react like this? I still had my child, unlike Monica. Unlike Richard and Mary. That thought snapped me out of the misery.

‘Do you think that’s where they’ll be?’ I wiped my eyes with the sleeves from my jumper, smudging mascara down my cheeks. A small drip of snot hung from the end of my nose and I gave a quick deliberate sniff.

‘Well I can’t be sure but it’s worth a go.’

I nodded silently and got up off the floor and gestured with my hand for him to lead the way. He put his mop back in the bucket and pushed it against the cream-coloured wall. Then the man sunk his hands deep into his overall pockets and headed along a corridor I had not been down. He took long quick strides and I tottered along behind, struggling to keep up on my chunky high heels. The sound of us walking echoed around and bounced off walls that were decorated with various murals intended to inspire peace and tranquillity.

After working our way through a maze of corridors that all looked the same, we came upon a door marked ‘Relatives’ Room’. I felt lost, both physically and mentally. The cleaner who had been so kind took a step back and waited for me to enter. I stood still, holding my breath. I needed to be ready and wanted to be strong for them. A rush of cold ran over my body and I hugged myself.

‘Good luck.’ The young man with dark eyes stepped away and hurried off back in the direction from which we came. The solid door was all that stood between death and I. It was an unusual feeling. I pictured Mary inside and it pulled my heartstrings. I straightened myself and lifted my head up. Then, holding my breath, I slowly pushed open the laminate beech door. In doing so, I noticed my knuckles turn white.

 

 

 

CHAPTER 2

 

 

When I woke up, the first thing I noticed was how dry my throat felt. It took a few minutes before I realised I was in a hospital bed. Gradually my circumstances became clear. My leg was in plaster and my body in a brace. The needle from a drip was sticking into my right arm, secured by medical tape. A blue paper curtain was pulled around my bed. On a table next to me stood a get-well card, a potted azalea and a vase of yellow lilies. Mum had been here. I knew that much. Yellow lilies meant my mum had come.

I tried to swallow but found the pain too much. My throat felt like a cheese grater. The rest of my body felt numb. It was a strange sensation. I couldn’t really move, although if I had been able, I am not sure where I would have gone. I looked down at my static frame and wondered whether I was paralysed. And then I began to think. How had I got here?

It took a moment for my memory to order the events and begin to process my reality. I was in hospital. I felt battered and bruised. I was scared. I was alone. Panic started to set in when I realised I couldn’t remember how I had ended up there. And then the sudden memory flashed across me like a comet. Being in the car. The crash. And Tom.

I tried to move. I hadn’t believed I was capable of it at first but the thought of Tom, the sense of him, made me try. I wriggled in my cast. My leg swung about as though it belonged to a puppet. Claustrophobia set in out of nowhere and I tried to scratch the drip out of my arm.

Someone must have heard me struggle because it was at that point that a fresh-faced nurse arrived and efficiently pulled the curtain back.

‘Well, Hello!’ She spoke as if we knew each other. ‘We’ve been waiting for you to wake up, love.’

I hated that expression. How could she call me love? What did it even mean? All I wanted was answers. I didn’t require her patronising kindness.

‘Tom,’ I croaked. ‘Where is Tom?’

By now she had a hand on my shoulder and was forcefully guiding me back into a lying position. She had more strength than I expected. Her narrow face and dirty scraped back blonde hair gave the impression of someone weak and naïve. From a glance into her eyes I established I was wrong. She was a strong young woman in every sense. It had been a mistake to underestimate her.

‘You need to lie back. I am going to get the doctor. You’ve been in an accident. The doctor will be along to explain. Just lie back please.’ By then she had restrained me and I was helpless once again, a victim in a hospital bed.

Once she was satisfied that I was going to obey her, she stood back and straightened her uniform and then my bedsheets. Her glare held the authority of a true professional and I accepted I was powerless. I let my chin drop to my chest and gave a loud sigh of acceptance as she pulled back the curtain. It sounded like a zip being fastened and my eyes flashed open with surprise. Noises sounded strange, like they were one-dimensional. Perhaps it was the drugs they had me on.

As the short blonde nurse disappeared, I looked around the ward I was in. It was a large room with five other beds. Only three were occupied. The other patients were so different from one another. There was an old boy, who must have been in his eighties, who lay motionless staring into space on his bed. His body was skeletal and his skin was so thin and frail it was almost translucent.

On the bed opposite him was a young man with both arms in casts. He had a thick dark beard and long dark hair he wore in a ponytail. His face was round and chubby and his cheeks glowed pink. He was wearing an AC/DC T-shirt instead of hospital robes. As I glanced at him, he offered me a friendly smile. I didn’t feel like smiling back.

On the other side of him was a bed surrounded by people. I could just make out a woman in her fifties lying there. She was ghostlike, her skin was so pale. Her lips looked blue and her hair was colourless. I was sure she was dying.

I was snatched away from absorbing my surrounding when Mum appeared in the ward and rushed towards me, arms outstretched.

‘Oh, my darling girl!’ she whimpered. I surprised myself by smiling.

‘Mum.’ The word sounded good to my ears.

‘God damn bloody bad luck. I’ve been here for hours! I wanted to be here when you woke up but I needed to pee, and oh, it’s just typical.’

She parked her bony frame down on the bed and somehow managed to jolt it.

‘Mum…’ My voice was distant. She immediately reached for a jug of water and poured some into a small plastic tumbler.

‘Here, shhhh,’ she said, ‘drink, sweetheart,’ and held the cup to my lips.

Since my body was confined to the brace, it made drinking difficult. She did her best to help but most of the lukewarm water ended up dribbling down my chin. Still, it felt good.

‘Mum, Tom…’ I managed to say more clearly. ‘Where…?’ The words petered off. My mother couldn’t look at me. She silently put the cup back down on the bedside table and looked down at her feet. It seemed like an eternity before she spoke.

‘Monica, darling…’ Her words trembled and it seemed that time stood still. ‘The accident. Sweetheart, what do you remember?’

I clenched my fists and tried hard to get to grips with a memory that danced just beyond my reach.

‘We were driving along … the car.’

The pictures were jumbled up in my brain and the memory was a mess. Mum had hold of my hand. Her grip was firm. ‘Tom was taking us … we were going out…’

Mum’s eyes were wide and searching my face. Surely she was the one with the answers.

‘Yes, you were in the car…’ She let the statement hang unfinished in the air. And then like a tidal wave it hit me.

‘The crow! I remember. The blood … Tom. Oh fuck, Jesus, the crow!’

The vision came pouring back over me, like photographs from the past. I felt my body tense and my heart rate increase. I remembered those dark eyes staring into me, cold and unforgiving. My mother looked confused.

‘No Monica, calm down. The accident, darling … you were in an accident.’ Her words were restrained and calming. She brushed my brow and I felt like a child again. I sank back into the bed. Everything was muddy. ‘Shhh.’

Her mouth sung the sound and I noticed how busy her mouth was with teeth. ‘Shhh now.’ She repeated the words over and over until I had relaxed again. Her fingers brushed my hair again. I noticed that although she did have make-up on, her hair was unkempt. It was so unlike her.

‘Monica,’ she said gravely, looking me right in the eye, ‘I have some terrible news. It is not going to be easy for you to hear but I’d rather you heard it from me. It’s Tom.’ By then my heart was in my throat. ‘Darling, he’s gone. I’m so sorry. He’s gone.’ It took a while for the words to compute. My face must have given away my lack of belief. ‘Monica, sweetheart, I am so, so sorry.’ I looked around the room again. I thought maybe I would find him there in one of the beds. ‘You were in a car accident. We don’t know exactly what happened but you crashed. The car hit a tree and Tom…’ She didn’t need to say anymore.

I think I stared blankly at my leg in its cast. That’s all I can remember from that moment – the sight of my broken, bandaged leg. I didn’t say anything. I couldn’t.

‘There’s more,’ my mother added, but I doubted there was anything else that could be worth mentioning.

‘The baby…’ Just those words were enough to snap me out of my daze. The baby. I tried to sit up, forgetting I was held down by the brace around my torso. My baby. I looked frantically at my stomach. I could find nothing.

‘My poor girl.’ She gripped my hand in between hers. ‘The baby didn’t make it.’ By this point it all became too much for her. Her resolve crumbled and her mask fell away. She hung her head so that I couldn’t see her face but I watched as her shoulders shook up and down.

I instantly felt sick. The hollow space, which had once been home to my unborn child, began to ache. I’d been thrown onto a violent rollercoaster that would not stop. I closed my eyes to try to escape the nausea but it was pointless. The entire bed began to shake with the tremor that travelled through my body. I don’t know where it came from or why. Something alien had hold of me and I needed to expel it.

Mum jumped up off of the bed and brought her hands up to her mouth. I watched as her lips formed the words ‘N-U-R-S-E!’ but I heard nothing. A woman in uniform appeared and began pressing buttons on the machine next to me. I felt my eyes go back into my head and then there was darkness.

 

***

 

When I came too, the first thing I saw was my mother sitting at the end of my bed reading a book. Her trendy red glasses were perched on the end of her strong nose. She’s in her mid-sixties and has steely eyes. Her hair is shoulder length now, peroxide blonde and wavy. It frames her narrow face. A charcoal-grey mohair jumper hung loosely from her slender frame and she was wearing tight black jeans. She is a slight woman who looks like she knows how to enjoy herself. She always wears chunky silver rings on her fingers and that day had deep brown painted nails

I didn’t speak. I just watched her for a while. During that time I had forgotten what I had been told moments before. The only thing in the world I thought about was my mother. I watched her silently as she thumbed through each page she read. She had no idea I was awake; her book had total control of her concentration. I was glad she had some way of losing herself. Looking at my beaten-up body, I wished I did too. And then I remembered. I remembered what my mother had told me about Tom and the baby.

My skull began to ache. For a second I entertained the idea that perhaps it was just a sick joke or a nightmare. I closed my tired green eyes and let out a long breath. Just then I felt Mum’s movement on the bed and my eyes sprung open. She smiled as she closed her book and removed her glasses. Lightly, she placed her hand on the sheet which covered my leg and gave a squeeze. She didn’t speak. Clearly she didn’t know what to say. But I wanted her to say something. I wanted her to tell me that everything would be fine and that nothing bad was going to happen, but the worst had already happened and there was nothing in the world either she or I could say to change it. We just looked at one another for what seemed like an eternity. For the first time, my mother looked old to me. It was as if the news of the accident and everything that came with it had aged her ten years.

My mind felt heavy with medication. All I wanted to do was sleep again. I felt like I’d done ten rounds with Mike Tyson. Suddenly the world felt like a very unfair place. I tried not to think about Tom. I couldn’t deal with it. It was too raw. It made no sense. I hadn’t had a chance to say goodbye. What had my last words been to him? What were we talking about before the crash?

And then I remembered the crow; its black eyes staring into me. In that moment I knew it was the crow that caused the accident. I couldn’t explain how it did it but I knew it was responsible. And it had been deliberate. The crow had taken my life away from me but left my body behind.

My mother cleared her throat and asked if I was hungry. I shook my head. What was the point in eating? I wanted to die, to be with Tom and our child.

‘Was it a boy or a girl?’ I asked urgently.

‘What are you talking about, darling?’

‘My baby. Was it a boy or a girl? I want to know.’

‘I…’ The confusion swept across her face. ‘I-I don’t know darling, but I can find out for you.’

The words were helpless and hung in the air along with the smell of the yellow lilies. It seemed morbidly appropriate that they were Mum’s favourite flower.

‘Yes, please.’

My mother patted my leg and got up off of the bed. Before leaving the room she turned,

‘Would you like me to get you a magazine from the shop or something?’

‘Quite frankly I don’t give a fuck what William, Kate and George are doing in their happy bubble. Thanks anyway.’

‘Sorry.’ My mother blushed and looked embarrassed.

‘No Mum, I’m sorry. I just don’t fancy reading at the moment. I can’t take in any more words. I have enough going round my head at the moment.’

‘I know, darling, I know.’ And she slipped out of the room.

I lay static, staring at the card my mother had brought. It featured a large bunch of watercolour flowers lying on a sun-drenched table. It was a warm scene but I felt cold. I only had a sheet over my body and outside the grey October wind clattered the world. I remembered it had been windy on the day of the accident. I wondered how long I had been in hospital. My head ached as I tried to search my memory for answers. Why had we crashed? I couldn’t remember. It seemed so unkind of my brain to withhold this information. I had nothing left. My husband and my child had both been taken from me and I needed answers.

Continued….

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CARRION

A psychological thriller you won’t be able to put down, perfect for fans of Stephen King!
CARRION by Betsy Reavley

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CARRION

by Betsy Reavley

CARRION: a psychological thriller you won
4.5 stars – 13 Reviews
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“Carrion is a dark, edgy read”
“Perfect for fans of Stephen King”
“Fast paced… kept me on my toes”

After surviving a fatal accident Monica is left wondering what happened to her life.Why did the car crash and why is she being haunted by a crow?Unable to remember the events that led to that fateful day and plagued by frightening visions Monica is determined to get some answers.

But sometimes the truth is best left buried.

From the bestselling psychological thriller writer comes Betsy Reavley’s chilling second novel.

5-star Amazon reviews:

Read this book. More than just your average thriller, this book delves into some dark places and addresses issues of mental health. The story flowed well and the characters were believable. Recommended.

Carrion is a dark, edgy read which deals with the aftermath of a fatal car accident on it’s lone survivor...”

“… deliciously dark, it delves deeply into the psychology of a troubled young woman. A must read.

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