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The Husband’s Secret

The Husband’s Secret

Titel: The Husband’s Secret Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Liane Moriarty
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didn’t.’
    His arms around her seemed to soften.
    ‘Thank you. Feel embarrassed.’
    ‘Don’t be stupid.’
    His breathing slowed. She let hers slow to match his.
    She’d lied because she didn’t want to lose the opportunity to read the letter, if and when she chose to read it. It was a real lie that lay between them now. Damn it. She just wanted to forget about the bloody letter.
    She was so tired. She would think about it tomorrow.

    It was impossible to know how long she’d been asleep when she woke up again, alone in bed. Cecilia squinted at the digital clock. She couldn’t see it without her glasses.
    ‘John-Paul?’ she said, pushing herself up on her elbows. There was no sound from the ensuite bathroom. Normally he slept like the dead after a long-haul flight.
    There was a sound above her head.
    She sat up, completely alert, her heart hammering with instant understanding. He was in the attic. He never went in the attic . She’d seen the tiny beads of sweat gathering above his lips when he suffered an attack of claustrophobia. He must want that letter very badly if he was prepared to go up there.
    Hadn’t he once said: ‘It would have to be a matter of life or death to get me up there’?
    Was the letter a matter of life or death?
    Cecilia didn’t hesitate. She got out of bed, walked down the dark hallway, and into the office. She switched on thedesk lamp, slid open the top drawer of the filing cabinet and pulled out the red manila folder marked Wills .
    She sat down in the leather chair, swivelled it to face the desk and opened the file in the little pool of yellow light created by the desk light.
    For my wife, Cecilia Fitzpatrick.
    To be opened only in the event of my death.
    She opened the top drawer, took out the letter opener.
    There were frantic footsteps above her head, a thud as something fell over. He sounded like a crazy man. It occurred to her that for him to be back in Australia now, he must have gone straight to the airport after she called last night.
    For Christ’s sake, John-Paul, what in the world is going on?
    With one swift, vicious movement, she sliced the envelope open. She pulled out a handwritten letter. For a moment her eyes couldn’t focus. The words danced about in front of her.
    our baby girl Isabel
    so sorry to leave you with this
    given me more happiness than I ever deserved
    She forced herself to read it properly. Left to right. Sentence by sentence.

chapter fifteen
    Tess woke up suddenly, irretrievably alert. She looked at the clock next to her bed and groaned. It was only eleven-thirty pm. She snapped on the bedside light and lay back on her pillow, staring up at the ceiling.
    This was her old bedroom, but there wasn’t anything much left in it to remind her of her childhood. Tess had barely been out the door before her mother had transformed it into an elegant guest bedroom with a good queen-size bed, matching bedside tables and lamps. This was in complete contrast to Auntie Mary, who had reverently kept Felicity’s bedroom exactly as she’d left it. Felicity’s room was like a perfectly preserved archaeological site, with the TV Week posters still on the wall.
    The only part of Tess’s bedroom that had remained untouched was the ceiling. She let her eyes follow the rippled edge of the white cornices. She used to lie in bed staring at the ceiling on a Sunday morning, worrying about what she’d said at last night’s party, or what she hadn’t said, or what she should have said. Parties had terrified her. Parties still terrified her. It was the lack of structure, the casualness, the not knowing where to sit. If it wasn’t for Felicity shewould never have gone, but Felicity was always keen to go. She’d stand with Tess in a corner, quietly delivering cutting critiques on all the guests and making Tess laugh.
    Felicity had been her saviour.
    Wasn’t that true?
    Tonight, when she and her mother had sat down for a glass of brandy and too much chocolate (‘This is how I coped when your father left,’ Lucy explained. ‘It’s medicinal.’), they’d been talking about Felicity’s phone call, and Tess said, ‘The other night, you guessed that it was Will and Felicity. How did you know?’
    ‘Felicity never let you have anything just for yourself,’ said her mother.
    ‘What?’ Tess felt bemused, disbelieving. ‘That’s not true.’
    ‘You wanted to learn the piano. Felicity learned the piano. You played netball. Felicity played netball. You got

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