Read Cloudy with a Chance of Love Online
Authors: Fiona Collins
Every cloud has a silver lining when it comes to loveâ¦
Daryl Williams never minded the fact that she had a big bottom. It's always been behind her. In fact, it was one of the things that her husband loved about her. Until he ran off with her best friend, Gabby.
Daryl knows that she needs to get back in the dating game, she just doesn't know how. So when her friend suggests taking a fortune forecast, she reluctantly agrees. And it looks like Daryl's luck is in, by Friday she has a 99% chance of falling in love!
Only, even when it's written in the stars, finding the one
after
the one is never easyâ¦
The laugh-out-loud, uplifting story from Fiona Collins, bestselling author of
A Year of Being Single.
Perfect for fans of Jane Costello, Helen Fielding and Fiona Gibson.
A Year of Being Single
F
IONA
C
OLLINS
lives in the Essex countryside with her husband and three children, but also finds time for a loving relationship with a Kindle. She likes to write feisty, funny novels about slightly (ahem) more mature heroines. Fiona studied Film & Literature at Warwick University and has had many former careers including TV presenting in Hong Kong; talking about roadworks on the M25 on the radio; and being a film and television extra. She has kissed Gerard Butler and once had her hand delightfully close to George Clooney's bum. When not writing, Fiona enjoys watching old movies and embarrassing her children. You can follow Fiona on Twitter @FionaJaneBooks.
To Matthew
Thanks go to my amazing editor, Charlotte.
To Elizabeth Davies and Mary Torjussen, always!
To Matthew and my children for letting me shut the study door and get on with it!
Contents
Sunday
I have a large bottom. If I had to quantify it, I would say it was somewhere between the size of a space hopper and a meteorite. It's pretty big, and it needs quite a bit of upholstery to keep it in check. Big knickers. Spanx. Industrial scaffolding like you might see on buildings in major cities. But I like it. I'm used to it. It has always been behind me.
It's a relief to find that it's very fashionable to have a big bum these days. It never used to be. Women used to spend hours in the gym trying to whittle the damn thing down to nothing; now they're trying to build it up. Make it round and firm and sticky-outy. Women have operations where things are stuffed into it: fat from other parts of their body, cotton wool, sandwiches⦠A big behind has recently become an asset and I
finally
find it's something to be quite proud of. I could definitely give Kim Kardashian a run for her money, in the backside stakes, although I'm not sure I could âbreak' the internet (unless I sat on it, of course) â I'm in my mid-forties for god's sake. I no longer resemble the mildly sexy goddess I once was. But I do have a fashionably big bum.
My big bottom is currently coming in very handy. I'm sitting on it, on the cold ground, in Trafalgar Square, and laughing my head off. The denseness of my large behind means I probably won't feel the cold for another â ooh â three minutes and I'm laughing because I've just chucked my wedding ring in one of the fountains. Yes, it's gone, just like that. I stood up, on the edge of the fountain and, without fuss or war cry, just lobbed it in. I thought it might land with a satisfying clunk, but it didn't. I couldn't hear anything, which was a bit of a disappointment. It just sank to the bottom, without ceremony, and now it sits there, rather forlornly, with all the pennies and the euros and the ring pulls from cans of Coke. Still, it feels wonderful, getting rid of it like that. It's
gone
. I feel light, I feel free. I also feel slightly drunk; I may have had three or more cocktails in a bar off The Strand.
I'd struggled to get it off. Well, it has been on my left hand for fifteen years. Sam had to lend me her little blue tin of Vaseline, so I could lubricate my finger.
âRub it all around the knuckle, that's it, then wriggle,' she'd said.
âIt's bloody stuck!'
âWriggle it a bit more. Keep trying. You can do it, Daryl.'
I kept trying. I smeared on a bit more Vaseline and wriggled it a bit more and finally the damn ring was free of my knuckle and off my finger and at the bottom of the fountain. Thank goodness for that. Let a Portuguese language student have it, for all I care. Let it fund some eagled-eyed teenager's first Nissan Micra. Let it languish there for ever. It was nothing to do with me any more.
âWell done,' said Sam. âHow do you feel?'
âOh god, Sam,' I said. âI feel giddy and bloody wonderful!' She hugged me and we did a little Fagin-ish jig, right there and then, in front of a group of Japanese tourists who were huddled together offering the peace sign to the world and taking selfies.
I've been wonderfully giddy since this morning, to be honest, when I received my divorce papers.
People don't normally receive notice of the end of their marriages on a Sunday. Divorce papers come in the post, usually, along with everything else and if mine had arrived with Saturday's post, they would have just plopped on my mat in the same yellow envelope as all the other boring solicitors' missives I've received over the last year. I wouldn't have noticed anything special about this particular envelope. Nothing would have alerted me to the fact that its contents were anything much different to all the others â no klaxon would have gone off; the envelope wouldn't have flashed red, like the Batphone; there would have been no thunderbolt from the sky with accompanying, dramatic timpani music. But this particular envelope didn't even land on
my
mat. My neighbour â my
new
neighbour, I've only lived in my new house for a week â smilingly handed me my decree absolute over the doorstep this morning.
âYour
hunky
new neighbour' said Sam, when I told her. He is quite hunky, which is not quite what I need when I'm embarking on a new start and don't need any distractions â especially in the male form â but what can you do?
Will, my hunky new neighbour, said there was a relief postman on at the moment obviously making all sorts of rookie errors and sorry he hadn't noticed it yesterday, but he had some post for me. I thanked him in the embarrassingly gauche way I seem to have adopted with him (he is
very
good looking) and opened the envelope in my kitchen, expecting another drily-worded, highly expensive and baby-step advance in the slow-grinding cog of torture that was the dismantling of my marriage⦠It should have been simple â our daughter Freya is twenty-one and has left home, so there hasn't been need for disputes over child maintenance or anything like that â but I don't think it ever is simple, is it? The whole process was dreadfully and soul-crushingly slow.
It had been
so
slow that I was really surprised to discover, via the ponderous words of my bumbling and rotund solicitor (too many cakes, not enough time), that the deed was done; Jeff and I were divorced.
I did a little whoop, then had a little cry, then gave another whoop. It was done, it was over. I was divorced â Jeff and I were no longer married and he and my very-much-former best friend, Gabby, were free to do whatever the hell they liked.
I immediately called Sam; we got the Tube up to central London from Wimbledon, where we both live, and we've been here since half eleven, in a bar since quarter to twelve and it's not yet three o'clock and we're really rather tiddly and my ring is at the bottom of a fountain in Trafalgar Square.
âSo let's have it, Daryl,' Sam says, stretching out her legs in front of her and admiring her new boots (dark tan, riding in style; something a Jilly Cooper character would be proud of), âWhat are your plans for the future? What do you want to do?'
I'm full of daiquiri so I can only think of four things.
âDate but not fall in love.' I start counting them off, on my fingers. âEnjoy my freedom. Make it up to Freya, who's had to mother me for the past twelve months, when it should be the other way round. And decorate my new house.' I stretch out my legs, too, which only reach to about Sam's knees. I've got my favourite ankle boots on, the black suede ones with the glittery bits on the toes â I might make it into a Jilly Cooper novel too, as a dumpy, blinged-up stable hand. âApart from that, who the hell knows?'
âSounds like a plan to me,' says Sam. âBut it'll all be written in the stars, anyway.' I look at her and shake my head. I'm not into mumbo jumbo and pie-in-the-sky pseudo-psychic jiggery-pokery, but Sam
is. She's into it all: horoscopes â Virgo with Sagittarius rising in a lunar coulis or whatever â tarot cards, Feng Shui, reiki, cosmic ordering, crystals and tea-leaf reading. She
adores
all that stuff. She pulls those long legs up to her chest, slaps both knees with her manicured hands and says, âLet's do your fortune!'
âWhat? How? Are you going to read my palm?'
âNo. Online fortune teller. Let's stand up, though. My bum's gone numb.' We haul ourselves to our feet. I really am about four foot shorter than Sam, and with a much larger bottom, so it takes me a bit longer. âWe just go on my phone and use my new app.'
âOnline fortune tellerâ¦' I groan. âAs it's you, I'll indulge you, but I bet it's a right load of rubbish.'
It's not!' says Sam, flicking her glossy brown ponytail from side to side. âYou know my friend from Pilates, Jan?'
âJan with the thighs? The one who's been on a hundred dates and is still single?'
âThe very same. Except she's
not
single any more. She went on the same app two weeks ago â
Madame L'Oracle's Love Fortunes
, it's called â and Madame L'Oracle told her she was going to meet a man that night and she did! She met a guy from DelightfulDates.com
that very night
and now they're engaged!'
I dust down my backside. It has a leaflet explaining the Tower of London stuck to it. âAfter only two weeks? Come on! He's a conman or a nutter, he has to be.' From what I've heard, the only people who are âsuccessful' on DelightfulDates.com are men who manage to achieve sex with a stranger two hours after messaging them. It's not for finding long-term love. Not that I'm looking for that, ever again. It's going to be fun, flirting and frivolity for me, all the way now. I've done all my moping and my crying; it's high time for me to be
fabulous
.
âNo, he's a proper bloke! A nice bloke. One of the few. He's turned out to be amazing. That's what Jan said.'
âBut I don't want a bloke, do I? All I want now is to go on a few dates and have some fun.'