Secret Lives
78 pages
English

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78 pages
English

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Description

A novella and five short stories set in the middle class England of the author; even there parts of some peoples' lives are kept from others.Many people have investigated their family history; in the early days, this meant visits to public record offices, which for some involved travel to other towns. Some were hoping, or fearing, to find skeletons in cupboards. Others have found cousins of distant kinship engaged in the same investigation. Both these themes come together in The Secret Sits a novella spanning the centuries; the details of the life of a late nineteenth century Yorkshire businessman, who was airbrushed out of family history, because of a scandal, are finally revealed when his family gains access to the censuses of the period. The scandal caused a rift in the family and one branch may have lost an inheritance.The other parts of the work are short stories. In Roy a bombastic self confident fourth former in a 1950s grammar school who disappears into obscurity. In Helena a rather lonely, late middle aged woman in a Midlands town may have found love when she meets a charming, handsome, but somewhat secretive man. In The Lost Phone a chance encounter leads a widowed man to find two sisters searching for family secrets; they become his new family. The Strange Tale of Walter Greenough is about a man who tries to create his own secret life, but is unmasked. Sue's Caff is a busy city centre eatery with a largely working class clientele; Sue describes a notable day when secrets were shared, though one man is brought to a sort of poetic justice.

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Publié par
Date de parution 07 janvier 2022
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781803138763
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Ernie has spent most of his eighty years in Parbold, Lancashire. He is married to Madeleine and they have two sons and two grandsons.






Copyright © 2022 Ernie Savage
Cover photograph by the author

The moral right of the author has been asserted.

Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside those terms should be sent to the publishers.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.


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ISBN 978 1803138 763

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

Matador is an imprint of Troubador Publishing Ltd



To Madeleine and all my friends who urged me to write more


Contents
Prologue
January 2002
Chapter 1
1991
Chapter 2
1973 & 1979
Chapter 3
1976
Chapter 4
1991
Chapter 5
1996
Chapter 6
1996
Chapter 7
1996
Epilogue
2002

Letters found in Leverford and held by Edward
Letters found in Melcester and held by Angela
Roy
Helena
The Lost Phone
The Strange Tale of Walter Greenhough
One Day in the Caff


Prologue
January 2002
‘It’s coming!’
‘Well, what does it say?’ Edward was impatient.
‘Give me a minute,’ Angela replied. ‘We’ve had to wait long enough. A few more minutes can’t matter!’
‘I suppose so. And it was good of you to wait until we all could look at it together.’
In 2002, the 1901 census became the subject of much interest. For some, the fascination was the possibility of finding the famous, whose domestic situations were recorded and which had hitherto been protected by the one hundred year rule. A few of these were still alive. For Angela, Edward and millions of others, it became the anxiously awaited moment when they could discover that little bit more about their ancestors, with the hope, or fear, that skeletons might be found in cupboards. Their search had begun nearly thirty years earlier when Angela and Edward were living in different cities and did not even know of each other’s existence. The rest of the group clustered around Angela’s computer were either babes in arms or not even born at that time. But all had some familial link to the others and to the one they were trying to track down. As the tension built up, Edward allowed himself to relax; his eyes wandered round the room in Fairholme , the rambling house in the East Midlands town of Melcester where Angela and her extended family had lived for several generations. It was very different from the tidy conformity of the house in the Yorkshire city of Leverford, the home he and his wife Mollie had shared for the forty years that they had been married. Here, cracks were appearing in the plaster, the place needed a complete redecoration and there were piles of books and papers gathering dust, but of course such matters were not important to them, he reflected. He glanced across to where Henry, their elder son, was standing, holding hands with Joanna, Angela’s niece. It was the relationship between Henry and Joanna, formed when they were at university, that had brought them all together on this fateful day. If Henry had followed his father to Liverpool University instead of Cleadonbridge, they would all have remained in happy ignorance.
For what seemed an almost interminable period they sat or stood in Angela’s study at Fairholme . She was sitting staring at the screen. Someone coughed. Another yawned noisily. The silence was broken by one of the younger members. ‘So, what’s there then?’
Rather uncharacteristically Angela swore. ‘Oh bloody hell!’
‘What is it?’
‘The blasted programme has crashed.’
The system was, it transpired, overloaded.
Mollie broke the silence. ‘It reminds me of a couplet by… who was it? Robert Frost I think:

‘ We dance round in a ring and suppose,
But the Secret sits in the middle and knows .’

It was seven months before Angela and Edward could return to find The Secret.


Chapter 1
1991
‘It’s sort of like a commune, Dad.’ Henry Simpson, nearing the end of his first year reading Geography in the University of Cleadonbridge, had been invited to spend a part of the long vacation with his girlfriend Joanna at Fairholme . Over dinner in the family home he was explaining what he intended to do. James, his younger brother, was away at scout camp, which made it easier. Even as a young teen he wanted to join any activity that Henry took part in.
‘I don’t think I like the sound of that.’ Edward spoke rather pompously. It would be unfair to describe the Simpson household in Leverford as stuffy, but it was conventional and not the least of the reasons that Henry was drawn to Joanna was her unconventionality.
Henry’s mother, Mollie, ever practical, sought an explanation. ‘What exactly do you mean, dear?’
‘Well, there are all the gospel writers, Matthew, Mark Luke and… well the last turned out to be a girl so they called her Joanna.’
‘Oh, I see! Good church folk then.’ Edward was considerably mollified. ‘Catholics? All those kids…’ A pillar of the local Anglican parish, he had reservations about the Church of Rome, but was inclined to feel that any church was better than none. He knew his elder son’s adherence to the church was wavering.
‘No, no, no,’ Henry spoke impatiently. ‘They are all atheists. And they aren’t especially named after the gospel writers. It was just that William and Mary were twins and were always close. William is Joanna’s dad. Actually he’s usually called Bill.’
‘I see.’ Edward spoke carefully. ‘I think… could you draw out a family tree?’
‘I got Joanna to do one.’ He pulled a piece of paper from his briefcase. ‘She’d explained, but I couldn’t remember the details.’ He pointed to the family tree. ‘The twins both married, and later decided to buy Fairholme together. Well, not exactly buy, it was theirs really, it had been in the family for years, but they made it a joint property, I think. It’s a big house quite near the centre of Melcester, and they decided they would live there with any children that might happen. Well, John and Mary, she’s Joanna’s aunt, Bill’s twin sister, of course…’
‘Hey, slow down,’ said his mother, ‘your girlfriend is Joanna. What’s her surname?’
‘Walker. Now Mary, Joanne’s dad’s twin sister, married first and had a boy and they liked the name Matthew and then they had another and decided to call him Mark, really without thinking, and then Bill and Susan, that’s Joanna’s parents, got married, that was when they took Fairholme over. Someone joked about the next being Luke because of—’
‘I see!’ His mother laughed. ‘And the fourth one, who isn’t John, but Joanna, is the child of Bill and his wife. And would I be right in suggesting that you are quite keen on her?’
Henry blushed.
‘Don’t embarrass the boy.’ Edward spoke quite kindly to his son. ‘And you go there on the 15th of August? It’ll be quite crowded in that house… four parents, four children…’
‘And Angela.’ Henry added.
‘Who is Angela?’
‘Joanna’s aunt. She isn’t married or anything.’
‘I see what you mean about it being a commune.’
‘Oh that’s only part of it. There are always people around; the boys – well, I suppose I ought to say “men” – Matthew, Mark and Luke – have girlfriends who are often there, well Mark’s girlfriend lives with them and then there are refugees and political exiles and such—’
‘Good heavens!’ Edward sounded rather disapproving. ‘But all this use of Christian names for the adults, I do hope you will show proper respect for her parents and uncle and aunts.’
‘Dad, they don’t use the term “Christian name”; I told you, they’re atheists. And anyway they expect everyone to use first names. I met her when she came up to Cleadonbridge and she said I was to call her Angela, not Miss Walker.’
Edward made a noise something like “Humph”.
*
Joanna met Henry at the railway station and they decided to walk. ‘It’s only a hop, skip and a jump!’ she had said. ‘And it’s a lovely day. We can go round by the park.’
Fairholme was a double-fronted late Victorian detached house with a small garden facing Balfour Park. There were basements and attics, so Henry supposed it might be termed four storeys. Seeing that he was gazing in some wonder at the house, Joanna explained, ‘The place was new when my great-grandparents, Frederick and Edith Walker, moved here

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