At First Sight by Hannah Sunderland (latest novels to read TXT) ๐
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- Author: Hannah Sunderland
Read book online ยซAt First Sight by Hannah Sunderland (latest novels to read TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Hannah Sunderland
It was fifteen minutes before he signed off with his usual โTa-ra, Babโ and then he was gone.
I sat back in my chair, seeing that all of the other calls were being handled at the moment, and I looked out of the window again. The light outside was turning from dusk to darkness and I caught sight of my reflection in the glass. My hair was no longer holding the delicate beachy wave, which Iโd attempted with great success this morning when Joel had left, after watching a YouTube tutorial on ten different uses for flat irons. It had now fallen both flat and frizzy, which I didnโt even think was possible. I grabbed one of the decade-old bobbles from beside my monitor and twisted my unruly locks into a topknot.
I saw Ned in the reflection of the window as he made his way over, coming back in from a meeting with Barry.
โIf youโre quite done admiring yourself, Barryโs got a favour to ask,โ he said when he reached his cubicle and leaned one elbow nonchalantly on the partition between our desks. Barry was the single least inspiring person Iโd ever encountered. Even the resigned timbre of his voice was enough to sap the enthusiasm from any conversation. And yet, he was such a good counsellor that heโd started as a volunteer and worked his way up to manager over the eight years heโd been here.
โAdmiring wouldnโt be the right word,โ I replied. โLoathing would be a good alternative, berating maybe.โ
โWhat do I keep telling you? You need to leave Joel behind. Heโs no good for you,โ he said with an air of I told you so about him.
โI know.โ I sighed. โNow what is it that Barry wants me to do?โ
โThat new volunteer, Caleb, heโs stuck in traffic and will be a tad late. Do you mind covering until he arrives?โ
โFine. Anything to take my mind off how much of a tit I am.โ I sent a smile his way.
He glanced around to check that no one was paying us any attention and whispered, โI got some mince on my lunch break. You up for spag bol and a marathon of Cold Case Files?โ
โSounds like perfection,โ I whispered back before turning to the screen and readjusting my headset. Ned eyeballed Beryl, the volunteer opposite me, and slid back into his cubicle as if heโd just successfully pulled off a covert op.
Ned and I had got along well ever since I started here five years ago. Heโd been here a little longer than me and was one of the others who were paid for their time here. We sat in the far back corner, a coveted spot that weโd earned from years of consistently moving along a desk when someone left until we finally got our chosen seats. He was in his forties, although I didnโt know where exactly as he was always very vague on the subject. He was shorter than average with a longer than average neck, which I am sure is trying to make up for the deficit in leg length. He has large brown eyes and his hair is short, dark and unremarkable. He is, in almost every way, very plain. But he possesses that thing that some people have, that glimmer of something that shines out and puts a glow over everything else. I know that a lot of the women in the office fancy him but heโs always just been good old platonic Ned to me.
Ned and his wife had separated several years ago and I think that sheโd messed him around for much longer than any decent woman should have. He lived alone in a huge Victorian detached house on one of the most sought-after suburban roads in town and I think that he was just as lonely as I was. When Iโd started at the helpline, Iโd been living in a shitty little flat above a kebab shop on a road that, letโs just say was in a less desirable postcode. Joel and I had moved in there together a year after leaving university and three weeks after moving in, there was a drive-by shooting at the end of the road, but luckily the only victim had been the driverโs side door of a Peugeot 206.
Joel and I lived crammed together in the tiny little hovel for years, before our relationship fell apart and he left to go back home and live with his parents. Iโd struggled to keep up the payments alone, not that Joel had contributed much towards rent when he lived there anyway, and the air inside the flat always smelled like three-day-old doner meat and mint yogurt, which after surprisingly little time of living there, had put me off kebabs for life.
Ned and I had quickly become good friends after Iโd had an emotional breakdown in the toilets at work, during a particularly bitchy phone call from my landlady, and Ned had heard me crying from the hallway. Heโd taken me out for a cheer-up Chinese and asked me if I wanted to move in with him as a lodger. It made sense โ he had that huge empty house and I hated my horrid little flat. He only wanted half the amount of rent that I was already paying and he said it would be nice to have someone around to watch true crime documentaries with in the evenings and that having someone else there would make him feel less guilty about putting the heating on.
I waited out the month in my flat and moved in with Ned within the fortnight, leaving the kebab-scented sofa behind.
Twenty minutes into my overtime and Caleb still hadnโt shown. Ned wasnโt done for another hour, so I was in no
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