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Sophie Kinsella

Finding Audrey

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  • faaahar citeretfor 4 år siden
    I don’t look back once, the entire time I’m talking to her. But I can feel his eyes on me all the time. Like sunshine.
  • faaahar citeretfor 4 år siden
    We’re just looking and looking at each other. And I can feel something new between us, something even more intimate than anything we’ve done. Eye to eye. It’s the most powerful connection in the world.
  • faaahar citeretfor 4 år siden
    It’s actually pretty funny. When Linus arrives at Starbucks we’re all sitting there at one big table, the whole family, waiting for him. He looks totally unnerved, and for a moment I think he’s going to run away, but you know, Linus isn’t a runner-awayer. After about five seconds he comes forward resolutely and looks at us all in turn, especially Mum. And last of all me.
  • faaahar citeretfor 4 år siden
    But vulnerable. And speechless. And now they’re all looking our way. I squeeze Frank’s hand in silent desperation and he seems to get the message.
  • faaahar citeretfor 4 år siden
    My insides have turned hollow. Just like that, in an instant. All the inner strength I’ve been building up, the tensed-up spring, the fighting talk . . . it’s all disappeared.

    I feel small and vulnerable.
  • faaahar citeretfor 4 år siden
    ‘Leave me alone,’ I say, wrenching my arm out of his grasp. ‘Leave me alone.’ And finally, after managing to ignore it all day, I surrender to my lizard brain. And I run.
  • faaahar citeretfor 4 år siden
    I’m scrambling to my feet, trying to keep my poise, which isn’t easy when the landscape is looming at me and my head is singing loud protests.
  • faaahar citeretfor 4 år siden
    Stressful events don’t make you ill, actually. It’s the way your brain reacts to stressful events. So.’
  • faaahar citeretfor 4 år siden
    He doesn’t understand. He won’t understand. He’s not just opposed to the plan, he’s angry. Physically angry. He hits a tree, like it’s the tree’s fault.

    ‘It’s fucking nuts,’
  • faaahar citeretfor 4 år siden
    but right now it’s as though the whole world has shrunk to his face. His brown hair, his honest eyes, that crescent smile.

    ‘What . . . do you mean?’ I force the words out.

    ‘What I said. I love it too,’ he says, not taking his eyes off mine.

    ‘You said you.’

    ‘Well . . . maybe that’s what I meant.’

    I love it. So do I. You.

    The words are dancing around my mind like jigsaw pieces, fitting together this way and that way.

    ‘What, exactly?’ I have to say it.

    ‘You know exactly.’ His eyes are smiling to match his orange-segment mouth. But they’re grave too.

    ‘Well . . . I love it too,’ I say, my throat tight. ‘You.’

    ‘Me.’

    ‘Yes.’ I swallow. ‘Yes.’

    We don’t need to say any more. And I know I’ll always remember this moment, right here, standing in the park with the ducks and the sunshine and his arms round me.
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