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CHAPTER NINETEEN

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Paul and moustache man rushed upstairs to the club and met the very big man at the gold curtain.

‘What’s going on?’ moustache man asked him.

‘Those girls you told me to keep my eye on tried to crawl through to the other side,’ big man said seriously. You could tell by looking at him that his previous job involved killing people. He was taking this breach of security very seriously.

‘Where are they?’ moustache man asked.

Big man cleared his throat and looked away, ‘They’re hiding, boss.’

Moustache man rolled his eyes. ‘They’re hiding?’

‘Yes, boss.’

‘Where? In the club?’

‘I think so, boss.’

‘You think so?’

‘Well, they didn’t pass us on our way in so they must still be here,’ Paul piped up.

‘OK,’ moustache man sighed. ‘Well, let’s start looking, then. Get someone to keep an eye on the curtain.’

The camera followed the three bouncers as they patrolled the club, looking behind couches, under tables, behind curtains and they even got someone to check the toilets. Holly’s family laughed hysterically at the scene unfolding before their eyes.

There was a bit of commotion at the top of the club and the bouncers headed towards the noise to sort it out. A crowd was beginning to gather, and the two skinny dancers dressed in gold body paint had stopped dancing and were staring with horrified expressions at the bed. The camera panned across. Underneath the gold silk sheets there appeared to be three pigs fighting under a blanket. Sharon, Denise and Holly rolled around screaming at each other, trying to make themselves as flat as possible so they wouldn’t be noticed. The crowd thickened and soon enough the music was shut down. The three big lumps under the bed stopped squirming and suddenly froze, not knowing what was going on outside.

The bouncers counted to three and pulled the covers off the bed. Three very startled-looking girls, like deer caught in headlights, stared back at them, lying there as flat as they could with their arms stiffly by their sides.

One just had to get forty winks before one left,’ Holly said in her royal accent, and the other girls burst out laughing.

‘Come on, princess, the fun’s over,’ said Paul. The three men accompanied the girls outside, assuring them that they would never be allowed back into the club ever again.

‘Can I just tell my friends that we’re gone?’ Sharon asked.

The men tutted and looked away.

‘Excuse me? Am I talking to myself? I asked you if it was OK if I go in and tell my friends that we had to leave?’

‘Look, stop playing around, girls,’ moustache man said angrily. ‘Your friends aren’t in there. Now off you go, back to your beds.’

‘Excuse me,’ Sharon repeated angrily, ‘I have two friends in the VIP bar; one of them has pink hair and the other one—’

‘Girls!’ the bouncer raised his voice. ‘She does not want anyone bothering her. She is no more your friend than the man on the moon. Now clear off before you get yourselves into more trouble.’

Everyone in the club howled with laughter.

The scene changed to ‘The Long Journey Home’, and all the girls were in the taxi. Abbey sat like a dog, with her head hanging out of the open window by order of the taxi driver. ‘You’re not throwing up in my cab. You either stick your head out the window or you walk home.’ Abbey’s face was almost purple and her teeth were chattering but she wasn’t going to trek all the way home. Ciara sat with her arms crossed, in a huff, angry with the girls for forcing her to leave the club so early but, more embarrassingly, for blowing her cover as a famous rock singer. Sharon and Denise had fallen asleep with their heads resting on one another.

The camera turned round to focus on Holly, who was sitting in the passenger seat once again. But this time she wasn’t talking the ear off the taxi driver; she rested her head on the back of the seat and stared straight ahead out into the dark night. Holly knew what she was thinking as she watched herself. Time to go home to that big empty house all alone again.

‘Happy birthday, Holly,’ a very cold Abbey’s tiny little voice trembled.

Holly turned round to smile at her and came face to face with the camera. ‘Are you still filming with that thing? Turn it off!’ and she knocked the camera out of Declan’s hand.

The End.

As Daniel went to turn the lights up in the club, Holly slipped quickly away from the gang and escaped through the nearest door. She needed to collect her thoughts before everyone started talking. She found herself in a tiny storeroom surrounded by mops and buckets and empty kegs. What a stupid place to hide, she thought. She sat down on a barrel and thought about what she had just seen. She was in shock. She felt confused and angry at Declan; he had told her that he was making a documentary about club life. She distinctly remembered him not mentioning anything about making a show of her and her friends. And he had literally made a show of them. If he had asked her politely whether he could do it that would have been a different matter. Although she still wouldn’t have agreed to it.

But the last thing she wanted to do right now was to scream at Declan in front of everyone. Apart from the fact that it had completely humiliated her, Declan had actually filmed it and edited it very well. If it was anyone else but her on the TV, Holly would have thought it most deserving of the award. But it was her so therefore it didn’t deserve to win … Parts of it had been funny, she agreed, and she didn’t mind so much the bits of her and her friends being so silly; it was more the sneaky shots of her unhappiness that bothered her.

Thick salty tears trickled down her face and she wrapped her arms around her body to comfort herself. She had seen on television how she truly felt. Lost and alone. She cried for Gerry, she cried for herself with big heaving sobs that hurt her ribs whenever she tried to catch her breath. She didn’t want to be alone any more and she didn’t want her family seeing the loneliness she tried so hard to hide from them. She just wanted Gerry back and didn’t care about anything else. She didn’t care if he came back and they fought every day, she didn’t care if they were broke and had no house and no money. She just wanted him. She heard the door open behind her and felt big strong arms wrapping themselves round her frail body. She cried as though months of built-up anguish were all tumbling out at once.

‘What’s wrong with her? Didn’t she like it?’ she heard Declan ask worriedly.

‘Just leave her be, son,’ her mum said softly, and the door was closed behind them again as Daniel stroked Holly’s hair and rocked her softly.

Finally, after crying what felt like all the tears in the world, Holly stopped and let go of Daniel. ‘Sorry,’ she sniffed, drying her face with the sleeves of her top.

‘There’s no need to be sorry,’ he said, gently removing her hand from her face and handing her a tissue.

She sat in silence while trying to compose herself.

‘If you’re upset about the documentary, then there’s no need,’ he said, sitting down on a crate of glasses opposite her.

‘Yeah, right,’ she said sarcastically, wiping her tears again.

‘No, really,’ he insisted. ‘I thought it was really funny. You all looked like you were having a great time.’

‘Pity that’s not how I felt,’ she said sadly.

‘Maybe that’s not how you felt but the camera doesn’t pick up on feelings, Holly.’

‘You don’t have to try to make me feel better.’ Holly was embarrassed at being consoled by a stranger.

‘I’m not trying to make you feel better, I’m just saying it like it is. Nobody but you noticed whatever it is that’s upsetting you. I didn’t see anything so why should anyone else?’

Holly felt mildly better. ‘Are you sure?’

‘I’m sure I’m sure,’ Daniel said, smiling. ‘Now you really have to stop hiding in all the rooms in my club. I might take it personally,’ he laughed.

‘Are the girls OK?’ Holly asked, hoping it was just her being stupid after all.

There was loud laughter from outside.

‘They’re fine, as you can hear.’ He nodded towards the door. ‘Ciara’s delighted everyone will think she’s a star, Denise has finally come out of the toilet and Sharon just can’t stop laughing. Although Jack’s giving Abbey a hard time about throwing up on the way home.’

Holly chuckled.

‘So you see, nobody even noticed what you saw.’

‘Thanks, Daniel.’ She took a deep breath and smiled at him.

‘You ready to go face your public?’

‘Think so.’ Holly stepped outside to the sounds of laughter. The lights were up and everyone was sitting around the table and happily sharing jokes and stories. Holly sat beside her mum. Elizabeth wrapped her arm round her daughter and gave her a kiss on the cheek.

‘Well, I thought it was great,’ announced Jack enthusiastically. ‘If only we could get Declan to go out with the girls all the time, then we’d know what they get up to, eh, John?’ he winked at Sharon’s husband.

‘Well, I can assure you,’ Abbey spoke up, ‘that what you saw is not a regular girls’ night out.’

The boys weren’t having any of it.

‘So is it OK?’ Declan asked Holly, afraid he had upset her.

Holly threw him a look.

‘I thought you would like it, Hol,’ he said worriedly.

‘I might have liked it if I had known what you were doing,’ she snapped back.

‘But I wanted it to be a surprise,’ he said genuinely.

‘I hate surprises.’ She rubbed her stinging eyes.

‘Let that be a lesson to you, son,’ Frank warned Declan. ‘You shouldn’t go around filming people without them knowing what you’re doing. It’s illegal.’

‘I bet they didn’t know that when they chose him for the award,’ Elizabeth agreed.

‘You’re not gonna tell them, are you, Holly?’ Declan asked worriedly.

‘Not if you’re nice to me for the next few months,’ Holly said slyly, twisting her hair around her finger.

Declan made a face. He was stuck and he knew it. ‘Yeah, whatever,’ he said, waving her away.

‘To tell you the truth, Holly, I have to admit I thought it was quite funny,’ giggled Sharon. ‘You and your Operation Gold Curtain.’ She thumped Denise playfully on the leg.

Denise rolled her eyes. ‘I can tell you all something – I am never drinking again.’

Everyone laughed and Tom put his arm round her shoulders.

‘What?’ she said innocently. ‘I really mean it.’

‘Speaking of drink, would anyone like one?’ Daniel stood up from his chair. ‘Jack?’

‘Yeah, a Budweiser, thanks.’

‘Abbey?’

‘Em … a white wine, please,’ she said politely.

‘Frank?’

‘A Guinness, thanks, Daniel.’

‘I’ll have the same,’ said John.

‘Sharon?’

‘Vodka and Coke, please. Holly you want the same?’

Holly nodded.

‘Tom?’

‘JD and Coke, please, Dan.’

‘Me too,’ said Declan.

‘Denise?’ Daniel tried to hide his smile.

‘Em … I’ll have a … gin and tonic please.’

‘Ha!’ everyone jeered her.

‘What?’ She shrugged her shoulders as though she didn’t care. ‘One drink is hardly going to kill me …’

Holly was standing over the sink with her sleeves rolled up to her elbows, scrubbing the pots, when she heard the familiar voice.

‘Hi, honey.’

She looked up and saw him standing at the open patio doors. ‘Hello, you,’ she smiled.

‘Miss me?’

‘Of course.’

‘Have you found that new husband yet?’

‘Of course I have. He’s upstairs in bed asleep,’ she laughed, drying her hands.

Gerry shook his head and tutted. ‘Shall I go up and suffocate him for sleeping in our bed?’

‘Ah, give him another hour or so,’ she joked, looking at her watch. ‘He needs his rest.’

He looked happy, she thought, fresh-faced and still as beautiful as she remembered. He was wearing her favourite blue top she had bought him one Christmas. He stared at her from under his long eyelashes with his big brown puppy eyes.

‘Are you coming in?’ she asked, smiling.

‘No, I just popped by to see how you are. Everything going OK?’ he leaned against the door jamb with his hands in his pockets.

‘So, so,’ she said, weighing her hands in the air. ‘Could be better.’

‘I hear you’re a TV star now,’ he grinned.

‘A very reluctant one,’ she laughed.

‘You’ll have men falling all around you,’ he assured her.

‘Falling all around me is right,’ she joked. ‘The problem is they keep missing the target.’ She pointed to herself. He laughed. ‘I miss you, Gerry.’

‘I haven’t gone far,’ he said softly.

‘You leaving me again?’

‘For the time being.’

‘See you soon,’ she smiled.

He winked at her and disappeared.

Holly woke up with a smile on her face and felt as if she had slept for days. ‘Good morning, Gerry,’ she said happily, staring up at the ceiling.

The phone rang beside her. ‘Hello?’

‘Oh my God, Holly, just take a look at the weekend papers,’ Sharon said in a panic.

Cecelia Ahern 2-Book Valentine Collection: PS I Love You, Where Rainbows End

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