Эротические рассказы

Glover’s Mistake. Nick LairdЧитать онлайн книгу.

Glover’s Mistake - Nick  Laird


Скачать книгу
d="u2d6b603e-e1d7-5fc5-9eaf-2fa508ac9dc1">

      

      Glover’s Mistake

      Nick Laird

      

       To EJ

      Table of Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       Dedication

       Sixties fittings

       What all these people did

       All about frustration

       Reconciling everything

       Jeroboam or something

       Pyrotechnics

       A red jewel sparkled in her navel

       Invisible presences

       Exactly what an image does

       The republic of no one

       Around about one

       I carried you

       Natural disaster

       Menus

       Stalwart

       Flicking between channels

       A series of short rises and swinging stops

       Landfill

       A toast to Mrs Glover

       Where one might pin a medal

       Disegno

       Variegated bruise

       Daggers, crosses, hearts and bells

       Acknowledgements

       About the Author

       Praise

       By the Same Author

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

Three in the morning

       The club

      At the kitchen table he’d turned a page of Time Out and there was her face. He’d been so shocked that he’d started to laugh. She was still beautiful—though squinting slightly as if she’d just removed a pair of glasses. Did she need glasses now too? He snipped out the inch-long update with nail scissors, folded it and filed it in his wallet. The exhibition, ‘Us and the US’, featured several British and American female artists, and it opened in three days.

      When he reached the drinks table and lifted a plastic tumbler of wine, he noticed, with unexpected anger, how the suits had real champagne glasses. Money grants its owners a kind of armour, and this crowd shone with it. They were delighted and loud, and somewhere among them was Ruth. He headed towards her work and hovered.

      There.

      She did look good; older, of course, and the hair now unnaturally blonde. Her nose was still a little pointed, oddly fleshless, and its bridge as straight and thin as the ridge of a sand dune; one lit slope, the other shaded. A tall man in a chalk-stripe suit held forth as she twisted the stem of her empty glass between forefinger and thumb. Her unhappy glance slid round the group. As one of the men whispered into her ear she turned away, and her eyes had the same cast as in the lecture hall, when she would gaze longingly over the heads of the students towards the exit.

      ‘Hello, oh excuse me, I’m sorry, Ruth, hi.’

      David used one elbow to open a gap between the speaker and Ruth, and then slotted himself neatly into it.

      ‘Hello.’ The voice was lower than David would have guessed but instantly familiar. She still dressed in black but the materials had been upgraded. A pilous cashmere wrap, a fitted silk blouse.

      ‘You


Скачать книгу
Яндекс.Метрика