One Way Ticket to Paris: An emotional, feel-good romantic comedy Read online




  One Way Ticket to Paris

  An emotional, feel-good romantic comedy

  Emma Robinson

  Also by Emma Robinson

  The Undercover Mother

  Happily Never After

  One Way Ticket to Paris

  Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  The Undercover Mother

  Emma’s Email Sign-Up

  Also by Emma Robinson

  A Letter from Emma

  Happily Never After

  Acknowledgements

  For William

  I love you as much as the gravity of a neutron star

  Prologue

  When I was a kid and I’d lost something, my dad always said, ‘Go back to the place you last had it.’ That’s why, when I found myself (aged forty-one, married with kids, a house and an unreliable Renault Clio) missing something, I decided to take his words literally.

  The problem was that what I’d lost was… me.

  Chapter One

  Kate

  Insomnia at three a.m. is not the ideal time to purchase an unplanned train ticket to Paris. Without telling your husband. Or having any clue who will look after your two children while you were away.

  It was now 7.30 a.m. and Kate was in the bathroom, cleaning her teeth whilst undertaking covert surveillance on four-year-old Thomas doing a stand-up-wee-like-daddy. There weren’t enough bottles of bleach in the world to keep up with that boy. She spat toothpaste into the sink. ‘Thomas, please at least try to point your willy somewhere near the toilet.’

  Luke shouted up the stairs. ‘Love, do you know where my car keys are?’

  She gritted her newly-brushed teeth. Of course she knew where they were; she was the only person in this house who put things where they should actually be. ‘Look by the side of the kettle!’

  Kate had woken at the usual three a.m. and, between her stowaway daughter’s determination to sleep like a star fish and her husband’s snoring, she hadn’t had a snowball in hell’s chance of going back to sleep. Then her brain had started its night-time cycle: shopping lists, upcoming birthday parties, school events, missed dentist appointments, things she’d forgotten, or might forget, or… Somehow, she’d wriggled caterpillar-like from under the duvet without waking either of them and had gone downstairs for a glass of water. Which is when she’d found Luke’s keys.

  Alice wandered into the bathroom. ‘What do you think of my hair, Mummy?’

  Kate’s six-year-old daughter was adorned with the entire contents of the box of hair accessories. ‘You look beautiful, darling, but I think it might be better to save that look for the weekend.’ Or a Boy George lookalike convention.

  Alice flounced off to her bedroom and Kate turned her attention back to the boy child. ‘Pants up, Tom-Tom. Let’s give those hands a good scrub.’

  The glass of water hadn’t really cut it last night, so she’d stepped it up to a cup of camomile tea. So rock and roll. The keys had been by the side of the kettle on top of the Eiffel Tower postcard. When they’d bought the house in Kent, Luke had waxed lyrical about the fact they would be so close to the Eurostar station at Ebbsfleet. But they hadn’t been to Paris since their honeymoon. Moving the keys, Kate had flipped the postcard over to reread the familiar handwriting:

  When are you coming?

  Luke stuck his head into the bathroom. His thick, blond hair was still tousled from bed. He winked at her. ‘Found the keys, thanks. Are you done in here? Can I get in to take a shower?’

  He disappeared into the bedroom before she had a chance to say anything. But what was she going to say? Kate put a hand up to her own, dark hair and looked in the bathroom mirror. She still missed having hair which reached past her shoulders. But it had been the right decision to have it cut shorter. So much easier now she had the children to worry about. Practical.

  Whether she stayed or went, the kids would still need lunch. Kate consulted the school lunch choices sellotaped to the door of the cereal cupboard, praying for pizza. No such luck: Beef stew. Fish stew. Vegetable stew. Fabulous. Did anyone’s child eat that?

  ‘Alice, Thomas. There’s a yummy stew for lunch today!’ The enthusiasm in her voice sounded fake even to her. But she really wanted them to have a hot meal at school. They might be eating later than usual tonight. Something else to feel guilty about. Just add it to the list.

  Both children clutched their stomachs and pretended to be sick. Then Thomas looked up with his beautiful blue eyes. ‘Chocolate spread sandwiches?’ You had to admire his optimism. Kate got out the bread to make packed lunches – ham, not chocolate spread. Obviously.

  Last night, she’d carried the postcard through to the lounge, putting it on top of the ever-growing pile of papers on her piano. Luke called it the most expensive letter rack in the country. She’d sat on the piano stool, sipping the disgusting tea and just staring at the postcard. Paris. And Shannon. If Shannon was awake at three a.m. it would be because she’d just got home from a glamorous night out, not because she was drinking camomile tea and turning over in her head whether or not she had made a fool of herself in the school office yesterday because she couldn’t for the life of her remember the name of her daughter’s class. Or worrying whether her husband would find out where she’d been. Or who with.

  Kate had given up on the tea and hunted through the mountain of papers on the piano until she found the old photo Shannon had sent her the month before: the two of them drinking virgin marys, complete with celery sticks, at The Albert on Victoria Street. It must have been one of the many Mondays they had pledged to start a health kick. She peered at her thirty-year-old self. Where had that girl in the photograph gone?

  Right now she was squashing an apple into each of her children’s lunchboxes – apples which would undoubtedly come back uneaten but would prove that Kate encouraged healthy eating. When she put the lunchboxes inside their backpacks, she found a letter in Alice’s informing her that an ‘optional’ homework for last night had been to draw their hero. ‘Shit.’

  Alice was right behind her. ‘Mummy, is shit a square word?’

  Perfect timing. ‘Alice, who is your hero?’

  Alice considered for a moment. ‘I would say Daddy.’ Of course he was. It didn’t matter that Kate was the one running herself into the ground making healthy lunches,
arranging excruciating playdates, supervising hellish craft activities. It was Daddy – who would come home late, feed them secret sweets and throw them in the air – who was the hero of the house. It wasn’t fair. Nothing had been fair lately. Nothing.

  It had been that photograph which had started it. Or the girl in the photograph. Looking at it, Kate had had a sudden urge to find her; to bring her out again. And if anyone could help, it would be Shannon. Still wide awake, Kate had passed the time searching her mobile for Eurostar train times. By chance, there had been a £29 one-way ticket for the 10.30 a.m. later that morning. She’d screwed up her eyes and done the calculations. Eight forty-five drop off, plus fifteen minutes to get the car, plus half an hour’s drive… Yes, she would be able to do the morning school run and still make that.

  Was it meant to be?

  Showered and dressed for work, Luke now appeared. He always looked handsome in a suit. ‘I’m going to make myself a coffee for my travel mug. Do you want a proper cup of tea?’

  Should she just tell him? No. It would spoil everything. ‘Actually, I’ll have a coffee, too.’

  Luke stopped mid-spoon in the coffee jar and looked at her. It was the same expression Thomas wore when she explained he had to put on new pants every morning. ‘Really? That’s not like you.’

  If changing her morning drink to coffee was surprising, Luke had better hold onto his pants when he found out what she had planned for the rest of the day.

  Last night, she’d sat for at least five minutes as her thumb had hovered over the online payment button. It was the longest she’d sat on the neglected piano stool in years. The camomile tea had done nothing for her pounding heart. Was she actually going to do this? Going to another country on a whim – without booking a return ticket – was the kind of thing the old Kate would have done. The single Kate. The reckless Kate. The fun Kate. The new Kate didn’t do things like that. The mother Kate. The sensible Kate. The bloody boring Kate.

  She’d pressed the button.

  If she was being transparently twitchy this morning, Luke was his usual oblivious self. ‘Anything nice planned for today?’

  Anything nice? Did he really think she spent her days lunching with the cast of Desperate Housewives whilst the housework and shopping fairies did their thing? ‘Nothing much, dropping the kids to school and then some cleaning, maybe a trip to the supermarket.’ Running away to Paris for the night. ‘Have you got a busy day today?’

  ‘Not really, I’ll try and get away early if I can – we could get a takeaway tonight, save you cooking.’

  ‘Mmmm, maybe.’ She wandered into the lounge to check on Alice and Thomas, who were about fifty centimetres from the TV, glued to Everything’s Rosie. If only it was.

  Thomas, with his thumb in his mouth and his pudgy finger twisted in his hair, leaned in to Alice and she put an arm around him. Tears pricked in the back of Kate’s eyes. This was crazy. She couldn’t just drop them at school and skip off to another country. What if they were sick during the day or she’d forgotten something they needed and the school had to call her? She couldn’t just say, Sorry I’m in Paris, might be a while. What the hell would the school think?

  She could just tell them to call Luke. He was their father, after all.

  Luke wandered into the lounge with her coffee and put it on the dining table. ‘Okay, that’s me off.’ He kissed Thomas and Alice on the tops of their heads, and Kate on the cheek, and left for work. He was always the one who got to leave. Today he might not be the only one.

  Kate’s heart started to pound again. Was she really going to do this? The ticket was only £29, so she wasn’t losing a huge amount if she chose not to go. She would just call Shannon. That would be the decider. Funny, clever, and too sensible to have children, Shannon was exactly what Kate needed right now. Shannon would understand how Kate was feeling. She’d help her to work this all out.

  If Shannon was too busy to see her, Kate wouldn’t go. But if she was free and up for it, Kate would pack, take the kids to school then head straight to the Eurostar. Kate’s stomach fluttered as she listed to the warbled ringtone three times before the line connected. Voicemail. Dammit.

  She would have to take a chance. The small purple suitcase was still under the bed from Luke’s last work trip. Underwear first.

  In the underwear drawer were about twenty pairs of black knickers and ten bras, only three of which actually still fit. There were even a couple of grey maternity bras still kicking around in there like teenagers with nowhere to go. She pulled out the least pathetic-looking items. Maybe she could buy something new once she got there? Something sexy, even.

  Next, she opened her wardrobe. What clothes should she take? These options filled her with even less enthusiasm. A row of loose-fitting tops and leggings. Her uniform was worse than the kids’. Maybe she should be the one raiding the hair accessories? Downstairs she could hear the beginning of an argument; there were probably only about five minutes before tears and/or bloodshed. She grabbed a daytime dress, an evening dress, a couple of T-shirts and some Capri trousers which she prayed still fit.

  Hours sitting by a hospital bed eating sweets had done nothing for her waistline.

  Chapter Two

  Shannon

  Shannon had been begging Kate to visit her in Paris for the last year. Why, oh why did she have to pick this weekend?

  She’d missed Kate’s call due to an urgent need to vomit the contents of her stomach into the toilet. If only this had been self-induced by a wild night out. Ironic that the last time she’d clung to a toilet quite like this had been her first week in the UK after arriving as a fresh-faced Yank who couldn’t hold her ale. At least, that’s what Kate had called her as she’d held back her hair and laughed. They’d been ‘mates’ ever since.

  Dragging herself away from the comforting coolness of the bathroom tiles, Shannon crawled back to the bedroom. There were six territory managers coming for a sales conference today and she was supposed to be the friendly face that put them at ease whilst organising everything within an inch of its life. Very much like a jovial duck, she had to be serene on the surface, paddling like a madwoman underneath. How the hell was she going to do it?

  The mirror confirmed that her face wasn’t looking friendly so much as frazzled. She dragged the hair band from her ponytail. It had been a good idea to leave a pile of them in a pot by the toilet for puking purposes. Chunks of carrot did not coordinate well with rose-gold highlights. She rubbed at her face to generate a bit of colour. Did she have time to reapply her make up? Probably best to get dressed first in case there was another wave of stomach lurches. She paused and put a hand to her stomach. Was that another one coming? No, she was okay.

  Sitting on the side of the bed, Shannon tried for the second time to put on pantyhose, managing to get her feet in before flopping forwards as she summoned the energy to pull them up. How could she be so exhausted when she’d only been awake for thirty minutes? She felt across the quilt to where her mobile was and listened to Kate’s voicemail, upside-down. The surprise made her sit back up.

  Wow. Kate was coming. And on her own. On any other weekend Shannon would have been psyched to have Kate just turn up like this. It was the kind of thing the old Kate would have done. They’d done some totally crazy stuff back when they’d worked together in London. Once, they’d gate-crashed a really posh New Year’s Ball. It had been a huge deal in a marquee, with free champagne and waiters laden with canapés. There were so many people there, they’d thought they’d never be discovered. Everything was going well until Kate whispered to the man she was dancing with that they hadn’t actually been invited. ‘I know,’ he’d said. ‘It’s my party.’

  Shannon lay back and wriggled the pantyhose up over her hips. A couple of weeks ago it had been still warm enough to go without them – and her legs tanned at the first sight of sun – but now autumn had brought a cool breeze. It was true what they said about Paris in the springtime, but autumn was a close second. She’d falle
n in love with this city and its parks and open spaces and sprawling cafés. If Kate had just left her visit until later this month, they could have spent the whole weekend together. Now Shannon would have to try and see her around meeting times and meals out with the team.

  Sales meetings were busy but a lot of fun. Every quarter they would meet at a different European office and this time they were hosting in Paris: the European HQ. She’d planned some nice things for them to do today as a counterbalance to what was coming from Robert: he was on the warpath about sales figures. He’d been stomping around the office like a bear with a sore head since his conference call with the US last week – even Shannon hadn’t been able to stand him. He was pretty cute when he was angry, though. A bear crossed with George Clooney. Although she knew better than to say that to his face.

  Fabienne, the office manager, did most of his PA stuff now that Shannon’s role had morphed more into… What was she, exactly? Sales Manager Coordinator with extra responsibilities? Whatever. She still liked to coordinate events like this, though. The sales guys were a great gang and she was looking forward to seeing them. She was looking forward to seeing Kate, too. Her lovely Kate; she’d missed her.