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Jenn Ashworth - Cold Light

Here you can read online Jenn Ashworth - Cold Light full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: New York, year: 2012, publisher: William Morrow, genre: Detective and thriller / Science fiction. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Jenn Ashworth Cold Light

Cold Light: summary, description and annotation

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Im sitting on my couch, watching the local news. Theres Chloes parents, the mayor, the hangers on, all grouped round the pond for the ceremony. Its ten years since Chloe and Carl drowned, and theyve finally chosen a memorial a stupid summerhouse. The mayor has a spade decked out in pink and white ribbon, and hes started to dig. You can tell from their faces that something has gone wrong. But Im the one who knows straightaway that the mayor has found a body. And I know who it is. This is the tale of three fourteen-year-old girls and a volatile combination of lies, jealousy and perversion that ends in tragedy. Except the tragedy is even darker and more tangled than their tight-knit community has been persuaded to believe. Blackly funny and with a surreal edge to its portrait of a northern English town, Jenn Ashworths gripping novel captures the intensity of girls friendships and the dangers they face in a predatory adult world they think they can handle. And it shows just how far that world is willing to let sentiment get in the way of the truth. An unforgettable tale of friendship and memory and the shattering truth behind a forgotten dead body newly unearthed is a most welcome addition to the crime fiction and thriller ranks. Cold Light Ashworth already has created great buzz in the U.K. thanks to her stunning debut novel, , winner of the prestigious Betty Trask Award, and now places her in elite literary companyalongside Laura Lippman, Kate Atkinson, and other acclaimed masters of intelligent, emotionally powerful mystery and suspense. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3uhjpJWklNw Review Hugely readable debut novel [] about the inability to know others and ourselves. Extremely intense and powerfully intriguing. Ashworth has the rare gift of being able to make her reader feel perverse and voyeuristic, implicated somehow in the tragedy laid out on the pages. (London) A grimly atmospheric mystery. (London) A psychological thriller of the first order. (Australia) Another cleverly skewed tale told from the self-conscious perspective of an outsider arrestingly observant Ashworths second book confirms that the first was no one-off her talent could take her a long way. A wonderful tale, beautifully told. A chilling, blackly funny novel with a surreal edge about the intensity of teenage friendship. [Ashworth] Evokes a damaged mind with the empathy and confidence of Ruth Rendell. (London)

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Jenn Ashworth

COLD LIGHT

Prologue

Between interviews, they make us wait upstairs in a classroom. Were left alone but were aware that in a nearby office we are being discussed. Teachers; her parents and mine; the nurse; social workers. And the pair of us with nothing to do but stare out of the windows at the bedlam occurring at the front of the school and wait.

We watch the cars arrive and unload. We lean on the sill, making palm prints in the dust. Emma rests her muscly thighs against the radiator. I pull leaves from a brown spider plant and we both look out of the window and say nothing. We listen. The glass muffles the crying and singing but we can still see the flowers and feel the atmosphere, which is shrieky and curious and raw.

These people who we dont know who Chloe doesnt know even turn up at the school in coaches. Every single one of them brings something. If its not roses and baskets of silk flowers then its stuffed bears and huge, handmade cards. So many ways of spelling her name.

They interview us alone, then together, then alone again. Because were only fourteen, were entitled to breaks. We dont discuss the questions weve been asked. We dont compare stories. I never know what Emma is going to say until she comes out and says it.

Theyre putting candles out now, she says blandly.

She nods towards a kneeling figure across the road from the school. He is pulling something out of a carrier bag, laying it out on the pavement. A bank of tea-lights blooms as quick as mushrooms to drip and sputter in the shelter where the school buses pick up. Emma leans forward, putting all her weight on her hands. Her breath makes clouds on the glass. Her school jumper smells like old towels.

I stare at the flickering candles and remember the time me and Chloe waited there in the rain on a day we were supposed to be at school.

The windll blow them out, I say. Emma nods and we wait, no one breaking the silence until Shanks comes back with another pair of police officers.

What is it now? I say, but not loud enough for Shanks to hear.

The police bring us cans of Coke and put their hands on our shoulders. Smile a lot, just to let us know that we arent in trouble and we shouldnt be afraid of speaking out of saying everything we knew about Chloe and her boyfriend. Sometimes they film us as we talk and make our parents sign pieces of paper afterwards to say its all right, that they dont mind. I wonder if the cameras will be out this time, and what theyll do with the recording, and if well end up on the television again. Sometimes there are journalists waiting for us after school. Theyve promised to make special arrangements.

Right then, Shanks says, and I notice hes taken the pack of fags out of his breast pocket, and that today hes wearing a proper shirt and not a denim one.

They just want another five minutes with each of you, one at a time, and then you can go back to classes. He smiles, tries a joke, No getting out of Maths today, Im afraid, girls. Whos first?

Emma and I dont look at each other. She steps forward. I see her ponytail bob from side to side against her neck. I dont wonder what she is going to tell them. Shanks takes her away and I turn back to my window. Another coach has arrived.

Chapter 1

Theyre showing it this afternoon. A ceremony to mark the first spadeful of earth, and when its built, a ceremony to open the thing, I bet. I bring a bag of Doritos and a box of wine with me to the couch. Close the curtains, find the remote and settle in. The screen crackles with static as it warms up and I wonder, uneasily, what Emma is doing with herself tonight.

Beginning of this January, the council got together with the school and Chloes parents and set up a memorial fund. There was a consultation and a vote at a meeting in the Empire Services Club. The crowd was so big it overflowed the bar and spilled onto the bowling green. Someone came round with a tray of tea in those beige plastic cups with the plastic frame holders you get to stop you squeezing too hard and covering yourself in boiling liquid. We voted, all together, for a memory. A memorial. A house. The upshot of it is the City has decided to build a summerhouse overlooking the banks of her pond.

Its not a pond and its not hers. Its a concrete-bottomed pool, man-made and deeper than it looks. The yeast in the bread thrown to the ducks has polluted the water so there are no fish and no reeds its a dead, black disc surrounded by a tangle of grey and leafless trees and hawthorn: their branches are decorated with torn carrier bags and faded crisp packets.

Its not a place where anyone, least of all Chloes parents, would want to sit and rest a while, as it will say on the bench. But the City has decided. The council is putting up the money. Terry did the publicity and the telethon appeal for donations, and because the wood was the place were Chloe and Carl used to go for their privacy the summerhouse, decorated with stone doves and plaster cupids, surrounded by trellis and its own decking tracing a walkway down to the dirty banks of the pond, was what they planned.

Theyve built a model which the camera in the studio zooms in on so that on the television it looks like the real thing. This summerhouse (a concrete folly) is half a monument to young love gone wrong and half a nice piece of publicity for the Citys urban renewal programme: deprived areas, community cohesion something for the teenagers to smoke their glue in. Its morbid and sentimental, it ticks all the right boxes for community enterprise funding, and now its on The City Today.

This February has been wet and mild so the soil is easy to turn. The location camera shows the mayor attacking the cleared patch with a spade decked out like a maypole in pink and white ribbon. Chloes parents, because of their guilt, wanted the memorial to be a celebration of love and life and St Valentine and as a concession to this the City has provided the ribbons for the spade and the pink and white balloons gratis. The mayor isnt paying attention when he sinks the spade in but smiling at the pop of a few flashing cameras.

When the earth opens theres nothing to see but some plastic thicker than ordinary bin-bags, but nothing like tarpaulin. The blade of the spade tears open the plastic and a corner of it catches underneath. Even then, its nothing spectacular. Nothing, that is, we watching at home can see. No spectacle apart from a dirty fold of fabric that comes up with the soil as the mayor leans back and jiggles the spade so that the blade turns up the first clod. It could be anything the cover from a pram, an old shower curtain, the material from an umbrella.

In fact, its a blue North Face jacket waterproof and indestructible.

Terry peers into the hole, smiles, and then leans into the camera. The black bulb of the microphone is at his mouth. He says something, but Im watching the weather girl who is standing next to him. Shes holding a white candle in one hand and a pink balloon in the other. They must have used helium the string is straight up like a plumb line and the balloon floats over her head like an idea. Her smile freezes, then fades. Terry is still talking but the people behind him are screwing up their faces and coughing.

Its the smell.

When the mayor heaves the spade backwards again, straining the row of buttons that bisects his belly, theres an audible groan of disgust from the crowd and the weather girl lets go of her balloon, leans to the side and vomits a clear string of bile onto the ground. I watch the balloon float upwards, out of camera shot.

Theres chaos. The doves are flapping at the wire of the boxes they are stacked in. I dont know if its because they can smell something too, or because the people around them are suddenly moving, jostling each other away from the little hole, talking too loudly. The camera doesnt wobble, but pans away from the crowd, focuses on the still black water of the pond.

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