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Flights of Angels

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by Victoria Connelly




  Table of Contents

  Flights of Angels

  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

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Other Books by Victoria Connelly

  Flights of Angels

  Victoria Connelly

  Copyright 2001 Victoria Connelly

  Cover image copyright Roy Connelly

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Victoria Connelly asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.

  ISBN 978-0-9569866-2-7

  Published by Cuthland Press

  in association with Notting Hill Press

  To Roy with love

  ***

  Prologue

  It’s a well-known fact that brides don’t look good in black. But newly-weds look even worse, and Claudie Gale was no exception. Her skin was porcelain-white against the ebony of her dress as she sat shivering in the tiny church. The very church she’d got married in just six weeks before. She could almost smell the flowers; almost feel the warmth of the June sun filtering through the stained glass windows. Almost, but not quite. It wasn’t quite there because she wasn’t quite there either. She felt suspended from her body as if a puppeteer had attached strings to her and was hovering somewhere up in the church rafters.

  She knew she’d promised till death us do part, but she hadn’t reckoned on the death part coming round so quickly. It all felt so incomplete, like an unfinished conversation, or the curtain falling five minutes into a play.

  She could remember their last conversation at the train station so clearly. She’d insisted on seeing him off. It was what newly-weds did, wasn’t it? Like lovingly smiling when you’re picking up socks off the bedroom floor, or putting down the toilet seat for the fourth time that day. It soon wore off, she’d been warned, but she’d insisted on basking in it whilst it lasted.

  ‘Do you have to go?’ she’d complained, her finger making tiny circles in his great, thick palm.

  ‘Claudie, it was arranged months ago. You knew that when we booked the wedding. I can’t let the lads down now, can I?’

  ‘I know,’ she’d lied, desperately wanting to be selfish and keep him all to herself for a little while longer. ‘But it’s so dangerous.’

  Luke had smiled down at her, his intense blue eyes twinkling mischievously. ‘It’s no more dangerous than crossing the road,’ he’d told her before giving her a kiss which had set her toes on fire.

  ‘You will take care?’ she said.

  ‘You know I will. And you will too? There are a lot of roads round here.’

  She’d smiled and thumped him in the belly, an d then he’d given her one of his crushing bear-hugs which flattened her nose and squashed her chin. She remembered how she’d protested the first time he’d hugged her like that.

  ‘I’m suffocating! Let me go!’

  ‘No, never!’ he’d yelled back.

  But he had let her go. He’d left her, hadn’t he?

  She’d watched him hop onto the train, wielding his mammoth rucksack as if it were a mere wisp of material. They’d blown kisses and waved as the train pulled out, and Claudie had stood on the platform, like a character from a 1940’s movie, watching as her husband turned into a funny little dot on the horizon.

  It wasn’t simply the fact that she’d never see him again which upset her, but that he’d never see her or anything else ever again. For Luke, the world had stopped on the twenty-first of July. No more songs would be sung; no more books would be written. On the twenty-first of July, the world had become complete for him: no additions, no evolutions. And Claudie couldn’t bear that.

  Life with Luke had been like living in the land of Oz: a perfect Technicolor dream-sequence. But now she was back in Kansas: drab, colourless, and threatened with tornadoes.

  What was she going to do without her daily intake of jokes? He’d turned her into a joke junkie. She laughed now as she remembered one of them, blissfully forgetting where she was for a moment.

  ‘Claudie?’ her mother, who’d flown over from Marseille for both wedding and funeral after not having seen her daughter for four years, sounded sharp and stressed-out.

  ‘Claudie? What’s the matter?’

  What’s the matter? What’s the matter? The sheer idiocy of the question caused Claudie an unprecedented fit of giggles.

  ‘Claudie!’ her mother’s manicured hand clasped her arm but it didn’t do any good. She’d slipped out of the world around her, and was miles from anywhere and everybody.

  And that’s when the voices had started. All suspended. Were there puppeteer’s strings attached to them too? Claudie looked up into the rafters but it was too dark; she couldn’t see.

  ‘It’s only to be expected.’

  ‘She shouldn’t have come.’

  ‘She needs to be on her own.’

  ‘Just give her time.’

  Everything was echoey and dreamlike, and she felt her vision blurring as hot tears spilled from her eyes. It was the joke that was making her cry, wasn’t it? She just couldn’t stop laughing.

  And then, all of a sudden, she couldn’t remember what it was that she’d found so funny. What was the punch line? What had he said to her?

  Where was he?

  ‘Luke?’

  She was no longer laughing.

  Chapter 1

  ‘How long has it been now?’ Angela asked after swallowing a mouthful of machine-processed coffee.

  ‘Nine months,’ Kristen replied, opting for the hot chocolate after seeing Angela’s weak specimen.

  ‘Is that long enough, do you think? You know - to get over it?’

  Kristen puffed out her cheeks and sighed. ‘Well, it once took me nine months to get over an ex-boyfriend.’

  ‘Blimey! How long had you been going out with him?’

  ‘Six weeks.’

  Angela nodded in sympathy and drained her cup, filling it up again. This time, the coffee came out looking like molasses.

  ‘It’s not natural, is it?’ she said, not noticing the contents of her cup. ‘I mean, he was so young. It just seems so unfair.’

  Kristen nodded, looking across at Claudie who was staring vacantly at her PC, her pen hanging out of her mouth as if it were a particularly potent joint. ‘I hardly recognise her these days. She’s just shut herself away.’r />
  ‘So what did all those books say? You must have read every one written on the subject by now.’

  Kristen sipped her chocolate, licking the undissolved particles from her lips. ‘They’re perfectly useless. One will say one thing, the next: another. I don’t think anybody really knows.’

  ‘But wasn’t there that emotional equation thing?’

  ‘That the stronger the love, the longer you grieve?’ Kristen looked at Angela. ‘So, the only way to avoid grief is by not loving.’

  Angela shook her head. ‘It’s not natural. How can a person get through life without loving?’

  ‘I don’t think you can.’

  ‘No. It can’t be done, can it?’

  They stood in silence for a moment, drinking and thinking.

  ‘We’ve got to do something, though, haven’t we?’ Angela began.

  ‘She’s still seeing that bloke in York. That must be helping,’ Kristen reasoned.

  ‘How do you know? Are you sure she doesn’t just get on the train and go shopping?’

  ‘No! She wouldn’t do a thing like that.’

  ‘Or just go and sit in the cinema? You know what she’s like with films.’

  Kristen knew only too well. There’d been many a Saturday evening when she’d tried to drag an unwilling Claudie away from her collection of MGM musicals and actually leave the house.

  ‘What is she doing with that pen pot?’ Kristen whispered, watching Claudie’s glossy brown bob swinging from side to side as she examined the stationery on her desk. ‘That’s the third time she’s emptied it this morning.’

  ‘And she’s sorted through her in-tray a dozen times too. She must have lost something.’

  Kristen nodded. She’d been afraid of as much for the last nine months.

  Claudie looked at the growing pile of work leaning precariously over the edge of her table like a paper version of the Tower of Pisa. She had enough to keep her busy for a week but she just couldn’t muster any enthusiasm.

  It was odd but, since that morning, she’d had the strangest sensation that she was being watched. Yes, she knew Kristen and Angela had been talking about her again: they were about as subtle as a sledgehammer, but there was something else. It was almost as if her computer had turned into an enormous eye; a great spying Cyclops on her desk, watching her, recording her, assessing her. It gave her the shivers. She kept having to get up and leave her desk. A bit of filing here, a quick trip to the ladies, a lengthy session at the photocopier. But, as soon as she sat down, the feeling would come back.

  She’d soon become paranoid and had started looking round the room, half-expecting to see a hidden camera, as if she were the unwilling guinea pig on a new television programme. But everything seemed normal; depressingly so.

  Then there was the other problem. She kept losing things. Yesterday, it had been her calculator, today her silver Parker pen. She was sure she’d left it by her keyboard, but it wasn’t there any more. Was she going mad? It was very probable. She really couldn’t trust herself with anything at the moment.

  And then it had happened. From the corner of her eye, she saw something move: quick and fluid as a fish. She turned round and blinked, but whatever it was had gone. She shook her head and smiled. She knew what her problem was. She needed a dose of caffeine.

  Still, as she wondered whether to have weak-as-rainwater tea or thick-as-quicksand chocolate, she couldn’t get it out of her head. For a moment, she’d sincerely believed she’d seen a tiny person diving into her pen pot.

  Chapter 2

  Claudie wondered if Dr Lynton would believe her. She always enjoyed the sessions she had with him. There was an unexpected cosiness about being somebody’s focus of attention for a whole hour, but was it doing her any good? She’d been going for several weeks now, and still wasn’t sure that she was making enough progress. Still, it kept her best friend, Kristen, off her back. Honestly, she could be worse than a mother at times and, with Claudie’s mother, that was saying something.

  Claudie had never been close to her mother. At the age of eight, she’d put her on a plane from Marseille under the pretence of wanting her daughter to have an English education, but it really had been to enable her to divorce Claudie’s father and set up home with the toy boy milliner Claudie detested. It had been his idea in the first place, Claudie had later found out. He’d had a cousin who lived near the boarding school, and gave it a glowing report, but he was a middle-aged man and would never have to go there.

  Claudie had staunchly stood her ground during school holidays back in France, and would have nothing to do with the hat man. No man could buy her with a hat. Not even a feather-festooned, Gigi, affair.

  It had been an ugly, grey time, and Claudie had never seen her real father again, but at least her mother had had a hat for every occasion. But she never really forgave her for what she did. Eight years was far too young to end up in a gothic grange in the middle of the North Yorkshire Moors, and Claudie had screamed the rafters down every night until her mother had been forced to withdraw her from the school.

  ‘What are we to do with you?’ she’d complained, as if having a child had been nothing to do with her, and bitterly resenting the fact that her daughter was now compromising her life.

  So they’d settled in Whitby; a strange and unlikely place to end up when you were used to the Southern France climate, but compensated by being relatively cheap, and punctuated by regular flights back to France where her mother could top up her tan and her hat collection.

  Claudie didn’t care too much about having such a disjointed life because it was at that time that she’d met Kristen. Big-haired, big-mouthed and loveable, she’d instantly taken over the role of mother and, when they both left school and secured bedsits and jobs at a local solicitors, Claudie’s mother had sold-up and left England forever. But Claudie had no wish to return to her birthplace. She loved Yorkshire: weather-warts and all.

  Crossing the road from York station, Claudie followed the city walls. There was something about the place that always sent a pleasant shiver down her spine. Perhaps it was the thought of Romans, Vikings, Highwaymen and modern-day tourists all drawn to the same city.

  And now her. She’d found her own little corner of York at number fifteen Elizabeth Street, a three-storey town house, in pale blonde stone with a bright yellow door and a brass plaque on the wall. Claudie had laughed the first time she’d seen it because, following Dr Lynton’s name, there was a list of letters long enough to form a short story. She had no idea what any of them stood for but trusted Kristen’s friend of a friend’s recommendation.

  What he was a doctor in she had no idea. She was well aware that you could get a doctorate in Disney nowadays, and that titles before your name and letters after it could count for very little, but Dr Lynton had proved wonderful. Warm and welcoming, he’d quickly put her at ease and was the perfect blend of silence and advice that she had so desperately been looking for in order to help her through the quagmire of her mind.

  At first, she’d had to remind herself that he was a professional, and not a friend. It was so easy to forget that she was paying him for his time rather than him offering it as a friend, and so they had maintained the kind of distance shared between teachers and pupils.

  She didn’t even know what the ‘P’ in Dr P Lynton stood for, but had often speculated on what it might be. For weeks she’d had a strong suspicion that it was Peregrine: aristocratic and well-educated, but she’d since gone off that idea. No, it had to be Percival. Percy Lynton. Dignified yet approachable. Yes, she liked that.

  She hadn’t been at all sure what to expect from her sessions in York, and whether Dr Lynton was orthodox or not, and she’d always been a little sceptical about therapy; she just couldn’t quite see the point of being able to say: ‘Hi, my name’s Claudie, and I’m a widow.’ Would that sort of personal acknowledgement make her feel any better, and what would Luke think of her seeing a counsellor? He’d always been so self-reliant, so very ind
ependent, and would probably be horrified that she was seeking outside help. But she wasn’t as strong as he had been.

  At their first meeting, he’d explained how every person was an individual, and that it was almost impossible to timetable progress, so that didn’t exactly help. So how could she tell if she was making any progress? Did she get up one morning and feel better? Was surviving grief like coming round from anaesthetic, or shaking off a bad dose of flu? Could she ever expect to be the person she once was?

  One thing was for sure, her visits to York were certainly better than a long afternoon’s typing at Bartholomew and Simpson. Claudie loved these old houses with their lofty ceilings and picture rails, and it was almost worth coming just to spend an hour in the sumptuous surroundings.

  She pressed the doorbell, which always reminded her of a great Liquorice Allsort, and didn’t have to wait long for Dr Lynton to appear. Big as the door frame but with a smile as soft as butter, he ushered Claudie in. His study occupied a room at the back of the house which overlooked a tiny courtyard stuffed with overflowing troughs and chimney pots. Claudie often felt her eyes drifting towards it when she was meant to be soul-searching. She didn’t know much about plants but she liked to have a go at identifying them. She recognised the rosemary with its green spikes, and the lavender, but she didn’t know what the others were. Perhaps they were all medicinal? Perhaps he’d administer her some if she asked? But maybe it wasn’t possible to grow opium in York.

  The room itself was painted a warm yolky-yellow, and had two alcoves stuffed with the sort of books you can only buy second-hand. Selected watercolours of local scenes hung on the walls in old gilt frames, and a large Swiss Cheese plant grew happily by the patio door. There was an air of faded grandeur about the place which perhaps contributed to the sense of calm Claudie felt whilst there.

  ‘How are you, Claudie?’ Dr Lynton began with his usual opening question.

 

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