by Liz Eeles
SECRETS AT THE LAST HOUSE BEFORE THE SEA
A GRIPPING AND EMOTIONAL PAGE-TURNER
LIZ EELES
BOOKS BY LIZ EELES
HEAVEN’S COVE SERIES
Secrets at the Last House Before the Sea
THE COSY KETTLE SERIES
New Starts and Cherry Tarts at the Cosy Kettle
A Summer Escape and Strawberry Cake at the Cosy Kettle
A Christmas Wish and a Cranberry Kiss at the Cosy Kettle
SALT BAY SERIES
Annie’s Holiday by the Sea
Annie’s Christmas by the Sea
Annie’s Summer by the Sea
CONTENTS
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Epilogue
New Starts and Cherry Tarts at the Cosy Kettle
Hear More from Liz
Books by Liz Eeles
A Letter from Liz
A Summer Escape and Strawberry Cake at the Cosy Kettle
A Christmas Wish and a Cranberry Kiss at the Cosy Kettle
Annie’s Holiday by the Sea
Annie’s Christmas by the Sea
Annie’s Summer by the Sea
Acknowledgments
For Ivor Frederick Eeles, the best dad a girl could have. We miss you.
PROLOGUE
My darling Saffy,
You are in my heart for as long as the world turns. Before you, my life was empty and cold, and your love has brought me more happiness than I deserve. The thought of our wedding day, and spending the rest of my life with you, fills me with joy.
Know that you are always loved.
J
CHAPTER 1
Rosie turned the corner, into the salt-laced wind, and pushed up the collar of her jacket. She’d forgotten quite how chilly the English coast could be in early spring. Despite the grey clouds piling up over the sea, tourists on the quayside, with mottled bare legs, were still licking ice creams, grimly determined to enjoy their holidays before the rain set in.
Yes, Devon was just as she remembered it: dreary, damp and depressing. If only she was still in Spain, and she’d never got that phone call.
Seagulls screeched mournfully overhead as Rosie imagined herself under the tree in her Andalusian garden: her skin hot on the sun lounger, glimpses of azure sky through the palm fronds and bright splashes of Moorish tiles on her apartment wall.
Colours in southern Spain were vivid and vibrant, not muted and soft like here in Heaven’s Cove. She stared at the moss-green waves breaking against the harbour wall and darkening the pale stone. Like the ebb and flow of the tides, nothing here ever seemed to change. It was the same old, same old year after year. Narrow lanes clogged with tourists, barn dances in the village hall, cholesterol-boosting cream teas for sale. Though after this week’s shocking news, she didn’t suppose anything would be quite the same for her ever again.
‘Oi, watch out, Lily, or you’ll run that lady over.’
Rosie gathered her thoughts and side-stepped swiftly to avoid a girl on a pink bicycle with stabilisers. The dark-haired child wobbled past her on the pavement, scraping along the side of Rosie’s battered suitcase.
‘I’m so sorry. She got the bike for her birthday but hasn’t got the hang of steering yet.’ The short, curvy woman chasing after the youngster stopped suddenly and buried her hands deep into the pockets of her grey hoodie. ‘Um, aren’t you…?’
She trailed off as Rosie scoured her memory for the woman’s name. It began with a V, she was sure of it. Veronica? Violet? No, Vanessa, that was it. Though she was known as Nessa at school and nicknamed The Loch Nessa Monster – not because she was scary but because, like the fabled creature, she was rarely seen. Nessa was a serial truant. And now a mother, it seemed.
Rosie huddled further into her jacket as dark spots of rain began to splatter on the cobbled pavement. ‘I’m Rosie. We were at school together. I think you were in the year below me.’
‘Ah, that’s it.’ Nessa nodded, her tone suggesting she already knew exactly who Rosie was. ‘I haven’t seen you around here in a while.’
‘I’ve been living abroad for the last few years.’
‘Yeah, I can tell. You didn’t get that tan in Heaven’s Cove.’ Nessa shifted from foot to foot and ran a hand along her shiny, brown ponytail. ‘I was really sorry to hear what happened to your mum, by the way. It was such a shame. Hey, Lily, stay there and wait for Mummy, please.’
Such a shame. Rosie blinked behind her sunglasses, the knot in her chest tightening. ‘Thank you. It was a huge shock.’
‘It must have been. I guess that’s why you’re here.’
‘I needed to come back for a week or two. I’ve already been to the funeral home in Exeter. There’s a lot to be sorted out.’
‘I can imagine. Your mum’s death was a shock to all of us, coming out of the blue like that. And it doesn’t seem right that her home is empty now. It looks kind of sad.’
For the first time since arriving in the village, Rosie allowed herself to glance up at Driftwood House. Her family home, perched high on the cliffs above Heaven’s Cove, did look rather lonely with its blank windows reflecting the steely sky.
She looked away quickly. Crying in front of someone from school wouldn’t do. News of her distress would spread around the village like wildfire and then a stream of people would come to the house, offering condolences and veiled disapproval that she had, to all intents and purposes, abandoned her mother.
Why hadn’t she come back to Heaven’s Cove last month when she’d had a few days off work? Instead, she’d spent the time decorating her apartment and drinking sangria in the sunshine with friends.
Rosie pushed her fingernails into the palm of her hand, willing herself to stay in control for a while longer. ‘It’s really sad,’ she agreed, unsure if she was referring to her mother’s death, or the fact that the house now stood alone and empty.
Nessa nodded and ruffled Lily’s hair. The girl had given up waiting and wobbled back along the narrow pavement. ‘So will you be staying in Heaven’s Cove for long?’
‘I certainly hope not.’
The words were out before Rosie could stop them and Nessa’s face fell. ‘I dare say Devon is a bit boring after all your travels. Which amazing place are you living in at the moment, then?’
‘I’ve been in Andalusia for the last eighteen months, in southern Spain.’
‘Yes, I know where Andalusia is,’ replied Nessa, with an almost imperceptible eye-roll. ‘What do you do there, then, in exotic, far-away Andalusia?’
It was hard to tell if she was being sarcastic or was truly interested in her life.
‘This and that.’ Rosie shrugged, keen to bring the conversation to a close. ‘I’m working part-time in a B&B and the rest of the time for a property company, mostly flogging apartments with sea views.’
�
�That sounds wonderful.’
Rosie nodded, though showing hot, sweaty people around tiny flats was less wonderful than Nessa seemed to imagine. Especially when the promised ‘sea view’ turned out to involve leaning over the side of a balcony on tiptoe, to catch a glimpse of the sparkling ocean. She’d grown used to potential buyers’ excitement turning to disappointment but it made her feel uncomfortable nonetheless.
Nessa was still staring at her. ‘Um, what are you up to these days?’ asked Rosie, taking off her sunglasses and wiping spots of rain from the lenses.
‘Oh, nothing as exciting. I’m working part-time in Shelley’s hardware store and bringing up this little one, of course.’ She smiled down at Lily, before pulling a tissue from her pocket and scrubbing at the dark stain around the child’s mouth. ‘Birthday chocolate! She doesn’t usually eat sweets. I’m not the kind of mother who fills her kids full of sugar to shut them up, in spite of what some people think. Single parents get a bad press, specially round here where everyone has an opinion.’ Nessa’s cheeks flushed. ‘Sorry. I don’t mean to get on my soapbox but this place does my head in sometimes.’
Rosie smiled, her facial expressions on autopilot. ‘I know what you mean. But I’m sure you’re doing a brilliant job. I admire anyone who’s bringing up kids.’
‘Really?’ When Nessa grinned, the crease between her eyebrows disappeared.
‘Really. How old is your daughter?’
‘She was four two days ago.’
‘Is she your only one?’
‘Yeah, thank goodness. One’s quite enough for me.’
When Rosie nodded, too wrung out for more small talk, Nessa glanced at her watch. ‘Look, I’d better be getting on but it was good to see you again. And I am so sorry about your mum. I know what it’s like.’
A vague memory surfaced in Rosie’s mind, of Nessa’s mother passing away years ago after an illness. She’d wondered at the time if Nessa was truanting from school to look after her. And now both of them were motherless.
‘Nothing feels real at the moment. I keep thinking it’s all a mistake, a really horrible mistake, and I haven’t even cried yet. Is that wrong?’
Rosie hadn’t meant to blurt that out, but Nessa seemed unfazed. ‘Nah, I reckon that’s totally normal. It’s the shock of it all. I didn’t cry for ages and then I couldn’t stop.’ She hesitated for a moment, lost in a memory, before grabbing Lily’s hand. ‘Look, losing a parent is rubbish but you’ll get through it. Honest. And if you need anything, just look me up in Shelley’s. I seem to spend most of my life there.’
‘Thanks. I appreciate that.’
With a nod, Nessa scurried off with her daughter, and Rosie picked up her suitcase. That might have been her life if she’d stayed in Heaven’s Cove. She could be bringing up young children and working part-time selling rubber rings to tourists. Would that have been so bad? At least she’d have been close when her mum needed her, and her mum would have so loved being a gran.
An image of her mother lifting up a child and laughing flitted into her mind. She wasn’t sure if it was a memory or a might-have-been, and the knot in her chest tightened until it was hard to breathe.
‘Just. Stop. Thinking!’ she said out loud. A middle-aged man in baggy shorts glanced at her nervously and ushered his family away from the crazy lady.
This wouldn’t do. Rosie gulped down the deepest breath she could manage and focused on the brightly painted fishing boats bobbing at the quay. She took in the gentle slap of waves against stone and the scent of the briny air, and gradually her torturous thoughts began to slow.
Everything was so familiar here, even after being away for so long. And at least her first encounter with someone from her past had gone smoothly. She’d been worried that habitual feelings of not belonging in this tight-knit community would come flooding back. Her face had never seemed to fit around here. But Nessa had been pretty decent, actually, so maybe returning to Heaven’s Cove and facing her old school friends and neighbours wouldn’t be as bad as she feared.
Buoyed up by this thought, Rosie ducked into one of the narrow lanes that led away from the sea and walked past a row of whitewashed cottages. She’d certainly imagined the villagers being less welcoming during her journey back to England: a three-hour flight from Málaga that seemed to last forever. The plane had been full of happy holidaymakers coming back from trips away, their high spirits contrasting sharply with her grief and guilt.
‘Maybe it’ll be OK being back in Heaven’s Cove,’ murmured Rosie, ignoring the fact that she was talking to herself again. ‘It’s going to be all right.’
But when a barrel-shaped woman stepped out of the fishmonger’s with a parcel wrapped in newspaper, Rosie’s brief flash of positivity did a nosedive. There were two people she was desperately hoping to avoid during her stay. One of them was Katrina Crawley, who’d been a right cow to her at school and never missed a chance to put her down. The other was Belinda Kellscroft, who was now homing in on her like a heat-seeking missile. It was ages since they’d last met and Belinda knew very little about Rosie’s life now, but that wouldn’t stop her from commenting. Belinda commented on everything and everyone at length, whether she was well informed or not.
Rosie put her head down and picked up speed but it was too late. Belinda stopped directly in front of her, parcel tucked into her bag, hands on her hips and the gold rings on her fingers glinting in the watery sunlight peeping through cloud.
‘Rose Merchant, as I live and breathe. So you finally made it home.’
She pursed her lips, no more words needed because her sour expression said it all: Such a shame you only came back after your mother’s death.
Rosie tensed, noticing the extra grey in the tight perm that curled around Belinda’s lined face. She’d had the same hairstyle for as long as Rosie could remember.
‘I’ve only just arrived. I got the first flight I could after… after I heard the news. A doctor called me from the hospital.’
Though it hadn’t been Rosie who’d taken the call. She’d been too busy cooking paella and drinking wine in the kitchen of her sunny apartment to answer her ringing phone. Matt had answered it instead, which upset Rosie hugely – not only was she a thousand miles away when her mother had a stroke, she hadn’t even been the first to know that something was wrong. What kind of daughter was she?
Belinda sniffed as though she knew exactly what kind of daughter Rosie was. ‘I’m very sorry for your loss. Poor, poor Sofia to be taken so soon. Tell me, when were you last back in Heaven’s Cove?’
‘I’m not sure. It must be about three years.’
‘Such a long time.’
‘I guess so, but Mum regularly came out to visit me, wherever I was.’
The newspaper around Belinda’s parcel crackled when she folded her arms, crushing her bag against her chest. ‘Sofia showed off her holiday photos to everyone in the village. She lived for those visits.’
‘And we Skyped a lot when she was over here. All the time, really.’
Sorrow washed over Rosie as it hit her there would be no more internet calls, no more picking up Mum from foreign airports, no more sending her pics of hot and dusty Spain on WhatsApp. It still didn’t seem real.
‘Hmm, well I suppose that was better than nothing. And it’s good you’re back now. I dare say there will be a lot to sort out up at the house.’
‘I expect so. That’s where I’m going now.’
‘Right.’ Belinda’s sharp features softened. ‘If you need any help, don’t forget that we’re all here and watching over you.’
She was only trying to be nice. Rosie knew that, but the back of her neck still prickled. She always felt claustrophobic in Heaven’s Cove with its tiny, cobbled streets that were jammed with tourists in the summer months. Even the cove itself had a hemmed-in feel, with its crescent of bright sand curbed by cliffs at either end. But it was the constant feeling of being watched that had got to her as a teenager.
She couldn’t put a
foot out of line without someone – usually Belinda – reporting back to her mum. Whether it was sitting with her legs dangling over the cliff edge, jumping off rocks into the cool sea, or skipping out of school at lunchtime to buy chips, the gossips of Heaven’s Cove made sure that her mother heard about every minor transgression.
‘Thank you, Belinda,’ said Rosie, her throat tightening. ‘But I’m sure I’ll be fine.’
‘You’ll be jetting back to Greece or Italy, or wherever it is you’re living now, before you know it. Everything done and dusted and Heaven’s Cove forgotten forever.’
Rosie nodded, not trusting herself to speak, as Belinda launched into one of her infamous gossip-fests. ‘Did your mother keep you up to date with village news while you were away? Did you hear that Phyllis Collins has moved to Exeter to live with her awful niece, Serena near the quay has taken up with a chartered accountant, and Simon in the old coastguard’s cottage has decided he’s gay?’
Rosie nodded again, although it was the first she’d heard of any of it – unlike Belinda, her mum didn’t revel in passing on village gossip. She was also sure that Simon hadn’t simply ‘decided’ to be gay, as Belinda had so succinctly put it.
‘And we’ve just carried out repairs on the village hall roof because the old one was leaking like a sieve. I ended up chairing the fundraising committee, of course. If you want a good job done around here, do it yourself.’ Her laugh juddered through Rosie like nails down a blackboard. Belinda was mostly well meaning, but she was hard to cope with on a day like today.
Rosie stepped into the road and moved around her. ‘Sorry not to stop and chat but I’d better get to Driftwood House.’
‘Oh yes, of course. As I say, we’re all very sorry about your mother. Sofia was an unusual woman – a bit of a hippy, really. But she was one of us and we’ll miss her. Look after yourself, my dear.’
A hippy? That was probably fair enough. Her mum was never happier than when walking barefoot over the cliffs, with wild flowers threaded into her long hair. Rosie batted away the painful memory and walked along the lane, dragging her suitcase over the cobbles and feeling Belinda’s eyes on her back until she turned the corner.