Praise for Me Before You
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1e26ddfa-8682-47f5-9fb7-43f8d306c0c8Moyes, Jojo - Me Before You
He’s probably
not even there. We did a slow circuit of the castle, watching Thomas roll down the steep parts of the hill, feeding the ducks that by this stage in the season were so well stuffed they could barely be bothered to come over for mere bread. I watched my sister as we walked, seeing her brown back exposed by her halter- neck top, her stooped shoulders, and I realized that even if she didn’t know it yet, everything had changed for her. She wouldn’t stay here now, no matter what happened with Will Traynor. She had an air about her, a new air of knowledge, of things seen, places she had been. My sister finally had new horizons. “Oh,” I said, as we headed back toward the gates, “You got a letter. From the college, while you were away. Sorry—I opened it. I thought it must be for me.” “You opened it?” I had been hoping it was extra grant money. “You got an interview.” She blinked, as if receiving news from some long-distant past. “Yeah. And the big news is, it’s tomorrow,” I said. “So I thought maybe we should go over some possible questions tonight.” She shook her head. “I can’t go to an interview tomorrow.” “What else are you going to do?” “I can’t, Treen,” she said sorrowfully. “How am I supposed to think about anything at a time like this?” “Listen, Lou. They don’t give interviews out like bread for ducks, you idiot. This is a big deal. They know you’re a mature student, you’re applying at the wrong time of year, and they’re still going to see you. You can’t muck them around.” “I don’t care. I can’t think about it.” “But you—” “Just leave me alone, Treen. Okay? I can’t do it.” “Hey,” I said. I stepped in front of her so that she couldn’t keep walking. Thomas was talking to a pigeon, a few paces up ahead. “This is exactly the time you have to think about it. This is the time when, like it or not, you finally have to work out what you are going to do with the rest of your life.” We were blocking the path. Now the tourists had to separate to walk around us— they did so, heads down or eyeing with mild curiosity the arguing sisters. “I can’t.” “Well, tough. Because, in case you forgot, you have no job anymore. No Patrick to pick up the pieces. And if you miss this interview, then in two days’ time you are headed back down to the Job Center to decide whether you want to be a chicken processor or a lap dancer or wipe some other person’s bum for a living. And believe it or not, because you are now headed for thirty, that’s your life pretty well mapped out. And all of this—everything you’ve learned over the past six months—will have been a waste of time. All of it.” She stared at me, wearing that look of mute fury she wears when she knows I am right and she can’t say anything back. Thomas appeared beside us now and pulled at my hand. “Mum…you said bum.” My sister was still glaring at me. But I could see her thinking. I turned to my son. “No, sweetheart, I said bun. We’re going to go home for tea now— aren’t we, Lou?—and see if we can have some buns. And then, while Granny gives you a bath, I’m going to help Auntie Lou do her homework.” Mum looked after Thomas the next day, so I saw Lou off on the bus. I didn’t hold out a lot of hope for the interview, so I spent the day at the library worrying about my own future instead of hers. Over dinner that night, I glanced over at Lou. She was gazing at her plate, pushing the roast chicken around as if trying to disguise it. Uh-oh, I thought. “You not hungry, love?” said Mum, following the line of my gaze. “Not very,” she said. “It is very warm for chicken,” Mum conceded. “I just thought you needed perking up a bit.” “So…you going to tell us how you got on at this interview?” Dad’s fork stopped halfway to his mouth. “Oh, that.” She looked distracted, as if he had just dredged up something she did five years ago. “Yes, that.” She speared a tiny piece of chicken. “It was okay.” Dad glanced at me. I gave a tiny shrug. “Just okay? They must have given you some idea how you did.” “I got it.” “What?” She was still looking down at her plate. I stopped chewing. “They said I was exactly the kind of applicant they were looking for. I’ve got to do some kind of foundation course, which takes a year, and then I can convert it.” Dad sat back in his chair. “That’s fantastic news.” Mum reached over and patted her shoulder. “Oh, well done, love. That’s brilliant.” “Not really. I don’t think I can afford four years of study.” “Don’t you worry about that just now. Really. Look how well Treena’s managing. Hey”—he nudged her—“We’ll find a way. We always find a way, don’t we?” Dad beamed at us both. “I think everything’s turning around for us now, girls. I think this is going to be a good time for this family.” And then, out of nowhere, she burst into tears. Real tears. She cried like Thomas cries, wailing, all snot and tears and not caring who hears, her sobs breaking through the silence of the little room like a knife. Thomas stared at her, open-mouthed, so that I had to haul him onto my lap and distract him so that he didn’t get upset too. And while I fiddled with bits of potato and talking peas and made silly voices, she told them. She told them everything—about Will and the six-month contract and what had happened when they went to Mauritius. As she spoke, Mum’s hands went to her mouth. Granddad looked solemn. The chicken grew cold, the gravy congealing in its boat. Dad shook his head in disbelief. And then, as my sister detailed her flight home from the Indian Ocean, her voice dropping to a whisper as she spoke of her last words to Mrs. Traynor, he pushed his chair back and stood up. He walked slowly around the table and he took her in his arms, like he had when we were little. He stood there and held her really, really tightly to him. “Oh Jesus Christ, the poor fella. And poor you. Oh Jesus.” I’m not sure I ever saw Dad look so shocked. “What a bloody mess.” “You went through all this? Without saying anything? And all we got was a postcard about scuba diving?” My mother was incredulous. “We thought you were having the holiday of a lifetime.” “I wasn’t alone. Treena knew,” she said, looking at me. “Treena was great.” “I didn’t do anything,” I said, hugging Thomas. He had lost interest in the conversation now that Mum had put an open tin of Celebrations in front of him. “I was just an ear. You did the lot. You came up with all the ideas.” “And some ideas they turned out to be.” She leaned against Dad, sounding bereft. Dad tilted her chin so that she had to look at him. “But you did everything you could.” “And I failed.” “Who says you failed?” Dad stroked her hair back from her face. His expression was tender. “I’m just thinking of what I know about Will Traynor, what I know about men like him. And I’ll say one thing to you. I’m not sure anyone in the world was ever going to persuade that man once he’d set his mind to something. He’s who he is. You can’t make people change who they are.” “But his parents! They can’t let him kill himself,” said Mum. “What kind of people are they?” “They’re normal people, Mum. Mrs. Traynor just doesn’t know what else she can do.” “Well, not bloody taking him to this clinic would be a start.” Mum was angry. Two points of color had risen to her cheekbones. “I would fight for you two, for Thomas, until my dying breath.” “Even if he’d already tried to kill himself?” I said. “In really grim ways?” “He’s ill, Katrina. He’s depressed. People who are vulnerable should not be given the chance to do something that they’ll…” She trailed off in mute fury and dabbed at her eyes with a napkin. “That woman must be heartless. Download 2.9 Mb. 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