upstairs.â
Oh it was good to have a phone again and be back in the real world. I sat on my bed, keeping one eye on the window because it had started snowing again and that made me nervous. I logged into the Wi-Fi and synced my contacts on to Leonaâs phone, then added my email accounts and watched as dozens appeared in my inbox. There were lots about the wedding, from the registration office in Inverness saying the registrar couldnât reach us, from the photographer saying the same, and the catering suppliers. I fired off emails saying what a shame, I understood, we were making alternative arrangements and I trusted they would return my deposit.
In my work inbox was an email from a friend, Stacey, who Iâd worked with in London. Sheâd transferred to our New York office, where she was flying high. Her email was full of chat about the Manhattan dating scene and her seemingly never-ending search for the perfect apartment. I paused, tapping the phone against my chin.
As a family lawyer for an international firm I had a good idea of how US law worked. I knew that unlike in the UK not just anyone could look up a birth certificate. Except we could â employees of my firm had access to databases that normal people didnât. Our credentials had been approved in most of the states, I thought. And we definitely had an office in Boston so we were bound to have been approved for there. I couldnât do it from here. At work we used a proxy server but it wouldnât work from my phone on Mumâs Wi-Fi. But Stacey could do it. It was Sunday morning in the States but if Stace was at her computer I knew she wouldnât mind having a quick look for me. It didnât take long to run a search.
I typed out an email explaining the bare bones of our situation but claiming it was happening to a friend. I knew if Iâd said it was Jamie whoâd had a kid turn up on his doorstep, sheâd ring and I couldnât bear to talk about it. Not yet. I asked Stacey to track down Parkerâs birth certificate â I didnât know his exact birthday but I knew roughly, and where he was born. And with Tansyâs name too it shouldnât be too hard. Then I asked her to email it to me when sheâd found it. Straightaway a message pinged back saying she was on it. Good old Stace.
I settled back against the pillows and rang Chloe. When she answered, cautiously because obviously I had a new number that she didnât recognise, I smiled just hearing her voice.
âItâs me,â I said.
âAaaaaaargh!â Chloe shrieked. âWhere have you been? Iâve been phoning and phoning but you never answer. And then someone said youâd been in the avalanche and I was so worried. I thought you were dead. And because Robâs in the police and he knows people, I got him to check, so I knew you werenât dead, but I was still worriedâ¦â
As she paused for breath I saw my chance.
âI lost my phone,â I said. âIn the avalanche.â
âOh my god,â Chloe said. âSo it was true? Are you okay?â
âIâm fine,â I said. âIâve sprained my wrist and banged my head, and my legs are aching like Iâve done a particularly full-on spin class, but Iâm fine. It was bloody scary though.â I told her all about being caught up in the snowfall.
âRob said you helped people get out,â Chloe said.
âHarry helped too,â I said. âThere were three people trapped.â Again I felt the strange mix of pride and fear that talking about the avalanche always gave me.
âPeople are saying youâve got a photographic memory,â Chloe said with a chuckle. âThat you remembered exactly where the people were.â
âIt wasnât quite like that,â I admitted, knowing sheâd know what I meant. Chloe was fully up to speed with my familyâs talents.
âSo whatâs happening with
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