Praise for Me Before You
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1e26ddfa-8682-47f5-9fb7-43f8d306c0c8Moyes, Jojo - Me Before You
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she’s washing those for you every day!” Richard was vainly scooping up armfuls of his stuff as it landed on the grass. He was yelling something up at the window, but against the general noise and catcalls it was hard to make it out. Oddly, whereas his CD collection and video games had been quite popular, no one made a move on his dirty laundry. Crash. There was a brief hush as his stereo met the path. He looked up in disbelief. “You crazy bitch!” “You’re shagging that disease-ridden cross-eyed troll from the garage, and I’m the crazy bitch?” My mother turned to my father. “Would you like a cup of tea, Bernard? I think it’s turning a little chilly.” My dad didn’t take his eyes off next door. “That would be great, love. Thank you.” It was as my mother went indoors that I noticed the car. It was so unexpected that at first I didn’t recognize it—Mrs. Traynor’s Mercedes, navy blue, low-slung, and discreet. She pulled up, peering out at the scene on the pavement, and hesitated a moment before she climbed out. She stood, staring at the various houses, perhaps checking the numbers. And then she saw me. I slid out from the porch and was down the path before Dad could ask where I was going. Mrs. Traynor stood to the side of the crowd, gazing at the chaos like Marie Antoinette viewing a load of rioting peasants. “Domestic dispute,” I said. She looked away, as if almost embarrassed to have been caught looking. “I see.” “It’s a fairly constructive one by their standards. They’ve been going to marriage counseling.” Her elegant wool suit, pearls, and expensive hair were enough to mark her out on our street, among the sweatpants and cheap fabrics in bright, chain-store colors. She appeared rigid, worse than the morning she had come home to find me sleeping in Will’s room. I registered in some distant part of my mind that I was not going to miss Camilla Traynor. “I was wondering if you and I could have a little talk.” She had to lift her voice to be heard over the cheering. I glanced over at the crowd and then behind me at the house. I could not imagine bringing Mrs. Traynor into our front room, with its litter of toy trains, Granddad snoring mutely in front of the television, Mum spraying air freshener around to hide the smell of Dad’s socks, and Thomas popping by to murmur bugger at the new guest. “Um…it’s not a great time.” “Perhaps we could talk in my car? Look, just five minutes, Louisa. Surely you owe us that.” A couple of my neighbors glanced in my direction as I climbed into the car. I was lucky that the Grishams were the hot news of the evening, or I might have been the topic of conversation. On our street, if you climbed into an expensive car it meant you had either pulled a footballer or were being arrested by plainclothes police. The doors closed with an expensive, muted clunk and suddenly there was silence. The car smelled of leather, and there was nothing in it apart from me and Mrs. Traynor. No candy wrappers, mud, lost toys, or perfumed dangly things to disguise the smell of the carton of milk that had been dropped in there three months earlier. “I thought you and Will got on well.” She spoke as if addressing someone straight ahead of her. When I didn’t speak, she said, “Is there a problem with the money?” “No.” “Do you need a longer lunch break? I am conscious that it’s rather short. I could ask Nathan if he would—” “It’s not the hours. Or the money.” “Then—” “I don’t really want to—” “Look, you cannot hand in your notice with immediate effect and expect me not even to ask what on earth’s the matter.” I took a deep breath. “I overheard you. You and your daughter. Last night. And I don’t want to…I don’t want to be part of it.” “Ah.” We sat in silence. Mr. Grisham was now trying to bash his way in through the front door, and Mrs. Grisham was busy hurling anything she could locate through the window down onto his head. The choice of projectile missiles—loo roll, tampon boxes, toilet brush, shampoo bottles—suggested she was now in the bathroom. “Please, don’t leave,” Mrs. Traynor said, quietly. “Will is comfortable with you. More so than he’s been for some time. I…it would be very hard for us to replicate that with someone else.” “But you’re…you’re going to take him to that place where people commit suicide. Dignitas.” “No. I am going to do everything I can to ensure he doesn’t do that.” “Like what—praying?” Mrs. Traynor gave me what my mother would have termed an “old-fashioned” look. “You must know by now that if Will decides to make himself unreachable, there is little anybody can do about it.” “I worked it all out,” I said. “I’m basically there just to make sure he doesn’t cheat and do it before his six months are up. That’s it, isn’t it?” “No. That’s not it.” “Which is why you didn’t care about my qualifications.” “I thought you were bright and cheerful and different. You didn’t look like a nurse. You didn’t behave…like any of the others. I thought…I thought you might cheer him up. And you do—you do cheer him up, Louisa. Seeing him without that awful beard yesterday…you seem to be one of the few people who are able to get through to him.” “Don’t you think it would have been fair to mention that I was basically on suicide watch?” The sigh Camilla Traynor gave was the sound of someone forced to explain something politely to an imbecile. I wondered if she knew that everything she said made the other person feel like an idiot. I wondered if it was something she’d actually cultivated deliberately. I didn’t think I could ever manage to make someone feel inferior. “That might have been the case when we first met you…but I’m confident Will is going to stick to his word. He has promised me six months, and that’s what I’ll get. We need this time, Louisa. We need this time to give him the idea of there being some Download 2.9 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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