Chướng ngại chỉ đe dọa được bạn một khi bạn rời mắt khỏi mục tiêu.

Henry Ford

 
 
 
 
 
Tác giả: Cecelia Ahern
Thể loại: Tiểu Thuyết
Biên tập: Yen
Upload bìa: Ngô Trà
Language: English
Số chương: 54
Phí download: 6 gạo
Nhóm đọc/download: 0 / 1
Số lần đọc/download: 5708 / 188
Cập nhật: 2015-08-08 15:02:01 +0700
Link download: epubePub   PDF A4A4   PDF A5A5   PDF A6A6   - xem thông tin ebook
 
 
 
 
Chapter 35
OLLY PULLED UP TO HER driveway and took a deep breath before getting out of her car. She should have been to visit Sharon first and she knew it, now things just seemed far worse. She walked toward Sharon's car and was surprised to see John stepping out. There was no Sharon to be seen. Her heart began to pound; she hoped Sharon was OK.
"Hi Holly," John said grimly, banging the car door behind him.
"John! Where's Sharon?!" she asked.
"I just came from the hospital." He walked toward her slowly.
Holly's hands flew to her face and tears filled her eyes. "Oh my God! Is she OK?"
John looked confused. "Yeah, she's just having a checkup, I'm going back to collect her after I leave here."
Holly's hands dropped down by her side. "Oh," she said, feeling stupid.
"You know if you're that concerned about her you should call her." John held his head high and his icy blue eyes stared straight into hers. Holly could see his jawline clenching and unclenching. She held his stare until the force of his gaze caused her to look away.
Holly bit her lip, feeling guilty. "Yeah, I know. Why don't you come inside and I'll make us a cup of tea." At any other time she would have laughed at herself for saying that; she was turning into one of them.
She flicked the switch on the kettle and busied herself while John made himself comfortable at the table.
"Sharon doesn't know that I'm here so I would appreciate it if you didn't say anything."
"Oh." Holly felt even more disappointed. Sharon hadn't sent him. She didn't even want to see her; she must have given up on Holly altogether.
"She misses you, you know." John continued to stare straight at her, not blinking for one moment.
Holly carried the mugs over to the table and sat down. "I miss her too."
"It's been a while now, Holly, and you know the two of you used to speak to each other every day." John took the mug from her hand and placed it in front of him.
"Things used to be very different, John," Holly said angrily. Didn't anybody understand what she was going through? Was she the only sane person in the whole entire world these days?
"Look, we all know what you've been through . . .," John started.
"I know you all know what I've been through, John; that's blatantly obvious, but you all don't seem to understand that I'm still going through it!"
There was a silence.
"That's not true at all." John's voice was quieter and he fixed his gaze onto the mug he was twirling around on the table before him.
"Yes it is. I can't just move on with my life like you're all doing and pretend that nothing has happened."
"Do you think that that's what we're doing?"
"Well, let's look at the evidence, shall we?" she said sarcastically. "Sharon is having a baby and Denise is getting married-"
"Holly, that's called living," John interrupted, and he looked up from the table. "You seem to have forgotten how to do that. Look, I know that it's difficult for you because I know it's difficult for me. I miss Gerry too. He was my best mate. I lived right next door to him all my life. I went to playschool with the guy, for Christ's sake. We went to primary school together, we went to secondary school together and we played on the same football team. I was his best man at his wedding and he was at mine! Whenever I had a problem I went to Gerry, whenever I wanted to have a bit of fun I went to Gerry. I told him some things that I would never have told Sharon and he told me things he wouldn't have told you. Just because I wasn't married to him doesn't mean that I don't feel like you do. And just because he's dead doesn't mean I have to stop living too."
Holly sat stunned. John twisted his chair around in order to face her properly. The legs of the chair squeaked loudly in the silence. He took a deep breath before he spoke again.
"Yes, it's difficult. Yes, it's horrible. Yes, it's the worst thing that has ever happened to me in my whole life.
But I can't just give up. I can't just stop going to the pub because there's two blokes laughing and joking on the stools Gerry and I used to sit on, and I can't stop going to football matches just because it's somewhere we used to go together all the time. I can remember it all right and smile about it, but I can't just stop going there."
Tears welled in Holly's eyes and John continued talking.
"Sharon knows you're hurting and she understands, but you have to understand that this is a hugely important time in her life, too, and she needs her best friend to help her through it. She needs your help just like you need hers."
"I'm trying John," Holly sobbed as hot tears rolled down her cheeks.
"I know you are." He leaned forward and grabbed her hands. "But Sharon needs you. Avoiding the situation isn't going to help anyone or anything."
"But I went for a job interview today," she sobbed childishly.
John tried to hide his smile. "That's great news, Holly. And how did it go?"
"Shite," she sniffed, and John started laughing. He allowed a silence to fall between them before he spoke again.
"She's almost five months pregnant, you know."
"What?" Holly looked up in surprise. "She didn't tell me!"
"She was afraid to," he said gently. "She thought you might get mad at her and never want to speak to her again."
"Well, that was stupid of her to think that," Holly said angrily and wiped her eyes aggressively.
"Oh really?" He raised his eyebrows. "So what do you call all this then?"
Holly looked away. "I meant to call her, I really did. I picked up the phone every day but I just couldn't do it.
Then I would say that I'd call the next day, and the next day I would be busy . . . oh, I'm sorry, John. I'm truly happy for the both of you."
"Thank you, but it's not me that needs to hear any of this, you know."
"I know, but I've been so awful! She'll never forgive me now!"
"Oh, don't be stupid, Holly, it's Sharon we're talking about here. She'll have it all forgotten about by tomorrow."
Holly raised her eyebrows at him hopefully.
"Well, maybe not tomorrow. Next year perhaps . . . and you'll owe her big-time, but she'll eventually forgive you . . ." His icy eyes warmed and twinkled back at her.
"Stop it!" Holly giggled, hitting him on the arm. "Can I go with you to see her?"
Butterflies fluttered around in Holly's stomach as they pulled up outside the hospital. She spotted Sharon looking around as she stood alone outside, waiting to be collected. She looked so cute Holly had to smile at the sight of her friend. Sharon was going to be a mummy. She couldn't believe she was almost five months pregnant. That meant Sharon had been three months pregnant when they went away on holiday and she hadn't said a word! But more important, Holly couldn't believe that she stupidly hadn't noticed the changes in her friend. Of course she wouldn't have had a bump at only three months; but now, as she looked at Sharon dressed in a polo neck and jeans, she could see the swelling of a tiny bump. And it suited her. Holly stepped out of the car and Sharon's face froze.
Oh no, Sharon was going to scream at her. She was going to tell her she hated her and that she never wanted to see her again and that she was a crappy friend and that . . .
Sharon's face broke into a smile and she held her arms out to her. "Come here to me, you fool," she said softly.
Holly ran into her arms. There, with her best friend hugging her tight, she felt the tears begin again. "Oh Sharon, I'm so sorry, I'm a horrible person. I'm so so so so so so sorry, please forgive me. I never meant to-"
"Oh shut up, you whiner, and hug me." Sharon cried too, her voice cracking, and they squeezed each other for a long time as John looked on.
"Ahem," John cleared his throat loudly.
"Oh come here, you." Holly smiled and dragged him into their huddle.
"I presume this was your idea." Sharon looked at her husband.
"No not at all," he said, winking at Holly, "I just passed Holly on the street and told her I'd give her a lift . . ."
"Yeah right," she said sarcastically, linking arms with Holly as they walked toward the car. "Well, you certainly gave me a lift anyway." She smiled at her friend.
"So what did they say?" Holly asked, squeezing herself forward between the two front seats from the back of the car like an excited little child. "What is it?"
"Well, you'll never believe this, Holly." Sharon twisted around in her chair and matched her friend's excitement. "The doctor told me that . . . and I believe him because apparently he's one of the best . . . anyway he told me . . ."
"Come on!" Holly urged her on, dying to hear.
"He says it's a baby!"
Holly rolled her eyes. "Ha-ha. What I mean is, is it a boy or a girl?"
"It's an it for now. They're not too sure yet."
"Would you want to know what 'it' is if they could tell you?"
Sharon scrunched her nose up. "I don't know actually, I haven't figured that out yet." She looked across at John and the two of them shared a secret smile.
A familiar pang of jealousy hit Holly and she sat quietly while she let it pass until the excitement returned.
The three of them headed back to Holly's house. She and Sharon weren't quite ready to leave each other again after just making up. They had so much to talk about. Sitting around Holly's kitchen table, they made up for lost time.
"Sharon, Holly went for a job interview today," John said when he finally managed to get a word in edgewise.
"Ooh really? I didn't know you were job-hunting already!"
"Gerry's new mission for me," Holly smiled.
"Oh, was that what it was this month? I was just dying to know! So how did it go?"
Holly grimaced and held her head in her hands. "Oh it was awful, Sharon. I made a total fool of myself."
"Really?" Sharon giggled. "What was the job?"
"Selling advertising space for that magazine, X."
"Ooh, that's cool, I read that at work all the time."
"Don't think I know that one, what kind of magazine is it?" John asked.
"Oh, it kind of has everything in it: fashion, sports, culture, food, reviews . . . everything really."
"And adverts," Holly joked.
"Well, it won't have such good adverts if Holly Kennedy isn't working for them," she said kindly.
"Thanks, but I really don't think I will be working there."
"Why, what was so wrong with the interview? You can't have been that bad." Sharon looked intrigued as she reached for the pot of tea.
"Oh, I think it's bad when the interviewer asks if you have any experience working on a magazine or newspaper and you tell him you once printed up a newsletter for a shitty company." Holly banged her head playfully off the kitchen table.
Sharon burst out laughing. "Newsletter? I hope you weren't referring to that crappy little leaflet that you printed up on the computer to advertise that dive of a company?"
John and Sharon howled with laughter.
"Ah well, it was advertising the company . . ." Holly trailed off and giggled, feeling even more embarrassed.
"Remember, you made us all go out and post them around people's houses in the pissing rain and the freezing cold! It took us days to do!"
"Hey, I remember that," John laughed. "Remember, you sent me and Gerry out to post hundreds of them one night?" He kept on laughing.
"Yeah?" Holly was afraid to hear what came next.
"Well, we shoved them in the skip at the back of Bob's pub and went in for a few pints." He kept on laughing at the memory of it and Holly's mouth dropped open.
"You sly little bastards!" she laughed. "Because of you two the company went bust and I lost my job!"
"Oh, I'd say it went bust the minute people took a look at those leaflets, Holly," Sharon teased. "Anyway, that place was a kip. You used to moan about it every day."
"Just one of the jobs Holly moaned about," John joked. But he was right.
"Yeah, well, I wouldn't have moaned about this one," she said sadly.
"There's plenty more jobs out there," Sharon reassured her, "you just need to brush up on your interview skills."
"Tell me about it." Holly stabbed away at the sugar bowl with a spoon.
They sat in silence for a while.
"You published a newsletter," John repeated a few minutes later, still laughing at the thought of it.
"Shut up, you," Holly cringed. "Hey, what else did you and Gerry get up to that I don't know about?" she demanded.
"Ah, a true friend never reveals secrets," John teased, and his eyes danced with the memories.
But something had been unlocked. And after Holly and Sharon threatened to beat some stories out of him, Holly learned more about her husband that night that she never knew. For the first time since Gerry had died, the three of them laughed and laughed all night, and Holly learned how to finally be able to talk about her husband. It used to be that the four of them gathered together; Holly, Gerry, Sharon and John. This time only three of them gathered to remember the one they lost. And with all their talk, he became alive for them all that night. Soon they would be four again, with the arrival of Sharon and John's baby.
Life went on.
P.S. I Love You P.S. I Love You - Cecelia Ahern P.S. I Love You