Freya North

Home Truths


Скачать книгу

       Kate and Max and Merry Martha

       Sweet is the Voice of a Sister in the Season of Sorrow

       Coupling

       On the Phone

       Seeds Sown

       Seeds Not Sown

       Seeds in a Packet

       Bad Seed

       Stray Cat Blue

       A Fish Out of Water

       Al and the Girl from Purley

       Cat Out of the Bag

       The Ten o’Clock News

       Where Were You When You Heard that Django McCabe Had Cancer?

       Testing Time

       Time for Tests

       VT 05154

       Lester Falls

       Plastic Tubing

       Love at Long Distance

       No-Brainer

       Freedom Trail

       Red-Eye

       Return of the Natives

       Fen McCabe and Matt Holden

       Pip and Zac Holmes

       Cat and Ben York

       To the Bone

       Hard Facts and White Lies

       Sundae

       Moving On

       Christmas

       Keep Reading

       Acknowledgements

       About the Author

       Also by Freya North

       About the Publisher

      ‘How do you say goodbye to a mountain?’

      From her vantage point, Cat York looked across to the three Flatirons, to Bear Peak and Green Mountain. She gazed down the skirts of Flagstaff, patting the snow around her and settling herself in as though she was sitting on the mountain’s lap. ‘It’s like a giant, frozen wedding dress,’ she said. ‘It probably sounds daft, but for the last four years, I’ve privately thought of Flagstaff as my mountain.’

      ‘There’s a lot of folk round here who think that way,’ Stacey said. ‘You’re allowed to. That’s the beauty of living in Boulder.’

      The sun shot through, glancing off the crystal-cracked snow on the trees, the sharp, flat slabs of rust-coloured rock of the Flatirons soaring through all the dazzling white at their awkward angle.

      ‘When Ben and I first arrived and I was homesick and insecure, I’d walk to Chautauqua Meadow and just sit on my own. It felt like the mountains were a giant arm around my shoulders.’ Cat looked around her with nostalgic gratitude. ‘Then soon enough we met you lot, started hiking and biking the trails and suddenly the mountain showed me its other side. You could say it’s been my therapist’s couch and it’s been my playground. It’s now my most favourite place in the world.’

      Stacey looked at Cat, watched her friend cup her gloved hands over her nose and mouth in a futile bid to make her nose look less red and her lips not so blue. ‘This time next week, the only peaks I’ll be seeing are Victorian rooftops,’ Cat said, ‘grimy pigeons will replace bald eagles and there’ll just be puddles in place of Wonderland Lake. Next week will be a whole new year.’

      ‘Tell me about Clapham,’ Stacey asked, settling into their snow bunker.

      ‘Well,’ said Cat, ‘it’s a silent “h” for a start.’

      They laughed.

      ‘God,’ Cat groaned, leaning forward and knocking her head against her knees, ‘I’m still not sure we’re doing the right thing – but don’t tell Ben I said so. I can’t tell you about Clapham, I don’t think I’ve ever been.’ She paused and then continued a little plaintively. ‘God, Stacey, I have no job, my two closest friends don’t even live in the city any more and I’m moving to an opposite side of London to where I used to live, where my sisters still live.’

      ‘It’s exciting,’ Stacey said, ‘and if you don’t like it, you can always come back.’ She tore into a pack of Reese’s with her teeth, her chilled fingers unfit for the task. ‘And there’s some stuff that’s really to look forward to.’

      Placated and sustained by the pack of peanut butter, the comfort of chocolate, Cat agreed. ‘I’ve missed my family – by the sound of it, my middle sister Fen is having a tough time at the moment. And it’s going to be a big year for Django – he’ll be seventy-five which will no doubt warrant a celebration of prodigious proportions.’

      ‘I’d sure like to have met him,’ Stacey said and she laughed a little. ‘I remember when I first met you, I thought you were like, so exotic, because you came to Boulder with your English Rose looks and a history that Brontë couldn’t have made up. You with the mother who ran off with a cowboy, you who were raised by a crazy uncle called Django, you and your sisters brought up in the wilds of Wherever.’

      ‘Derbyshire’s not wild,’ Cat protested, ‘not our part. Though there are wallabies.’

      ‘What’s a wallaby?’

      ‘It’s like a mini kangaroo,’ said Cat. ‘They were kept as pets by the posh folk