Who's Sorry Now (2008)

Read Who's Sorry Now (2008) Online

Authors: Freda Lightfoot

Tags: #Saga

Who's Sorry Now (2008)
Champion Street Market [5]
Lightfoot, Freda
Fre (2013)
Tags:
Saga
Sagattt

Sisters, sisters, there were never such devoted sisters ...Things aren't quite that simple in the noisy, warm-hearted Bertalone family. Carmina is the glamorous one, the sexy extrovert who has the boys flocking like bees round the honeypot—all except Luc Fabriani, who for some unaccountable reason seems to prefer her sister Gina. Innocent and naïve, Gina believes her sister when she spreads malicious lies about Luc: what has Carmina got to gain by breaking her sister's heart? But lies have a habit of being found out, and trapping the liar in a web of deceit, as Carmina is about to discover. Who's sorry now?

 

Who’s Sorry Now

 

Freda Lightfoot

Originally published 2008 by Hodder & Stoughton Ltd. 338 Euston Road, London NW1 3BH

 

Copyright © 2008 and 2012 by Freda Lightfoot.

All rights reserved.

The moral right of the author has been asserted.

 

No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of the publisher. Nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

 

ISBN 978-0-9570978-0-3

 

Published by Freda Lightfoot 2012

 

 
‘Romance doesn’t come sweeter than this tale of love and chocolate set in the grimy streets of 1950s Manchester.’
Lancashire Evening Post
on Candy Kisses

 

‘Kitty Little is a charming novel encompassing the provincial theatre of the early 20
th
century, the horrors of warfare and timeless affairs of the heart.’

The West Briton

 

‘Another heartwarming tale from a master story-teller.’

Lancashire Evening Post
on For All Our Tomorrows.

 

‘a compelling and fascinating tale’
Middlesborough Evening Gazette
on The Favourite Child
(In the top 20 of the Sunday Times hardback bestsellers
)

 

‘She piles horror on horror - rape, torture, sexual humiliation, incest, suicide - but she keeps you reading!’ Jay Dixon on House of Angels.

 

‘This is a book I couldn’t put down . . .
 
a great read!’

South Wales Evening Post
on The Girl From Poorhouse Lane

 

‘paints a vivid picture of life on the fells during the war. Enhanced by fine historical detail and strong characterisation it is an endearing story...’

Westmorland Gazette
on Luckpenny Land

 

‘An inspiring novel about accepting change and bravely facing the future.’

The Daily Telegraph
on Ruby McBride

 

‘A bombshell of an unsuspected secret rounds off a romantic saga narrated with pace and purpose and fuelled by conflict.’
The Keswick Reminder
on The Bobbin Girls

 

‘a fascinating, richly detailed setting with a dramatic plot brimming with enough scandal, passion, and danger for a Jackie Collins’ novel.’

Booklist on Hostage Queen

 

Description

Sisters, sisters, there were never such devoted sisters

 

Things aren’t quite that simple in the noisy, warm-hearted Bertalone family. Carmina is the glamorous one, the sexy extrovert who has the boys flocking like bees round the honeypot – all except Luc Fabriani, who for some unaccountable reason seems to prefer her sister Gina.

 

Gina is quiet and shy, the apple of her over-protective parents’ eye, and much too young to have a boyfriend. Innocent and naïve, Gina believes her sister when she spreads malicious lies about Luc: what has Carmina got to gain by breaking her sister’s heart?

 

But lies have a habit of being found out, and trapping the liar in a web of deceit, as
 
Carmina is about to discover. Who’s sorry now?

 

Chapter One

1958

It had been the worst Easter anyone could remember, a bitter Good Friday only brightening up as the weekend progressed. Wet, cold and miserable with even some snow in the south. Trade on Champion Street Market had been the worst in living memory with rain dripping from the pink and white striped awnings down people’s necks, forming puddles on the cobbles to soak the unwary. Temperatures were so low folk hurried to buy only the barest essentials before dashing home to their warm firesides.

Today, the Tuesday following Easter Monday, many of the traders were in the process of packing up early for the day, with only the hot chestnut man doing brisk business.

Certainly no one was interested in buying ice cream and Carmina Bertalone had been excused work and sent to buy bread and Parmesan cheese from Poulson’s. Papa issued a stern warning not to be late as the food was needed for supper. In any case, Momma liked all her brood to be present before she began serving the evening meal and he well knew how Carmina loved to dawdle and chat to the boys.

Carmina sauntered along Champion Street, making sure the hood of her scarlet duffel coat shielded her long ebony hair from the relentless rain. Usually she liked to feel its soft thick curls drifting over her shoulders, but Papa didn’t allow this when she was working in the ice cream parlour so today she wore it neatly secured in a pony tail.

She batted her eyelashes flirtatiously at Barry Holmes as he stacked boxes of apples and oranges in his van. Unfortunately, he was far too old to appreciate her charms. Jimmy Ramsay was old too but he still called out to her as she passed by.

‘You look a right bobby-dazzler in that coat, chuck.’

Carmina purred with pleasure and rewarded him with a bewitching smile. She did
so
like to be noticed.

A crowd of people were demonstrating outside the market hall. They were marching right around the city, gathering support for the New Peace Movement before delivering a petition to the Town Hall in Albert Square. Carmina paid them little attention, being concerned only in keeping her new black patent shoes dry. They had very high heels and were cramping her toes dreadfully but she wouldn’t be seen dead in anything flat and frumpy.

She took a detour by Dena Dobson’s stall in the market hall, not only to escape the rain but also to check if she’d any exciting new skirts in stock. She lingered long enough to try on one or two, even though she had no money to treat herself until she got paid at the end of the week.

‘Save this red and black one for me, will you, Dena? I love these cabbage roses.’

Big Molly Poulson was wrapping the huge yellow cartwheels of cheese in their muslin cloths preparatory to stacking them away in her cold store by the time Carmina finally reached her stall.

‘By heck, you Italians can get through enough Parmesan to sink a battleship,’ she said, as she carved off a large block, much as she said every week. ‘At least with your mam’s good pasta inside you, you’ll not slip down t’gutter in all this rain.’ Clearly referring to Carmina’s voluptuous curves, of which she was rightly proud.

Carmina put down her head against the deluge and hurried over to George’s bakery to buy crusty bread to accompany Momma’s spaghetti. She was on her way back across Champion Street, dancing between puddles and trying not to slip on the slick cobbles in her high heels when she spotted her sister. Wiping the rain from her eyes she was about to call out to Gina to help her carry the load when she suddenly noticed she was not alone.

Carmina stopped in her tracks, shock running through her like a bolt of lightening.

She could hardly believe what her eyes were telling her. Her dull, stupid sister was talking to
Luc Fabriani
! How
dare
she? In an instant Carmina became oblivious to the rain; not even caring, for the moment at least, about her new shoes. Didn’t Luc belong exclusively to her? At least he would if she had any say in the matter.

She stood stock still, dazed with shock, the hood of her duffel coat falling back so that her hair was drenched in seconds but Carmina didn’t even notice. Then someone bumped into her.

‘Eeh, sorry, chuck, I didn’t see you standing there. I nearly run you over.’ It was Dorothy Thompson, more fondly known as Aunty Dot, rushing along wheeling a big pram with one of her foster babies tucked up inside. A small boy was perched on the end, and an older girl hanging on to the handle.

‘We’re trying to get our errands done as quick as we can afore we get washed away.’ Aunty Dot grinned. ‘Not that I’m complaining mind, since the Good Lord chose to let the sun shine on us on Easter Sunday. It were a miracle. Lizzie and me took these nippers to Blackpool. Eeh, it were grand. We’d been saving up for months and thought for a while we were going to be drownded, didn’t we, love?’ she said, addressing the question to the small girl. ‘But it all turned out champion.’

Carmina didn’t trouble to reply to the silly woman, she was too busy watching Gina with Luc.

Fists clenched, teeth gritted, she watched in mounting fury as her pathetically timid younger sister openly flirted with the boy
she
wanted most in all the world. No, not a boy, a
man
! Twenty years old and absolutely
gorgeous
!

‘We saw the clowns and built sand castles,’ the girl, whose name was Beth, told Carmina, bright eyes shining at the memory of such joy.

Then her little brother piped up with some tale about riding in a big train and Carmina rudely ignored him too as she itched to escape their chatter, to run over and tear her sister away from
her
man.

Why a woman would willingly foster other people’s children was quite beyond her understanding. Momma had produced ten, plus one who’d died, which she couldn’t understand either. Carmina wasn’t in the least interested in babies. She’d had more than enough of their noise and smells to last her a lifetime.

Desperate to escape, she made some inane remark about being pleased the children had enjoyed their holiday and stepped back into the nearby pawn shop doorway, leaving sufficient room for Aunty Dot to give a cheery wave and go on her way.

Carmina couldn’t believe this was happening to her.

She
needed
Luc. How dare Gina steal him from her?
 

Hadn’t she been practically throwing herself at him for weeks now, ever since the day he’d callously told her it was all over between them and chucked her? So far none of her usual tricks and wiles had worked, and yet Carmina had convinced herself that this coldness he exhibited towards her was merely temporary, that she could win him back given time and persistence. All that was required was the right sort of inducement on her part. Carmina’s velvet brown eyes glittered wickedly. And how could she fail to persuade him, given her attributes?

Carmina freely admitted that she was passionate and quick tempered, her head constantly filled with wild schemes and dreams and forbidden deeds which she would impulsively put into effect without pause for thought. Her slanting, velvet brown eyes blazed with wilful determination yet could melt a man’s soul in seconds. Her wide seductive lips were eminently kissable and she had the kind of face which could transform itself in seconds from playful and sweetly kittenish to archly sophisticated or enticingly passionate.
 

Gina might be reasonably pretty, in a bland, uninteresting,
skinny
sort of way, but she had none of Carmina’s voluptuous Latin charm. Without question the whole Bertalone clan agreed that Carmina was the beauty of the family.
 

Other books

Ctrl Z by Stone, Danika
Attack of the Cupids by John Dickinson
Helpless by Barbara Gowdy
Backlands by Euclides da Cunha
I Wish... by Wren Emerson
Quofum by Alan Dean Foster
Burn by Maya Banks