The Skeleton Tree Diane Janes (accelerated reader books .TXT) đ
- Author: Diane Janes
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âVery good secret.â
âCome on then, tell me.â
His smile became a grin. âIâve been promoted.â
âHow lovely! Congratulations!â
âEffective from April. District Director for Leicestershire.â
âLeicestershire? Wonât that involve an awful lot of travelling?â
âNot once weâve moved down there.â
âBut I donât want to move to Leicestershire.â The words were out before she could stop them.
Bruceâs smile faded. He adopted the patient tone which she recognized as the one he used for the children, when they didnât understand the finer points of their maths homework.
âDarling, you havenât had time to think about it yet. Itâs my fault for springing it on you like this. Once you get used to the idea youâll love it. Itâs a real step up the ladder. Quite a lot more money.â
âBut you donât have to say âyesâ? I mean, they canât make you go, can they? You said it was a secret. Itâs not official yet, is it?â
âI had the official offer today. Naturally I wasnât going to turn it down.â
âYou mean youâve accepted the job? Youâve been negotiating for a job in Leicester behind my back and youâve accepted it without even consulting me?â
âI didnât want you to get all stirred up for nothing. Itâs a brilliant opportunity. Weâll be able to afford a lovely house down there, somewhere handy for my parents in Ashby.â
âAny advantages of living somewhere handy for your mother completely escape me.â
âAs well as more money, I get a company car. That means we could easily afford a second car, so you could have a little runaround of your own.â
âGreat. I suppose youâve forgotten that Iâve lost my licence.â
âDriving bans donât last forever. Youâll be back behind the wheel before the end of the year. We have to look to the future.â
âAnd what about the children? Theyâll have to change schools, leave all their friends behind.â
âGood heavens, theyâll soon make new friends. Now is as good a time for a move as any, before Katie starts senior school. And Tara will be going to university in September, so it wonât make much difference to her. Sheâll come home to Leicester in the holidays instead of Durham.â
âBut sheâs in the middle of doing her A-levels.â
âSheâll be sitting them well before we actually move down there. The move wonât be instantaneous. Thereâs this place to sell, and you know how long it takes for house sales to go through these days. Weâre sure to become involved in some interminable chain.â
âSo itâs all decided then?â Wendy asked angrily. âWeâre definitely going. The master has spoken.â
âLook, Wendy, I know this has taken you by surprise and maybe I should have mentioned before that I was going for it, but you have to understand that if I turn this down, it puts my career into a siding, possibly permanently. I canât afford to pass up an opportunity like this at my age.â
âBut youâre only forty-one.â
âExactly. Iâm still young enough to move up again, if I take my chances. If I donât, Iâm going to get stuck at the same level, bypassed by younger men. I know you donât really understand things like this âŠâ
âBut I thought you were happy doing what you do now. Itâs not as if we actually need more money. Not really.â
âPeople always need more money. You moaned last month when I said we couldnât afford a microwave oven without dipping into savings.â
âNo, I didnât.â
âWell, on the new salary, you can have as many microwave ovens as you need.â
âBut only if I go to Leicester.â
âCome on, Wendy. You always knew we might have to move. Weâd never have met at all if I hadnât been transferred up here. You must try to see this from my point of view.â
âHave you tried to see it from my point of view? All my roots are up here. Weâve just made The Ashes into a lovely home and now youâre asking me to leave it. I donât even like it down south.â
Bruce was struggling to contain his growing annoyance. âFirstly, Leicester is not in the south, itâs in the Midlands. As for your so-called roots, your parents are dead and youâve got one cousin who lives in London and one who lives in Peterborough, both of which are actually closer to Leicester than they are to here, and the others are all so distant that theyâre no more than names on a Christmas card list. And the prospects for the children will be much, much better. Itâs a far more prosperous part of the country, with far more jobs available.â
âWhat about The Ashes? What about all the work weâve put in?â
âLook on it as an investment. It will fetch much more than you paid for it. Wait until you start house-hunting down there. We could have one of those big splooshy new builds, four or five bedrooms, an en-suite for us, somewhere fuel economical. You have to admit that this house isnât exactly practical.â
âIn what way?â
âThe sheer size of the place. The layout. Huge gardens, back and front. These houses were designed for people who could afford to keep servants. You know itâs too much for you to keep up with. I went into the study for some Sellotape the other day and you could write your name in the dust. Itâs not that Iâm being critical âŠâ
âWell, I do let the study go a bit, because no one seems to go in there very much.â
âMy point entirely. It isnât used. Absolutely surplus to requirements.â
âBut Bruce, I love this house.â
âWhoâs to say that you wonât find another house you like even better?â
âI wonât.â
âYou might at least try,â he snapped.
âIâm sorry. I know I ought to be pleased for you and everything, but you donât understand how I feel. I thought we were happy here. I thought we were here to stay.â
He had let his hands drop from her shoulders, but now he raised his right hand and gave her left shoulder a squeeze. âI shouldnât have
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