How to Fall in Love. Cecelia Ahern

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу How to Fall in Love - Cecelia Ahern страница 2

How to Fall in Love - Cecelia Ahern

Скачать книгу

How to Quiet Your Mind and Get Some Sleep

       9. How to Enjoy Your Life in Thirty Simple Ways

       10. How to Make an Omelette Without Breaking Eggs

       11. How to Disappear Completely and Never Be Found

       12. How to Solve a Problem Like Maria

       13. How to Recognise and Appreciate the People in Your Life Today

       14. How to Have Your Cake and Eat It

       15. How to Reap What You Sow

       16. How to Organise and Simplify Your Life

       17. How to Stand Out from the Crowd

       18. How to Make Absolutely Everything Okay Again

       19. How to Pick Yourself Up and Dust Yourself Off

       20. How to Stand Up and Be Counted

       21. How to Dig a Hole to the Other Side of the World

       22. How to Solve Will and Inheritance Disputes in Eight Easy Ways

       23. How to Prepare Yourself for a Goodbye

       24. How to Wallow in Your Despair in One Easy Way

       25. How to Ask for Help Without Losing Face

       26. How to Find the Positive in a Catch-22

       27. How to Celebrate Your Achievements

       Acknowledgements

       Q & A

       Keep Reading …

       About the Author

       Also by Cecelia Ahern

       About the Publisher

       1

       How to Talk a Man Down

      They say lightning never strikes twice. Untrue. Well, it’s true that people say it; it’s just untrue as a fact.

      NASA-funded scientists discovered that cloud-to-ground lightning frequently strikes the ground in two or more places and that the chances of being struck are about forty-five per cent higher than what people assume. But what people mostly mean to say is that lightning never strikes the same location on more than one occasion, which is also untrue as a fact. Though the odds of being hit by lightning are one in three thousand, between 1942 and 1977 Roy Cleveland Sullivan, a Park Ranger in Virginia, was hit by lightning on seven different occasions. Roy survived all the lightning strikes, but he killed himself when he was seventy-one, shooting himself in the stomach over what was rumoured to be unrequited love. If people dispensed with the lightning metaphor and instead just said what they meant, it would be that the same highly unlikely thing never happens to the same person twice. Untrue. If the reason behind Roy’s death is true, heartbreak carries its own unique brand of sorrow and Roy would have known better than anyone that it was highly likely that this highly unlikely misfortune could occur again. Which brings me to the point of my story: the first of my two highly unlikely events.

      It was eleven p.m. on a freezing cold December night in Dublin and I found myself somewhere I had never been before. It is not a metaphor for my psychological state, though it would be apt; what I mean is that I literally had never geographically been to the area before. An ice-cold wind blew through the abandoned Southside housing development, causing an unearthly tune to play through broken windows and flapping scaffolding materials. There were gaping black holes where there should have been windows, unfinished surfaces with menacing potholes and upturned flagstones, pipework-cluttered balconies and exit routes, wires and tubing that began randomly and ended nowhere, the place a stage set for tragedy. The sight alone, nothing to do with the minus-degree temperature, made me shudder. The estate should have been filled with sleeping families, lights out and curtains drawn; instead, the development was lifeless, evacuated by owners who had been left to live in ticking time-bombs with fire-safety concerns as long as the list of lies they were told by builders who failed to deliver on the promise of luxury living at boom-time prices.

      I shouldn’t have been there. I was trespassing, but that wasn’t what should have concerned me: it was dangerous. To the conventional ordinary person it was unwelcoming; I should have turned around and gone back the way I came. I knew all these things and yet I ploughed on, debating with my gut. I went inside.

      Forty-five minutes later I stood outside again, shivering, trembling and waiting for the gardaí as the 999 operator had instructed me to do. I saw the ambulance lights in the distance, which were quickly followed by the unmarked garda car. Out leapt Detective Maguire, unshaven, messy-haired, rugged if not haggard, whom I’ve since learned to be an emotionally hassled, pent-up jack-in-the-box ready to explode at any moment. Though his general appearance might have been a cool look for a member of a rock band, he was a forty-seven-year-old detective on duty, which took the stylish away from him and highlighted the seriousness of the situation I’d found myself in. After directing them to Simon’s apartment, I returned outside to wait to relay my story.

      I told Detective Maguire about Simon Conway, the thirty-six-year-old man I’d met inside the building who, along with fifty other families, had been evacuated from the estate for safety reasons. Simon had talked mostly about money, about the pressure of having to pay the mortgage on the apartment he wasn’t allowed to live in, and the

Скачать книгу