Saving Grace

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by Fiona McCallum




  SAVING GRACE

  Fiona

  McCallum

  www.harlequinbooks.com.au

  In memory of Panda.

  Acknowledgements

  Thank you to my wonderful editor, Lachlan Jobbins, for making sure my stories are the best they can be, and to Haylee Nash, Cristina Lee and everyone at Harlequin Australia for turning my plain pages into beautiful books, and for continuing to make my dreams come true.

  Huge thanks to Deb McInnes, Kate Taperell and the team at DMCPR Media for spreading the word, and to the media outlets, booksellers and libraries for your interest and support.

  It means so much to me to hear of people enjoying my books and connecting with my characters and stories. Thank you to all my wonderful readers. I may not have met you, but please know you are special to me and I am very grateful for your support. Without you my manuscripts might remain doorstops!

  I am truly blessed to have a handful of wonderful friends who provide a lot of love and support and help me weather the ups and downs. Some are new, but most have been a part of my life for many, many years and were always steadfast in their belief of me and my dream to be a novelist. I owe you so much. Special thanks to dear friends Carole and Ken, Mel, Arlene, Sonia, and Tamara. You guys mean the world to me.

  About the Author

  About Fiona

  FIONA MCCALLUM spent her childhood years on the family cereal and wool farm outside a small town on South Australia’s Eyre Peninsula. An avid reader and writer, she decided at the age of nine that she wanted to be the next Enid Blyton! She completed her final years of schooling at a private boarding school in Adelaide.

  Having returned to her home town to work in the local council office, Fiona maintained her literary interests by writing poetry and short stories, and studying at TAFE via correspondence. Her ability to put into words her observations of country life saw a number of her feature articles published in the now defunct newspaper SA Statewide.

  When her marriage ended, Fiona moved to Adelaide, eventually found romance and followed it to Melbourne. She returned to full-time study at the age of twenty-six and in 2000 graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (Professional Writing) from Deakin University. While studying, she found herself drawn to writing fiction where her keen observation of the human condition and everyday situations could be combined with her love of storytelling.

  After brief stints in administration, marketing and recruitment, Fiona started Content Solutions, a consultancy providing professional writing and editing services to the corporate sector. Living with a sales and marketing executive and working on high level business proposals and tenders in Australia and overseas gave Fiona great insight into vastly different ways of life.

  Fiona continued to develop her creative writing skills by reading widely and voraciously, and attending short courses. In 2001 she realised her true passion lay in writing full-length fiction, and in 2002 she completed her first manuscript.

  In early 2004 Fiona made the difficult decision to return to Adelaide alone in order to achieve a balanced lifestyle and develop a career as a novelist. She successfully re-established her consultancy, and now enjoys the sharp contrast between her corporate work and creative writing.

  Fiona describes her books as ‘heart-warming journeys of self-discovery stories’. Her first novel, Paycheque, was released in April 2011 and became an ‘instant bestseller’. Her second novel, Nowhere Else (released in December 2011), was an even bigger hit. Fiona’s third novel, Wattle Creek, was released in April 2012. Fiona was thrilled and deeply honoured when Wattle Creek’s success saw it chosen as one of the 2012 Get Reading! campaign’s ‘50 Books You Can’t Put Down’. Saving Grace is Fiona’s fourth novel, and is the first in The Button Jar series.

  Stay in touch with Fiona

  Like her on Facebook

  Visit her website fionamccallum.com

  Prologue

  When John encouraged Emily to resign from her secretarial position with the insurance firm, telling her he’d rather his wife was at home, she thought it rather nice; antiquated, but nice. It meant they would stand shoulder to shoulder and run the farm together. She was really looking forward to that: mucking in and getting her hands dirty, and learning how to be a farmer.

  Finishing work two weeks before the wedding meant she could attend to the final preparations in comfort, without the flurry of last-minute hiccups and the stress other brides faced. The only problem was all the extra time she was expected to spend with her mother. Still, it was easier than the confrontation and inevitable sulking that would follow if she avoided her.

  At twenty-eight, Emily was an old bride by Wattle Creek standards – the average age being around twenty-three – and for a few years now her mother had been voicing her concerns about having a daughter ‘left on the shelf’. With the day finally approaching, Enid Oliphant was desperate that nothing prevent her daughter being married. She was determined to present a wedding that would be the talk of the town for months, for all the right reasons.

  Frankly, Emily would have been just as happy barefoot on the beach, but she didn’t have the courage to tell her mother that. Instead, she quietly went along with all Enid’s plans, which in her opinion involved far too many bows and way too much white satin. Experience had taught her that there was no point putting up an argument; when dealing with her mother, it was best to just grin and bear it.

  The day went off without a hitch and the couple spent their first night as husband and wife in the local pub’s honeymoon suite – a room that differed from the others in the row only in the length of stained white tulle draped across the ceiling and windows.

  Emily barely noticed the décor; she was too caught up in reliving her perfect wedding to the most eligible farmer in the district. They had indeed made a handsome couple. The photos would be great.

  She still sometimes found it hard to believe he’d chosen her. But he had! And now she was free from all Enid’s pointed comments and could get on with her own life out of her mother’s shadow. She, Emily Oliphant, would live happily ever after.

  ‘Come on, how ‘bout it,’ John Stratten said as he dragged his new wife towards him. Emily closed her eyes on the first kiss and cringed at the beer on his breath.

  Afterwards, she retreated into the bathroom and sat down on the plastic toilet seat. As she pulled a wad of paper from the roll to dry her eyes, she wondered if she’d made a terrible mistake. Maybe John liked sex a little rougher than other blokes, not that she had much previous experience on which to go by. It felt like he’d been drumming into her – that she was now his to do with as he pleased.

  Perhaps she was imagining things, the exhaustion of the day making her overly sensitive. But the more she tried to mop away the tears, the more they fell. Meanwhile, her husband of nine hours and twelve minutes was snoring loudly in the saggy bed in the next room having – apparently – made love to her.

  If they hadn’t been setting off early in the morning for their honeymoon interstate, Emily would have consulted her gran about it. She felt the cold raking its way up her body from the tiles beneath her bare feet, adding to the emptiness in the pit of her stomach. She pulled a towel from the nearby rail and wrapped it around her shoulders. What would Gran say? First, probably, ‘It’s never as bad as it seems,’ and then, without a doubt, ‘You’ll just have to make the best of it.’

  Then she brightened a little. Eleven days on Great Keppel Island; a source of great envy for those past and future brides who had to be content with their family’s fibro shack amid the dunes of Pigeon Bay. That was something to look forward to.

  Her only other choice was to slink back home and become the talk of the tiny town and district for having the shortest marriage in its history. Ordinarily the brides
maids’ dresses, quality of the food, who had and had not been invited, and who had made a drunken fool of themselves would be enough to occupy the gossips.

  No, Emily decided, she was not about to disrupt the natural order of things by running out on her new husband. Enid would probably drag her straight back to John anyway. She dried her eyes, hung the towel back over the rail, and returned to bed.

  On the plane back home Emily thought about the irony of what a waste the resort had been – they may as well have been in Pigeon Bay. Each of her suggestions of things to do – snorkelling, kayaking, horseriding, romantic walks along the shore – had been rejected. Emily had tried to excuse her husband; holidays were meant to be all about sitting around drinking, weren’t they? But by day seven she was bored.

  After snapping at him to get up and get his own bloody beer, she had left him at the poolside bar and stormed off for her own long stroll along the beach.

  Upon their return, Emily spent a week unpacking her few possessions and giving the bachelor pad farmhouse a sense of homeliness. After stepping around her husband watching daytime television for five days in a row, Emily came to the conclusion that the man she’d married was indeed pathologically lazy. Damn love being blind. Hopefully, with her buzzing about, he would pick up some of her energy.

  Having run out of domestic chores, Emily began tidying up the office, only to be yelled at not to touch his paperwork – it was private. But the warning came too late; she had already perused a couple of bank statements lying on the desk. With a shock that hit her like a four-by-two across the temple, she realised that John Stratten, best catch of the district and legendary big spender, was almost totally broke.

  He was wild when Emily innocently enquired if there was another working account she should use for buying groceries. After he’d got through screaming that she had no right to go through his things, he simmered down enough to explain that he had plenty of money thanks to his parents. Rather than feeling buoyed, Emily felt like enquiring if there was such a thing as a money tree. But she was already learning to keep her thoughts to herself – life was easier if he was kept calm and happy. He clearly had no intention of them working together in a partnership. No, she was expected to spend her days chained to the sink, vacuum cleaner and washing machine.

  While preparing dinner, Emily tried to get rid of the biting nag deep inside her by telling herself she didn’t care if he didn’t have a cent – what mattered was they had each other. Oh, and not admitting to her mother that she’d made a huge mistake. She shuddered at the thought.

  Over golden syrup dumplings, her offer to go back to work was met with such forceful opposition she actually feared for her physical safety. No wife of his was going to work in town and show the world he couldn’t support his own family, John bellowed.

  But any tension he took to bed that night evaporated as Emily let him have his way, ‘Just lie back and think of England’ running through her head. They’d been married eighteen and a half days.

  With the house immaculate and both lunch and dinner organised by ten most mornings, Emily began taking daily walks to the crumbling old stone cottage across the creek. She’d first fallen in love with it while being shown around the farm. At the time, in answer to her remarking it should be preserved, John had said it was earmarked for demolition to make way for a hayshed – when he got around to it. Emily had almost cried at the sacrilege, but was now somewhat soothed by the thought that he was unlikely to ‘get around to it’ for years, if at all.

  Sitting amongst the rubble and pigeon poo, Emily whiled away the hours daydreaming of structural renovations, colour schemes and décor for the bed and breakfast she pictured it becoming. Back at the main house she indulged her reverie further by putting together a scrapbook of ideas and samples. One evening, desperate to tell someone her thoughts, Emily shared her aspirations with her husband.

  ‘I told you before, it’s a knockdown job. Anyway, who’d want to stay out here? I’ve never heard of anything so ridiculous!’

  ‘You’re probably right,’ Emily said, and closed the scrapbook with a heavy sigh.

  John went off to the pub that night while Emily was taking a long, hot shower to hide her tears. Afterwards, she put all remnants of her musings into a box and stuffed it into the bottom of the linen press. He was right: it was a ridiculous idea. No one would want to stay so far out in the bush.

  Emily didn’t waste her time wandering the semi-ruins again. Instead she began to take walks in the other direction, towards an old concrete water tank. It took a few weeks before she stopped looking up and offering a regretful grimace to the old cottage as she turned the corner into the driveway by the house.

  Chapter One

  Around three years later …

  Emily checked her watch and gathered up her handbag and car keys. John had stopped deriding her for her visits to her gran a while ago. In his mind, Rose Mayfair wasn’t worth wasting the time on. It was a view shared by Emily’s mother Enid and her aunt Peggy, especially since Rose had begun to show signs of dementia. But to Emily, her gran was still one of the wisest, kindest women in the world.

  Above all, she loved and respected Granny Rose for the strength of her inner conviction – the ability to make her own choices, no matter what others thought. As a young woman, Rose had upset her parents by choosing to marry a farmer rather than a wealthy lawyer or doctor. Emily thought that maybe if she shared this trait, she’d have the guts to leave her husband. Or was it strength that made her stay and try to make it work?

  Before her marriage, during the four and a half years she worked at the insurance company in Wattle Creek, Emily had made the short stroll up the street to have lunch with her gran every day. Although she no longer worked, she still managed a visit most days when she drove in to get the mail and groceries.

  Gran was now in the old folks’ home on the hill. For Emily’s mother, the last straw had been when she caught Rose defrosting a loaf of bread in the oven – inside its plastic wrapper. To Enid Oliphant, her mother’s condition had been an inconvenience, and she had been waiting for the opportunity to hand her over to someone else. After the incident with the bread, she bolted off to see the people at the home, leaving Emily scraping the melted plastic bag from the oven racks. Emily and Gran shared a laugh about it, with Gran calling herself a silly old fool. But things had already been set in motion.

  Two years on, Emily still hated seeing Granny Mayfair confined to the nursing home, though she consoled herself with the thought that the dementia was a mixed blessing. On the one hand, if Gran didn’t have it she wouldn’t have been there; on the other, she didn’t remember she had lost her independence and should probably be miserable.

  Enid Oliphant regularly grumbled that the ‘old bat’ was otherwise healthy as an ox and would probably live forever. Emily hoped so, and not just to spite her mother. Granny Mayfair was her best friend.

  Emily knocked gently on door 221 and called, ‘Hello, Gran? It’s me, Emily.’ She held her breath while waiting for an answer. Would it be one of Gran’s good days or bad days?

  On a good day she would be welcomed, offered the lone armchair or end of the bed to sit on, and would spend an hour or so listening to Rose talk about days gone by. Most stories she’d heard dozens of times, but she never tired of hearing them.

  On Gran’s bad days Emily would be told, usually without the door being opened, that all donations were handled by her husband and that he would be home around six that night. On these occasions, Emily would let herself in and spend ten minutes explaining who she was, where she fitted into Gran’s life, and convincing the old lady that she was just there to visit. This Gran invariably accepted with a sceptical but resigned frown and waved a hand to indicate she find somewhere to sit.

  Today the door opened suddenly, startling Emily slightly.

  ‘Come in.’

  Emily couldn’t tell from the greeting whether it was a good or bad day, and she frowned as she entered the room. She settle
d herself in her favourite position: cross-legged on the multicoloured rug Gran had crocheted back before her memory and eyes had let her down. Gran went over to the only available chair but remained standing, wringing her hands. There was something different about her, but Emily couldn’t put her finger on what it was. And she was still none the wiser as to her mental state.

  ‘Emily, I need you to listen to me.’

  Phew, it was a good day. ‘I always listen to you, Granny Rose.’

  ‘I know, but this is important.’ Granny Rose seemed agitated.

  ‘Okay. But Gran, please sit down, you’re making me nervous.’

  Instead, Rose Mayfair knelt and retrieved a large rattling jar of buttons from under the bed. Emily recognised it at once. She had loved the colourful collection since first being allowed to touch the outside as a four year old. For as long as she could remember she’d been fascinated by the fact that Gran had often added buttons but had never taken any out. She’d once asked why and had been told they were too precious; it was easier just to buy some more. Emily had always accepted the explanation without further question.

  When the old lady struggled to get back to her feet, Emily rushed to her aid.

  ‘Don’t ever get as old as me, dear. It’s horrible.’

  ‘I could have got it for you, silly,’ Emily scolded.

  Granny was slightly out of breath when she finally settled in the chair.

  ‘Thank you, dear. Now, it won’t be long before I’ll be pushing up daisies and …’

  ‘Don’t talk like that, Gran.’

  ‘Oh fiddlesticks. It’s the truth and the inevitable …’ she waved a dismissive arm. ‘But now, I need you to have this and take good care of it.’ Gran pushed the jar towards Emily.

  ‘Of course I will,’ Emily said, clutching it to her chest. ‘Thank you.’

 

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