Million Dollar Que$tion
By Ellie Campbell
Genre: Contemporary Romance, Women's Fiction, ChickLit
Release Date: April 25, 2015
Just
as a huge financial scandal ejects Olivia Wheeler from her high-flying
Manhattan job and high-society engagement, a silver Mercedes pulls up at lonely
single-mother Rosie Dixon’s house with a cheque for one million pounds from the
Premium Bonds. Two very different strokes of luck. And yet
both women have more in common than they realize. While Olivia struggles
with the humiliations of surviving in London broke and homeless, shy unassuming
Rosie discovers that unexpected wealth arrives with its own mega-load of
problems.
Can a
career-obsessed workaholic find a passion for something earthier and warmer
than cold hard cash? And can Rosie sift through envy and greed to discover true
friends, true family and even true love?
Two
strangers who've never met. Yet neither realises how each is affecting the
other’s destiny or the places their paths touch and fates entwine.
But
will they surmount the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune?
That
is the million dollar question.
Chapter
One
Rosie Dixon
perched herself on the hard plastic chair, watching the drawing take shape. A
line, followed by a squiggle. Snake maybe? Then what looked like a head of a
person with ears on top. And was that a saddle on its back or—
‘Do you like
it, Miss?’ Emily asked.
‘Oh yes, it’s
good.’ Rosie smiled encouragement as the young girl plucked another crayon from
the Tupperware box and worked earnestly, tongue curled stiffly against her
cheek in concentration. ‘Extremely good. I love the bright colours you've
chosen.’
Finished,
Emily pointed at the purple object. ‘What do you think that is?’
‘Um. Let’s
see.’ Rosie peered closer. It vaguely resembled a bear, although how that
fitted in with the ‘My Family at Home’ project, heaven knew. She didn't want to
offend but… ‘What’s his name?’
‘Bruno.’
Ah yes. ‘Bruno
the bear. Of course.’
‘Bear?’ The
girl shook her two perfect bunches and wrinkled her tiny freckled nose. ‘It’s
not a bear, Miss, it’s a chocolate Labrador. Mummy’s boyfriend has one. Durr…’
‘Well it’s
lovely.’ Rosie stood up. ‘And I’m Rosie, remember?’
Not that Rosie
didn't appreciate being called Miss, she did. Made her feel like a teacher,
although the rather less grand title of ‘Teaching Assistant’ suited her fine.
She’d been working at Avondale Infants for eighteen months now, supporting
primary-aged pupils in classes of thirty-plus without needing to fret about
parents’ evenings, lesson plans and the mountains of paperwork expected of a
real teacher. She loved the small children and the hours meant she could still
collect her own two sons from junior school.
‘Miss?’ Max,
angelic curls disguising an impish spirit, frowned at his latest creation. ‘Can
you help me?’
‘Shove over
then.’ She nudged him playfully, as she squeezed beside him. Who’d have ever
thought that she, shy little Rosie, always too timid to raise her hand in
class, would be making a difference, however small, in the world of education?
Just showed that good could come from the direst of situations. Even if it had
taken a broken heart and some other God-awful trials to get her here.
She tucked a
lock of shoulder-length hair behind her ear and handed Max a glue stick.
All things
considered she really was incredibly lucky.
$$$
Mid-morning,
the kettle in the staffroom had boiled and Rosie’s fellow teaching assistant,
Gemma, was handing round the custard creams. Also in her early thirties, Gemma
was recently divorced and had a secret obsession with The X Factor’s Simon
Cowell that Rosie was sworn, on pain of death, never to reveal.
‘Anyone got an
astrophysics degree?’ Carol, teacher of Orange Class, leafed through a stack of
forms, eyebrows furrowed. ‘Certainly need one to fill in all these bloody risk
assessments. Talk about ’elf and safety!’
Rosie joined
in the laughter as she dropped a teabag in a smiley face mug. She was about to
ask her colleagues, flopped onto chairs for their short break, if they were all
right for beverages when Pauline Dawkins, Admin Officer, sidled up, a giant
birthday card tucked under one paisley-clad arm.
‘Barry’s
fiftieth. Whip-round,’ she hissed, spy-like from the corner of her mouth, as if
the sole male teacher might burst in and discover the dastardly plot. ‘Drinks
and cake at four.’
Pauline took
her charge of The Birthday Book extremely seriously. Rosie had suffered the
same ordeal when she’d turned thirty-three in March.
‘Oh, I’d love
to be there, but I've my sons to pick up.’ Dutifully she scribbled, ‘Have a
great day, Barry!’ unable to conjure anything witty or mildly original.
The envelope
under her nose was stuffed with pound coins and larger notes. Rosie opened her
ancient leatherette handbag, pushed aside her soggy egg sandwich and peeked
inside her purse.
A lonely fiver
lay folded next to a single fifty pence piece.
Her heart
sank. That cash had to last the next two days until her monthly salary reached
her bank. The twins, being eleven, always needed money for this or that and
Charlie’s cheque was late again.
But then again
poor Barry had recently lost his wife. Fifty pence seemed so stingy and she’d
never dare offer the five pound note and ask for change.
There was an
uncomfortable beat. Rosie’s fingers froze. Nobody was paying attention but
still damp pooled in her armpits and along her hairline, her insecurities
running rampant under Pauline’s scrutiny.
Was she
assessing the havoc a runaway husband could create? Maybe worse – thinking it
no wonder he’d strayed? If Rosie had once felt young, pretty and loved, it had
all vanished with the end of her marriage. She cursed herself for not finding
something smarter to wear than the skanky black cords pilled from the washing
machine and a faded cotton blouse (Selfridges Sale 70% off) which sagged where
it used to cling. And she’d totally messed up her hair attempting to add subtle
honey-gold streaks from a Superdrug box to her mousy-brown frizz and ended up
with tiger stripes instead.
Blow it, she
thought, and handed over the fiver with a flourish, smiling to silence the
warning pang from her gut.
‘Ta ever so.’
Pauline stuffed the note in the envelope. ‘We want to buy him a special
present. Poor devil’s all on his lonesome…’ She broke off, fiddling with the
plastic ID badge dangling from her neck. ‘I didn't mean…well, it’s different
for you with those darling boys, never a dull minute in your house, I’m sure.’ Her
eyes fired with matchmaking zeal. ‘Now there’s a thought. Don’t suppose you and
Barry…?’
‘No. Really.’
Rosie tried looking appreciative instead of appalled. Bearded bespectacled
Barry was even more tortuously shy than Rosie and any attempts to speak made
him extra nervous. They only had to reach the kettle at the same time and Rosie
could feel her hands sweat, watching him twitch and stammer. As for fireworks,
there’d be more sparks with two squibs in a rainstorm.
‘Just an
idea.’ Pauline shrugged it off. She was basically a kind woman, Rosie thought,
whatever catty things people said – just maybe a touch too blunt for the
fragile sensitivities of a mostly female environment. And it must be
excruciating asking people to hand over cash.
Pauline left to
corner someone else and Rosie slumped onto an empty seat, tea forgotten. Two
years since Charlie had walked out and no one – except Rosie in the secret
corners of her soul – believed he was ever coming back. The beautiful home
they’d spent ages lovingly doing up had been sold, Rosie and the boys now
installed in a tatty two-bed terrace in a scruffy housing estate, where luckily
the neighbours had welcomed her as one of their own.
Better off
without him, everyone declared. What self-respecting woman stayed with a cheat
after all? Outraged friends wanted him to suffer and occasionally Rosie did
too. Not in a nasty, vengeful way, but at least to experience a few twinges of
her own devastation.
She had
fantasies in which he came crawling back, grief-stricken over what he’d
carelessly tossed aside. She’d imagine herself on the arm of Colin Farrell,
wearing a fiery-red figure-hugging dress, strikingly elegant, flawlessly
made-up, her belly flat and her legs mysteriously three inches longer. She’d be
ice-cool, telling him it was too late but usually in these daydreams – and she
knew it was wrong – just as Charlie left, dejected, her stony heart would
relent, she’d apologise to Colin, kick off her heels and run to Charlie’s
joyful arms.
Other times
her sleep betrayed her. She’d walk in the kitchen to find Charlie cooking
spaghetti bolognese, wearing only a chef’s apron and an endearingly rueful
smile. Silly stuff. Like last night – they’d sat in the bath together, him
soaping her back. So convincing was this dream that in the morning she’d lazily
stretched out her arm to him, forgetting that his side of the bed was empty and
cold. He’d been her best friend and lover for so long. Not easy persuading her
subconscious to switch from love to hate. Or even indifference. And he’d been
such a caring father to Luke and Tim. Were they truly ‘better off without him’?
Determined not
to submerge into despondency, she jumped up and tackled the backlog of crockery
clogging the staffroom kitchenette.
Damn. She’d
thought she’d got past all those predictable emotional stages, familiar to her
as commuter stations. Denial. Shock. Anger. Depression. Last stop – Guilt –
where she still lingered, scolding herself for not leaping to action the second
Charlie’s secretary warned her about the female customer who showed more
interest in the showroom’s Sales Manager than the vehicles on sale.
And why hadn't
she? Jumped? Leapt? Fought?
Because it had
been unthinkable. Laughable even. With the red flag flapping inches from her
face, Rosie had brushed it away with a smile, too certain of her husband to
fall for that alarmist nonsense. This was Charlie, after all, her soul mate,
who’d rescued her in her darkest hours, made her believe in her own worth after
years of her mother’s jibes. He loved her even if she had grown two dress sizes
finishing the kids’ meals, barely ever wore make-up, slumped around the home in
baggy sweatshirts and couldn't stay awake to watch an entire film when the boys
were finally in bed.
‘…first out.
Hey, what’s so fascinating about that sponge? You've been staring at it ages.’
Rosie hadn't
realised Gemma had joined her at the sink, let alone that she’d been speaking.
‘Sorry, Gem.’
She came out of her daze. ‘What was that?’
‘I was saying
that as long as it’s not last in, first out, ’cos technically speaking…’ Gemma
pushed her glasses up her nose and gave Rosie a meaningful glance before
picking up a tea towel.
‘Technically
speaking…?’
Gemma sighed
as she wiped a saucer. ‘Rosie, you dingbat, did you hear a word I said? That
meeting with the union reps yesterday, Carol’s just filled me in. They’re
talking staff cuts. Redundancies. Teaching assistants in particular. Some of us
– God knows how many – are for the chop!’
Ellie Campbell
is a pseudonym for sisters, Pam Burks and Lorraine Campbell who collaborate
across the mighty Atlantic, finding writing together the perfect excuse for
endless phone conversations. They are equally passionate about travel,
animals and the great outdoors. Although Pam lives near London, with husband,
three children and a dog, while Lorraine is on a Colorado ranch near wild and
wonderful Boulder with husband, five horses, five cats, one dog and four
chickens – they both believe in enjoying life to the fullest, be it discovering
new remote locations or going on trail rides in the beautiful Rocky Mountains.
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