The Love Shack, page 1

Jane Costello was a newspaper journalist before she became an author, working on the Liverpool Echo, the Daily Mail, and the Liverpool Daily Post, where she was Editor. Jane’s first novel, Bridesmaids, was an instant bestseller and her subsequent novels have been shortlisted for a number of prizes, including The Melissa Nathan Award for Romantic Comedy and the Romantic Novelists’ Association Romantic Comedy Award, which she won in 2010 with The Nearly Weds. Jane lives in Liverpool with her fiancé Mark and three young sons. Find out more at www.janecostello.com, and follow her on Twitter @janecostello
Also by Jane Costello
Bridesmaids
The Nearly-Weds
My Single Friend
Girl on the Run
All the Single Ladies
The Wish List
The Time of Our Lives
First published in Great Britain by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd, 2015
A CBS COMPANY
Copyright © Jane Costello 2015
This book is copyright under the Berne Convention.
No reproduction without permission.
® and © 1997 Simon & Schuster Inc. All rights reserved.
The right of Jane Costello to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
Simon & Schuster UK Ltd
1st Floor
222 Gray’s Inn Road
London WC1X 8HB
www.simonandschuster.co.uk
Simon & Schuster Australia, Sydney
Simon & Schuster India, New Delhi
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
PB ISBN: 978-1-47112-927-8
EBOOK ISBN: 978-1-47112-928-5
TPB ISBN: 978-1-47112-926-1
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual people living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
Typeset by M Rules
Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY
For my fabulous bridesmaids,
Ali and Nina
Acknowledgments
This book was a joy to write, but I can’t deny it involved the odd moment – the ones all authors know about – during which I was quietly tearing out my hair. Special thanks go to Mark O’Hanlon for the reassurance, IT support, for coming up with the title and, if that wasn’t enough, for proposing marriage too. (I said yes, obviously).
Huge thanks also to my editor Clare Hey, whose insight played such a crucial role in making The Love Shack the book it became. It would’ve been a far poorer novel without her.
The entire team at Simon & Schuster remain a pleasure to work with – there are too many to lovely people there to mention them all but I must give a shout-out to Suzanne Baboneau, Sara-Jade Virtue, Ally Grant and Dawn Burnett. Thanks all!
One of the more challenging – and interesting – elements of this novel to write about was Dan’s job at a homeless charity. Although the charity in this book, its staff and service users, are all entirely fictional, I did spend some time shadowing the team at The Whitechapel Centre in Liverpool before I wrote it. I found such an inspiring bunch of people there, all of whom are doing vital work to help those less fortunate than most of us. I salute you all and thank you for putting up with my (probably daft) questions.
Speaking of which, thank you also to Donna Smith for putting me straight on what might happen in an armed siege (a sentence I never thought I’d find myself writing!)
Thanks also to my agent Darley Anderson and his angels, with a special mention for Clare Wallace and Mary Darby.
Thanks, as ever, to my mum and dad, Jean and Phil Wolstenholme – and (Uncle) Colin Wolstenholme for the number crunching.
And a final mention to my gorgeous children, Otis, Lucas and Isaac – love you all lots. x
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
Chapter 67
Chapter 68
Chapter 69
Chapter 70
Chapter 71
Chapter 72
Chapter 1
Dan
When a man loves a woman, there are moments when she’ll nudge him out of his comfort zone. Most of the time, he can live with this. He’ll man up and remind himself what she is to him: his Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca. His Patricia Arquette in True Romance. His Princess Fiona in Shrek (though somehow she never appreciates that comparison).
However, there are times when even the most temperate of men, and I consider myself among them, approach their limit.
I am standing outside a row of small cottages, set high above the River Dee in Heswall in the Wirral Peninsula. I am clutching the estate agents’ blurb that was thrust at me this morning – and which I’d shoved into the ‘man bag’ my mother bought me in her enduring quest to turn me into a metrosexual – and my limit currently feels dangerously close.
When, four months ago, my girlfriend suggested that we buy a place together, I was nothing less than keen. Gemma is the sort of woman I never thought would come along: the girl of my most pleasant dreams, my All Time Great.
But who knew that house-hunting would turn out to be the hardest thing a man could do, outside training as a Royal Marine or venturing into Next on a Saturday?
We started our quest with the old houses we both liked in the Georgian Quarter in Liverpool. ‘We could buy somewhere cheap and do it up,’ I agreed. What a hopeless, naïve fool.
That was before our chips were thoroughly pissed on, along with all hopes of cracking open the Blossom Hill. The houses in that part of the city – the ones for sale anyway – were miles out of our price range.
So we widened our search to include anywhere within a forty-minute drive from Liverpool, making the rookie error of believing this would open up a cornucopia of choice. Since then, weekends have been dominated by viewings of places it was impossible to leave without wondering whether you’d contracted typhoid from the door handles.
Things came to a head last week when we were touring a semi with a pungent nursing home fragrance and a bathroom suite the colour of bile. I was invited to inspect a converted under-stairs toilet, only to come face-to-face with the owner’s teenage grandson, mid-way through evacuating the by-products of the previous night’s takeaway.
It wasn’t just the puking teenager that did it for me. It was that there was simply nothing left that we hadn’t seen. We’d already viewed a vast spectrum of houses, starting with The Dead Certs and ending with The Dregs, and one fact was now screaming at us: WHAT WE WANT DOESN’T EXIST.
Which I must admit, even I find hard to believe. I know we’re first-time buyers with a challenging budget, but our tick-list shouldn’t be insurmountable: nice area, two bedrooms, running water a bonus.
There is of course another issue, one I couldn’t say out loud: some houses were deemed unsuitable by Gemma for reasons that remain as mysterious and inexplicable as the construction of Stonehenge.
I’d complete the tour, optimistically anticipating her verdict about a place I couldn’t see anything wrong with, only to be told emphatically that she couldn’t see anything right about it.
It’s not often that I put my foot down. I’d flatter myself if I could list three occasions in the four years we’ve been together. But we needed a break from this, and I said so.
To my surprise, she agreed wholeheartedly. For a week and a half, life Before Rightmove resumed and the internet was free to exist without risk of Gemma melting it.
Then I got a phone call yesterday asking me to knock off work early to check out this place because it looks ‘completely perfect on paper’.
So here I am.
‘You’re early. Anyone w
She’s come straight from work and is in heels, a suit and is carrying her ‘statement bag’ (which I’ve now learned simply means psychotically expensive).
‘I can think of nothing more enjoyable, except perhaps plucking out my own armpit hair,’ I say.
‘It’ll be worth it if it’s The One. And I’ve got high hopes. I don’t know how I missed this place. It’s been on and off the market for a while, apparently. And look at the view, Dan.’
I can’t argue with the view, which stretches across rooftops, fields and trees, right down to the river and across to the Welsh hills.
We look up to see the estate agent marching towards the house, his phone at his ear. ‘There’s one and a half per cent at stake here. I don’t care if she’s a little old lady – so was the Witch of the West.’ He sees us and straightens up. ‘Gotta go.’ He slams shut the phone.
‘Hiyyy.’ He grabs me by the hand and pumps it up and down. Like Gemma, he’s wearing pinstripes, though his are crooked at the top as his trousers stretch violently over a pronounced belly. ‘Rich Cummins. FAB to meet you both. Day off, is it?’
‘No, I . . .’ I glance down at my jeans and long-sleeved T-shirt, which might breach the dress code in some workplaces, but not mine.
‘Pah. Five years ago you’d have been sacked for not wearing a tie, and now look. Standards, eh?’ Gemma stifles a smile. ‘KIDDING! Right. This . . . is Pebble Cottage.’ He presents the house to us with a flourish of his arm, like a magician’s assistant after sawing someone in half. Then he opens up.
The hall is small but bright and overwhelmed by the kind of junk only women buy: candle-holders, key hooks, picture frames that are battered (deliberately).
We enter a living room that’s been decorated by someone who knows what they’re doing. It has a cast-iron fireplace, lots of books, pale walls, a faintly ethnic rug. On the mantelpiece, there’s a single picture – of three women in their late twenties in front of the Sydney Opera House – and gaps where it looks as though others once were.
It’s a nice gaff. At least, I think so.
I glance at Gemma as she runs a finger along the window-frame with her Bad Cop face on. She’s worn this expression at every viewing since her friend Allie confided that she had paid more than necessary for her house because she failed to hide how keen she was.
The estate agent claps his hands together. ‘I should warn you that this property is blindingly popular.’
‘Um . . . why’s it still for sale then?’ Gemma asks. He responds with an odd little laugh, as if she’s told a joke he doesn’t quite get.
‘There’s no chain in this sale – the owners are moving out this weekend. The schools here are UH-MAZ-ING . . .’
‘We don’t have kids,’ Gemma tells him.
‘The bars and restaurants in Heswall are pumping.’
‘Potential for noise and drunks then?’
‘It’s fabulously convenient for the station . . . a commuter’s paradise.’
‘Thought I’d heard the clatter of trains.’
He does the laugh again and shows us into the kitchen. It’s another nice room. Very nice. As are the two bedrooms, with an old-fashioned radiator and antique rocking horse in the window bay, which I presume is some sort of ‘feature’ as there are no other signs of children living here.
More nonsense spills from Rich’s mouth all the way round, while Gemma steadfastly maintains a look that says she couldn’t be less impressed if he’d paused to piss on the carpet.
By the time we reach the end, he’s still banging on about ‘original features’ as he points to a rusty door hinge, and effervescing about the ‘access arrangements’, while highlighting the single front step.
‘We’d like to have a look round by ourselves now, if that’s okay?’ Gemma asks.
‘Sure. I’ll step outside – take as long as you want. Well, not too long: Robocop’s on tonight.’ He winks at her and grins. I decide I don’t like him very much.
We head up the stairs as Gemma takes more photos on her phone, resisting discussion of whether she likes the place until after the viewing. When we reach the room with the rocking horse, she wanders over, runs her hand along its mane.
‘I had one of these when I was a little girl,’ she tells me wistfully. ‘Mum used to sit on it and hold me on her lap.’
‘Go on, no one’s looking. I dare you.’ I suggest this in the full knowledge that it’s never going to happen.
‘What – have a go? Don’t be ridiculous,’ she tuts. Then she bites her lip. ‘What if it breaks?’
‘You’ve just said yours used to take the weight of both you and your mum. Although . . .’ I register how old it looks . . . ‘maybe you’re right. It might not hold you.’
She produces a familiar look of indignation. ‘Are you saying I’ve put weight on?’
I love this kind of logic. ‘Of course not, there’s nothing of you.’
She looks the horse up and down and clearly decides that proving the weight issue – the one that never was an issue – is of vital importance. She defiantly hoists up her skirt and climbs on.
I wince as it creaks loudly in protest, but decide not to point this out to her.
‘I know what you’re thinking: I look like that Khaleesi in Game of Thrones,’ she grins, rocking backwards and forwards.
‘The resemblance is uncanny, particularly with your steed’s glass eye and wooden legs.’
‘Oh, Dan, this brings back memories,’ she sighs, gooey-eyed, as she increases in force and speed until the horse is virtually galloping through the window. ‘I have no idea what happened to mine.’
She appears entirely oblivious to the cracking sound vibrating through the floorboards, the sharp pops farting themselves from the arse end of the horse.
‘Erm, Gemma . . .’
‘I hope my mum didn’t throw it away – these things are worth a fortune.’
The horse now makes a sound I can only compare to a 300-foot redwood tree falling on a shed. Gemma’s eyes inflate.
‘Shit!’ she shrieks, but it’s too late to rein in and dismount. The horse sinks to one side, throwing her off as if she’s just insulted the braid in its mane.
I help her up as she scrambles to a standing position, hoists her skirt over her knickers and stands gaping at an angry break in one of the rocking horse’s legs. It’s hard to avoid the conclusion that the horse has a glittering career as firewood ahead of it.
‘Oh my GOD,’ she hisses, hysteria wobbling in her voice. ‘Don’t suppose you’ve got any Blu Tack on you?’
Ten minutes later, Rich drives off in his snot-green Seat Ibiza with a ‘Laters!’ hanging in the air.
Gemma turns to me. ‘I’m going to have to phone and offer to pay for the horse,’ she says, rubbing her brow. It is true that our restoration job, which involved precariously balancing the top half of the horse on the broken leg, then hurrying away – would not win either of us a job on The Antiques Roadshow.
‘Why didn’t you just confess to it there and then, like you said you were going to? I’d have said it was me if you were that worried.’
‘I know,’ she cringes. ‘Anyway, look: what did you think of the house?’
It took a few attempts before I worked out the right answer to this question. Small. No character. Not my cup of tea. But she doesn’t give me a chance to say anything.
‘Dan, it’s absolutely gorgeous. Did you see the cornices in the bedroom? And the distressed tiles in the kitchen? There’s even somewhere for my shoes – that little closet in the main bedroom. Oh my God, I love everything about it. This one’s not just perfect on paper, it’s perfect in every conceivable way.’
She throws her arms around me as one word springs to my lips. Hallebloodylujah.
Chapter 2
Gemma
I feel like shouting it from the hilltops: I AM IN LOVE!
I am completely and utterly smitten with a two-bedroom period home boasting Edwardian-style geometric tiled splashbacks, dogtooth oak flooring, restored cast-iron radiators and a fully-functioning feature fireplace.
‘Where do I sign?’ Dan asks, as he threads his fingers through mine and we walk towards the beach. ‘I want to get this done before you change your mind.’










