Accidents Happen

Accidents Happen Read Free Page A

Book: Accidents Happen Read Free
Author: Louise Millar
Tags: Fiction, General, Psychological, Thrillers
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was bathed in a pale lemon tint. Kate pushed her bike across Donnington Bridge, then freewheeled down the steep path on the other side to cycle along the river.
    It was busy. She set off, cycling around a woman with two big wet dogs, and a student on a bike who had clearly not learned to drive yet and wasn’t sticking to the left side. Kate pumped her legs hard, averting her eyes from the water on her right, trying to clear her mind of what she was about to do. She pushed against the resistance of each pedal stroke, changing gear when the journey along the flat path became too easy, until she could hear her own breath whistling gently on the summer breeze.
    A swarm settled around her head like tiny flies.
    One out of five. About 20 per cent, she thought, trying to ignore it.
    She hit a steady pace around Christchurch Meadow. The grand old college looked especially beautiful tonight across the river, its stone facade soft and pretty in the low light. The grass in front of it glowed that rich, saturated Oxford green that suggested high teas and country estates. It was scattered with groups of the cheery, hard-working students who imbued the air in Oxford with their optimism and best efforts, who sprinkled its streets and parks and alleyways with goodwill, like bubbles of sweetness in a fizzy drink. Who made Oxford feel safe.
    No, on nights like these, she hardly missed London at all.
    After Folly Bridge Kate cleared the crowds and stepped up her speed again. She sailed past the waterside flats at Botley and the circus-coloured canal boats moored around Osney Lock. Behind Jericho, she ducked under a graffitied bridge and carried on along the canal path till she could cross into north Oxford.
    There. She had done it. Dismounting to cross the bridge, she checked her watch. Twenty-five minutes flat. She could still make it for six.
    As she set off, pushing her bike along the pavement to Summertown, the enormity of what lay ahead hit her.
    She was here finally. She was actually going to do it this time.
    Before she could change her mind for the tenth time, Kate made herself walk on, pushing the bike along the pavements of quiet side streets before emerging into the rush-hour traffic of Woodstock Road and Banbury Road, which she crossed to arrive in a leafy Summertown avenue.
    Peace descended as she entered the exclusive Oxford enclave. The houses were spectacular. Imposing Victorian detacheds, with grand pianos in grand bay windows and walled gardens. Inspector Morse streets, as Helen would call them. As far from the clattering noise and cheerful chaos of east Oxford as you could be. The kind of leafy avenue Helen and Richard had assumed Kate would buy in when she and Jack moved from London – the first thing she had done to annoy them.
    To avoid thinking about her destination, Kate observed each house as she passed, searching for a feature Hugo would appreciate. The houses were Victorian Gothic revival. Not his period, but she bet he would have known the correct name for every architectural detail on their splendid frontages.
    Before she knew it, the sign was in front of her. Hemingway Avenue.
    Kate stopped. Her cheeks were covered in a gentle sheen of perspiration, her lips still slightly numb from riding fast into the breeze.
    Her watch said five to six. She had made it.
    She was nearly there.
    This was nearly it.
    The urge to run overwhelmed her so abruptly, she put a hand out and touched a wall.
    She was outside No. 1. If she carried on to No. 15 Hemingway Avenue there would be no going back.
    Shutting her eyes, she forced herself to summon the memory of Jack’s face in her rear-view mirror an hour ago. His cheeks rigid like a mask, his lips thrust forward as he bit the inside of his mouth.
    ‘You are going to do this,’ she whispered, pushing herself off the wall.
    And on she went, with smaller and smaller steps.
    The house was even more impressive than its neighbours. One gable jutted in front of the other. Ivy grew

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