The Staycation, an all-new
laugh-out-loud story of fun and a holiday escape close to home by USA Today bestselling author Michele
Gorman is out now!
Two families. One cancelled flight. And a last minute
house swap...
Things get desperate for
strangers Harriet and Sophie when they become stranded with their families in
Heathrow's Terminal 5. Each woman has her own reason for really really really
needing the family holiday they've anticipated for months. But Iceland's
volcano has other plans for them. When their flights are cancelled, the
families swap houses and discover that sometimes the best things in life happen
close to home.
This ash cloud has a silver lining, even if no one can
quite see it yet.
Amazon Worldwide: http://mybook.to/thestaycation
Nook: https://bit.ly/2Kkl1mv
Kobo: https://bit.ly/2yAFYHa
Google Play: https://bit.ly/2VqJBso
Nook: https://bit.ly/2Kkl1mv
Kobo: https://bit.ly/2yAFYHa
Google Play: https://bit.ly/2VqJBso
Excerpt:
‘Do you really have to do that?’ Harriet glared, first at the
nose, then at her husband attached to it. It was a fine one, as noses went.
She’d probably adored it when they were young and in love, even paid it cutesy
compliments. Now she wanted to fill it with the entire pot of muesli yogurt he
was eating and watch it set like the quick-dry grout she’d used on the bathroom
tiles last month.
‘Do what, my darling?’ James’s smile beamed with pure adoration.
Sod that Leo DiCaprio. She’d nominate James for an Oscar any day. The winner of this year’s Best Performance
by a Husband in a Dicey Marriage category is: James Cooper, for the third year
in a row!
‘That. Your nose is whistling.’ She could hear it wheezing over
the announcement of another flight cancellation. Athens, this time. ‘It’s
annoying.’
‘My breathing annoys you?’
‘You’re free to breathe, James. Just do it quietly.’
He shared a look with their daughter over the mountain of hand
luggage on Harriet’s lap.
Billie wouldn’t tear her eyes from that bloody phone if
Harriet’s knickers were on fire, but for her dad? She was sympathy personified.
‘Oh, don’t you start too,’ Harriet warned her.
Billie saluted, though her eyes drifted back to her screen. ‘Not
breathing, sir, sorry, sir.’
‘Can you at least listen for an announcement instead of
obsessing over your phone. Who are you emailing anyway?’
‘Pfft. Emailing. Mum, you’re ancient.’
James pointed his chin at the Departures board. ‘We can see
what’s happening. Same thing that’s been happening since we got here. It’s
delayed. They’re all delayed. Even you can’t do anything about that, so why not
just relax? Besides, I’m sure with your hearing you’d pick up any announcements
dead easy.’
‘If your breathing doesn’t drown it out.’ She scanned the board.
The Budapest flight was still showing a gate. That would be promising, if they
were going there instead of Rome. ‘Bloody ash cloud. Bloody volcano,’ she
mumbled.
James smiled at her. ‘I wish I had a quid for every time that
thing erupted.’
‘You’d have three quid in the last two hundred years. I wouldn’t
make it your retirement plan. Best stick to your goats, Bill Gates.’
‘This is fun,’ Billie said. ‘No, really, can we go on holiday
together all the time?’
Harriet crossed her arms – not easy with a lap full of luggage –
closed her eyes and tried to imagine being in Rome already. Apparently being
happy and content was all in the mind. What was it again? Mindfulness? No, it
was the other bollocks. Positive visualisation. That was it.
Breathing deeply, Harriet imagined all the whingeing was the
happy buzz of fellow travellers savouring their coffee in an ancient cobbled
square near the River Tiber. The algae-tinged scent of the water tumbled over
garlicky cooking smells as they wafted from the al fresco restaurants. Those
weren’t passenger announcements but the distant zooming of the Vespas that
carried Romans, young and old, about their business in the sun-drenched city.
She could almost taste the delicate almondy crumbliness of the biscotti as she
lifted it, after a perfect dunk, from her steaming cappuccino. Her film star
glasses shielded her eyes but she could feel the sun warming her hair, picking
out the highlights she’d begrudgingly paid over a hundred quid for. The knicker-squirmingly
gorgeous man who’d been giving her bedroom eyes from the next table leaned over
and said—
‘Mum, I’m hungry. And crampy. I need something to eat. Have you
got any paracetamol?’
Was it too much to ask for two minutes of la dolce vita in peace?
Meet Michele Gorman:
Michele writes comedies packed with lots of heart, best
friends and girl power. She is both a Sunday
Times and a USA Today bestselling
author, raised in the US and living with her husband in London. Michele also
writes cosy comedies under the pen-name Lilly Bartlett. Lilly’s books are full
of warmth, quirky characters and guaranteed happily-ever-afters.
Connect with Michele:
Facebook: https://bit.ly/2SbvGof
Instagram: https://bit.ly/3eGzuHl
Amazon: https://amzn.to/2Kl0VIO
BookBub: https://bit.ly/2XSbcEs
Goodreads: https://bit.ly/3bumYc0
Website:
http://www.michelegorman.co.uk/Instagram: https://bit.ly/3eGzuHl
Amazon: https://amzn.to/2Kl0VIO
BookBub: https://bit.ly/2XSbcEs
Goodreads: https://bit.ly/3bumYc0
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