Here are the first three chapters of Beneath the Moon and the Stars by Amelia Thorne. This book is absolutely AMAZING!!! You MUST read it!
Prologue
Joy crouched down behind the bush, her heart hammering
against her chest. Someone had called the police and now, after two years, she
was finally going to get caught.
Her car was hidden in the dark trees behind her and
she glanced towards it, trying to decide whether to make a run for it. It was
quite far, maybe a hundred metres or more. She peered through the leaves at her
would-be captor. He was a lot older than she was and held a bit of weight on
his stomach. She was certain she could outrun him. But running would draw his
attention, as would the noise of the engine.
She couldn’t get caught, her life would be over.
The policeman walked slowly towards where she was and
she tried to make herself as small as possible. He was only a few metres away
now. If she was going to run, now was the time to do it.
Suddenly another policeman came round the edge of the
house with a dog; a great, snarling Alsatian.
‘Come on Phil, there’s nothing there,’ the dog handler
called. ‘There’s no sign of a break in, no damage, it was probably just kids
messing about. They’ll be long gone by now. Or shall I release Tiger; he’s
dying for a run around?’
Tiger? Joy swallowed as she felt cold sweat prickle
her neck.
‘Keep that savage beast on the lead, you know we don’t
see eye to eye,’ Phil called back, rubbing his bum as he obviously remembered
his last run in with the evil hound.
Tiger and his owner disappeared back round the house
and with a last look in her direction Phil turned away too.
Just then her stomach gurgled loudly and Phil whipped
back to face her, grabbing his baton like it was a loaded gun.
‘Colin!’ called Phil.
Her heart in her mouth, she leapt up and ran.
‘Oi! Police!’ yelled Phil. ‘Stay where you are.’
Joy leapt over a log and tore through the trees.
Behind her she heard Tiger bark and she pushed herself faster. The branches
caught her clothes and hair, like fingers dragging her back.
Black metal gleamed in the moonlight and she ran for
it. She threw her rucksack into the passenger seat as torchlight danced through
the trees towards her.
She quickly started the car, threw it into reverse and
seconds later she hit the road. Thanking her brother for teaching her the
darker side of how to drive, she slammed her foot on the brake and spun the
wheel, executing a perfect J-turn manoeuvre, before tearing off up the road.
The road stayed empty behind her.
She took the first turn off and her wheels screeched
as she took several other corners in quick succession. She turned the engine
off as she parked outside a quiet, unassuming row of cottages and threw herself
across the passenger seat.
A minute later she heard the sound of the police car
tearing along the main road. The siren faded into the distance and she knew she
was safe.
With a shaky hand, she pushed her hair from her face
and waited for her heart to stop pounding. That was close, too close.
Chapter One
‘Please let me lick it,’ Joy said.
‘Uh uh, no way, not in my car,’ Alex said. ‘I’m
driving as fast as I can. Bloody stupid country lanes, could you have picked
anywhere more remote than this to live?’
She smiled as they passed the village sign: “Bramble
Hill; Voted Britain’s Friendliest Village for the Last Nine Years.”
‘I love that it’s in the middle of nowhere. It’s so
cute and quiet. Fifty-six people live in this village Al, can you imagine.
Pretty soon I’ll know them all by name. There’ll be Mrs Twinkly Eyes who will
invite me in for a slice of homemade lemon drizzle cake whilst she regales me
with stories from her youth. Mr Silver Hair who will come round to offer advice
on my garden, and lovely mummies who will invite me round for coffee and we’ll
chat in the garden whilst the angelic little cherubs play quietly nearby. And
there’s a local pub, a proper local. Do you know how long I’ve wanted a proper
local? Somewhere the landlord knows your name, knows your usual tipple and has
it waiting for you on the bar as soon as you walk in. There’ll be cake sales
and village fairs and people will give me eggs and fresh vegetables in return
for my delicious apple pies. I can’t wait.’
She surreptitiously licked a tiny droplet of chocolate
ice cream off her hand and looked up at Alex who was smiling at her.
‘What?’
‘What’s it like in your head Joy, is everything
slightly rose-tinted? Your glass is permanently overflowing isn’t it? When it
rains you smile because it’s good for the garden. Joy by name, Joy by nature.’
She smiled at the turn of phrase he had used for years
as he pulled up outside the house.
He leaned over her looking out on the tiny whitewashed
cottage. ‘Are you sure about this place? It’s quite close to Blueberry Farm.’
She frowned slightly. ‘I know. That wasn’t my
intention. When I agreed to move here, I had no idea it was so close. Maybe
it’s fate though; maybe it’s time I came home.’
His face darkened at this. It was the same
disagreement they’d had for the last few years. He put his fingers to his
heart. ‘Home is in here, you know that, it’s not a much-revered bunch of bricks.
And you shouldn’t allow fate, tradition or sentiment to dictate where you live.
You just need to open your heart to new possibilities.’ He brushed a stray hair
from her face. ‘This is a fresh start for you; I hope you get everything you
want from this.’
‘I’ve had a lot of fresh starts and none of them
worked. But I have a good feeling about this place.’ She ignored the protest
that Alex was quickly forming and pressed on. ‘It’s not just its proximity to
Blueberry Farm. There’s something about here that feels like coming home.’ She
negotiated the door handle with her little finger and carefully clambered out,
holding the two ice creams precariously in her hands. ‘You’ll see. Moving here
will be the best thing that has ever happened to me.’
She ignored the look from Alex. Admittedly, she’d said
that for the previous eight places she had lived in over the last few years,
but this time she hoped it would be different. She turned back towards the
house and walked straight into someone.
‘Oh sorry.’ Joy leapt back and to her horror realised
that the man now had two large round chocolate stains on his gleaming, white
shirt –
almost as if two fake breasts had been painted on. An expensive shirt too, she
recognised the little logo on the breast pocket.
‘Oh god, I’m so sorry, I…’
He glared down at her and then down at his shirt in
shock. She balanced the ice creams in one hand and fished a tissue from her
pocket. But as she started to wipe away the ice cream, all she succeeded in
doing was mushing the chocolate stain into a larger area across his shirt. He
stood watching her as she desperately tried to get some off but made the stain
bigger every time she touched him. Now tissue bits were sticking themselves to
the shirt too. She abandoned the tissue, which was now hanging off him, and
used her hand instead. As she felt his heart thud against her fingers, he
suddenly caught her hand and moved it off him.
Joy’s mouth went dry. The man was huge, the largest
man she had ever seen in her life. He was almost like a bear in terms of size
and build, the hand that had pushed her own hand away was like a giant paw. His
hair was a shaggy, dirty blond mess that fell across his eyes. Slate grey eyes,
like thunder clouds.
In stark contrast to the angry bear before her, a
shaggy grey mongrel stood at his side, wagging his tail, his tongue falling out
of his mouth in what looked like an amused grin.
Emboldened by the dog’s smile, she tried one of her
own. ‘I really am very sorry. I’ll pay to have your shirt cleaned of course
and…’
Suddenly Alex was by her side, obviously sensing there
was trouble brewing.
‘Hey, there’s no harm done here – we’ll pay to
have your shirt cleaned or for a new shirt, and as it was obviously an accident
it would be a shame to start off on the wrong foot. This is Joy, your new
neighbour, and I’m Alex, her brother.’
Joy watched as the big man tore his glare away from
her and his eyes slid to Alex.
‘Brother?’ he asked, deliberately ignoring Alex’s
outstretched hand.
Alex nodded.
‘For Christ’s sake,’ he muttered as he stormed away.
‘Well you certainly know how to make a good first
impression,’ Alex said.
‘I’m sure I can win him round.’
‘I’m sure you can. You’re my favourite person in the
world and if he can’t see how fantastic you are, then he’s blind.’
Joy passed Alex his rather squished ice cream and
followed him into the house. She glanced back at the large man disappearing
down the road and tried to ignore the butterflies that were fluttering with
unease around her stomach.
*
The sun was setting over Bramble Hill as Joy drove
down towards the tiny village with the last load of her stuff. She had picked
it up from Alex’s house, nearly an hour’s drive from her new home, and waved
away offers for him to spend the first night with her.
Next to the village sign she’d just passed was another
that she hadn’t noticed before. It was weather beaten, decorated in tiny
delicate flowers and said; “Bramble Hill, Home of Finn Mackenzie.” She wondered
who that might be; the village founder perhaps, or some old scout leader who
had taken boys camping and taught them how to make fires since before she was
born. She was sure she would find out over the next few days.
The village looked beautiful basked in the rosy glow
of the sun as she drove down the hill towards the cluster of whitewashed
cottages. It was peaceful and quiet. There was a tiny duck pond, glinting pink
and gold as the little white ducks bobbed on the water, an old beamed pub,
called charmingly The Peacock’s Pride, a tiny shop, and that was it. Life here
would be as idyllic and quiet as the village itself.
She drew up outside her house and sighed. Home, sweet
home.
Opening her boot, she hefted her large chainsaw over
her shoulder, picked up a smaller one and grabbed a bag of some of her other
power tools.
‘Hey, would you like some help?’ came a voice from
behind her.
She turned to see a man hurrying towards her. It was
the smile she saw first – an
honest, genuine smile that spread to his denim blue eyes. He was quite broad in
the shoulder, and wearing very tight jeans. His dark hair was floppy over his
eyes, in a sexy, unruly, unkempt kind of way.
Although she had carried the large chainsaw many times
over the years and she was used to the weight, she wasn’t about to turn down an
offer of help from someone, it might appear rude. Besides, he was the first
person who had actually spoken to her since she had arrived.
‘Sure, that would be great.’ She carefully passed the
chainsaw into his waiting hands.
‘This isn’t the twelve tonnes of makeup and hair
products I was expecting,’ he said, following her into the house.
She smiled at the dig. ‘I’ve already unpacked that.’
‘Now if my detective skills haven’t let me down, you
must be Jo Carter.’
‘I’m afraid they have. Joy Cartier, my landlord is Joe
Carter.’
He was clearly thrown by this.
‘I know, weird isn’t it? Similar sounding names, but
no relation.’
‘This could be a problem,’ he mumbled, clearly more to
himself than to her. She looked at him waiting for clarification but his lovely
smile quickly returned and he changed the subject. ‘I’m Casey Fallowfield, my
brother Zach lives next door. This place looks great.’
They walked through the house and towards the shed.
‘Thanks, though I can’t take any of the credit. Joe did all the decorating. I’m
just renting from him. Just put that on the shelf up there.’
The shed was very small and Casey leaned up over her
to put the chainsaw on the shelf, revealing a flash of brown, toned belly. She
swallowed. He was standing so close and his fresh citrus smell made something
clench in her stomach.
He flashed her a grin as he let go of the chainsaw and
she blushed. He knew she had just been staring at his stomach.
‘So the chainsaws, what are they for?’
‘Cutting wood,’ she said.
‘This is a very expensive chainsaw though, and are
those your initials engraved onto the side?’
She brushed past him as she headed out the shed.
‘You’re not… The Dark Shadow are you?’ He grinned,
clearly not believing she was.
She laughed. ‘Isn’t he supposed to be some eight foot
tall alien, or a time traveller, or a demon from the underworld?’ Some of the
conspiracy theories surrounding The Dark Shadow were ridiculous.
‘I heard it was animals, trying to send us a message.
Or fairies, definitely fairies.’
‘I heard…’ she looked around to make sure no one was
listening, ‘that it was a Scotsman.’
Casey gasped theatrically. ‘Nooooo.’
‘A nine foot Scotsman with a twelve foot long red
beard, eyes of coal, arms of steel, teeth made from razor blades.’
‘Those Scotsmen are savage.’
‘Well I’m sure the Scottish are perfectly wonderful
people, it’s just this one that’s savage. Some say he’s actually a vampire and
he’s hundreds of years old. Can I offer you a beer?’
‘Sure, then you can tell me about the chainsaws.’
She smiled at him over her shoulder. ‘You’re nosy aren’t
you?’
‘People interest me – you interest me, Joy. Where have you come
from? Why did you come here? Was it to run away from something or towards
something? What do you do for a job? Though it must be something good to afford
the rent in this place… and what’s with the hulking great autographed chainsaw
in your shed?’
‘Wow those are a lot of questions.’ She passed him a
beer and came back to stand on the decking, watching the sun sink behind the
hills. ‘Maybe one day I’ll tell you the answers.’
‘Ah a woman of mystery. I suddenly like you a whole
heap more.’
She chinked her beer against his. ‘To friendship then,
and to sucking out all the gory details of each other’s personal lives.’
‘I like it, that’s what true friendship is all about;
being beholden to each other over our deepest darkest secrets.’
She smiled. ‘So what are yours?’
‘I’ll need more than just a sip of beer inside me to
tell you that.’
She turned back to the view.
Just then the large man, who she had literally bumped
into earlier, walked out into his garden. Her heart leapt. He wasn’t wearing a
top and his whole body seemed to shout muscles. He was so tall, nearly two feet
taller than her tiny five feet. He was filthy and sweaty and Joy had never been
so turned on in her entire life.
She watched him pick up a large tree, as easily as if
he was picking up a daffodil, and place it carefully into a large hole. He
patted the soil gently around it, as if the tree was made from china. More soil
was added until the tree was secure. He stood up and drank long and deep from a
bottle of water. As he moved, the sunlight caught a piercing in his nipple. Joy
tried to swallow but realised her throat was now parched. She took a long swig
of beer and suddenly remembered Casey standing next to her.
She quickly turned to him, blushing furiously at the
thought that he would have caught her gawping so avidly. To her surprise his
attention was well and truly caught by the beautiful man next door as well. His
eyes, as she imagined hers were right now, were dark with lust and desire.
Joy took another sip of beer, whilst she pondered
this, watching the man next door pick up his tools and take them to his shed.
As he turned back, he caught them watching, scowled first at her and then broke
into a huge grin when he saw Casey and waved at him before going back into his
own house.
Casey took a long sip of beer, which he had clearly
forgotten about whilst he had enjoyed the show, and then looked at Joy in what
he clearly hoped was a nonchalant way.
She arched an eyebrow at him and he sighed.
‘That… was Finn Mackenzie, my best friend and the man
I’ve been secretly in love with for the last fifteen years.’
Joy smiled at him in sympathy. Unrequited love was the
worst.
He chinked his beer against the side of hers, dryly.
‘Come inside and we can start on at least one of my dark and gruesome secrets.’
She followed him in, and sensing this unburdening was
going to need a bit more than cheap beer, she grabbed a bottle of wine from the
fridge and a huge slab of chocolate. She went through to the lounge where Casey
was already sitting on the sofa with his head in his hands.
‘You saw it didn’t you, the way I looked at him,’ he
said.
‘What, the same look of desire that I had on my face?
Yes, I saw it.’
Casey looked up with a sheepish smile. ‘He is
beautiful isn’t he?’
Joy shook her head with admiration and sat down next
to him. ‘He’s magnificent. If we’re sharing secrets, I might as well share mine
with you. When I saw that pierced nipple, I wanted nothing more than to run
over and lick it.’
Casey laughed, loudly. ‘Oh, I know. I went with him
when he got that done. It gave me a good excuse to touch it, you know, purely
out of curiosity.’
She grinned. ‘Of course.’
Darcy, her great, beloved Newfoundland, hauled herself
up from the cool tiled fireplace to finally greet the new visitor. Casey
stroked her absently, but his smile faltered as he thought. ‘Do you think he
saw how I was looking at him?’
‘I doubt it. Men are blind to these things. Besides,
he waved at you. All I got was a scowl.’
‘Yeah I clocked that. It’s your hair, he has a thing
about redheads, can’t stand them.’
Joy felt her mouth pop open. ‘That’s a bit… hairist.’
Casey smiled again. ‘To be fair, he’s anti all women
at the moment.’
‘Oh… so he’s gay as well?’
Casey laughed even louder at this. ‘Oh god, I wish.
That would be all my Christmases, birthdays, dreams and wishes come true in one
fell swoop. No Finn is straight. He just hates women after his ex-wife cheated
on him. He hasn’t been with anyone since. Though not from lack of offers from
the entire female population of Bramble Hill and the other local villages. They
were queuing up once Pippa left, but he hasn’t shown a flicker of interest. He
has been sullen to the point of rude and still they fancy their chances.’
‘Maybe his marriage broke up because he was gay.’
‘You’re just saying that to cheer me up. No he’s
definitely straight. But it’s not just women he has a problem with. He’s rude
to everyone; well he has been for the last eighteen months. So don’t take it
personally. He says very little, keeps himself to himself, never gets involved
with village life. Never gets involved with anyone. You’ll be no different.
Well except that you have red hair. He’ll hate you for that.’
Joy frowned.
‘Pippa was a redhead so now he has tarred all redheads
with the same brush,’ Casey explained as he finished his beer and opened the
wine.
‘And how do the villagers take to his rudeness?’
‘They love him.’ Casey obviously saw the look of
confusion on her face. ‘You know who he is right?’
She shook her head.
‘Finn Mackenzie, the actor?’
She shrugged, still none the wiser.
‘He was in that vampire trilogy years ago – In The
Darkness, The Taste of Blood and, my personal favourite, The Spoils of War. God,
that bit when he bathes naked in the moonlit lake… I think I ruined my video by
pausing it so often in the same place. I should have realised back then that I
was gay, when all my friends were drooling over the beautiful Scarlet Rome and
all I could see was Finn.’
He must have seen the blank look on her face.
‘You haven’t seen them, really? You must be the only
living woman not to. What exactly were you doing twenty years ago?’
‘I was nine, so…’ She trailed off as she realised
exactly what she was doing twenty years before.
‘You might have been a bit young to appreciate the
first film, but the second and the third? How could it have passed you by?’
She shrugged. ‘I guess it did.’
‘He was fourteen when he filmed the first one and
nineteen by the time the last one came out. Overnight he became this Hollywood
sensation, the press followed him around everywhere. He hated it. I don’t think
he had any idea what it would be like for him to be suddenly famous. After
Spoils was finished he withdrew from public life. He had so many offers to do
so many different projects, but he wasn’t interested at all. He hasn’t done
anything for the last fifteen years.’
She smiled at Casey’s enthusiasm for Finn. ‘I guess
it’s safe to say, you’re his biggest fan.’
‘I am yes, but we’ve been friends since we were both
knee high to a grasshopper. It wasn’t the fame thing that attracted me. Hell,
you’ve seen him – the
man’s a god.’
‘I take it you haven’t told him how you feel?’
‘Good Lord, no, definitely not. No one knows I’m gay.
You’re the first person I’ve told, and I wouldn’t have told you if you hadn’t
caught me drooling. I’m normally better at disguising it than that. Well I hope
I am.’
Joy frowned slightly. ‘You’ve been gay for fifteen
years and never told anyone?’
‘No. Not really. I mean yes, my inappropriate crush on
my best friend has lasted fifteen years but I guess I never really accepted I
was gay until recently. A year, maybe two.’
‘But why haven’t you told your parents? Would they be
awful about it?’
Casey poured two large glasses of wine, broke off a
huge chunk of chocolate and shoved it in his mouth. It took him a few moments
to answer whilst he chewed on it.
‘Honestly, I think they would have been ok with it. I
come from a very loving family and all they’ve ever wanted was for me and Zach
to be happy. But I think their friends would give them hell over it. They’re…
Mum’s incredibly wealthy and there’s always social gatherings – balls, seven
course dinners, big charity events that they used to attend with Lord and Lady
Chalsworth, the Earl of Menton Hall, and Sir Ronald Chase-Matthews.’ He
affected a posh voice as he reeled off his fellow socialites. ‘I’ve always
shied away from it myself, which I think disappointed them slightly. Zach is
more into the social networking, keeping up with the Joneses malarkey than I
am. As the oldest son, they would have loved nothing more than if I attended
these functions with some beautiful lady on my arm. If I were to turn up with a
beautiful man on my arm instead… Well, I don’t think their friends would be as
understanding.’
Joy broke off a chunk of chocolate and chewed on it,
thoughtfully. ‘So you’re never going to tell them?’
‘I suppose, if I found someone I loved, truly loved
and who loved me too, then perhaps I would be brave enough to say, “this is the
man that I’m going to spend the rest of my life with”. But it’s hard to find
that man when no one knows I’m actually gay.’
‘My brother’s gay,’ Joy said and then laughed at the
look on his face. ‘No, don’t worry. I wasn’t trying to set you up with him. I
hate that when people do that to me, “oh you’re single, he’s single, why don’t
the two of you get together?” No, you’re not his type at all. Alex prefers big
men, just as you do it seems. No I just meant maybe he could take you out to
some gay bars, give you a chance to meet some men that are in the same boat.’
‘He’s… openly gay?’
She nodded.
‘And how did your parents take to that?’
‘They didn’t. They were both killed in a car accident
when he was seventeen. I’m not sure if he had even figured it out by that
point. He came out to me a few years later.’
‘Oh god Joy, I’m so sorry, that’s terrible. Your
parents being killed obviously, not your brother being gay.’
She swallowed the lump in her throat that was always
there when she spoke about her parents. ‘It’s fine. It’s been twenty years.’
‘You were nine?’
She nodded again.
‘That’s what you were doing twenty years ago. I was
fawning over my best friend dressed in leather and you were mourning the loss
of your parents. I’m sorry. Who raised you after they’d died?’
‘Al did. He was three weeks away from been eighteen.
He lied about his age, told the authorities he was eighteen and as such was my
legal guardian. By the time they checked, he was eighteen.’
‘He raised you on his own?’
She smiled. ‘I know, looking back, I just took it for
granted that he was there. He had always been there, always would be there for
me. I didn’t think until I was eighteen myself what he should have been doing – that going
clubbing, getting drunk, going to parties should have been a way of life for
him. He wanted to go to university, train to be in the film industry. He put it
all on hold to look after me. He did a superb job too. He wasn’t just my
brother, he was my dad, my mum and my friend. Can you imagine, when all his
friends were graduating university, or coming back from travelling the world,
he was sitting down with me explaining to me about periods. He was amazing.’
‘Sounds like someone I’d like to meet.’
‘You should, just so you have at least one gay friend
to talk to about all this stuff. Maybe he can help you to come out to your
family. Or at least help you find someone other than Finn to set your sights
on.’
Just then there was a loud knock on the door.
Casey stretched back into the sofa. ‘Well I don’t
think we’ve done too badly in the sharing of our deepest, darkest secrets for
one night. Maybe we’ll stop there before I discover that the chainsaw is for
hacking up bodies.’
‘Damn it, now I’m going to have to kill you too.’ She
moved to answer the door and Darcy followed.
Joy opened it and the man standing on the doorstep was
so obviously Casey’s brother, Zach. He had the same washed denim eyes, the same
black floppy hair, but where Casey’s unkempt style had probably taken seconds
to achieve, Zach’s unruly “I don’t care about my hair” look had probably taken
hours of styling. He had the sexy designer stubble in comparison to Casey’s
clean shaven face. But feeling horribly disloyal to her new friend, she had to
admit that Zach had the edge when it came to sex appeal.
‘What have you done with my brother?’ asked Zach, his
mouth twitching into a smirk. ‘I know he’s in there with you. I saw him carry
that chainsaw into your house, and he hasn’t come out since. If you’ve chopped
him up into tiny pieces you’ll have me to answer to.’
She fixed him with a dark look. ‘Why don’t you come
down to the cellar and I’ll show you what I’ve done with him.’
‘Ha I’ve seen that film. I go down to the cellar with
you and the next thing I’m manacled to a table as you cut out my innards. Not a
chance. Unless it’s bondage you’re into, then I wouldn’t mind a bit of
manacling.’
She laughed. ‘I’m Joy, you must be Zach?’
‘Ah he mentioned me did he, just before you brutally
murdered him?’
Just then Casey appeared behind her. ‘Fret not little
brother, she tried to kill me, but I fought her off. Are you ready to go down
the pub?’
‘Yep, is the murderer coming with us?’
‘She sure is. We’ll introduce her to the friendly folk down The Pride.’
Joy couldn’t fail to miss the sarcastic way Casey had
said friendly.
‘Hey, they’re ok… just not keen on newcomers,’ Zach
said. ‘They’ll take a while to warm to you but I’m sure you’ll win them round.’
He moved closer to her, his eyes casting over her. She stroked Darcy, a useful
prop to focus on as she found herself embarrassed by the sheer hunger in his
eyes.
Casey moved to stand by her side, forcing Zach to move
back a bit. ‘Go and grab my wallet would you, I left it on the coffee table.’
Zach nodded and with a last dark look in her
direction, he scooted back to his house. Joy tried to calm her heart down
before she turned back to Casey. What was wrong with her? Three times her pulse
had quickened in the last half hour, each time with someone different. It had
clearly been too long since she’d been with a man.
Casey closed the door behind Zach and turned to her.
‘I like you Joy, so let me give you one piece of
advice. Don’t get involved with my brother. Women are like a game to him. He’ll
lavish you with attention and charm but once he’s had you, he’ll move onto the
next. If he had notches on his bedpost, he would’ve gone through several
bedposts by now. I shudder to think how many women he’s actually slept with.
Don’t be one of them. Now…’ he opened the door and offered her his arm, ‘… let
me escort you down The Pride.’
Zach was already waiting with his dark looks of
appreciation. Joy sighed inwardly; she really didn’t need to get involved with
a serial womaniser. And with her definitely not being Casey’s type, and Finn
hating the ground she walked on, it didn’t seem her dry patch would be ending
any time soon.
Chapter Two
The Pride was a
rustic, country pub, with low beamed ceilings and a great fireplace which Joy
could imagine sitting by in the winter months, chatting with her new friends.
Zach and Casey were funny and friendly and the fact that she wouldn’t be
getting involved with either of them made things very easy and comfortable
between them. She would just have to ignore the way her heart raced every time
Zach brushed against her or looked at her.
The unfriendliness of the locals didn’t seem to be a
problem either. Chloe, standing behind the bar and serving them, was as
overenthusiastic as a puppy. She was sweet and had a huge smile that lit up her
entire face.
‘So you’re friends with Zach?’ Chloe said, finally
diverting her attention from the man himself, as he chatted with her.
‘She’s my friend actually,’ Casey said and Joy was
thrown by the slight protective tone to his voice.
Zach obviously picked up on the tone as well and he
slid an arm round Joy’s waist, clearly trying to piss his brother off or make
him jealous. Little did he know. ‘He’s always been the same Joy, never wanted
to share his toys.’ He turned back to Chloe. ‘Joy’s just moved in next door, so
I’m just showing her the sights, making her feel welcome.’
Chloe let out a girly, high-pitched giggle, twisting
her hair round her finger.
Joy looked around at the scattering of customers. Was
it her imagination or did the pub suddenly go quieter when Zach announced that
she had moved in next door? They were bound to be curious about any newcomers
to their tiny village, but the room seemed colder all of a sudden. Although a
nearby pair of older men were seemingly focused on a game of chess, and three
old ladies – all
supping pints of dark coloured bitter and wearing thick woolly cardigans,
despite the heat of the night – were chatting quietly in a small booth. None of them
seemed to be interested in her. She must have imagined it.
Sitting in the corner, reading a paper, was Finn
Mackenzie. And there it was, the huge tidal wave of desire crashing over her
again. She could see why Casey was head over heels in love with him. The
permanent scowl did nothing to detract from his appearance.
She hadn’t made the best first impression on him. But
even if she wasn’t his type, they should at least be civil to each other for
the sake of neighbourly relations. She turned back to Chloe.
‘Can I get a pint of whatever Finn is drinking?’
Casey and Zach sucked in their breath.
‘Seriously, you really want to go there?’ Zach said.
‘This is not going to be pretty.’ Casey shook his head
in warning.
‘Look, I’m not chatting the man up. I just think we
started off on the wrong foot after I got ice cream all down him earlier. If
we’re going to live next to each other, it makes sense that we can at least be
on talking terms.’
Chloe put a pint of bitter on the bar. ‘Good luck.’
‘When he shoots you down, we’ll be over in the
corner.’ Zach gestured to the part of the pub that was the furthest away from
Finn.
A smile and a free pint went a long way with most men,
so she picked up the bitter and walked over to him.
‘Finn, hi,’ she said, gaining his attention. His eyes
cast over her for a second, before he returned his gaze to the paper again. She
was undeterred –
determined to get one civil word from him, she pressed on. ‘Look I know we
started badly, but I’m sure we can at least be polite when we see each other.
I’m Joy Cartier and…’
‘I don’t care,’ he said, without even looking up.
Annoyed, she stepped closer. ‘I’m not hitting on you
and I know I’m not your type but…’
He looked up, appraising her with what appeared to be
a look of disgust. ‘You’ve got that right; you are most definitely not my type.
Now I suggest you run along back to your friends.’
He turned back to the paper again and Joy felt her jaw
clenching at the dismissal. She slammed the bitter down on top of his
newspaper, so it splashed over the glass, soaking the article he was reading.
‘You’re welcome.’
With that she turned and stormed back to the warmer
side of the pub.
*
Finn watched her go. The girl could certainly flounce.
The black dress she was wearing seemed to flounce as well; it shook
dramatically around her bum and legs as she moved. Damn it. He didn’t like
short women. He was so big that kissing someone small was always a problem. And
redheads? No way, not again. He would just ignore the flash of heat that surged
through him when she had walked over.
Joy Cartier though, not Jo Carter as everyone thought.
Joy Cartier from Ascot. So she was rich. She probably had a pony called
Princess and a butler called James. Even the way she said Cartier screamed of
wealth, not Car-te-er but Car-te-yay. She drove a Range Rover too, big flashy
thing that had probably never seen a fleck of mud in its life. He didn’t like
snobs.
As she walked, the eyes of every single person in the
pub followed her. They weren’t friendly either, some glared at her with
mistrust, but most eyes were filled with pure venomous hatred.
He pushed away the sudden need to protect her. He
forced his eyes away from her and back to his paper. The ale stain was
spreading slowly across the article about The Dark Shadow that he had been
avidly reading. He tried to pick out the words through the watery mess. He
would not get involved.
*
Joy knew she had a big, stupid grin on her face. Apart
from the cretin in the corner, life in the tiny village had started just as she
had imagined it would. She already had two friends and was sitting in her
local, putting the world to rights. Zach was very funny and, as Casey said,
very charming and attentive. Finn was a git, but she wouldn’t let that spoil
her mood.
Casey got up to get another round in, coincidentally
at the same time that Finn went to the bar. As the appreciative gaze from Zach
returned, Joy excused herself to go to the toilet.
It was as she was washing her hands that Chloe came
into the toilet behind her. Joy turned round to speak to her, but she was
thrown by the look on her face. Gone was the giddy over exuberance and huge
smile – her
eyes were dark, filled with hate.
Chloe grabbed Joy by the scruff of the neck and threw
her against the wall. Pain seared through her as something stabbed into the
back of her shoulder. Joy reacted instinctively, without thought. Her
self-defence teacher had taught her well and in that moment when the mind was
still processing the attack, her body seemingly reacted by itself. She kneed
Chloe hard in the stomach and as she staggered back, Joy kicked her legs out
from under her and slammed her into the floor, pinning her down with her foot
to her chest.
Shit.
She hadn’t meant to do that. But as Chloe struggled
against her, she didn’t think it was safe to let her up any time soon.
‘What’s your problem?’ Joy said, concerned by the
amount of blood that was pouring down her arm. She looked round to see some
kind of nail or picture hook hanging out of the wall, which Chloe had
inadvertently thrown her against.
‘Zach’s mine,’ Chloe growled.
‘Seriously!! You’ve just attacked me over Zach? Honey,
I have absolutely no interest in Zach whatsoever. Casey has already warned me
off him, says he’s with a different woman every week. I have no desire to be
another notch on his bedpost. I’ve just moved next door to him, that’s all.’
‘He loves me. Those other women mean nothing to him.
He’s just sowing his seed. When he’s finished, he’ll come back to me. You’ll
see. He’s mine, so keep your filthy hands off him.’
Joy shook her head at the lack of comprehending on
Chloe’s part. ‘And you’re welcome to him.’
‘And Casey is with one of my friends, so you can’t
have him.’
‘He…? Erm… I’m not interested in Casey either.’ That was
a turn up for the books.
‘Or Finn…’
‘The man’s an arse, I’m definitely not interested in
him.’
All the fight seemed to go out of Chloe. ‘Zach does
love me.’
Still not sure whether to let her up, Joy kept her
foot on Chloe’s chest a moment longer. ‘I’m sure he does.’
The toilet door suddenly opened and another lady that
worked behind the bar came in. Joy presumed she was the pub landlady. She was a
large, short woman who would look right at home on a rugby field.
‘What the hell is going on here?’
Joy thought this might be an opportune moment to let
Chloe off the floor. ‘Just a difference of opinion, right Chloe? I think we’ve
sorted things out now.’
Chloe scrabbled up, clearly still winded by the knee
to the stomach, and shot Joy a filthy look. ‘She attacked me Pam, said I was to
stay away from Zach, she just threw me to the ground for no reason.’
Joy opened her mouth to protest, but stopped. The
landlady’s face was like an open book. Joy could tell that Pam knew Chloe was
lying, Pam clearly knew of Chloe’s inappropriate infatuation for a man who
didn’t return her feelings, and she had already seen the blood trickling down
Joy’s arm. But Pam had already decided whose side she was on, and it wasn’t the
side where the customer was always right.
‘How dare you come into my pub and attack my staff
like this. Get out now.’
‘But…’
Pam took a threatening step towards her and,
recognising that that was one fight she certainly didn’t want to have, Joy held
up her hands in a symbol of defeat and surrender. ‘I’m going.’
‘And don’t you dare show your face in this pub again.’
Joy scooted out, past Pam and into the pub. She
hurried over to Zach’s table and grabbed her jacket.
‘Hey, where you going? I’ve just bought you a drink.’
Casey said, as he sat back down.
‘I’ve got to go. Sorry, you boys stay here, enjoy your
evening. Don’t worry about me.’
‘Are you ok?’ Zach stood up, suddenly filled with
concern. ‘You’re bleeding. Here, let me walk you back.’
She edged to the door. ‘No, I’m fine. My house is only
a minute away. I’ll be fine. Stay here, please and finish your drinks.’
With concerned looks from both of them, she hurried
out the pub.
*
Finn glared at Joy as she ran out the pub. He felt
annoyed by the protective feelings she provoked in him.
Chloe was about as unhinged as Kathy Bates’s character
in Misery so when he had seen her stalking into the bathroom after Joy, he’d known
it was going to lead to some confrontation. He had to physically stop himself
from going into the bathroom after them. He was shocked to see Joy hurrying out
of the bathroom a few minutes later, bleeding and shaken, but stunned that Pam
had to physically help Chloe out of the bathroom seconds after Joy had left.
Little Joy Cartier had obviously given as good as she’d got. But he still had
this need to go after her to make sure she was ok.
He would not get involved. That would only lead down
one path and he wasn’t going to let that happen again.
His eyes flitted to Mrs Brannigan who was hurriedly
finishing her pint and heading out the door after Joy. Albert Cole, with a dark
look of venom in his eyes, met her at the door and with a mutual nod of
understanding between them they quickly left.
Finn was already on his feet as he slammed down the
pint that he knew would now go to waste. He cursed Joy for making him care and
stormed out of the pub after them.
*
Outside, Joy slipped off her shoes and leaving her
jacket on top of them, she walked down to the edge of the small pond. Moonlight
bathed the waters with silvery ribbons. The village was so quiet. There was not
a single sound to be heard. It was a beautiful place and she was so desperate
to finally find a place that she could call home. But now it seemed that
Bramble Hill would go the same way as the other places she had tried, though
she had never left because she had been involved in a fight before. She had
thought the tiny little village would be the answer. London and the other big
cities, where her neighbours had barely said two words to her for the entire
time she had lived there, certainly hadn’t been.
She hadn’t even been here a day and she had alienated
her neighbour by spilling ice cream down him, had a fight with a barmaid and
been banned from her local. It wasn’t the rose-tinted start to village life she
had hoped for. Suddenly she was pushed hard from behind and as she tumbled head
first into the inky cold water she heard a man speak.
‘Piss off back to Ascot you little bitch,’
But then she also heard a far off shout that sounded
like, ‘Oi, leave her alone.’
The coldness of the water was shocking against her hot
skin, reeds closed around her like fingers, dragging her down as she fought
against them to reach the surface. She gasped out as her head burst through the
water and she struggled against the reeds to get to the side. She grabbed a log
and pushed her hair out of her eyes, shivering against the cold.
Finn was standing on the edge of the pond, his
expression thunderous and she wondered if he was capable of any other
expression.
‘Oh very good, payback for me covering you with ice
cream was it? A bit childish, but yes revenge is certainly a dish best served
cold.’ She was trying to laugh it off, keep some dignity even though she looked
like a drowned rat, but she had been shocked by the maliciousness of the push.
She heaved herself out of the cold water and clambered up onto her knees, aware
of pain in her ankle and shin. The heat of the night did nothing to stop the
chill of the cold water on her skin.
‘It wasn’t me,’ he said.
She looked around; the village was quiet and deserted.
‘Well who then? The ghost of the pond perhaps. Oh was it Chloe?’
‘No she was still clutching her stomach when I left.
People here are not going to take kindly to you after what you did.’
‘To Chloe? She attacked me, I just defended myself –’
‘I’m not talking about that nut job, everyone round
here knows what’s she’s like – though beating her up certainly isn’t going to curry
favour with the locals. I’m talking about Mrs Kemblewick.’
She looked up at him in confusion. He was a lot bigger
than her, but from her position kneeling on the floor, the feeling of
intimidation that seemed to seep from him was certainly more prevalent. She
moved to get up, but quickly realised that the pain in her ankle was from a bad
twist or sprain. She was determined that he wouldn’t know he had hurt her as
well as soaking and embarrassing her, so she stayed where she was. She would
wait till he had gone before she hobbled home. She shivered again.
‘Who’s Mrs Kemblewick?’
‘The lady you kicked out so you could move in. Classy,
you don’t even know who was living there. Did Daddy’s solicitor handle
everything for you?’
Her head was swimming with cold, confusion and pain
and he clearly wasn’t going any time soon. She stood carefully, deliberately
trying not to put any weight on her ankle. Her dress clung to her and she
realised her bra had come undone at the back. To her absolute horror as she
stood, one of her breasts fell out the top of her dress.
To her surprise, as she quickly scooped her breast
back in, Finn’s coat was suddenly around her. It was huge, swamping her from
neck to toe, making her feel like a child in her dad’s clothes. It was warm and
smelt earthy.
She glared at him. ‘What the hell is wrong with you?
You push me in the pond, then hang around so you can see how humiliated I am,
give me some cryptic warning about some Mrs Kemblewick and then give me your
coat because you suddenly feel guilty?’
‘As I said, it wasn’t me and if you don’t want my coat
I’ll take it back.’
‘Fine.’ Joy shrugged out of it and passed it back to
him, then wobbled a bit when she inadvertently put weight on her twisted ankle.
Finn grabbed her arm to stop her falling back in.
‘You’re bleeding.’
Joy looked down at her shoulder. ‘I know, where Chloe
attacked me, silly cow, threw me against a picture hook.’
‘I meant your shin.’
Joy glanced down and sure enough her shin was pouring
with blood from a large gash just underneath her knee. Though the water was
probably making it look worse than it was.
‘Just… go away Finn. You don’t like me; you’ve made
that perfectly clear…’
Just then Casey came running down the banks towards
them, closely followed by Zach.
‘What happened?! Joy, are you ok?’ Casey shrugged out
of his jacket and wrapped it round her.
‘Someone pushed her in,’ Finn said.
‘Over Mrs Kemblewick?’ Casey said, rubbing her arms
trying to get her warm.
Finn nodded then turned to walk away but stopped when
he came face to face with Zach. If she thought the look of anger and hate that
he had given her was bad enough, it was nothing in comparison to the look he
gave Zach. It was pure venomous loathing. Zach stepped back under the weight of
it, and with another filthy look in his direction, Finn stormed off.
Zach watched him go, then quickly moved to her side.
‘Are you hurt?’ he said, his arm round her shoulders.
‘No, not really – my ankle is twisted, I’ve cut my shin, but my
pride is hurt more than anything.’
‘Here, lean on me, I’ll help you get back.’
Casey grabbed Joy’s shoes and jacket and with Zach
supporting her she hobbled the short distance back to her house. On the way,
she explained what had happened between her and Chloe and then with Finn and
the pond.
‘It wasn’t Finn,’ Casey said, as he opened her front
door for her. ‘I know he can be a moody sod, but there’s no way he would do
that.’
Zach nodded. ‘Me and Finn don’t get on, as you no
doubt saw, but I’d have to agree with Casey, Finn would never do something like
that.’
Joy sighed as Zach helped her onto the sofa.
‘Then who, and more importantly why?’
Zach moved into the kitchen, probably to get some ice
and Casey sat next to her.
‘My guess would be Albert Cole and Mrs Brannigan, they
left the pub straight after you. I only thought it odd when Finn got up and
went after them. He must have known something was wrong.’
Zach came back with a bowl of water and a towel. He
knelt at her feet and started to clean up her cut. There was something about
the way he ran the damp cloth up her leg that was incredibly intimate. His eyes
were on hers as he moved the cloth over her and swallowing the desire to
suddenly lean forward and kiss him, she tore her eyes from him and focused on
Casey instead.
‘Who’s Mrs Kemblewick?’
‘A very sweet old lady that lived here for twenty
years or more – so
say the gossips.’ Casey said. ‘It seems she was the lover of the man that owned
the house…’
‘Joe?’ That was a surprise. Her landlord was young,
very good looking and had struck her as a bit of a ladies’ man. Who knew those
ladies were of the elderly variety?
‘His father apparently, Eric Carter from Ascot. He
would turn up two or three times a week, keep her entertained, so to speak. He
died a few months ago, leaving the house to his child. Joe then gave Mrs
Kemblewick notice that if she wanted to stay there she would have to start
paying rent, seemingly paying rent in sexual favours for the last twenty years
wasn’t going to cut it with the recently bereaved offspring. Mrs Kemblewick,
having no income of her own, was forced into a retirement home. Something that
the residents of Bramble Hill were less than impressed with. She died last week
and I think the locals are baying for blood.’
Zach moved to sit on her other side, so he could clean
up her shoulder.
‘We all thought that it was Joe Carter that was moving
in. Or Jo as in Joanne. When you introduced yourself to me as Joy Cartier and
told me you were renting, I knew we were going to have some problems. Though I
didn’t expect this,’ Casey said.
‘Are you saying that my landlord Joe kicked out some
old lady from her home and I’m now being punished for it?’
‘Sums it up, yes.’ Casey eyed his brother suspiciously
over her shoulder.
Joy turned round to see what Zach was doing and
regretted it immediately when she nearly clashed mouths with him. She shuffled
away from him and he moved back as well.
‘Er… your cut to your shoulder is pretty deep and as
it was a nail, I’d recommend getting a tetanus jab.’
She narrowed her eyes at him. ‘And what the hell is this
thing with Chloe about?’
‘She is an absolute fruit loop. I slept with her,
three, four years ago, just one drunken night. She’s been like my stalker ever
since. I’ve made it clear that it was a one night only thing, that I’m not
interested, but she won’t listen. Sorry about that. I’ll talk to her.’
‘So… that’s your thing is it, sleeping with a
different woman each week, not worrying about the broken hearts you leave
behind?’
‘No.’
‘Yes,’ Casey said. ‘She summed you up pretty quickly.’
‘With a little help from you no doubt.’ Zach glared at
his brother. ‘I’m looking for love, Joy. It’s just very hard to find. And when
you know that the person you’re with is not the one you’re going to spend the
rest of your life with, there’s no point in continuing with it is there?’
His eyes were so honest and she suddenly felt like
she’d found a kindred spirit. That’s what she had felt about all the places she
had lived in over the last few years. She knew almost instantly that a place
wasn’t going to be her home, so there seemed little point in sticking it out.
She felt her frown soften slightly. ‘I suppose not.’
She smirked when she heard Casey let out a sigh of
exasperation behind her.
‘Listen both of you, get out. I need to think about
how I’m going to persuade the village I’m really very lovely.’
Zach stood and with the sexy smile fixed back on his
face, he moved towards the door. ‘I’m already persuaded.’
Casey rolled his eyes as he watched him go, then
turned back to her. ‘You ok?’
She nodded.
He leaned forward and kissed her on the forehead.
‘I’ll probably see you tomorrow.’
She smiled as she watched him go. Damn his sexual
preference.
*
Finn was lying in bed when he heard Joy come upstairs
and start to move about in her room. He switched the TV off and listened.
The four houses in Blackberry Row used to be two
larger houses and were converted into four smaller cottages, many years before.
He shared floorboards with Joy. Zach shared them with Mr and Mrs Butterworth.
The split had been done very successfully downstairs, so that you would never
know that it once had been one large house. But up in the smaller back bedroom,
they had either run out of time, money or patience and the dividing wall
between his and Joy’s houses was so thin that he could hear everything. This hadn’t
been a problem when Mrs Kemblewick lived there. Her bedroom, the one she shared
with the previous owner of the house, was the front one, so Finn didn’t get to
hear their sexual antics two or three times a week. But Joy, it seemed,
preferred the amazing view that the back bedroom gave, which was the very
reason he had chosen it to sleep in too.
The wall was so thin, or built so badly, that he could
even see a thin sliver of light underneath the skirting boards. He rolled over
to his side to watch the shadows move around the room as she did, finding it
oddly comforting to have her there.
He heard her on the phone, putting the person she was
calling on loud speaker as she no doubt got undressed.
‘Hello my lovely,’ said a man’s voice, which gave Finn
an unexpected surge of jealousy.
‘Hey Al,’
Alex. That was her brother.
‘How’s your first night going?’
Finn heard the hesitation in her voice. She clearly
wanted to tell Alex all about Chloe and the pond incident and the nasty man
next door, but she didn’t.
‘Fine.’
‘Joy, I know that tone, what’s happened? Is it that
moody sod that you spilt ice cream over, is he giving you grief?’
Little did Alex know that the moody sod next door was
the least of Joy’s worries.
‘No, well I don’t think I’m going to win him round
with my famous apple pie, but … everything’s fine. I’ve met some other people,
there’s Casey, he’s lovely. I may give him your number actually; you might be
able to advise him on a few things.’
‘Oh yes?’
‘Well I’ll let him tell you all about it, it wouldn’t
be fair for me to tell you. And I’ve met his brother Zach who lives the other
side of me.’
There was a pause from Alex and Finn could hear the
laughter in his voice when he spoke.
‘And Zach, is he lovely too?’
Joy laughed. ‘Yes he is, but by all accounts he’s a
complete tart. Casey warned me off him, so I’m staying well clear. We can just
be friends.’
‘Men and women can’t be friends.’
Finn nodded in agreement. He certainly didn’t want to
be friends with Joy, because then it would be friends who would hang out
together, friends that would kiss, friends that would… No it would be better
all round if he stayed as the moody sod next door.
‘Sure they can. You’ve got lots of women friends,’ Joy
said.
‘That’s because I’m gay. That’s like being an honorary
female. Besides they know they’re never going to get anywhere with me, so they
don’t have to worry about impressing me or making me jealous, they can just be
themselves. That’s the only time male/female friendships works. You can sort of
be friends with the husband of a female friend, that’s ok as long as the female
friend is laidback enough or comfortable enough in their relationship not to
get all jealous and psycho every time the two of you speak. Other than that,
being friends with a man doesn’t work, especially not when you’re both single
and both attracted to each other.’
‘Well I’m going to prove you wrong. Absolutely nothing
is going to happen between me and Zach.’
‘How much do you want to bet?’
‘A million pounds.’
‘Done.’
Finn sat up. Bloody hell. Was she that rich that she
could so easily bandy about that kind of money?
‘Anyway, I’m going to sleep now, that’s if I can shift
Darcy off the bed, she’s slept all afternoon, lazy sod.’
‘Joy, are you sure you’re ok?’
‘I’m fine, everything’s okay. Goodnight. I love you.’
‘Love you too, kid.’
There was a beep to indicate the call had finished and
then there was a heavy sigh.
‘Yeah, everything’s fine Al, the moody sod next door
hates me, the locals are going to run me out of the town with pitchforks and
burning torches, I was pushed in a pond, had a fight with a barmaid and I’m now
covered in so many cuts and bruises I look like I’ve had a run in with Mike
Tyson. Yeah everything is absolutely fine.’ She sighed again. ‘Shift your arse
Darcy, you big fatty.’
There was the sound of the bed creaking, the light
went out and then silence.
Finn lay back on his pillow. She’d not had the best
start to village life and he was part of the reason for that. He couldn’t help
feeling guilty. The villagers were going to make her life hell; he didn’t need
to add to it. In fact, he was probably the only one that could stop it. His
position in the village as local celebrity should be able to afford him some
weight in these matters. But then again, her moving out wouldn’t be such a bad
thing either. Then he could just go back to his uncomplicated life.
Suddenly there was the sound of a really loud fart.
He sat up in surprise. Surely not.
‘Darcy, I swear, if that stinks, I’m shoving a cork up
your bum.’
He smiled to himself. Maybe having her next door
wouldn’t be so bad after all. Just as long as they weren’t friends.
Chapter Three
Finn was standing at the bottom of his garden, staring
at the heather covered hills that swept up from his back fence. It was early
morning and the sun, if it had bothered to come out at all, was currently
hiding behind heavy rain clouds. He had never minded the rain. In fact he loved
it, it was always so peaceful. The only noise he could hear was the soft thud
of raindrops hitting his hood. That was until he heard a wailing behind him.
He turned quickly, wondering if someone had been hurt,
and immediately saw Joy dancing around in her bedroom window, seemingly singing
or rather shrieking her version of ‘It’s Raining Men’. She was wrapped only in
a towel, a tangle of red wet hair hanging down her back. She spun around and as
she did the towel fell away. His eyes drank her in. In a flash, his hands were
caressing her pale, milky skin, feeling the fire of her hair between his
fingers, pulling her warm body against his.
Unashamed, she carried on dancing. If it could be
called that. Every part of her seemed to be wiggling as if she was attached to
strings and controlled by a very drunk puppeteer. Her arms were punching up and
down, her hips going side to side and her knees knocking together. But none of
this detracted from the incredibly beautiful body. The innocent enthusiasm was
incredibly endearing. After the night before, he expected her to be moping
around, but it seemed nothing could keep Joy in a bad mood. He couldn’t help
but smile at her.
The music obviously changed, because the next thing
she was screaming along to ‘Lady Marmalade’ by All Saints. He didn’t need to be
fluent in French to know the lyrics meant ‘Do you want to sleep with me
tonight.’ Every teenage boy on his university trip to France made sure they
knew those words if nothing else. The terrible dancing had changed too. It was
still terrible but was now what could only be classed as provocative, as she
ground her hips round in slow circles.
He couldn’t take his eyes off her. What an absolute
creep he was. But no matter how much he despised himself, he could do nothing
to stop it.
Suddenly anger flooded through him. She knew he was
out here, that’s why she was dancing like this. How could she not see him? He
was wearing a bright yellow hoodie; it’d be pretty hard to miss. She was either
trying to turn him on, or she was just teasing him to wind him up.
Either option was not pleasing in his book.
He stormed back into the house, out onto the street
and hammered on her front door.
It took a few moments for her to answer, when she did
she was thankfully wrapped in a white robe. Her face was flushed with
happiness, which immediately vanished as soon as she saw him.
‘Let’s get one thing straight, I don’t like you, and I
certainly don’t fancy you. That little show you’ve just put on for my benefit
only made you look ridiculous.’
Her mouth fell open, her face going a bright shade of
red. She’d clearly had no idea he was out there. But he’d started now, so he
was damned sure he was going to finish.
‘I suggest if you want to dance, badly may I just
point out, that you put some bloody clothes on or draw the curtains. That way I
won’t see something I really don’t want to see.’
With that he marched back to his house.
But she was hot on his heels.
‘You arrogant, conceited, jumped up little shit. I was
not dancing for you. I didn’t even know you were there. And you know what, if I
want to dance naked in the privacy of my own home, I will. I suggest if you are
offended by my nudity, you look away, instead of perving on me like the
disgusting creep that you are.’
She flounced away.
He caught her arm and span her round.
‘Hey!’ came Zach’s voice, protectively, though he was
wise enough not to come any closer.
Finn stared down at Joy, his jaw clenched. Her eyes,
currently filled with hatred, were an intense olive green, tiny freckles
covered her nose and shoulders. Her lips…
He let her go, taking a step back before he closed the
gap between them and kissed her. What was wrong with him? She infuriated him;
he certainly didn’t like her in that way.
He flashed Zach an obligatory filthy look, looked back
to Joy, at her wet hair dripping down her neck, at the swell of her breast that
was peeping out the top of her robe, and then stormed back into his own house.
*
Joy watched him go, her heart pounding.
‘You ok?’ Zach stepped up to her a fraction too late.
She nodded, aware that her hands were shaking.
‘What was that about?’
‘Er…’ she tore her eyes away from Finn’s front door
and looked at Zach instead. ‘Just Finn making it very clear he doesn’t like
me.’
‘Oh that. Don’t take it personally, he doesn’t like
anyone.’
She noticed Zach’s eyes travelling down her body, his
pupils widening with lust. She looked down to see that her wet hair was making
the robe damp and see-through. Folding her arms across her chest she moved back
towards the house.
‘I’ll see you later.’
His face fell slightly as she closed the door.
How strange to be so desired and so hated within a
matter of seconds. Her heart was still pounding furiously. In part it was down
to anger at Finn’s arrogance and comments, but she knew mainly it was down to a
wave of desire and need that had crashed over her when he had grabbed her and
spun her around. If he had thrown her over his shoulder and carried her back to
his cave right then, she would have only protested out of principle.
Suddenly a disgusting smell hit her nose. She looked
around to find the source and saw a piece of paper, with what could only be dog
poo on it. Scrawled across the paper in large angry capital letters was the
word BITCH. It had clearly been posted through her letterbox that morning, but
because she had opened the door, she had dislodged half the poo and it had
mushed into the carpet and underneath the door.
Retribution for Mrs Kemblewick was swift indeed. She
stomped into the kitchen to get a bowl of hot soapy water to clean up the mess
and knew she would have to come up with a plan and quick.
*
Casey let himself through Finn’s back door and helped
himself to a bottle of beer from the fridge before moving through to the front
room. Finn was sprawled out on his sofa, reading a book and he looked at Casey
over the top of it when he walked in.
‘Could have got one for me while you’re raiding my
fridge,’ Finn said, marking his place in his book and throwing it onto the
coffee table. He stood up and stretched, showing the toned muscles in his
stomach for a brief second. If Casey didn’t know better, he’d think Finn was
deliberately torturing him.
Casey sat down, picking up the book as Finn went to
get a beer for himself.
‘Any good?’ he waved the book in the air as Finn
returned.
‘I have no idea,’ Finn sighed.
Casey smiled. ‘Yeah, I thought you might say that. Are
you doing ok?’
‘Not really.’
‘Joy’s incredibly beautiful.’
‘She’s not my type.’
‘Oh come on, are you saying that to convince me or
yourself?’
Finn sat down. ‘Me, obviously. If I say it enough, I
might start to believe it.’
Casey stroked the head of Billy, Finn’s straggly dog.
His heart went out to Finn. For him to have his heart broken twice by the same
woman must have been horrendous. Finn’s child would have been a year old now
and Casey wondered how often Finn must think about that.
‘Admittedly Joy has red hair like Pippa but that’s
where the similarities end. She’s lovely. You’d really like her if you gave her
a chance.’
Finn stared at Casey as if he’d just suggested he
should chop off his own head.
‘I can’t do a relationship again, I just can’t. Pippa
hurt me spectacularly and I never want to be hurt like that again.’
‘Mate, I’m not suggesting you marry her or even jump
into bed with her, I’m just saying be nice. Don’t treat her like scum just
because she has the same hair colour as your ex-wife. She’s had a bit of a
rough life…’ He hesitated in telling Finn about Joy’s parents, but there was a
vulnerability in Joy that he wanted to protect. ‘Her parents were killed when
she was a kid. I feel like she’s come here for a fresh start and now the
villagers are all giving her grief over this stupid Mrs Kemblewick fiasco – which has
nothing to do with her, by the way. Her landlord is Joe Carter, the man that
kicked Mrs Kemblewick out, she just has a similar name.’
‘You’re kidding?’
‘No, she has no idea who Mrs Kemblewick is. Look, she
needs a friend and if you can’t manage that, then at least be civil to her.’
Casey put the empty bottle of beer on the table. ‘I’m
going next door to see if she’s ok after last night. Anything you want me to
say to her?’
Finn shook his head as he stared at the floor. Casey
smiled sympathetically at him. Finn had gone through a rough time too, but
Casey was damned sure he wasn’t going to let Finn take his anger out on Joy just
because he was still messed up over his own heartbreak.
*
Finn watched Casey go and groaned. Joy’s parents were
dead. That made things so much worse. He had this innate need to protect, to
comfort. That was how he had met Pippa. She had driven her car into a ditch at
the side of the road and although she was unhurt, she was very shaken and
tearful when he had pulled over to see if he could help. Her tears, her
clinging to him as he held her, was what had done it. He had been lost, beyond
redemption from that point on.
Now he wanted nothing more than to wrap his arms round
Joy and hold her.
An orphan. She could only be about thirty and she had
lost both parents. He would be distraught if he lost his, he couldn’t even
begin to think what that would feel like. And she had moved here and the
welcome party was well and truly out.
He would have to try to be civil to her from now on.
He wouldn’t be friends with her, that would lead to trouble, but at least he
could be polite.
*
There was a knock on her door as Joy was knee deep in
tissue paper and pretty lilac notelets. The kitchen smelt delicious and Darcy
had moved downstairs in the hope of scrounging some morsels. She should have
taken poor Darcy for a walk ages ago, though she seemed happy to sleep on the
cool tiles of the kitchen floor at the moment.
She hurried to the door; Casey was standing there,
looking lovely and dishevelled.
‘Hi, how you feeling today?’
‘I’m good, come in, you can help me.’ She turned back
down towards the kitchen and Casey followed her.
She watched him look at the chaos and mess across the
breakfast table and then at her with amusement. She tried to look at it through
his eyes; the desperation of a mad woman.
‘What are you doing?’
‘These are my friendship cakes. I’ve made one for each
house in the village. I’m wrapping them in tissue paper and putting a note in
with each one explaining who I am and inviting them all to a housewarming
barbeque this Sunday. Here, read the note and tell me what you think.’
He picked up one of the lilac notelets and read it. It
explained that she was Joy Cartier and was renting from Joe Carter, that though
their names were similar she was not related to him or the previous owner. It
said she was very sorry for what had happened to Mrs Kemblewick, but it really
had nothing to do with her. It was brief, friendly but to the point, and had
taken her hours to construct those few little lines.
‘It’s fine,’ Casey said. ‘But I don’t know if it will
work. They seemed to be quite irate when I was in the village shop this
morning. I tried to explain to them who you were, but they practically shooed
me out of the shop, telling me it was village business and as such was none of
mine.’
She stopped in the middle of wrapping up another cake
in red tissue paper. ‘You don’t live here?’
‘No, I live in Ashton Woods, the next village.’
‘Oh.’ This bothered her more than it should. She
thought that she had at least two friends in the village, now it was down to
only one – and
Zach was only friends with her because he wanted to sleep with her. ‘Well, it’s
clear they’re never going to be my best friends but maybe I can persuade them
not to push me in the pond again or post dog poo through my letterbox.’
‘What?’ Casey’s eyes widened as he picked up one of
the cakes and artfully arranged the tissue paper around it in a way that she
could never achieve.
‘Found it this morning, with a note telling me I’m a
bitch.’
He shook his head. ‘Well then, you certainly can’t
make it any worse. I’ll give you a hand.’
They worked diligently between them for a while until
all the cakes were wrapped.
She sat down, her back aching a bit, and looked out
the window at the rain that hadn’t stopped all morning. The hills looked
dramatic, silhouetted against the grey sky.
‘It needs to stop raining by tonight, I really need to
go out to work,’ she said, then wished she hadn’t as that was bound to lead to
questions.
‘A lady of the night are you?’ Casey’s eyes gleamed
with excitement. ‘A prostitute? A spy?’
‘Yes to both. Spying doesn’t pay well, so I supplement
it with a bit of prostitution.’
‘Noble.’
‘I thought so. Oh that’s what I meant to ask you,’ she
quickly changed the subject. ‘When Chloe was threatening me to keep away from
Zach, she also said that I couldn’t have you because you were with one of her
friends.’
Casey picked up a crumb of cake from the baking tray. ‘Umm…
yes, Arielle.’
She waited for more details but clearly none were
forthcoming. ‘You’re dating a girl?’
‘Yeah, well not really dating, sort of…’
There was another knock on the door, interrupting what
Casey was clearly finding embarrassing to tell her. She presumed it was Finn or
Zach and found herself straightening her hair as she moved to answer it, then
cursed herself for doing it.
Opening the door, Joy came face to face with a
spaghetti thin blonde, her hair scraped back in a very severe looking French
roll. She was dressed in a very expensive, very short dress with matching
jacket and her face had that look of someone who had sucked a lemon. She was
pretty, Joy supposed, and would be even prettier without the excessive makeup
and angry pursed lips. She was holding an umbrella over her that matched the
colour of her dress suit exactly.
‘Is my fiancé in there with you?’
Joy felt like she’d just received a smack to the face
with that news, but quickly collected herself. Clearly this woman had come to
the wrong house.
‘Arielle, hi,’ came Casey’s voice behind her.
There was a silence as Joy processed this information
and Arielle cast her beady eye over her.
‘This is Joy, she’s just moved in next to Zach,’ Casey
said.
‘Evidently,’ said Arielle, icily.
‘Er…’ Casey fumbled for something to say. Gone was the
happy, relaxed Casey – he
had rapidly been replaced by someone who was clumsy, awkward and clearly
petrified of his fiancé. ‘Joy is my cousin. Remember me telling you about Uncle
Raymond, well this is his daughter.’
Arielle stared at Joy vacantly for a moment as well
she might. Joy was feeling equally confused. Finally Arielle nodded and
stretched out her hand for a delicate and formal handshake. ‘Of course, Cousin
Joy, it’s a pleasure to finally meet you. You’ll be coming to the wedding next
week?’
‘Yes, we invited her ages ago, she RSVP’d
straightaway. We were quite close growing up.’ Casey squeezed past Joy who
seemed to be frozen in the hallway.
Arielle cast her eyes over her again. ‘Of course, well
if I don’t see you before, we’ll see you then. Casey do come along, we must
meet with Jules to discuss the flowers. Apparently I can’t change the roses to
daffodils as they aren’t in season. You need to talk to her.’
Without waiting for an answer, Arielle marched down
the path to a little red convertible that was gleaming on the street. Casey
glanced at Joy as he followed.
‘I can explain, I promise,’ he said and hurried after
Arielle.
‘I can’t wait,’ Joy shouted after him.
But whether he heard or not, she didn’t know because
her voice was lost in the noise of the engine as the car roared up the road.
*
Joy delivered the cakes to each doorstep in the
village, though she hadn’t quite been brave enough to knock on the doors. Then
it was time to take Darcy for a walk.
She intended to trek along the hill range past Menton
Hall. She had a job to do there that night, if the rain stopped, and she wanted
to get an idea of the lay of the land.
That’s what she was telling herself, it wasn’t at all
because the hills held sentimental attachment to her.
When one of Alex’s friends had mentioned that his
cousin was doing up a place in the country with a view to renting, Joy had
taken it as a sign that it was time to move on from the busy town of Milton
Keynes. She had been a face in the crowd there and had no more than a nodding
acquaintance with her neighbours of three months.
It was only as she had driven round to see the house
that the village names started to sound familiar. She had rounded a corner and
was suddenly met with the striking hills that bordered the cluster of villages,
the same hills that she had trekked over every weekend with her dad, right up
until the weekend before he died.
Even before she saw the house, she knew she was going
to say yes. Maybe she could never go back home, but maybe walking these hills
with Darcy, as she had done many years before with her dad, would be all she
needed to feel at home.
Joy sighed as Darcy left her side and went galloping
up to greet Finn’s straggly dog. Seemingly, in the dog world, you just had to
shove your nose up the other dog’s bum and you were best friends for life. She
wondered what Finn’s reaction to that would be if she tried it. She hung back a
little, hoping Finn would try to avoid her, but he was obviously on his way home
now, so their paths had to cross if she intended taking Darcy on the walk she
had planned. Finn called his dog away from Darcy, but Billy, tongue hanging
out, stupid grin in place, was very interested in her. He had that demented
look about him when a dog smells a bitch in heat. Damn it. Darcy had been a bit
listless the day before, but Joy had put it down to the move. Still they
wouldn’t be here long enough for Billy to get lucky. Hopefully Finn would pass
without a single word.
He drew closer. He always looked so cool, even today
tramping over the rain sodden fields with his dog, he looked like he’d just
stepped out of a clothes commercial. He was wearing a simple baseball cap and a
waterproof hoodie, but he still looked sexy. And also, as he drew closer, she
saw he was wearing a sneer just for her. Her heart sank. Well attack was
sometimes the best form of defence.
She marched up to him. ‘Why is it you hate me so much?
It can’t possibly be about the ice cream, that would be unbelievably petty. And
as you don’t get involved with village matters it can’t be about Mrs Kemblewick
either, which by the way had nothing to do with me. So it’s either like Casey
said, you hate me because I have red hair, which would be very shallow and
small minded or it’s just that you’re a bastard for no other reason than you
like to make people’s lives a misery. So tell me, which is it?’
He glared at her but when there was clearly no answer
forthcoming, she turned away from him. ‘I’ll take that as the latter then.
Darcy, heel!’
She walked away from him, her hands clenched into
fists in her pockets, and refused to look back.
*
Damn it. Finn watched her go, his hand on Billy’s
collar, who seemed very keen to follow them. Just like his owner. She was
right, he was a bastard. He felt beyond guilty for shouting at her that morning
just for singing and dancing – and then as she walked towards him, he had been
appalled by how turned on he was after seeing Joy dressed in her waxed jacket
and cap. It was a waxed jacket and cap, how could it be sexy? The black dress
she had worn the day before was sexy. Not a waxed jacket and a pair of battered
walking boots. He was determined to be polite, regardless of these insane
feelings for her slamming through him. He was going to say hello, that was as
good a start as any but as his emotions clawed away inside him his face must
have been a picture as he battled with a sudden fear of redheads, a fear of
intimacy and a fear of what might happen if they got too close. And whatever
she had seen in his face had not been good, going on the defence before he
attacked her again.
So now not only did he have to be polite to a woman, a
redhead none the less, but he was going to have to work on his facial
expressions too. He practiced a smile, the feeling of his mouth turning upwards
felt alien to him. He looked down at Billy with the rictus grin stuck on his
face, Billy glanced up at him and whined with something akin to fear. Finn
sighed and headed for home.
*
The sun finally decided to make an appearance late
afternoon as Joy came back home from her walk.
Though would it ever be the place she could finally
call home? She would give Bramble Hill a chance, just like all the other places
she had tried over the years. Joe, her landlord, had said if she wanted to
stay, permanently, he would sell the place to her, but he was quite happy to
rent in the meantime. She could easily afford the asking price if she decided
to buy it; her job paid her ridiculously well. But as with the other places,
she rented first, in a “try before you buy” type way. So far, she’d not found
anywhere that she had wanted to buy.
As she drew close to her house, she noticed a
collection of flies and wasps around her front door. More dog poo? But then the
wasps wouldn’t be interested in that.
She moved closer and realised, with a crashing wave of
disappointment, that many, if not all, of her lovingly made friendship cakes
had been deposited on her doorstep. Some had seemingly been stamped on and some
had even been forcibly shoved through her letterbox. They either hadn’t
bothered to read the notes once they spotted it was from her, or hadn’t
believed the declaration that she’d had nothing to do with the ousting of Mrs
Kemblewick. It did seem slightly implausible that she was Joy Cartier and her
landlord was Joe Carter; she and Joe had laughed about it when they had first
met. It was much more believable that she was lying about who she was.
She couldn’t even get through the front door, there
were so many wasps. She had legal access to her back garden through Finn’s
garden. There was a side gate that allowed her to walk through his garden and
into hers. She hadn’t used it yet, though she had every right to do so. She
thought that it would be the polite thing to do to check with Finn before she
strolled across his land. But since the man was an arse, she certainly wasn’t
going to extend that courtesy to him.
She opened his back gate, which legally had to be kept
unlocked, and walked purposefully towards her own gate, biting her lip as she
hoped she could get past unnoticed. She would just walk across his garden as if
she had every right to do so, which of course she did. Five metres away, four,
three… and if he had noticed her he hadn’t come out and yelled at her yet.
Suddenly something in Finn’s downstairs window caught her eye, and despite her
best intentions to be in and out in mere seconds, she couldn’t help but look.
There was Finn, stark naked, drying his wet hair with
a towel.
If
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