The Girl in the Scrapbook by Carolyn Ruffles (reading women TXT) ๐
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- Author: Carolyn Ruffles
Read book online ยซThe Girl in the Scrapbook by Carolyn Ruffles (reading women TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Carolyn Ruffles
Susan turned the pages with trembling fingers. โOh,โ she sighed. โOh, my word, she looks just like Iris. Wait a second. I have some pictures too.โ She crossed the kitchen and picked up a pile of old Truprint envelopes. โI keep meaning to put these in an album but Iโve never got around to it.โ
She handed the pile to Jennifer and she and Emily pored over them while Susan looked at the album.
โThereโs certainly an unmistakeable resemblance between them and me too,โ Susan murmured. โLook at this.โ She pointed to a photo of a teenage Elizabeth grimacing at the camera. โI have a picture of me at a similar age wearing just that look! Oh, I wish I could have known her! Tell me,โ she turned to Jennifer, โWhat was she like?โ
Jennifer smiled warmly. โShe was a lovely mum,โ she said simply. โShe used to stick up for me when my dad was angry and then she could be quite feisty. Her parents were incredibly strict and she was quite rebellious as a teenager, that was how she ended up marrying my dad and having me when she was just sixteen. Sadly, though, my dad was quite overbearing and never really trusted her. She was very beautiful and always drew menโs eyes when she walked into a room. They used to argue about it. He would accuse her of flirting when she had done no such thing. I have to say she did have quite a sad life and then she died of cancer when she was only thirty-eight.โ
โThat must have been awful for you.โ Compassion shone in Susanโs eyes. โWhat did you do?โ
Jennifer shrugged. โThrew myself into work, became an accountant and then retrained as a teacher. Eventually, I ended up as a headteacher in Norfolk, believe it or not, and now Iโm retired and running a bed and breakfast cottage in Great Chalkham in Suffolk. Thatโs how I met Emily.โ
โOh,โ Susan looked surprised, โso youโre not related? I thought โฆโ Her voice tailed off.
โNo,โ Emily chimed in. โI booked to stay in Jenโs cottage because I recognised it in a photograph I was given so I went to Great Chalkham to find some answers and weโve ended up here.โ
โOh,โ Susan said again. โIโm afraid I donโt understand.โ She gave Emily a searching look.
โSorry. I guess I need to start at the beginning. That might help!โ Emily reached for her own capacious, cherry red bag and pulled out Norahโs album, the box containing the locket and the letter from her real mother. โMy parents died in a car accident in 2007. Thatโs when I discovered they had adopted me at birth; they had never told me. The solicitor passed on these which had been left with me by my real mum.โ She looked up. โAre you alright, Susan?โ
Susanโs face was chalk white and she was staring at the brown, leather album initialled N.D.
โThis,โ she said, reaching forward to stroke the soft cover, โand this.โ She indicated the jewellery box. Slowly shaking her head, she met Emilyโs eyes. โI never thought I would see them again. My grandfather gave them to my mum, Iris, and she gave them to me when I was just a small child. I remember the moment so clearly. It was when I first saw the woman, dressed in old fashioned, black clothes, sitting at the foot of my bed. I was a little bit frightened but mum explained that it was just my grandma, Norah, watching over me. I couldnโt understand that because this woman was young and grandparents, I knew, were older so mum told me that Norah had died after giving birth to her. She said that Norah had made a promise that she would always look after her daughter and that, now I was born, she would watch over me too. Then she showed me the album and the locket. The initials stand for Norah Dunn โ that was her maiden name.โ
Emily stared at her, open-mouthed. โMolly,โ she breathed and then, โI can see her too โ I have done since I was little but I never knew who she was. I thought she was a figment of my imagination โฆ and then I was given the album and I realised she was a real person but, until now, I didnโt know what the initials stood for. Thatโs why I always called her Molly - I still do โ because I never knew her name.โ
โOh, my goodness!โ Susanโs knuckles were white as she gripped the album. โThat means โฆโ Her voice tailed off and she continued to stare at Emily, drinking in every detail of her face.
โWhat does it mean?โ Emily asked. โHow come the album ended up with me?โ
Susan took a deep breath. โThatโs a secret I swore I would never tell another living soul. Itโs not my secret to tell.โ She glanced at the kitchen clock. โHopefully, you wonโt have to wait much longer for the answer to your question.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ
Susan shook her head. โIโm sorry, Emily but โฆโ
At that moment, there was the rattle of keys in the door. Jennifer and Emily looked expectantly at Susan but she remained sitting at the table, her eyes fixed on the kitchen door.
โMum?โ The voice calling was husky with emotion.
โWeโre in the kitchen,โ Susan called back.
The door burst open and a woman stood framed in the opening. The first thing Emily noticed was her hair - long, wavy and dyed purple. The next was her multi-coloured dress, leggings and black biker boots. Finally, she zoned in on her eyes, green like hers, searching her out across the room and that was when she knew. She was half rising from her chair
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