Release Date: 14th June 2018
Publisher: Avon
Publisher: Avon
Genres: Contemporary Fiction / Humour /Family
The voice of modern women is back! Perfect for fans of Milly Johnson and Carole Matthews.
‘More than funny, it’s true!’ Elle
After
sixteen years of marriage, Nate and Sinead Turner have a nice life.
They like their jobs, they like their house and they love their son
Flynn. Yes, it’s a very nice life.
Or, at least Nate thinks so.
Until, one morning, he wakes to find Sinead gone and a note lying on the
kitchen table listing all the things he does wrong or doesn’t do at
all.
Nate needs to show Sinead he can be a better husband – fast.
But as he works through Sinead’s list, his life changes in unexpected
ways. And he starts to wonder whether he wants them to go back to normal
after all. Could there be more to life than nice?
EXTRACT
The exclamation marks are coming thick and fast now, pinging
into my face like air rifle pellets.
‘Dad?’ Flynn raps on the bathroom door.
‘Yes?’
‘It’s ten past eight. I can just get the bus if it’s
easier?’
‘No, it’s okay.’
‘Why are you insisting on driving me? I don’t get it …’
Because it’s imperative that you go to school under the
impression that everything is normal, as indeed it will be by the time you come
home this afternoon, because I fully intend to sort everything out.
‘I’m nearly ready, okay?’ I shout back. Through the door, I
hear him muttering about my weirdness – the word ‘mental’ is clearly audible –
then wandering back to his bedroom and firmly closing the door.
I drop the note on the floor, pull off my pyjamas and kick
them, rebelliously, into the corner by the bin. In the shower I use Sinead’s
posh Penhaligon’s ‘Juniper Sling’ shower gel rather than the cheap blue stuff –
another devil-may-care gesture – and mentally run through as many of her
complaints as I can remember whilst sluicing myself down.
The big ones – about being an uncaring, selfish arsehole –
all swirl into one terrible, heady mess, and I find myself fixating instead on
the more tangible matter of Scout’s poos. Okay, maybe I have missed the odd
tiny deposit in our garden, down in the long grass by the shed. Or at least,
they have been missed (clearly, and without my knowledge, this has become my
responsibility). This matter can be easily rectified. From now on I will never
again let Scout – or, specifically, Scout’s arse – out of my sight.
With a wave of petulance, I dry off briskly and check my
phone in case Sinead called while I was showering. Nothing. I’m tempted to
phone around her closest friends, but I don’t want to alarm anyone and, anyway,
what would I say? ‘Hello, it’s Nate. Sinead seems to have gone missing’? No
need for any of that.
It also occurs to me now that, because she’s gone AWOL, I’ll
have to walk Scout and Bella before Flynn and I can set off. Sinead usually
takes Scout around the block first thing, before driving Flynn to school, then
she parks back by our house and walks to the gift shop a few streets away,
where she works. On top of all that, she also pops home at lunchtime to let
Scout into our back garden (naturally, she never fails to pick up his poos).
Oh, God, the colossal amount of stuff she does! No wonder she’s hacked off. All
this perpetual nipping back and forth, plus taking care of most of the
shopping, cooking, laundry and homework supervision – and that’s just for
starters. But then, she’s never complained about anything specifically before
now … At least, I don’t think she has (admittedly, I find it hard to keep up
with everything sometimes). Instead of harbouring all of these resentments,
couldn’t she just have let me know?
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