Rejection Runs Deep (The Canleigh Series, book 1: A chilling psychological family drama) by Carole Williams (uplifting novels TXT) ๐
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- Author: Carole Williams
Read book online ยซRejection Runs Deep (The Canleigh Series, book 1: A chilling psychological family drama) by Carole Williams (uplifting novels TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Carole Williams
He sank down wearily on the floor of the veranda of the run-down bar, which certainly wasnโt the luxury hotel Delia had been envisaging. She couldnโt imagine her mother here, helping him run this place. It was dire. No more than a large wooden shack with a roof that was rotting and the veranda didnโt look safe either. A few grubby looking white plastic chairs and tables rested on the uneven planks of wood between which grass and weeds grew. The only redeeming feature was the view. The building was set on a hill overlooking the beach. The sea was crystal clear, a sparkling turquoise in the dazzling sunshine and Delia watched fascinated as pelicans dived for fish. She turned and saw an iguana ambling through the bushes behind her, its skin virtually the same colour as the undergrowth. She had only ever seen one in a zoo when she was young and she watched it with fascination as it trundled out of view while she let the information Simon had just delivered sink in.
โIโm sorry. It must be a shock,โ he uttered, waving a hand at the entrance door. โHelp yourself to a drink if it helps โฆ and while youโre at it, bring me the brandy bottle. No need for a glass.โ
Numb from the news of her motherโs untimely demise, Delia gingerly entered the shack with its louvered doors, glad she was wearing flat flip-flops and not heels. The floor inside was nearly as bad as the roof and there was a nasty aroma of sweat mixed with urine and booze. The bar was in the far corner, dirty glasses everywhere. Lots more plastic tables and chairs dotted the room and there was an uneven dance floor in the centre with a discotheque unit in the opposite corner to the bar.
Grabbing a half empty bottle without a label but which looked and smelled like brandy Delia stumbled back out to the veranda, desperately wanting a drink too but not daring to risk using one of the brown stained glasses or putting her lips to the bottle. The small hotel she had booked into a couple of miles down the road had looked relatively clean when she had offloaded her luggage a couple of hours ago so she could have a drink later.
Parfitt was still on the floor, his back to the wall. He took the bottle and drank deeply. She watched him. Did he remember what she had done to his car all those years ago, she wondered.
โWhat on earth happened?โ she asked. โHow did Mother die? And how did you end up in this place? I thought you had a thriving business out here. Father gave her a generous divorce settlement so she should have been able to afford something better than this.โ She sniffed disdainfully as her eyes roamed over the decrepit dwelling and the neglected piece of land circling it.
Parfitt lifted his head and looked at her. She reminded him so much of Margaret. In fact, she was just a younger version of the woman who was supposed to have made his life an easy and comfortable ride. It had been fine at first but for the last five years it had been a bloody nightmare and he wished to God he had never met the damned woman. He would have been much better off staying in London. He badly wanted to go back but he doubted if he would be able to raise enough from the sale of his ramshackle home and business for the flight home. He knew his mother wouldnโt help him, as much as she might want to, thanks to her bloody husband, and he had lost contact with his friends. With no hope of going back, depression engulfed him when he thought of lovely cool, busy, exciting London with plenty of decent booze and no flaming mosquitoes. Thanks to that damned Duchess, he was trapped here now. He took another swig of the rough brandy.
He squinted in the strong sunshine and held a hand over his eyes as he looked up at Delia. โWe bought a somewhat popular hotel and bar with a damned good turnover not long after we arrived, over in Grenada, near St. Georges. It was good for a while. We made money, quite a bit of money in fact but as fast as it came, even faster it went. We partied, we had long holidays โฆ but not having a clue how to run such a place, we hired a manager. He robbed us blind for months, ran the business into the ground, and then cleared off with the takings. They eventually found him in St..Lucia, living it up, and now heโs languishing in a rotten Caribbean jail.โ
โBut if you had a good business โฆ couldnโt you have turned it round?โ
โNo. It was too late for that. We had spent your motherโs divorce settlement and were living on the rapidly diminishing proceeds of the hotel. We didnโt have
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