With Jane
Riddell, Anne Stenhouse and Jennifer Young I am part of Capital Writers – four
writers who live in Edinburgh, Scotland’s capital city.
Edinburgh,
renowned for many things over the centuries, is now also famous for its
Christmas/New Year festivities (anyone tried this year’s silent disco on George
Street …?).
So it seemed
appropriate that we produce an anthology of festive stories and here it is,
available from Amazon at the very cheery price of 99p:
And here is a
review by Joanne Baird of Portobello Book Blog
This is how my
story begins:
UNDER
THE CHRISTMAS TREE
Princes Street.
George Street. Moray Place. Castle Street. Hanover Street.
Jessica
blinked and looked again at the map she’d just been given in the tourist
office.
Edinburgh was over 11,000 miles away, but in front of her were
many of the same street names – albeit in a different configuration.
Sophie had only given her vague instructions about how to get to
where she lived on Wallace Street, walkable she’d said from the centre of the
city. Jessica had left home twenty-four hours ago, the time now a blur of airports and
trying to sleep in cramped seats, and her head swam as she scanned the map for
the street whose name was yet another reminder that Dunedin, New Zealand, was
named after Scotland’s capital.
She
took the map over to the assistant behind the desk. He swivelled it round
towards him and made a pencil circle.
‘There,’
he said, marking a spot that actually didn’t look too far to walk and then
helpfully pointing out the route. ‘Start here, at Stuart Street. About twenty
minutes’ walk? Or there’s a taxi rank on the other side of the road.’
Any
thought that a walk would clear her head – and postpone the moment of seeing
her sister – was dispelled when Jessica saw that Stuart Street was vertical, so
vertical she imagined herself having to scale it like a mountaineer while
trying to hang on to her wheeled suitcase. Did people really live up there?
Edinburgh was hilly but this was in a different league.
So,
she wouldn’t walk. But she could still put off arriving at Sophie’s; she’d
spotted a café when she got off the shuttle bus from the airport.
Over
a long black coffee, which served to wake her brain up a little, she tried to
think what she would say to her sister, what platitudes she could come out with
this time to comfort her. And she wondered if Sophie would realise that Jessica
herself might be in need of comforting.
Would
Sophie remember what had happened to Jessica last Christmas? Would she wonder
why her hysterical phone call home a month ago, crying that Logan had left her,
had resulted in Jessica, uncharacteristically impulsive, saying she’d book a
flight and come to New Zealand for Christmas? Just her, not David. No, she
wouldn’t wonder; she would take it for granted that her older sister would drop
everything – including her husband – so that Sophie wouldn’t be on her own over
the festive season.
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