Cruel Legacy Read Online Free Page A

Cruel Legacy
Book: Cruel Legacy Read Online Free
Author: Penny Jordan
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as well do a bit extra and pay for something J want as well.'
    Joel hadn't made any response, but the look on his face, in his eyes, had made her catch her bottom lip between her teeth.
    Joel was a very proud man—too proud, she sometimes thought—but then her guilt had changed to irritation. Why should she be the one to feel bad just because she wanted a new kitchen? Was it really so much to ask? The trouble with Joel was that his precious pride was more important to him than she was, or so she was beginning to think.
    In the end, Joel had given way and she had got her kitchen. The units weren't the same as her sister's expensive hand-painted ones, of course. Joel had installed theirs himself, working in the evenings and at weekends, and the day he had finished them she had come home from night duty to find that he had worked all through the night to get them finished.
    He had grinned at her like a boy as he'd invited her to admire his handiwork, sweeping her up into his arms and kissing her.
    He had smelled of wood and paint and sweat, his exuberance reminding her of the boy he had been when they first met.
    The kitchen had been perfect.. .just what she had wanted, and she hadn't resisted when he had whispered suggestively to her that they play out a certain sexy scene from the film Fatal Attraction to celebrate its completion...
    Paul had put on his coat and was opening the back door.
    'Where are you going?' Sally asked him sharply.
    'Round to Jack's,' he told her. 'Dad still isn't back and if s going to be too late now.'
    She let him go, feeling her irritation against Joel grow. It wasn't fair, the way he always put himself first and refused to pull his weight, leaving her to do everything.
    It had been all right, expecting her to run the house and take care of all the kids' needs when she was at home, but now that she was working...
    'So stop working,' he had told her last week when she had come home to find the house in a mess and him sitting in front of the television.
    'You know I can't,' she had protested. 'We need the money.'
    'I'm ready, Mum..
    She forced herself to smile at Cathy as she came into the kitchen.
    'OK, love, I'll take you now. Don't forget, your dad's picking you up.'
    'Huh... if he remembers. Mum, can we go to Florida next year? Nearly everyone in the class has been except for me.'
    'Florida's very expensive, Cathy...'
    Sally hadn't told Joel, but she had already decided that she was going to try and put something aside from her wages into a special holiday account. She'd love to take the kids to Disneyland. Another few years or so and they would be too old to really enjoy it. It would be worth making a few sacrifices, and if she and Joel both put the same amount away each month...
    'Don't forget,' she reminded Cathy as she dropped her off outside her friend's home, 'you're not to leave until your dad comes to pick you up.'
    'All right, all right. Fm not a baby, you know,' Cathy told her as she rolled her eyes and tossed her hair.
    Physically, Cathy took after Joel's mother, being small, blonde and far too pretty. She had none of Sally's thick dark hair and, thankfully, seldom revealed any of the tension that often clouded Sally's deep brown eyes.
    Temperamentally Cathy was far stronger than Joel's mother and, if neither of their children had shown any signs of the superior intelligence Daphne claimed for her son, Edward, they were both doing well enough at school for Sally to feel secretly very proud of them.
    It was nice to have the house to herself, she acknowledged when she got back; not that she was likely to have any time to appreciate her solitude. Unlike Joel, she could not sit down in front of the television set oblivious to the chaos around her.
    Upstairs the bathroom floor was covered in wet towels and someone had left the shower gel open on the shower floor, so that its contents was oozing wastefully away.
    'You should make the children contribute more to the household work,' Daphne had
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