Book of Eve , livre ebook

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2015

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19 year old Melissa doesn't realise how bored she is with her dead-end life until she meets the beautiful renowned author, Annaliese, and her friends. Seduced by their easy glamour and apparently golden lifestyle, when an opportunity arises to become part of their charmed circle, Melissa desperately grabs it. However, she quickly suspects all is not as it seems within this beautiful world she now inhabits. Exactly who is Annaliese, where does she come from, and why does Melissa feel her new home is a house of secrets? Dismissing her initial doubts, Melissa willingly shrugs off her old persona to become Eve, talented and sophisticated, a valued member of Annaliese's inner circle of friends, accepted and loved by them all, except Caro, Annaliese's oldest friend and trusted confidante. She alone despises Eve with an intense hatred that seems to have its roots buried deep in the past. Years pass and Eve accepts that she will never be more than a friend to Scott, one of the circle and himself an enigma. Taciturn and withdrawn, seemingly emotionless, he too has his secrets. Despairing she will ever break through Scott's solid outer shell to the man within, Eve buries her love for him beneath a layer of friendship. But even Annaliese cannot protect her friends from everything and, when a terrible tragedy strikes, it cracks the perfect facade, threatening to split the circle apart. Having far reaching consequences, bizarrely, it gives Eve a tantalising taste of the happiness she so desperately craves. But then a calculated act of betrayal shatters Eve's world. Destroyed, she leaves, running as far away as she can to a lonely and self-imposed exile, until a message of love from beyond the grave brings her home where, in a shocking twist, the truth is finally revealed and Eve at last understands the true story of her life with Annaliese.
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Date de parution

05 février 2015

EAN13

9781785380556

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

1 Mo

Title Page
THE BOOK OF EVE

Julia Blake



Publisher Information
Published in 2014 by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
The right of Julia Blake to be identified as the Author of this Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1998
Copyright © 2014 Julia Blake
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. Any person who does so may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.



Dedication
To my Parents.
Thank you for all the years of support.
To my friends who told me to go for it.
Well, I went for it. Here it is.



About the Author
Julia Blake was born and raised in the beautiful historical market town of Bury St. Edmunds in Suffolk, where she resides still with her daughter, one crazy cat and a succession of crazy lodgers. Although The Book of Eve is her first novel, Julia has been writing stories and poems since she could first pick up a pen, and promises there are many more books in the pipeline, saying, “I write the kind of books I like to read myself. Books I can escape into and that make me laugh, cry and really connect with the characters. I also like my books to have a very satisfying ending, where all is explained and no string is left untied, well, not unless I’m planning a sequel that is!”





Prologue
Before dawn, the dream happened again. Once more, I wearily pulled myself up the long flight of stairs, paused outside the door, knocked gently, once, twice. Waited for the answer that didn’t come, that never came. Turned the handle, pushed the door open, looked into the room.
Knowing I was dreaming, unable to break free, I waited for what would happen, for what always happened.
The room was empty. In the sudden flash of lightning which burnt through the un-drawn curtains and open window, I saw the bed, pristine, unmarked by the weight of a body.
Disappointed, I left, hesitated, turned to pace softly down the dimly lit landing, searching, needing... what? What had I been looking for?
Thunder rumbled, lightning flickered again, staccato, other worldly. Around me the old house held its breath. Water oozed onto the thick carpet from my sandals, their sodden leather chafing against the chilled damp skin of my feet. Cold, I was so cold, so alone, confused.
I reached the next door, saw it was ajar, saw my hand stretch out. In my head I heard my despairing cries – no, don’t go in there, don’t...
It was too late, it was always too late.
Silently, the door swung open. I stood and waited. The room was dark, then, in an instant of blinding illumination from a lightning crack so violent it seemed the world trembled, I saw... and I saw... and I saw...
I catapulted out of sleep away from the dream, so abruptly teeth snapped shut over my tongue. Crying out in shock and pain, I sat bolt upright, sweat tangled sheets clinging to my legs tentacle-like, attempting to drag me back into the dream, my heart hammering violently, a desperate tattoo in rhythm with the throbbing of my skull; my breathing, hoarse and ragged, in the quietness of the room.
The dream. That dream. It’d been weeks, months even, since it had last plagued me. I’d thought myself free of it, but knew what had triggered this backward step, this unwanted look over my shoulder, knew what had made it come again. By sending the email to Ruth, I had broken through the confines of my self-imposed, year long exile. I had reached out to the past, to my old life, my old self. Was it any wonder the past had retaliated and was now reaching out to me?
I felt marginally better after I’d showered, standing so long under the rusty Heath Robinson contraption that the water, lukewarm at the best of times, suddenly ran frigid, jerking me back into a sense of time and place. The dream, banished to the outer corners of my mind by morning routine, rumbled discontentedly, demanding attention. I ignored it.
Taking my normal cup of caffeine overload with me, I settled on the rickety wooden veranda, propping my bare feet on the handrail, knowing from year long practice exactly where to place them to avoid the wicked splinters which sought to catch unwary flesh.
Gazing out over the expanse of Montego Bay, I felt myself begin to relax, the beauty of the view acting like an aspirin on jangled senses. Cautiously, I sipped at the scalding black coffee. It was a special brand, unique to the island; in truth, I think it was unique to Reg. I remembered the warning he’d given me, along with the first packet of shiny perfect beans.
‘Don’t drink too much, white girl, your system, it’s not used to it.’
I’d accepted the beans, but ignored the warning, much to my cost. I grinned ruefully thinking of the chronic migraine four cups in one day had caused, the way my body had shook for hours, the odd muzzy sensation behind the eyes, the loss of a night’s sleep, the fact for hours after, my pee had stunk of caffeine.
Now I play it safe and stick to one cup a day, drunk first thing, sitting here on the veranda, aware of the hardness of the ancient chair solid under my rear, the thrills skittering up my spine as I swung dangerously back on its unstable legs, the breath-taking majesty of the brand new day, the sea, the sand, the shiny faced sun... Why had I sent that email?
Other than odd emails to my parents to reassure them, prevent them listing me as a missing person, I’d had no contact with anyone since I’d arrived here. Since that night, over a year ago, when I’d run away. Ran as fast and as far as I could.
I knew why. The book was finished. That great cathartic purge, the story which had long niggled inside let loose during my year of self-imposed solitary confinement. A year spent without any modern day distractions which had allowed the tale to pour forth, although far darker, more complex and possibly better than I’d ever imagined it being. I’d agonised over every word, edited it forwards, backwards, inside out. I’d gone as far with it as I possibly could, it was time, if I was serious about it, to show it to someone else; Ruth being the obvious choice.
As risks go, it was a calculated one. Sure, she had my email address now, could reply if she wanted, but had no way of knowing where in the world I was. Also, I’d asked her not to tell the others and knew for all her faults Ruth would probably respect my wishes.
Becoming aware of the passage of time, I hurriedly finished my coffee and washed the cup at the tiny sink in the miniscule cupboard which served as a kitchen. Grabbing my shoes, I let myself out of the house, feeling sand shift between my toes, already warm, despite the fact the sun was barely out of bed. Five minutes’ walk along the beach and I reached work, surely the best commute in the world, sat on the restaurant steps to rub sand off my feet and pull on sandals.
I always ate breakfast at the restaurant; it was part of the deal. In exchange for many long hours of labour, I got board and lodgings. Board being whatever Reg had felt like cooking that day and lodgings the tiny house he owned along the bay. Isolated, dilapidated, it suited my new solitary nature perfectly and I was frequently aware how lucky I’d been to find Reg.
Those early days on the island were difficult to think about. Stunned, in a quagmire of misery so deep it would surely drown me, I’d quickly realised my limited funds wouldn’t last long. Stumbling across the bar and restaurant one evening I’d spotted the simple handwritten sign – staff needed. The rest, as they say, was history.
The owner of the bar, Reg, I’d found alarming at first, in that he was the blackest person I’d ever met. Skin the colour of over-ripe plums, so dark, light seemed simply absorbed by it; he’d looked me up and down, taking in the obvious quality of my clothes, the Rolex on my wrist.
‘You wanna work in my bar, white girl?’ The inference was obvious.
‘I need the money,’ I’d stated calmly. Again, he’d looked me up and down, before nodding slowly, a smile splitting the infinity to reveal perfect white teeth.
He’d taken me on, a strictly trial basis, which now, some eleven months later, had settled into an easy and satisfying working relationship, with a healthy side order of friendship.
Then, I’d been a little afraid of him, his blackness, his physical presence, his over the top personality, booming voice and even louder laugh. But, during the first few weeks of working for him, I’d come to appreciate the hidden qualities of Reg, his gruff kindness, his professional approach to his many enterprises, his spontaneous and eclectic sense of humour. It wasn’t until much later, I’d also come to understand there was a darker element to Reg.
Those mysterious meetings I wasn’t supposed to know about, the individuals Reg kept me well away from, odd packages stored for a brief time in his office. I was aware the island had a murky underbelly of crime. Knew, whatever my personal views, it was a fact of life, so kept my mouth shut and my opinions to myself.
Finishing breakfast I tied an apron around my waist, smoothing its crisp clean whiteness over the cotton dress I’d pulled on that morning, reapplying lip balm. My face was otherwise bare, unmade – I’d left that other me at Heathrow Airport; my hair now a cropped mass of

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