Читать книгу: «The Secrets of Meadow Farmhouse», страница 2
Shaking her head at the memory, Amelia was glad she’d left for university and never returned. Vera hadn’t wanted her and if it hadn’t been for Adam, the only friend she had in the village, she’d have run away long before then. He’d talked her out of it so many times when Vera had told her off for doing nothing more than being a child. Vera had always made her feel so burdensome and ultimately forgettable.
A moment’s respite from such intense emotions came as she thought of Adam again. The youthful face she remembered once more pushed its way into her brain and she swallowed hard. She’d missed him immensely over the years but had never been brave enough to contact him. He’d been her first love and she regretted that she’d left without saying a proper goodbye but there was no possible way she could have stayed in that place forever. He’d have got over it by now, Amelia reminded herself. He’d have forgotten her quickly. He’d probably been happy to be rid of her.
Swallowing down her feelings, Amelia reread the letter. As shock subsided to be replaced by grief and guilt, Amelia took another drink of water. She hadn’t even known Vera was sick. Apart from exchanging Christmas and birthday cards, they didn’t speak at all and her most recent Christmas card hadn’t mentioned anything about declining health. Had it been sudden? The solicitor’s letter didn’t mention the cause of death.
Though she regretted how their relationship had ended up, unless someone knew Vera – knew how cold and hard she was, how unloving – people didn’t understand. Some people were naturally private, and it was a behaviour Amelia herself had learned, but Vera took it to a whole new level, hating everyone. Amelia buried the turmoil threatening to rise and overtake her under the knowledge that she’d made something of herself. She took a breath in, counted to eight and let it out slowly, counting again as she did so.
Despite everything, Vera had left her Meadow Farmhouse and according to the letter, she’d made Amelia the sole heir. Amelia had always found the village hard to handle. The concern when she’d arrived and the constant reminders of why she’d ended up there had been overwhelming. Meadowbank was one of those places where everyone knew everyone else’s business and, as she’d grown, she’d longed for somewhere impersonal where no one asked her questions or reminded her of the past.
Would Adam still be there? Would anyone even remember her?
After she’d left, Amelia had never planned on going back and yet now it seemed she had no choice. She had to return to Meadow Farmhouse.
Chapter 2
Meadowbank
After hastily finishing what projects she could and rearranging others, Amelia left Paris just over a week later and made the trip to the tiny village of Meadowbank in Kent. She was unsure of how long she’d be in Meadowbank, but luckily she worked from home and didn’t have any staff to worry about except for a virtual assistant she’d hired. It was one less thing to occupy her mind, which had been full of Adam since reading the letter. How long would she be there? A few weeks maybe? Once the place was clear, the sale she could handle from Paris and, eager not to waste time, she had already booked an estate agent for three weeks away. Ever organised, Amelia had also been in contact with the solicitors and someone was going to meet her at the farmhouse with the keys.
Océanè’s use of the word cold rebounded in Amelia’s head as it had since their coffee date. Was she being cold over Vera? It was hard to be sure. It was true she hadn’t yet cried over her death, though the evening after she’d received the letter the back of her nose had stung as her brain wandered towards distant memories. Vera had never been one for praise or encouragement, but Amelia was still upset that she had gone before they could reconcile. Perhaps she should have made more effort on that front. Stupidly, she’d always assumed it would happen one day of its own accord. She’d never thought Vera would go without it ever occurring.
Since Amelia had left her apartment and made her way to the Gare du Nord, her heart had sat like a lead weight in her chest. She didn’t want to leave the safety of Paris and return to the small, suffocating village. She couldn’t say return home because Paris was her home now. Everything familiar to her was in this city, not the other side of the Channel. Would any of it be the same as the day she’d left? She’d hoped that while on the Eurostar her unease would settle, but it hadn’t. It had only intensified as the time ticked by and the distance shortened, bringing her ever closer to her old home and her old life.
Before the darkness of the tunnel, Amelia pulled out her phone and began scrolling through her social media feeds. After a few moments, her fingers twitched. Would it hurt to take a look at Adam’s Facebook page again? He wasn’t on Instagram or Twitter – she’d already checked – but he was definitely on Facebook. Not that she’d stalked him over the years. It had been a perfectly normal level of interest, but she had searched for him just to see what he looked like. Every time she did, a dull ache would throb in her heart. Adam was one of those people who didn’t use it often and of course, without being his friend she wouldn’t be able to see all that much, but curiosity forced her fingers over the keys.
Amelia’s eyes eagerly scanned the screen as a few photos popped up. There was a cute one of him with his mum, Lynne, at an event but it wasn’t clear where the event was. It didn’t look like Meadowbank. In another, which definitely hadn’t been there the last time she’d looked, he was laughing with his head thrown back wearing the tiniest swimming shorts she’d ever seen. While his choice of swimwear was dubious (Amelia had always associated budgie smugglers with middle-aged men on holiday in Greece), the physique was ridiculous. The skinny youthfulness had gone from his face and his features were more chiselled and rugged. His jaw was square and firm, and his gloriously red hair had ebbed to a less orangey hue. There were hints of brown she could see as she held the phone slightly in front of her nose, and there were toned, flat abs that made her palms a bit clammy.
How had she ever left him behind? Especially when he’d ended up looking like that. Men like that didn’t end up with pale-skinned, gothic-haired women with abandonment issues like her. They ended up with women who only had half their eyebrows and dewy complexions. Her heart gave an involuntary double beat and she took a deep breath to calm it. Just as she did, the train rocked, and her thumb slid across the screen, liking the photo.
‘Oh no. Oh, no, no, no, no, no.’ Amelia’s jaw hung loose as she realised what had happened.
Panic rose and she immediately hit the like button again to remove it but knew deep down that the notification would have been sent. Adam Noble would soon know that after ten years, Amelia Williams had creepily liked a photo of him looking particularly sexy in nothing but his Speedos. Why couldn’t it have been the one with his mum? That at least would have made her seem less like a pervert. ‘Oh God, oh God. Shit. No!’ She tried to mutter, but annoyance made her pathetic whine louder than intended and someone across the aisle tutted. ‘Sorry for swearing,’ Amelia said when she glanced over to see a middle-aged woman glowering at her. ‘But I just accidentally liked a photo of my ex. We’ve not seen each other in ten years.’ She mumbled more to herself than the other woman.
The lady softened and sucked air in through her teeth. ‘Oh dear. That sounds … embarrassing.’
Embarrassing wasn’t the word. Mortifying might hint at what she was feeling but embarrassing didn’t even come close. It was a drop in the proverbial ocean. She was quite tempted to throw herself from the train if only it didn’t have automatic doors. A wave of heat flew over her and Amelia dropped her phone into her lap before pressing her cold hands to her cheeks. Of all the photos, why did it have to be the one of him half naked?
‘I’m sure it’ll be fine,’ the woman said. ‘Do people even use Facebook these days?’
‘Some do, some don’t.’
‘Well, maybe you’ll be lucky, and he’ll be the type who doesn’t.’
‘Maybe.’ Amelia told herself to calm down. Just brush it off. The words drifted around her brain but didn’t sink in and she tried again to talk herself down. What did it matter if she’d liked a photo of Adam wearing next to nothing? He probably didn’t even live in Meadowbank anymore and as she’d unliked the post pretty quickly, maybe he wouldn’t even know. Amelia forced herself to take slow, deep breaths, even though her cheeks were still flaming.
Would he even remember who Amelia Williams was? Just because she still thought of him after all this time didn’t mean he still thought of her. Maybe he’d moved on and their years growing up together had faded from his memory. Memory, after all, was a strange thing. There were times when she could barely remember her parents now. Only vague notions of their faces, and the sound of their voices had faded completely. A surge of melancholy forced Amelia to pick up her phone and begin again on her social media feeds – work this time, rather than personal. It was safer that way.
After arriving on English soil and leaving the train station, a taxi took her on the final part of the journey to Meadow Farmhouse. The scenery blurred as they drove through the lane into the village, on towards the farmhouse she hadn’t seen in ten years. A brightly coloured ornamental sign proclaimed proudly that she was now entering the village of Meadowbank and below it was a horse and cart loaded with hay. Picturesque thatched cottages lined either side of the road with small picket fences. Everything about this place was quintessentially British from the timber-framed houses, thatched roofs and blossoming front gardens to the small, quaint bakery, butcher’s and tiny village school. Old-fashioned, Amelia thought sweetly.
A surprising feeling of nostalgia inched its way into her brain, warming her thoughts. She’d expected to see the place with the eye of a tourist, but the sense of coming home, the feeling of peace – even fondness – hadn’t been anticipated. Amelia pulled the collar of her jacket together and reminded herself that Paris was her home, silently listing all the things it had that Meadowbank didn’t. Unsurprisingly, after Bastien’s display, he hadn’t made the list.
It would only be a few more minutes before she saw the farmhouse itself and apprehension grew, mangling Amelia’s nerves. On leaving, she’d tried to imagine what it would feel like coming here and not having to see Vera. Easier perhaps but incredibly sad. She was ungrateful and had never hated Vera. She appreciated that she’d taken her in and given her a home, but it had been hard living with someone who so clearly hadn’t wanted her around. Vera had only taken her in because she was the last living relative Amelia had, and things had always been tough between them. She’d never been fond of communication and it had left Amelia feeling isolated.
When her parents died without a will and with only each other as next of kin, the police had located Vera and asked her to take in the orphan child. Though Amelia tried to think of the deeply buried memory in detached terms, it was impossible, and queasiness forced its way up. She’d been an obligation, nothing more. It was either take her in or she go into care, and Vera had thought it her duty to provide a home. At least, that’s what Amelia had always assumed because it wasn’t something they spoke about. Vera didn’t talk about feelings and, at times, Amelia hadn’t even been sure she’d had any.
Eager to see more of the village, and ignore the melancholy rising inside her, Amelia leaned further to the window, her eyes darting across the scene to take in as many details as possible. Weaving around the village green, where summer fairs and primary school sports days had taken place, and on past the bushy duck pond complete with tinkling stream, the car headed to the other end of the village. Amelia saw the nearest thing they’d had to a supermarket was still operating, looking like something from an old postcard with wicker baskets outside holding fruit and vegetables, and she wondered if it still belonged to the same family. Unlikely, after all this time, but she was glad it was still there.
One of the things she loved about Paris was the small boutique stores. It didn’t have just chains and supermarkets. Amelia firmly believed every town, village or city, needed quaint little shops like this. It gave character. The duck pond was the same as ever and she remembered feeding the ducks with Adam and his mum, tossing bread into the water for the hungry birds to chase after. Swallowing down a strange sense of wistfulness, she stared at the scenery.
Down a side road, a wooden board confirmed they now had a deli. That certainly hadn’t been there when she was younger, and with an internal chuckle she noted that it seemed Meadowbank had become gentrified over the years. It was strange to think how people and places exist when you’re not around. In her mind, it was like Meadowbank had gone into stasis and ceased to change or evolve. Such a silly point of view really. A part of her had assumed it would remain untouched, as it had seemed when she was little – caught in a time capsule – but time never stood still no matter how much you wanted it to. It always moved forward, just as she’d learned to do.
At the furthest end of the village green, the car took the still-familiar left turn and went on towards the rolling green fields. Houses became few and far between and acres of abundant green land surrounded her. The fields dipped and sloped away as far as the eye could see, cut through occasionally with tractor marks. Some were full of sheep lazily grazing, some were fallow, and squiggly lines of hedges criss-crossed the vibrant grassland, illustrating where history had marked out boundaries once upon a time. She’d forgotten how beautiful the place was when caught in the right light, and today was a perfect spring day.
The impossibly blue sky above was scattered with wispy clouds and the sun shone in through the taxi window. Amelia loosened the grey scarf worn over her black blazer and grey jeans. She’d wanted to look smart for her arrival, knowing it would give her courage to face whatever was about to befall her. Her usual red lipstick stained her lips and her hair had been tied into a high ponytail.
The country lanes swivelled left and right, and Amelia tightened her grip on her handbag. They passed over the small bridge that crossed the stream she and Adam had dipped their feet into on hot summer days and on the banks a rabbit scurried away into the undergrowth. It had been a long time since she’d seen such wildlife. It was like being a child again. A minute passed and farms began to appear on her left.
‘It’s just a little further on,’ she said, knowing the driver’s satnav would probably miss the turning. ‘It’s right here.’ The car slowed at a crooked wooden sign, the overgrown plants behind covering some of the letters, and Amelia leaned over from her seat in the back. Even though the lettering was faded and the wood rotten, the words were just about legible: Meadow Farmhouse.
She’d arrived.
Sitting back, Amelia hadn’t realised that her finger had gone to her mouth, about to chew a painted fingernail. She’d given up that nervous habit as soon as she left for university at eighteen.
The day she left, she’d assumed she’d come home for holidays, but luckily it had only been that first Christmas break she’d returned to Meadowbank for a non-celebration with Vera, who had never enjoyed Christmas. That had really been the last time she’d seen Adam Noble. When she waved goodbye at the train station, holding back sobs. She’d assumed she see him again the next holiday, but after that and for her remaining years at university, she’d stayed in shared houses sometimes on her own when everyone else returned to their families.
A dull ache in her chest lingered as she pushed her thoughts on. Océanè had been wrong. There was nothing wrong with living your life on your own. Amelia had done fine so far, and besides, she wasn’t alone, she had friends.
‘This it then, miss?’ The taxi driver’s voice cut through, bringing her back to the moment.
‘Yes. You can drop me here if you like rather than go all the way down the drive.’
‘You sure?’
‘Yes. Yes. Fine.’ She’d already begun uncoupling her seatbelt, giving the driver no choice but to stop the car. ‘It saves you time and it’s easier to turn around here than at the bottom.’ She wasn’t sure why she was rushing, but something made her want to see the place as quickly as possible. She checked the meter and found the money, handing it over with a thank you. As soon as the driver had taken it, he raced around to the back of the car and hauled out her two enormous suitcases.
Staring at the thin belt of trees to the left of the driveway and the dense wood off to the right on the edge of Meadow Farm’s land, Amelia wondered how long the trees had been there. The thick oaks were already mature when she was younger and she and Adam used to climb all around them. They’d been her own personal playground. Their long branches had recuperated from winter, covered now with blossoming green leaves. Birds darted in and out of them, though Amelia couldn’t find their nests. She heard them chirping happily and closed her eyes for a moment to meditate on the sound. Of course she’d heard birdsong in Paris, but this sounded different. Unmasked by traffic it appeared brighter and more musical.
The very first time she’d arrived it had been spring; a warm bright day when the police had delivered her to Vera’s house after they’d informed her of the car crash that had stolen her family. For all that journey, she’d sat in the back of the police car, her hands clasped tightly in her lap, knuckles white as she tried to stop the tears flowing down her face. A kind policeman – a Family Liaison Officer, she supposed – had sat in the back with her, giving caring glances and attempting to take her hand, but she couldn’t release them. The pressure between her palms had been the only thing keeping her terror and grief at bay.
The same fear threatened to climb up and spill out now, and she clenched her jaw shut. She refused to think about the solitary night in a care home while they’d located Vera. The long loneliness of the strange house full of children she didn’t know and noises she didn’t recognise. Part of her felt a failure for allowing it to distress her as much as it did. She was a grown woman now – a successful interior designer who lived in Paris – not the same scared little girl she’d been before, but the remembrance was visceral and overwhelming. With all her might Amelia pushed the memories down and her feelings with it. It was too painful to even think about. Slowly, she began her walk down to the house.
In the fields around her, daisies danced in the breeze, butterflies skimmed across the petals and bees moved efficiently from flower to flower. To her right, the wood loomed on the edge of Meadow Farm’s estate – a dense, tall patch of browns and greens. She and Adam had built camps there and played as teenagers, trying all the things the cool kids did like smoking and drinking. Neither of them had bothered with drugs. They hadn’t needed them to escape.
Instinctively, Amelia glanced around for any sign of Adam now, as though her brain was replaying it all. He was most likely married with three kids, two cars and a dog, living somewhere new. He’d always wanted that sort of life, but at eighteen, all she could think of was becoming more than the orphan child dropped here one morning by a stranger.
The wheel of her suitcase caught on a stone in the pot-holed drive and tipped to the side. ‘Oh, nuts and bolts.’ Amelia righted it, cursing as mud splattered up the back of her jeans. Dirt crept up her ballet pumps, threatening to make its way inside, and Amelia wished she’d worn something more suitable.
Around the bend in the unkept drive, the farmhouse itself came into view and shock forced Amelia’s feet to stop. The place had changed beyond anything she could have imagined. To say the farmhouse was ramshackle was far too much of a compliment. Decrepit would have been a better description. Every plant around it was overgrown, as was the ivy growing up it in veins. The tatty loose thatch probably had birds living in it by now, and here and there windows were broken, patched up with wood.
What was that noise? She spun, then cocked her head, turning her ear to the sound. ‘Chickens?’ So there were still chickens at Meadow Farm. A smile came to her face as she remembered chasing the hens around the garden as a child. She could only have been about ten at the time. Then later, she was trusted to collect the eggs for their breakfast. It had been an age since she’d had runny eggs and soldiers. Thanks to her time in France, she could whip up a decent omelette but there was something infinitely more comforting about runny eggs with salty buttered toast soldiers. Amelia frowned at the mix of emotions whirring inside her, as if she was letting Paris down by remembering so many nice things about Meadowbank. Returning home had certainly been stranger than expected.
What had happened to Vera that she stopped caring so much about the place? She’d always loved Meadow Farmhouse more than any person or thing, claiming it was a name to be proud of. So how had it gone so downhill? From the exterior, it wouldn’t be wholly unexpected to open the door and find livestock inside, all sat at the table having afternoon tea like something from Beatrix Potter. Scanning again with her eye for design, Amelia thought how good it would look if she could bring it up to scratch. It had always suited the yellow colour it had been painted, but its brightness had faded now.
It would make someone a wonderful home, but it was going to take a lot of work and more time than she’d allocated to bring it up to scratch. Her plan had been to clear the house of Vera’s belongings, spruce things up and sell quickly. She’d counted on it being structurally sound, yet at the moment it seemed anything but. With a twinge of conscience, she thought about Océanè calling her cold. Perhaps it was wrong to treat this like any other job. Though she knew she was only doing so through self-preservation. Perhaps she should invest more into what had been her childhood home. After all, it was going to be the last time she saw it.
As she was assessing the house and picturing it back to its former glory, a black-and-white collie dog bounded around the corner almost running straight into her. When it saw her, it slowed in surprise, its back legs the last part of its body to get the message as it skidded to a halt in a puddle.
‘Hello, you.’ Seeing the dog’s happy face, she let go of her suitcases and scratched him behind the ear.
A giant man with a huge bushy beard and dirty overalls tucked into socks ambled around the corner. ‘Who are you?’ he demanded. With his size and stature, he was slightly menacing but for all Vera said, Meadowbank had always been a neighbourly place.
‘I’m Amelia Williams.’ It seemed she’d been right to wonder if anyone would remember her. Seeing the dog, realisation dawned as to who the giant was. ‘It’s Mr MacMahon, isn’t it?’ Though she was an adult now, it didn’t feel right to try to call him by his first name. She wasn’t entirely sure she’d ever known what that was. ‘And this can’t be Bobby?’
‘Aye, it is.’ The man appraised her, his left eyebrow quirking as he regarded her. The dog sat with his tongue sticking out, looking almost as though he was smiling, which even Amelia, with her limited canine knowledge, knew wasn’t possible.
‘You were just a puppy when I saw you last,’ she said, stroking the dog who leaned against her legs.
‘Grown a bit, hasn’t he? So, Vera’s niece what upped and left.’ Amelia kept her eyes on the dog, feeling awkward. ‘Not to speak ill of the dead,’ Mr MacMahon said, scratching at his temple. ‘But I can see as why you would. She was a hard woman: Vera Cabot. A hard woman.’
What could she say to that? It was true, but Amelia didn’t want to speak ill of Vera either. Not to Mr MacMahon who had been their neighbour while she was growing up and still appeared to be now. ‘Do you still own Spring Farm?’ she enquired, hoping to turn the conversation away from herself.
‘I do. I’ve been checking on the place since Vera passed. Just been feeding the chickens. Sorry I didn’t recognise you at first, but you can’t be too careful these days, can you?’ He took a step forward and paused, swinging the dog’s lead by his side. ‘I still lives next door to Adam Noble. D’you remember him?’
So he was still here. Amelia wished her chest would stop constricting every time she heard his name or she might have a heart attack. The thought of the Facebook fiasco flew back into her mind. If she saw him and he mentioned it, what would he say? What would she say? Don’t panic. I’m not really a lecherous woman, it was all a mistake. That wasn’t really going to help. Or would it simply be an unspoken embarrassment sitting in the air between them? That was if he spoke to her at all. She wouldn’t blame him for blanking her entirely. Amelia cleared her throat. ‘Yes, I remember him.’
A wry smile came to Mr MacMahon’s face as he walked past her. ‘Welcome back,’ Mr MacMahon said, walking past her. ‘Come on, Bobby.’
The dog glanced at her then shot off after his master. Within minutes they’d stepped through a gap in the belt of trees on the left-hand side of the drive and disappeared.
How was Adam still here? In some ways it shouldn’t have been a surprise. He’d always loved Meadowbank. He loved the peace and quiet of being in nature and would never have survived in a cramped, impersonal city. It would have smothered him. She wondered what he’d ended up doing. At the time she left, he’d chosen not to go to university, but hadn’t found a career. He hadn’t even had a job. Had he settled on something and made something of himself? He’d always been laid-back, but she hoped he’d found a vocation that made him happy, as she had.
A silver car came slowly down the drive and Amelia watched as the solicitor climbed out. ‘Hello, there,’ he said cheerfully, hopping over muddy puddles with a briefcase in hand.
In his clean, pressed suit and tie, he was as out of place in this wilderness as she was, and she glanced again at her pretty ballet pumps. She had wellington boots in her suitcase but hadn’t wanted to wear them for travelling. She’d have looked pretty silly marching through the streets of Paris in those. God forbid Océanè had seen her; she most definitely would not have approved.
‘Crikey,’ he said, hoisting up his briefcase and leaping over a particularly deep pool. ‘You’re not dressed for farm work either, are you?’
‘No, I’m not,’ she replied with a chuckle. His kind face took away any insult from the statement. ‘I think we might be in for some rain judging by those storm clouds over there. Do you mind if we head inside?’ She pointed to the sky behind him.
‘I think you’re right. We better do this quickly then. How do you do?’ He held out his hand. ‘I’m Donald Morris from Morris, Crompton and Peel. You must be Amelia Williams.’
‘I am. Nice to meet you.’ She shook his hand, then placed her own in her pocket. It was fresher today out of the warmth of the taxi and her fingers and toes were becoming cold.
He unclipped the briefcase and took out the keys. ‘Firstly, I’m so sorry for your loss.’
‘Thank you. That’s very kind.’
‘Would you like to open the house? This is your new home after all.’
Amelia’s shoulders stiffened. ‘Oh, umm.’ She hadn’t expected to be asked that and given how emotional the journey had been, she wasn’t sure what would happen if she did. Would she burst into tears? Would the echo of teenage rows come back to her? There was also the memory of her first tentative steps over the threshold as the policeman hung back and Vera took her in. Vera had wrapped her arms around her, she remembered now, and gently shushed her tears, but how things had changed as she’d grown. Amelia wasn’t sure she trusted herself to open the door in case her fingers trembled even more than they were already. ‘No that’s fine, thank you. You may as well do it as you’ve got the key ready.’
He moved over to the heavy wooden door and pushed it to, standing aside for Amelia to walk through first.
It was so dark inside, her eyes had to adjust to the dim light and she almost stumbled, unable to confidently place her foot. A chill emanated from the stone floor, seeping into the thin leather of her shoes. The gathering breeze found its way through every gap in the old, warped windowpanes and draughts crept around her.
Everything was just as she remembered only darker and dirtier. The front door opened into an open-plan living room and kitchen that took nearly all of the ground floor. The paint on the sturdy well-crafted kitchen units had chipped and splintered over time. Already, Amelia could see what the kitchen would look like painted in a bright cream. With the large family-sized table in the middle, it would be a wonderful space for families to bond over dinner, chatting about their day. She started at the memory of quiet dinners after her arrival when the pain was fresh and raw.
The place needed more light, brighter curtains, livelier colours. On the countertops remnants of Vera’s life were still strewn around. A thick wooden cutting board and knife sat next to the sink along with earthenware pots full of rolling pins and wooden spoons. Vera had baked, jammed and pickled everything she could. It was mainly to avoid having to go into the village, but she had always seemed most contented in the kitchen. Amelia felt her face tense as grief threatened to bring tears to her eyes. Grief for Vera and, though she hated to admit it, for her parents.
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