Lottie Phillips

Sunshine at Daisy’s Guesthouse: A heartwarming summer romance to escape with in 2018!


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often tried to recall when her mother had become quite so bitter; she reckoned it must have been after her father died. He had a heart attack one day, out on the farm, and that was it. So sudden. He had been fine that morning eating his two rashers of bacon and two poached eggs with a wedge of buttered toast. In fact, she often thought guiltily, how at aged sixteen as she was becoming highly aware of her body she had ribbed her father over his diet and how, if he wasn’t careful, it could be the end of him. Then, one morning, the man she adored with his laughter lines and rough, calloused hands just dropped down dead.

      Daisy and her mother were both widows, only in Daisy’s case, her husband died over the course of a few years. She had never been able to figure out which way out was best. Maybe it didn’t matter; both left gaping holes in lives.

      She realised her mother was still stood in the hall and so she herself had to move towards the kitchen, otherwise they might be there all day.

      ‘I’ve got soup I made a few days ago, your favourite? Tomato. And some bread I put in the bread-maker this morning. Does that sound OK?’ Daisy looked at her mother who was eyeing up the antique French kitchen dresser and the granite work surfaces. She didn’t even need to ask what she was thinking. Granite was for posh people, apparently. What was wrong with a bit of Formica?

      ‘Sounds fine,’ her mother eventually answered, sitting awkwardly on the edge of the carver chair.

      ‘Great, perfect,’ Daisy remarked through gritted teeth. As she set to heating up the soup and slicing the bread, she wondered how she was going to tell her mother about their hare-brained idea.

      She needn’t have worried.

      Her mother’s beady eyes had already clocked the catalogues and list on the table.

      ‘Tell me you’re not redecorating? You know, you might be quite well off but Hugh’s money isn’t going to last forever.’ She paused. ‘Life is expensive when you’re relying on yourself.’

      Daisy continued stirring the soup, turning ever so slightly from the range.

      ‘Actually—’ she forced a smile ‘—you won’t believe this…’ Her mother flinched as if Daisy were about to inflict pain upon her. She had spent her life relaying her plans and goals with the utmost of care, never expecting a warm reception. Especially after the death of her father, he had been her go-between. ‘So I’m opening a B&B with Tom, Lisa and James.’ She turned quickly back to the soup.

      The silence lay heavy and ominous.

      ‘Well, I suppose it would do you good. Ground you.’

      Daisy took that as a seal of her approval.

      ‘Actually, it was an idea Hugh and I had years ago but not here, not in this house.’

      ‘Where then?’

      Daisy poured the soup into the bowls and placed her finest bone china soup dish in front of her mother. Her mother’s arched brow told her that she would have been happier with Tesco’s own.

      ‘France.’ Daisy sat down, busied herself with cutting more bread needlessly.

      ‘Well, that really would have been a stupid idea. You in France? We all know how well French went for you at university.’

      Daisy pushed down the lump in her throat. ‘Actually, I had been relearning and I’m almost fluent,’ she lied, pushing the far too hot soup into her mouth. Anything to avoid talking about it any further.

      ‘I’m amazed,’ her mother started after taking a mouthful of soup, giving an almost imperceptible nod of approval, ‘that James would want to stay here. I mean James is obviously from a house like this so that bit doesn’t surprise me but to stay here with the likes of you and your friends. It doesn’t make sense.’

      Daisy lifted her chin defiantly. ‘What does that mean? “The likes of you”? I may not have been born into a house like this but it doesn’t mean I can’t live in one.’

      ‘Oh, Daisy, don’t be silly. I’ve told you all along you should have stayed with me on the farm. I needed your help and you insisted on going to university, which, frankly, was a total waste of time and money because then you married above your station. You just tried to make me look bad.’

      Daisy buttered her bread, pushing the knife this way and that with such force she thought she might break the knife. ‘You’ll never be any different. I don’t know what happened, Mum, but when Dad died you changed and you pushed me away.’ She pouted. ‘Anyway, maybe I can make a success of this. Imagine that. Imagine your own daughter actually running a successful business.’

      ‘Well, we’ll see about that.’ Her mother spooned the last of her soup into her mouth and stood. ‘Thank you, I think I’d better get back to the lambs that have arrived early.’

      ‘Oh, have they?’ Daisy’s prickly mood softened. She had adored lambing, watching new life enter the world. ‘Do you want me to come over? Help?’

      ‘No,’ her mother said stiffly. ‘You stay here and look up cushions. Much more important.’

      With that, her mother bustled from the kitchen, her wellies leaving a trail of mud to the front door, and got into her jeep, roaring off down the drive.

      Daisy continued to sit, almost numb from the visit, except for one thing. Her mother had left a burning desire somewhere deep in the pit of her stomach, a desire to make the business not only work but be a raving success.

       Chapter 5

      Daisy’s mood had entirely shifted in a twenty-four hour period. This time yesterday she had felt as if the plans for the B&B were at best, mad, at worst, catastrophic. But something had changed. She had sensed it even in the sunrise this morning. It had appeared brighter, more hopeful.

      She rose early and made everybody breakfast. Well, she said everybody: Tom and Lisa. James hadn’t returned last night as he had promised. He had texted her saying he had some unfinished business. Daisy felt momentarily panicky at this news. But why should she? He was his own man. Maybe it was because James had given her the letter, set this whole ball rolling, that she felt he needed to be there every step of the way. When her more rational self took over, she knew that of course he had unfinished business: he had just quit his job, he had an apartment in London to close up for a while, he had… a girlfriend? The thought jolted her. She shook off the self-righteous feeling of ownership and they had a quiet breakfast of omelettes, hangovers still very much present.

      However, over the next two weeks, and with each passing day, she felt fresh and raring to go. She had phoned Laura Ashley and other interior shops in Cirencester asking them to deliver. In fact, on the final morning of deliveries, she was just about to call up to Tom and Lisa with the bell in the kitchen, when she heard the beeping of a lorry reversing.

      Tom and Lisa ambled down the stairs, clearly woken rudely by the sound of deliveries and sat heavily at the table. Daisy looked at them with affection, it was as if they were still at university. The only giveaway was Tom’s peppered hair, Lisa’s accentuated laughter lines and in her case… well, just about everything had gone south. Her friends with children often talked about how it all went ‘pear-shaped’ after having children. She hadn’t needed sproglets for nature to take its course.

      Daisy had dealt with the various deliveries that had appeared in the last forty-eight hours and had used the barn at the back as a storage area. She imagined the neighbour, a very sullen man in his eighties who had never taken a liking to her or Hugh, would imagine she was having some sort of post-Hugh crisis, spending all his money wildly in an attempt to fill the void in her life.

      When she had signed on the last dotted line and the barn looked like a warehouse, she walked to the kitchen, her cheeks flushed with the excitement and anticipation, in order to find Tom and Lisa.

      ‘Gosh,