A Finer End

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Book: Read A Finer End for Free Online
Authors: Deborah Crombie
jumper, and the clerical collar.
    She’d come straight from a meeting with the archdeacon, and she was running late. It had been an even more taxing day than usual, arranging to cover the obligations of two parish vicars who were away. But she had been fortunate, young as she was, and a woman, to be appointed rural dean, over and above the duties required by her own parish of St Mary’s, and she reminded herself of that whenever she was tempted to whinge.
    She slowed as she passed the Abbey, gazing through the wrought-iron fence at its grounds. As a child she’d felt a secret inclination towards the cloistered life; even now, a breath of the Abbey air made her feel strangely peaceful. Had the pilgrims come by the thousands hoping for a dispensation to save their souls, or because a glimpse of the Abbey itself was as close as they might get to paradise?
    Turning into the High, she was lucky enough to spot a parking place on the street a few doors past the Galatea. She swung the Fiat into the space, then walked back to the café, stopping to peer into the window.
    The cafe’s door stood open to the air. Jack sat at their usual table, halfway towards the back, reading something intently. Free to study him for a moment, Winnie tried to consider him dispassionately. A large, solidly built man with a shock of fair hair, and a rugged, hook-nosed face, he had the most piercingly blue eyes she had ever encountered. He might have played rugby — certainly he was not the weedy vicar type she had always found attractive. The thought made her smile, and in that instant, Jack looked up and saw her.
    By the time she reached the table he had shuffled his papers out of the way. ‘Long day?’ he asked, giving her a swift kiss. ‘You look a bit knackered. I’ve ordered some wine.’
    ‘You’re a dear,’ she replied, relaxing into her chair with a sigh as he poured her a glass of the burgundy already open on the table. ‘We had more than the usual squabbling and backbiting in the Deanery chapter meeting.’
    Jack studied her with the intense gaze she still found disconcerting. ‘I can tell. You’ve that strained look about the eyes.’
    She took a sip of the wine already waiting, let it linger on her tongue, then nodded towards his briefcase. ‘Working?’
    ‘Mmmmm,’ he answered non-committally. ‘Hungry?’
    ‘Ravenous. All that fresh air.’
    ‘Don’t tell me you’ve come on that dreadful bike?’ he asked, grinning.
    ‘No, more’s the pity. It would have been a lovely day for it, but I had to go too far afield.’ They had an ongoing disagreement about her bike, which he considered a threat to life and limb. But she loved the old thing, and after her London parish she cherished the freedom she felt as she made her daily rounds on it. There were times, however, when the weather or the distance of her calls forced her to use the serviceable Fiat that had come with the job. She narrowed her eyes, giving him a mock glare. ‘I’ve no intention of giving it up, you know, no matter how much you nag me.’
    ‘Then we had better build up your strength,’ he replied wryly as the waitress arrived at their table.
    Over dinner, they chatted companionably about their respective days, but Winnie soon sensed that in spite of his solicitousness, Jack was distracted. As he waited for her to finish eating, he lapsed into silence, and she was seized by a sudden fear that he had tired of her and couldn’t quite bring himself to say so.
    Well, if that was the case, there was no point putting it off, she scolded herself. Gripping the stem of her wine glass tightly between her fingers, she asked, ‘Jack, is something wrong?’
    He gave her a startled glance; his gaze strayed to the briefcase he’d left on the table. He frowned. After a moment’s hesitation, he said, ‘No. Yes. I don’t know. There’s something I haven’t told you.’
    Winnie’s heart sank, and she braced herself for bad news.
    Jack, however, seemed unaware of

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