Amanda’s Wedding. Jenny Colgan

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      JENNY COLGAN

      Amanda’s Wedding

       Dedication

      For Andrew McConnell Stott

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       Dedication

       Chapter Six

       Chapter Seven

       Chapter Eight

       Chapter Nine

       Chapter Ten

       Chapter Eleven

       Chapter Twelve

       Chapter Thirteen

       Chapter Fourteen

       Chapter Fifteen

       Chapter Sixteen

       Chapter Seventeen

       Epilogue

       Acknowledgements

       About the Author

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       One

      Most of the really messy things in life don’t actually have a beginning – they kind of bear down on you over years, like the consequences of not cleaning your bathroom floor (stickiness, cholera, etcetera).

      This one did, though. It definitely did, and I remember it extremely clearly. Well, in a fuzzy kind of way.

      Thank God – it was my bed. So: (1) I was actually in a bed, and (2) it was mine. I was beating the odds already.

      I prised open one very sticky eye and attempted to focus it, to try and work out where the smell was coming from. I appeared to be jammed between the wall and an extremely large and unidentifiable chunk of flesh.

      The chunk of flesh was connected to lots of other chunks, all in the right order, but I didn’t notice this until after I’d sat bolt upright in terror at a potential Godfather-type situation in my bed.

      Everything seemed weirdly out of proportion. Maybe I was still drunk. I pawed at the sticky stuff at the corner of my eyes. No, something was very wrong.

      An inappropriate hand was slung across me. It appeared to be about the size of my stomach, and my stomach is not renowned for its tiny-ness … A thought began to worm its way into my head.

      I knew that thought and tried to avoid it for as long as possible, but alongside my hangover voice that was howling ‘Fluid! Fluid!’ the thought whispered, ‘Oh my God … it’s Nicholas … Again!’

      I grimaced like I’d just swallowed something nasty – which, let’s face it, I probably had.

      Slowly creeping my way off the end of the futon, and feeling worse and worse, I crawled into the kitchen in search of aspirin and Diet Coke. Fran, of course, was lying in wait. She didn’t live here, but she made herself more at home than I did. Her own place was a three-foot-square studio which induced immediate Colditz fever, so I’d got used to her wandering in and out.

      ‘Good morning!’ trilled Fran, bright and breezy. She must have been putting it on. Through a strange fog – which I supposed was the alcohol in my system filling me right up to the eyes – she actually looked quite good. I couldn’t focus on her mass of fuzzy hair, but I did notice that she was wearing one of my T-shirts, not quite covering thighs that didn’t even meet in the middle. I hated that.

      I summoned all my energy to pipe, ‘Hello!’

      ‘Hungover?’

      ‘No, no, absolutely fine. I’ve just suddenly developed a taste for a half-bottle of warm, flat Coke, OK?’

      ‘Oh, right.’ There was a pause. Then she said, ‘I take it you’ll be wanting two glasses?’

      ‘Aaaaaaargh!’ I put my head down on the kitchen unit.

      ‘Mel. Mel Mel Mel Mel Mel!’

      ‘Urgugh?’

      ‘Nicholas …!’

      ‘Uh-huh …’

      ‘Twice …!’

      ‘Aaaargh!’

      Fran backed away.

      ‘I

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