Warwick's Mermaid

Contemporary Romance
Date Published: 11th October 2017
Publisher: Tirgearr Publishing
Having escaped an abusive relationship, Chloe MacGregor is determined to put the past behind her. The little cottage high up on the cliffs overlooking the beautiful North Yorkshire town of Whitby is her safe haven, somewhere she is free to be herself.
When the arrival of her new neighbour and boss, Luke Warwick, threatens her peaceful, sheltered life, Chloe is forced to confront her past and to re-evaluate who she really is. Falling in love with Luke is not part of her plan but, to her surprise, Luke is falling for her too. The only thing preventing their happy ever after is Chloe herself. Will she ever truly learn to leave the past where it belongs?
Chloe stared at the
bright blue front door, not quite sure if she was willing it to open or remain shut. Cerulean Bliss.
She had been drawn to the name, conjuring up images of crystal clear
Mediterranean Sea, sandy beaches, and cloudless skies. Chris had appeared
amused by her decision to choose the paint based on the name rather than the
colour.
‘‘Babe, if you want Cerulean
Bliss for the front door, Cerulean Bliss is what we’ll go for.’’
But when he’d returned from a
boys’ weekend away to find Chloe had painted the door, it had been a different
story. He had flown into a rage, claiming she hadn’t consulted with him on the
colour and had gone behind his back, waiting until he was away to make changes
to his house. That was the first time she had been on the receiving end of his
anger; the first time she had been frightened and confused by his apparent
about-turn on something he had previously agreed to. It hadn’t been the last
time.
Chloe glanced at her watch,
frowning when it showed only a minute had passed since she had last looked. The
frown deepened when she lifted a hand to rub her eyebrow and saw how much her
fingers were trembling. A gentle hand touched her forearm and she looked up to
meet her friend’s calm gaze.
‘Don’t worry. It’s going to be fine.’
‘Don’t worry. It’s going to be fine.’
Chloe shook her head, unable to
prevent her gaze from returning to the front door only twenty or so metres from
where they were sitting in her car. What if he glanced around and saw
her? What if he didn’t?
‘What am I doing, Bekah?’ She
dropped her head in her hands, squeezing her eyes shut and immediately wincing
as that small movement resulted in more pain than it should.
‘The right thing, that’s what.’
Rebekah rubbed her friend’s forearm. ‘Come on, Chloe. We talked about this.’
‘I know, I know we did.’ Chloe
lifted her chin, but didn’t remove her gaze from the door. ‘I just…I keep
thinking about it, over and over. He’s not always that bad, not really, and I
think…I think maybe it was my fault.’
Chloe didn’t have to see her
friend’s face to know she was angry; she could feel it radiating from her in
waves. Rebekah remained silent and reached across to pull down the sun visor in
front of Chloe, lifting up the small flap covering the vanity mirror.
‘There is nothing you could have
done that would ever justify what he did to you. Nothing.’
Chloe stared at her reflection,
taking in the dark purple bruise circling her left eye—now bloodshot and
half-closed—the ugly graze reaching across her cheekbone and further down to
the swollen and split bottom lip. Without thinking, she licked her lip. The tip
of her tongue slipped over the injury, and she drew in a sharp breath at the
sting it produced.
She met her gaze in the mirror
once more, noting the confusion and uncertainty dulling their green hue. ‘I
know. But it’s not usually this bad. He pushes me around a bit sometimes,
nothing major, and he says things…you know, usually when he’s had a drink.’
‘That doesn’t make it right. You
know that.’ Rebekah blew out a long breath. ‘I can’t believe you never told
me.’
Chloe avoided her friend’s
accusing gaze. What could she have told her? That Chris was proving her mother
right? That she wasn’t woman enough for any man?
‘It doesn’t matter now anyway.
I—’ She drew in a strangled breath as the front door opened and, shrinking down
a little in her seat, Chloe prayed he wouldn’t glance down the street and
recognise her car among all the others parked along the kerb.
As she watched, Chris locked the
door before turning and sauntering along the path, tossing his keys in the air
and catching them, his lips pursed as he whistled. Chloe couldn’t hear from
this distance, but she knew he would be whistling the tune to whichever song
had been on the radio before he left the house. She glanced at her watch once
more; 8.15am on the dot. Chris was a creature of habit.
‘Bastard.’ Rebekah thumped the
dashboard in obvious frustration as he got into his car without glancing left
or right before driving off. ‘Look at him, acting as if he hasn’t a care in the
world. You should have let Sean come round last night and hammer ten bells out
of him, see how he liked it.’
Chloe gave a weak smile. ‘I don’t
suppose that would have solved anything.’
They sat in silence for a few
minutes before Rebekah finally opened her door.
‘So, come on then. Let’s do it.’
Chloe bit her lip and immediately
winced in pain, wishing she hadn’t. Gingerly exploring her lip with her
fingers, she saw they were stained with blood, and stifling a sigh, searched in
her bag for a tissue.
‘What if he comes back? What if
he’s forgotten something?’
‘He’s not coming back. He’s gone
to work,’ said Rebekah, nodding her encouragement. ‘Come on, the sooner we get
in, the sooner we get out. We’ll only be a few minutes.’
Two minutes later, Chloe unlocked the door with trembling
fingers, her heart thumping painfully in her chest as she pushed it open.
Cerulean Bliss. It conjured up no happy thoughts for her now. It hadn’t done
from the moment Chris had returned from his weekend away. When she hesitated on
the step, Rebekah gave her a gentle shove, propelling her into the hallway.
‘Hey!’
‘Well, we can’t stand in the doorway all day.’ Rebekah
glanced around. ‘Okay, so where first? In here?’
Rebekah gestured to the living room but Chloe shook her
head immediately. She wasn’t ready to face that room, not yet. Instead, she
walked over to the bottom of the stairs and, after a moment’s hesitation,
shouldered her overnight bag and ran lightly up to the first floor. Ten minutes
later she reappeared and joined Rebekah, where she was waiting patiently in the
hall.
‘Got everything?’
‘Almost.’ Chloe licked her lip, the sharp sting and
coppery taste of blood reminding her why she was doing this. Taking a deep
breath, she walked into the living room where her gaze was immediately drawn to
the coffee table. It looked as tidy as ever, with the magazines and books
neatly stacked in one corner. In her mind’s eye, she replayed the moment Chris
had finally tipped over the edge.
It was football this time; football and beer. His team
had lost and, downing his fifth can of beer, he had turned to her, obviously
looking to pick a fight so he could vent his frustration. Chloe couldn’t
remember what it was he had said, but she had responded non-committally before
asking him if he wanted a coffee – a somewhat obvious effort to change the
subject. But he hadn’t let it drop, blocking her path as she tried to walk into
the kitchen. Her stomach rolled as she recalled Chris pushing his contorted
face into hers as he yelled at her through gritted teeth, backing her up
against the wall and knocking over the plant stand by the fireplace as he did
so.
She closed her eyes. It had been her fault. If she had
just let him carry on, he would have calmed down eventually. But she hadn’t.
She had pushed him away, pushed at his chest as he crowded in on her. And that
was all it had taken. Any ounce of self-control Chris might have had went
flying through the window, just as she went flying through the air when he
grabbed her hair and threw her across the room.
She could remember lying on the floor in a daze,
wondering what had happened, and Chris dragging her to her feet before punching
her in the face. That was when she had fallen across the coffee table, her
cheek grazing the corner as it tipped over and spilled the magazines to the
floor. A kick to the ribs for good measure had followed, with Chris standing
over her, his breath coming in harsh rasps, before he turned away and went
upstairs, hissing, ‘You’re not worth the effort.’
‘Chloe? You okay?’
Rebekah’s gentle voice broke into her thoughts and Chloe
blinked, unable to speak for a moment. ‘Um… yes. I just need a couple of things
from here.’
She hurried over to a bookshelf and took a handful of
books before casting a final glance around the room, sick with fear that Chris
might return at any moment. There was very little here that she could call
hers; Chris’s minimalist taste left little room for any of her personal items.
Anything she had bought herself had either mysteriously gone missing or been
accidentally broken.
Sorry, babe, don’t know what happened there. Never mind,
it wasn’t expensive, we’ll get you something else.
‘I think that’s it. There’s nothing else here I want.’
Following Rebekah out of the house, Chloe locked the door and posted the keys
through the letterbox. With a final look along the street, she walked back to
her car. She was worth more than that.
About the Author

I’m a contemporary romance author, published with the lovely Tirgearr Publishing, and am a proud member of the Romantic Novelist Association. I live in the beautiful East Riding of Yorkshire in the UK and, although I work full-time in the public sector, my favourite pastime, when not writing, is wandering around old stately homes.
My debut novel, Beauty and the Recluse, was published in February 2016, closely followed by my second, Love on the Nile, which was released in the Summer of 2016. My third novel, Warwick’s Mermaid, was published in October 2017.
A few random pieces of information about me:
• Favourite TV shows – The Walking Dead, The X-Files, Nashville, Dr. Who, the Great British Bake-off.
• Favourite Music – I’m an 80’s girl!, country, sixties, Elvis, classical (when I’m writing)
• Favourite Food – Indian, tapas, crisps
• Favourite Drink – black coffee (copious amounts when I’m writing) sauvignon blanc
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