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The Last Letter from Your Lover

The Last Letter from Your Lover

Titel: The Last Letter from Your Lover Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jojo Moyes
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expensive.’
    ‘But asbestos doesn’t hurt anyone. It’s just troublemakers in New York who are trying to blame him. Laurence told me.’
    Moira didn’t seem to be listening. She ran her hand down a list on the top sheet. ‘They’re all in alphabetical order. You can speak to the families, if you want. Most of their addresses are at the top. He’s terrified that the newspapers will get hold of it all.’
    ‘It’s just the unions . . . He told me . . .’
    ‘Other companies are having the same problem. I listened in on a couple of telephone conversations he had with Goodasbest in America. They’re funding research that makes asbestos look harmless.’
    The woman was speaking so fast that Jennifer’s head reeled. She glanced at the two children, now throwing handfuls of sand at each other.
    Moira Parker said pointedly: ‘You do realise it would ruin him if anyone found out what he’d done. It’ll come out eventually, you know. It’ll have to. Everything does.’
    Jennifer held the folder gingerly, as if it, too, might be contaminated. ‘Why are you giving this to me? Why on earth do you think I’d want to do anything that might harm my husband?’
    Moira Parker’s expression changed and became almost guilty. Her lips had pursed into a thin red line. ‘Because of this.’ She pulled out a creased piece of paper and thrust it into Jennifer’s hand. ‘It came a few weeks after your accident. All those years ago. He doesn’t know I kept it.’
    Jennifer unfolded it, the wind whipping it against her fingers. She knew the handwriting.
    I swore I wouldn’t contact you again. But six weeks on I feel no better. Being without you – thousands of miles from you – offers no relief at all. The fact that I am no longer tormented by your proximity, or presented with daily evidence of my inability to have the one thing I truly want, has not healed me. It has made things worse. My future feels like a bleak, empty road.
    I don’t know what I’m trying to say, darling Jenny. Just that if you have any sense at all that you made the wrong decision, this door is still wide open.
    And if you feel that your decision was the right one, know this at least: that somewhere in this world is a man who loves you, who understands how precious and clever and kind you are. A man who has always loved you and, to his detriment, suspects he always will.
    Your
    B
    Jennifer stared at the letter as the blood drained from her face. She glanced at the date. Almost four years ago. Just after the accident. ‘Did you say Laurence had this?’
    Moira Parker looked at the ground. ‘He made me shut down the post-office box.’
    ‘He knew Anthony was still alive?’ She was shaking.
    ‘I don’t know about any of that.’ Moira Parker hoisted up her collar. She managed to look disapproving.
    A cold stone had settled inside Jennifer. She felt the rest of herself harden around it.
    Moira Parker clipped her handbag shut. ‘Anyway, do what you want with it all. He can go hang for all I care.’
    She was still muttering to herself as she began to walk back across the park. Jennifer sank on to a bench, ignoring the two children, who were now joyfully rubbing sand into each other’s hair. She read the letter again.
    She took Dorothy Moncrieff home to her nanny, and asked Mrs Cordoza if she would walk Esmé to the sweet shop. ‘Buy her a lollipop, and perhaps a quarter of a pound of boiled sweets.’ She stood at the window to watch them go down the road, her daughter’s every step a little bounce of anticipation. As they turned the corner, she opened the door to Laurence’s study, a room she rarely entered, and from which Esmé was banned, lest her inquisitive little fingers presume to displace one of its many valuable items.
    Afterwards she was not sure why she had even gone in there. She had always hated it: the gloomy mahogany shelves, full of books he had never read, the lingering smell of cigar smoke, the trophies and certificates for achievements she could not recognise as such – Round Table Businessman of the Year , Best Shot, Cowbridge Deer Stalk 1959 , Golfing Trophy 1962 . He rarely used it: it was an affectation, a place he promised his male guests where they might ‘escape’ the women, a refuge in which he professed to find peace.
    Two comfortable armchairs stood on each side of the fireplace, their seats barely dented. In eight years a fire had never been lit in the grate. On the sideboard the cut-glass tumblers

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