Fern Britton - The Postcard - Escape to Cornwall with the perfect summer holiday read

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You will love this witty and warm novel from the Sunday Times best-selling author Fern Britton.Secrets. Sisters. The summer that changed everything . . .Life in the Cornish village of Pendruggan isn’t always picture perfect. Penny Leighton has never told anyone why she’s estranged from her mother and sister. For years she’s kept her family secrets locked away in her heart, but they’ve been quietly eating away at her. When an unwelcome visitor blows in, Penny is brought face to face with the past. And a postcard, tucked away in a long-hidden case, holds the truth that could change everything.Young Ella has come back to the place where she spent a happy childhood with her grandmother. Now she’s here to search for everything missing in her life. Taken under Penny’s broken wing for the summer, the safe haven of Pendruggan feels like the place for a fresh start. Soon, however, Ella starts to wonder if perhaps her real legacy doesn’t lie in the past at all.Pendruggan: A Cornish village with secrets at its heart

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Penny’s hand shook as she took a mouthful of the brandy and lovage. ‘She hated me.’

‘Hate is a very strong word. I’m sure she didn’t hate you,’ said Simon, reasonably.

‘You never met her though, did you?’

‘I would have liked to.’

‘She’d have hated you too.’

‘Well, we’ll never know.’ Simon had a fresh thought. ‘I still can’t understand why Suzie hasn’t phoned you.’

Penny drained her glass. ‘Why would she?’

‘She’s your sister when all is said and done.’

‘We burnt our bridges the last time we saw each other.’

‘Please tell me what happened.’

‘No.’

‘It might help. After all, it must be five years ago now.’

‘It doesn’t matter now my mother’s dead.’ Penny swallowed the remains of her drink and hugged Jenna tightly. ‘I don’t want to think about it. And it really, really doesn’t matter now.’

Simon sat down next to her. ‘Exactly, Penny, love, she can’t hurt you any more.’

When he and Penny had decided to get married, Penny had refused point-blank to invite them to the wedding.

‘But this is a chance to rebuild the relationship,’ Simon had told her. ‘To forgive.’

Penny had been adamant. ‘I don’t want them infecting my life again. I don’t want them to tell you things about me that will stop you loving me.’

‘You don’t know that – and anyway, I could never stop loving you.’

‘Believe me, they would try.’

Simon had attempted to bring the conversation up a handful of times since, but each time Penny had become tearful and finally he dropped the subject.

Penny took his hand and held it against her chest. ‘I’m so lucky to have you.’

‘And me you.’ He dropped a kiss on to the top of her head and she released him. ‘When is the funeral?’

She looked surprised. ‘Oh God! I forgot to ask.’

‘Will you go?’

‘I don’t want to.’

‘It may help. The ending resolved and all that stuff.’

Penny gave a small bark of laughter. ‘I don’t think so.’

Penny’s head dropped as she rubbed her face into Jenna’s soft hair. Simon could tell she was crying. ‘Darling Penny – was it really that bad?’

Penny nodded her head, not trusting herself to speak.

Simon persisted gently. ‘But you have a sister. Jenna has an aunt. Wouldn’t you like to have your family reunited again?’

Penny lifted her face to him. In that moment wishing she could tell him the truth but she was unable to confront the pain it caused her. ‘I have my family. You and Jenna and Helen – you are my family.’

4

ELLA

It was a Sunday and it was raining in Clapham. The branches of the cherry trees in Mandalay Road were bare, their leaves long ago dropped damply onto the windscreens of the cars parked on either side of the street. Rain bounced off the slate roofs like heavy artillery fire and swilled down drainpipes, startling flat-eared cats who skittered off to their catflaps. At intervals, passing cars shooshed through the deep puddles ploughing up sheets of water to drench already bedraggled pedestrians. It was a road of good neighbours and occasional street parties. The Queen’s Jubilee and the Royal Wedding were still fresh in the residents’ memories. Now, Christmas trees were already appearing in bay windows, their lights flashing and twinkling brightly.

No 47, Mandalay Road was identical in design to all the others in the terrace: an early Edwardian, two-up two-down with a small front garden. Its front door and window frames were painted in a delicate lilac, complementing the pale blues, pinks and yellows of its neighbours.

Inside, Ella was lolling on a sofa that was strewn with shawls to hide the decades of wear and tear. There was little spring left in its base but it had been Ella’s grandmother’s and was therefore treasured. She looked contentedly at the Christmas tree she had put up that afternoon.

A pot of tea, now stewed, and a half-empty mug sat on a tray by her side. On the television Julie Andrews was yodelling. All was well with the world.

She heard the creak of the floorboards above and the tread on the stairs before the door to the sitting room opened. Her brother came in, rubbing his stubbly chin and yawning.

‘What you watching?’ he said. ‘Shift yourself.’

She moved her legs and he sat in the space she’d created. She said, ‘What do you think of the tree?’

He looked at it. ‘Oh yeah. Nice.’

‘One of Granny’s baubles had broken.’

‘Inevitable after all these years.’

‘I know, but it upsets me. Each year a little more of our history gone.’

‘What’s made you so cheerful?’ he asked, prodding her with his elbow.

‘Christmas is a time for reflection,’ she said primly.

He grunted and watched as Julie Andrews and the von Trapp children worked the little puppets. ‘So, you hungry?’ he asked.

She nodded. ‘I’ve got fish fingers and waffles in the freezer.’

‘I fancy an Indian.’

‘Have we got enough money?’

‘Bollocks to that. I’ll put it on my credit card.’

‘Are you going to eat that bhaji?’ Henry reached with his fork to spear it but Ella got there first. ‘Mine! I’m starving.’

Henry mopped up the last of his tarka dahl with his peshwari naan and sat back, contentedly munching. ‘God, that was good.’

‘Don’t speak with your mouth full; you’re spitting desiccated coconut on the rug.’

He grinned at her. ‘Don’t care. Want a beer?’

‘We’ve only got one can left.’

‘Share?’

She nodded and he got up to get it from the fridge.

They were sitting on the threadbare Aubusson rug – another of Granny’s hand-me-downs – backs against the sofa, watching a rerun of The Mr Tibbs Mysteries on a satellite channel.

Henry reappeared with the last tin of beer and settled himself back down. ‘I rather fancy old Nancy,’ he said.

‘She’s very glam,’ agreed Ella. ‘But then Mr Tibbs is very handsome too.’

‘I read somewhere that in real life he’s a bit of a goer,’ Henry said.

‘Really? He looks like the perfect gentleman.’ They watched as Mr Tibbs climbed in through an open window at the suspect’s house. He was closely followed by his secretary and sleuthing sidekick, Nancy Trumpet, who revealed a lacy stocking top as she slid over the casement.

‘Phwoar!’ murmured Henry.

Ella tutted.

‘What?’ her brother said.

‘You know what.’

‘What do you expect me to do when I see a lacy stocking top and a glimpse of suspender? My generation are sold short on all that stuff. You girls and your tights and big pants and boring bras! I was born too late.’

Ella laughed. ‘So Jools has blown you out, has she?’

‘No.’

‘When did you last see her then?’

‘The other day.’

‘Where?’

‘Can’t remember.’

‘So what happened?’

‘She blew me out.’

‘Ha. Why?’

‘She said she liked me and all that, but …’ Henry pitched his voice higher and posher, ‘she couldn’t see a future for us and anyway, she wanted to be free to see other people.’

‘Like who?’

‘Justin.’

‘Justin no socks and loafers?’

‘Yeah.’

Ella was offended on her brother’s behalf.

‘Well, she’s welcome to that total prick.’

‘He is a prick, isn’t he?’

‘Total.’

They sat quietly thinking about Justin and Jools and watching the television screen as Mr Tibbs slipped his penknife into the lock of the desk drawer and revealed the stolen diary he’d been searching for. The camera cut to Nancy, a lock of hair falling alluringly over one eye and a button or two of her silk blouse undone more than was strictly necessary. Henry was rapt.

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