Read Flight Online

Authors: Isabel Ashdown

Flight (30 page)

Acknowledgements

My list of thanks grows longer with each new book – my family, friends, readers, champions – my superb agent and first-rate publishing team – you know who you are and I appreciate you all so very much.

Above all else, a special mention must go to my husband, who has loved me and supported my ambitions from the start, to help make all of this possible. Colin, my love – thank you.

Book Group Guide
  1. Flight
    shifts between different viewpoints and between the past and the present. Do you have a favourite character, or feel more sympathy for one over the other?
  2. Wren is a complex personality. Do you feel you understand her motivations for her actions? Did your view of her change as the novel progresses?
  3. Can Wren ever be forgiven for what she’s done? Can leaving a partner and child in this way ever be justified?
  4. Would you feel differently if the ‘leaver’ were the father?
  5. Would Wren have left if she hadn’t come into money?
  6. It would be easy to attribute Wren’s state of mind to postnatal depression alone, but do you think there were earlier indications of her fragility – or her need to escape?
  7. Is there such a thing as a ‘natural mother’?
  8. What does the novel seem to say about nature versus nurture?
  9. How do you feel about Wren’s mother, Eliza?
  10. What is your opinion of Robert as a character?
  11. What do you make of Laura’s relationship with her parents?
  12. Were Robert and Laura always meant to be together?
  13. Laura has sacrificed a lot to live the life she does. Is she the real hero of the story?
  14. How does the North Cornwall setting affect the mood of the novel?
  15. Did the truth about Ava come as a shock to you?
  16. What does the novel – and Phoebe’s experience in particular – make you think about the extent to which we are our parents’ children?
  17. Does Wren, Robert and Laura’s story reveal anything about the nature of love, both in terms of friendship and romantic love?
  18. What does the novel tell us about the ways in which the past haunt us?
  19. How satisfying did you find the ending of the novel?
  20. What does the future hold for the family?
Extract from Hurry Up and Wait

Read on for an extract from Isabel Ashdown’s critically acclaimed novel
Hurry Up and Wait.

 

 

Sarah waits at the kerbside, her winter coat buttoned up tight against the cold night air. The tang of sea spray whips through the lamp-lit High Street, as the distant rumble of clawing waves travels in from the dark shoreline, up and over the hedges and gardens of East Selton. It’s an ancient echo, both soothing and unsettling in its familiarity. She checks her watch. She’s early.

At the far end of the Parade, an old Citroën turns the corner and rattles along the street, drawing to a stop alongside her. She stoops to peer through the window, and sees John Gilroy smiling broadly, stretching across to open the passenger door, which has lost its outside handle. She slides into the seat, pulling the door shut with a hollow clatter.

‘It’s good to see you, John,’ she says, returning his smile, not knowing whether to kiss him or not. She runs her fingers through her hair. ‘This is a bit weird, isn’t it?’

John pinches his bottom lip between his fingers and frowns. ‘Yeah,
really
weird.’

There’s a moment’s pause as they look at each other.

‘I suppose we’d better get it over with, then?’ he says, releasing the handbrake and pulling away.

They cruise slowly along the deserted Parade as the wind buffets the faded canvas roof of the car, whistling out across the night. Sarah draws the seatbelt across her body, clunking it into place between the seats. A disquieting recollection rattles her, a sense of having been here before, with John at her side.
She studies his face as he struggles with the gear-change from second to third, a slice of mild irritation still lodged between his black eyebrows. ‘Sticky gearbox,’ he mutters as it grinds into gear.

Sarah gazes out at the shop windows as they pass through the High Street. She remembers old Mr Phipps from the tobacconist’s. Every Saturday morning Dad would take her there on the way back from the paper shop, and she’d choose something from the jars at the back of the counter. It was a tiny vanilla-smelling store, its walls adorned with framed black and white photographs of the screen greats: Clark Gable; Bette Davis; Victor Mature. She notices the estate agent’s, on the corner opposite the war memorial, although the name over the top has changed.

‘I couldn’t believe it when I got your email,’ she says. ‘It’s been years.’

‘Twenty-four years,’ John replies.

She nods.

‘I worked it out. It was just before your sixteenth birthday, wasn’t it?’

‘You’ve got a good memory.’

He keeps his eyes fixed on the road ahead. ‘Well, one minute you were there, and the next you’d gone. It sort of sticks in your mind.’

Sarah shivers against the cold. ‘The town gives me the creeps, to be honest. When I checked into the B&B this afternoon, the woman who owns it seemed familiar, but I don’t know why. I guess she’s just got that Selton look.’

‘What’s a “Selton look”?’

‘Don’t know. But it puts me on edge, whatever it is.’

John scowls, feigning offence.

‘Not you, though!’ she says quickly. ‘You don’t count.’

She notices he’s wearing a knitted waistcoat under his jacket. It’s a bit hippyish but she’s pleased to see he’s no longer in the black prog-rock T-shirts that seemed to be welded to his torso throughout the eighties.

They turn into School Lane.

‘So, who are you dreading most tonight?’ John asks.

‘Oh, God, what a question! It would be easier to say who I’m not dreading.’

‘OK, then. Who?’

A light mist of freezing fog has started to descend, and the windscreen wipers squeak into action.

‘Actually it’s the same people. I’m looking forward to seeing certain people but dreading them at the same time. Tina and Kate are the obvious ones.’

‘Dante?’ John asks, briefly turning his eyes on her with a small smile.

She blinks. ‘He probably ended up in some rock band in LA. That was the trouble with Dante. Too cool for school.’

John laughs, rubbing his chin.

They pull up in the new car park at the rear of the girls’ building, a few rows back from the large open double doors of the gym. Sarah scans the area, trying to make sense of the layout. ‘This bit used to be the netball court,’ she says. ‘Can you believe they’ve built a car park on it?’

John shrugs. ‘Well, I suppose the schools are even bigger now than in our day. I’m surprised they haven’t merged the boys’ and girls’ schools into one. It would make sense, wouldn’t it?’

Sarah’s fingers fiddle nervously with the charm bracelet beneath the sleeve of her coat. She rolls a small silver conch between her thumb and forefinger. ‘Do you mind if we just sit here a moment?’ she asks.

John shifts in his seat. ‘We can sit here as long as you like.’ He reaches inside his jacket and brings out the postcard-sized invitation. ‘I wonder who designed the cheesy invites? Look at this: “
Wanna
know what your old school friends have been Kajagoogooing? Then put on your leg warmers and Walk this Way for a Wham Fantastic night out
…”’

‘Stop!’ Sarah laughs, clapping her hands over her ears. ‘I can’t believe I let you talk me into coming.’

‘It’ll be fine,’ he says, slipping the card back in his jacket.

A taxi pulls up outside the entrance to the gym and a small group of men and women disembark. The men are clutching cans of lager, and they stumble on to the pavement, laughing and shouting to each other. Sarah recognises one of the women as a girl from her class, but she can’t quite grasp the name. Melanie? Or perhaps it was Mandy.

‘Bloody hell,’ says John, grimacing. ‘Look at the state of them.’

Sarah blows air through pursed lips, watching her white breath slowly drift and disperse inside the car. Her eyes rest on the funny little gearstick, poking out of the dashboard like a tiny umbrella handle. ‘Is this a Citroën Dyane?’

John leans into the windscreen to wipe the moisture away with a sponge. It’s a stiff synthetic sponge, and all it does is turn the condensation to water, which runs into a pool on the dashboard. ‘Yep. My trusty old Dyane. It’s a bit of a renovation project.’

‘Thought so,’ she says. ‘It’s freezing. Just like my dad’s old car.’

He sticks the sponge under the dashboard. ‘I know. I really liked his car. Used to see it chugging through the town sometimes, and I thought, one day, when I’ve got a bit of money, I’d like one of those.’

Sarah leans across and kisses him on the cheek. It takes them both by surprise, and she draws her hand to her mouth.

‘Sorry,’ she says from behind her glove. ‘I’m a bit nervous.’

John shifts in his seat so he’s facing the windscreen. ‘Me too.’

Two screaming women run down the side of the car towards the school, click-clacking on high heels. Sarah tries to make them out, but they’re strangers to her. She draws a smiley face on her misted side window.

‘We’d better go in,’ says John, ‘before the car steams up completely.’

Sarah stares ahead, her fingers curled around the
still-buckled
belt strap. ‘Just five more minutes.’

 

 

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About the Author

Isabel Ashdown is the author of four critically acclaimed novels:
Flight
(2015),
Summer of ’76
(2013),
Hurry Up and Wait
(2011) and
Glasshopper
(2009). Her first novel,
Glasshopper (Observer
Best Debuts,
Evening Standard
Best Books of the Year), won the
Mail on Sunday
Novel Competition. She lives in West Sussex with her husband and two children.

 

To find out more, visit:

 

www.isabelashdown.com
Facebook: /IsabelAshdownBooks
Twitter: @IsabelAshdown

Also by Isabel Ashdown:

Glasshopper

Hurry Up and Wait

Summer of ’76

Copyright

First edition published in 2015
This ebook edition published in 2015 by

Myriad Editions
59 Lansdowne Place
Brighton BN3 1FL

www.myriadeditions.com

Copyright © Isabel Ashdown 2015
The moral right of the author has been asserted

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the written permission 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 being imposed on the subsequent purchaser

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

ISBN (pbk): 978-1-908434-60-9
ISBN (ebk): 978-1-908434-61-6

Designed and typeset in Sabon LT
by Linda McQueen, London

MORE FROM ISABEL ASHDOWN

 

WINNER OF THE
MAIL ON SUNDAY
NOVEL COMPETITION

At once troubling, funny and joyous, Isabel Ashdown’s debut is the intimate, lyrical and deeply moving story of an ordinary family crumbling under the weight of past mistakes.

In this intense novel of secrets and simmering passions that takes us back to the legendary heatwave of 1976, Isabel Ashdown once again unravels the complexity of her characters’ lives – and reveals what really lies beneath the surface.

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