Free Novel Read

Cross My Heart




  About Cross My Heart

  When a promise kept means a life is broken…a haunting story of guilt, redemption and friendship that will have you turning pages well past bed-time.

  When a promise kept means a life is broken …

  Tessa De Santis’s child-free marriage in inner-city Sydney is ordered and comfortable, and she likes it that way.

  When tragedy strikes and her childhood friend Skye Whittaker dies, Tess is bound to honour a promise to become foster-mother to Skye’s ten-year-old daughter, Grace, throwing her life upside down.

  Leaving her husband and work-driven life behind, Tess travels to an isolated property where the realities of her friend’s life – and death – hit hard. The idyllic landscape and an unexpected form of therapy ease her fears, and her relationship with Grace begins to blossom.

  But a secret from her earlier life with Skye refuses to remain hidden, and Tess is forced into a decision that will either right the wrongs of the past, or completely destroy her future.

  Cross My Heart is a haunting story of guilt, redemption and friendship set in the beautiful central west of New South Wales.

  Contents

  About Cross My Heart

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-one

  Twenty-two

  Twenty-three

  Twenty-four

  1800 Respect Information

  Acknowledgements

  Also by Pamela Cook

  From Pamela

  Backlist information

  Pamela Cook and Room to Read

  About Pamela Cook

  Copyright

  In memory of Kathie.

  So greatly missed, forever in my heart.

  Do you remember the time we found that baby bird?

  We were sitting on a rock by the creek. Cicadas were singing and the bush mint was making my nose itch. There was a shrieking noise from over near the scribbly gum. I jumped up and ran over, and there he was all puffed up in a ball. You reached down and picked him up. A magpie, you said, or maybe a butcher bird. It was hard to tell because he was so young. His body was grey, but his tail feathers were black and white. You held him so gently, and he stopped squawking and watched us, with eyes like rusty pebbles. There was a cut in his chest and he’d been bleeding. We looked around, but his parents were gone. He was an orphan, you said. I held out the bottom of my T-shirt like it was a hammock and you rested him in there, and he just sat like that all the way home.

  Remember we dug up worms from the garden and tried to feed him? Except he wouldn’t eat. We put him in a shoebox with some straw and I tried to stay awake to look after him, but I fell asleep. When I woke up he was still and cold.

  Like you.

  One

  Even now, the click of a closing door could make her flinch. One long, deep breath, and the familiar citrusy scent of furniture polish was enough to pull her back.

  Home.

  Safe.

  A faint glow softened the darkness beyond the hallway. The proverbial light at the end of the tunnel. She hurried towards it, the heels of her boots beating a staccato rhythm on the polished timber, the wheels of her suitcase drumming along behind. She stuffed her keys into the handbag dragging on her shoulder, dumped it on the living-room floor and heaved a sigh of relief. Her hands found the nape of her neck, rubbing out the kinks—the usual long-haul gremlins. Something cracked beneath her fingertips—sinews, bones, muscle, maybe all three—and she groaned. A massage would be perfect right about now.

  Finally, a movement from the far corner of the room. Josh spun around in his chair, pulling the headphones from his ears, the screen of his laptop shining brighter as he turned.

  ‘Shit, Tess, you scared the hell out of me. I didn’t even hear you come in.’

  The knot between her shoulder blades tightened. ‘Yeah, I noticed.’ She dropped her hands to rest by her sides. The last thing she wanted right now was an argument. ‘What are you doing working so late?’

  ‘Trying to make some headway on this project. Not getting very far.’ He swivelled his chair back to the desk in front of him. ‘How was the conference?’

  Same old question, but at least he bothered to ask. ‘Fine.’ Same old answer, but it was too late to bother with details. She walked over and stood beside him. Once upon a time, she would have laid an arm across his shoulder, leaned down and brushed a kiss to his lips. Once upon a time, Josh would have greeted her at the airport—or at least the door—with a dozen red roses. She’d never had the heart to tell him the scent of them made her gag. It was crazy how some things never changed even when so much time had passed. She swallowed down the burn in the back of her throat.

  ‘Did you dazzle them all with your brilliance?’ A smile in his voice. His eyes glued to the screen.

  She coughed. ‘Naturally.’

  ‘Have you eaten?’

  ‘I picked at a few things on the plane.’ To be honest, she could do with something decent in her stomach, something that didn’t come from a foil container and smell like it belonged in a soup kitchen. Something they could share over a chilled glass of wine while they sat side by side on the couch, catching up on their respective weeks. Laughing. The fridge, no doubt, would be empty, and in all probability she’d be eating alone.

  She gave her neck another twist, closed her eyes and waited for the pop. Blinked her way out of her daydream. It was late and they were both tired. ‘Might just have a shower and collapse into bed.’

  Josh half turned, one of his hands hovering on the touch pad, the other cradling his chin. Had he sensed the note of disappointment in her voice? Was he about to shut up shop and suggest a nightcap?

  ‘What?’ His head angled slightly in her direction.

  ‘Nothing.’

  ‘I won’t be long.’ He was already back to work, fingers tapping against the shiny surface of the desk.

  How many times had she asked him not to do that? And it was a lie, of course, about not being too long. He’d be up all night. As always when a deadline was looming. Then again, when wasn’t one?

  She lifted her suitcase, a cramp stabbing at the arch of her foot, and grabbed the bundle of unopened mail from the island bench. A veritable mountain.

  Was it that damned hard to open a few envelopes?

  She glanced back to where he sat, completely absorbed with the numbers on his spreadsheet. She could strip off and dance naked around the room and he probably wouldn’t even notice. The suitcase thumped against each step as she dragged it upstairs. She didn’t bother lifting it to dampen the noise. Josh was totally in ‘the zone’, with any extraneous distractions, including his wife, completely blocked out. It wasn’t like she could complain. They were as bad as each other when it came to work. Focused. Determined. Driven. It was what had drawn them together in the first place. Five years of marriage and they were both still the same in that sphere of their lives.

  Even if other things had changed.

  There was no point thinking about it all now. Not when the spray of hot water on her skin was beckoning, closely followed by the cool weight of high-thread-count sheets against her arms. She tossed the mail onto the bed, the dozen or more envelopes falling like a hand of cards across the crisp white doona. Probably bills or bank statements; nothing that couldn’t wait. She undre
ssed and headed for the ensuite, her bra and knickers hitting the tiled floor as she stepped into the shower. Hot water, almost scalding, streamed onto her scalp and she moaned. She sounded positively R-rated. Luckily there was no one around to hear.

  Certainly not Josh.

  Oh, the irony. Over a week, she’d been away. They’d shared plenty of phone messages, some of which could only be described as sexting, and now here they were under the same roof barely able to utter two words to each other. Not that she was up for anything anyway, it’s just that the option would have been nice. Having some sort of conversation would have been even nicer. How long had it been since they’d talked about anything meaningful? She tipped her head back and let the heat pummel her face, to wash away her question. A few more minutes of mindless soaking and she turned off the taps and reached for a towel.

  White, thick, fluffy and perfectly arranged on the rail. She gave her body a quick once-over before rubbing it across her head. As a kid she’d been scolded for going to bed with wet hair, told she would catch ‘her death of cold’, whatever the hell that meant. It had stayed with her, though. That grandmotherly warning still niggled behind her closed lids whenever she defiantly pressed her freshly washed head against the pillow. Now that it was cut short it hardly mattered. A quick shimmy and just like that, it was almost dry. The bathroom was surprisingly clean considering Josh had been home alone. Everything gleaming and in its place—no smears on the mirror, floor without a mark, the lid down on the toilet seat. Of course. It was Thursday, so the cleaner had been. Yes, it was an extravagance she’d justified to her mother on more than one occasion; the office hours they both kept didn’t leave much time for household chores. Hard work might be its own reward, but a floor you could eat off and clothes pressed by an ironing service weren’t too shabby, either.

  She tossed the towel in the laundry basket and pulled on her pyjama top. The usual remnants of airsickness lingered from the flight; she knew they’d be gone by morning. Once she’d had a good night’s sleep and sorted out her body clock.

  Lamp on, light off.

  There was something so comforting about your own bed. Even if you were in it alone. She sank into it, pulling the covers up to her chin as she curled into a ball on her side and closed her eyes. Serious bliss. A rustling noise had her eyelids flickering: the unopened envelopes scattering to the floor. No problem, they could be dealt with in the morning. Everything was easier to deal with in the bright light of day.

  ‘Missed you.’

  Josh’s breath was damp on her cheek and the evidence supporting his words firm against the small of her back. Tess shifted forward, struggling against the heaviness of an arm draped across her middle. She cracked open one eyelid. Then another. Watery pre-dawn light leaked through the blinds. How could it be tomorrow already? Hadn’t she just gone to sleep?

  She reached over and switched off her bedside lamp. ‘God, what time is it?’ Her voice had the groggy, slurred sound of someone who’d stayed at the bar long after closing time. Jet lag was a bitch.

  ‘Time we said a proper hello.’ A hand rubbed at the underside of her breast and his mouth against the curve of her neck made her rouse. She could argue it was his fault their reunion last night had been more like colleagues passing in the coffee room than a married couple who were actually pleased to see each other. But at least they were connecting now.

  She closed her eyes and drifted as his fingers floated across her skin, a warm, familiar thrum between her legs. Blood heated her cheeks, and the other parts of her body with which Josh was quickly becoming reacquainted. She dropped her hand to join with his. Her habit of wearing no underwear to bed and his of sleeping naked, often led to early-morning sessions. Not that she minded. Not at all. She pulled the singlet over her head, tossed it onto the floor and rolled over to where he lay, propped up on one elbow.

  ‘Hello there.’ She looked up at him, a smile forming.

  He replied with a wicked curl of his mouth and a raised brow. His eyes, normally a sweet shade of caramel, had darkened into something more like treacle. Something in which she could happily drown. ‘Is that the best you can do?’

  She ran a hand greedily through the silky strands of hair at the back of his neck and followed up her earlier perfunctory greeting with a longer, deeper kiss.

  ‘Hmm … that’s more like it.’

  His body engulfed hers and she arched into him. Gripping his shoulders, she hooked one calf around his and gave him a quick shove, flipping them both over so she was the one looking down. She reached between his legs, positioning him in just the right spot, and with one single, sharp upward thrust he was inside her. Her chest billowed. She flattened her hands against the hollows below his shoulders and he rocked beneath her until they became a sweaty, ragged tangle of limbs, and she was completely overwhelmed by the glorious bone-shattering ache she’d been chasing. Josh followed quickly after, his palms searing her hips, his limbs rippling. She collapsed on top of him, her forehead nestled against the dark stubble of his jaw. Even after hours at the computer, minimal sleep and a sweaty round of wake-up sex, he had that just-washed, deliciously minty smell.

  She rolled over and lay on top of the sheets, her hands tracking the rise and fall of her ribcage as she waited for her heart rate to return to somewhere this side of normal. The room heaved with their tandem panting. A horn bleated from the street outside, and another echoed back. The world was out there, ready and waiting, demanding attention, but she remained still, eyes closed, willing it away.

  ‘Now that’s a good morning.’ Josh sat upright, reached for his phone from the bedside table and switched off the beeping alarm. He looked like a Cheshire cat. ‘Best I’ve had all week.’

  She stretched her arms above her head with a languid yawn. ‘Certainly beats Good morning, ma’am, this is your five am wake-up call.’

  ‘You’ve got the accent aced.’ He laughed. ‘I’d better get moving. I’ve got an eight o’clock meeting.’ He threw her a wink before sauntering off for a shower, wiggling his bare backside more than was strictly necessary.

  Tess snuggled back under the covers, any sign of the tension her body had stored up during the flight—and afterwards—now vanished. Sex had always brought them closer, stitched them back together even when their relationship had frayed. Her mind leap-frogged to those looser threads—the days, nights and weeks that sometimes rolled by when they barely saw each other. Hours spent working or doing their own thing: Josh with his cycling crew while she procrastinated about the gym by watching mindless reality-TV shows. More and more it felt like the seam holding them together was splitting, yet they were always able to patch it up with a workout between the sheets. It was how they found their way back to each other.

  But was it enough?

  She stared at the vacant space beside her, placed her hand on his empty pillow, the cotton cold beneath her palm. A weight heavier than the doona settled on her. She shook it away. There was nothing to worry about. Life had its ups and downs. They were all good.

  Something crinkled under the sole of her foot as she swung her legs over the edge of the bed: the mail she’d been too tired to deal with last night. She gathered it up and shuffled through the envelopes. As predicted most were bank statements addressed to them both, one was an electricity bill—overdue—and a few were for TDS. A thrill tripped through her veins. It was the same whenever she saw the acronym, especially in logo-form, the letters entwined with a rough sketch of a heart: Team-Driven Solutions. A play on her own initials joined by the heart of her own human resources consultancy, which just happened to be going gangbusters. Not bad for a thirty-five-year-old. Even if it was Plan B. One last envelope fell from her lap as she stood. This one addressed to Ms T. De Santis, her full name, and while it looked official, it didn’t seem to be a bill. She slid her finger under the seal and ripped, unfolding the single-page document.

  FACS, Department of Family and Community Services.

  Why would they be writing to her?
Her stomach hollowed as she skimmed over the first few lines, and she dropped back onto the bed. She needed to read from the beginning, but each word sucked her a little further out of her own skin, so by the time she reached the end of the letter she was watching herself from somewhere outside her body.

  She stared down at the signature and the department-speak at the bottom of the page, the muscles in her chest tightening as if a too-small elastic band had been wrapped too many times around her heart.

  This could not be happening.

  No.

  It was not happening.

  She folded the paper back into the torn envelope and placed it deliberately on the bedside table, pinching the points of her elbows tightly as she crossed her arms, holding herself together.

  ‘Tess?’ Josh’s voice came to her through a cotton-wool fog. ‘What’s wrong?’

  Somehow he was right there, standing by her side, already showered, the brown waves of his hair wet and towel-ruffled.

  ‘It’s …’ She tried to pick up the letter, but it fell from her grasp like a hot coal. Her hand flew to her mouth. If she didn’t say the words then they wouldn’t be true, would they?

  ‘Tess … what is it?’

  As much as she didn’t want it to be real it was right there at her feet, black print blurring into a haze of grey. She pressed her fingers against her palms, scoring the soft pads of flesh with her nails.

  ‘It’s Skye.’ The name was foreign on her tongue after all these years, like a rare fruit she’d tasted long ago, in another lifetime, and then forgotten. But it wasn’t as strange as the answer to Josh’s question. It came out quickly in a strangled cough, a bitter seed she couldn’t stand to swallow. ‘She’s dead.’

  Two

  A crescent moon of white arced at the base of her thumbnail, below the navy gloss. Regular manicures might draw attention away from her ravaged cuticles, but they didn’t change her disgusting habit. One day she might stop chewing the skin until it was raw and red. One day. Not today.