Agatha Raisin and Kissing Christmas Goodbye

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Book: Read Agatha Raisin and Kissing Christmas Goodbye for Free Online
Authors: M. C. Beaton
him.
    ‘Listen,’ said Charles. ‘These days, you can’t lose out buying property. Buy her a flat in Mircester and then when she starts earning enough, charge her rent.’
    Agatha opened her mouth to give an angry retort and then shut it again. Charles might have a point. What if she met the man of her dreams? It wouldn’t help to have a pretty young girl in
residence.
    ‘I’ll think about it,’ she said gruffly. She saw that Toni had finished eating. ‘Come along, Toni. I’ll take you upstairs. Have a hot bath and get into bed.
You’ll feel a lot better after a good night’s sleep.’
    Later, Toni lay in the comfortable bed and looked about her with a kind of wonder. Everything was so clean and cheerful. Chintz curtains fluttered at the open window. Agatha
had brought her up a glass of warm milk and two strong painkillers along with magazines and books.
    How odd that the terrifying Agatha should turn out to be so motherly. And the cottage was the kind she had seen on chocolate boxes and calendars with its deep thatched roof.
    Toni did not expect this heaven to last. But her young life had been full of experience of how to enjoy the moment before the drunken chaos created by her mother and brother descended on her
again. She sighed and stretched out and was soon fast asleep.
    Toni awoke with a start and looked at the alarm clock beside her bed – and groaned. Nine o’clock! How could she have overslept? She struggled up and saw a note on
the bedside table. It was from Agatha. She read: ‘I think you should take the day off and relax. There is food in the freezer. Help yourself. A.’ Toni got up and stretched. Two white
fluffy towels had been placed at the end of her bed. She found the bathroom, had a shower and dressed in a blouse, jeans and sandals.
    She went into the kitchen. Agatha’s cats, Hodge and Boswell, came to meet her. Toni crouched down on the floor and petted them, then stood up and went to the fridge. There were no eggs or
bacon. A chest freezer stood against one wall. She lifted the lid. The labels that could still be read showed Agatha’s love for microwaveable food such as curries and lasagne.
    Toni saw a loaf on the counter and decided to settle for a breakfast of toast and coffee.
    She had just finished when the doorbell rang. Toni experienced a pang of fear. What if her brother had come to hunt her down?
    There was a spyhole in the door and she peered through it. A pleasant-looking grey-haired woman stood on the step.
    Toni opened the door. ‘I am Mrs Bloxby,’ said the woman. ‘Mrs Raisin called me. She had not told you how to set the burglar alarm. Let me show you.’
    ‘That is kind of you,’ said Toni.
    She listened carefully to the instructions and then Mrs Bloxby said, ‘I also wondered whether you might like to come with me to the vicarage? You must be hungry. Mrs Raisin only has black
coffee and cigarettes for breakfast.’
    Toni was still hungry so she agreed, and ten minutes later was sitting in the vicarage garden listening to the domestic sounds from the kitchen as Mrs Bloxby prepared her breakfast.
    The sun shone down in all its hazy autumn beauty. From the fields above the village came the sound of a tractor.
    The vicar’s wife came out with a tray and unloaded a plate of bacon, sausage and eggs, coffee, toast and marmalade.
    ‘This is very good of you,’ said Toni awkwardly. ‘Did Mrs Raisin tell you why I am staying with her?’
    ‘Mrs Raisin said that you had some trouble at home, that is all.’
    Silence fell as Toni ate steadily. Mrs Bloxby took out some knitting. The needles flashed in the sunlight.
    Toni finished her meal and sat back with a sigh. ‘I’ll need to find somewhere to live,’ she said. ‘I can’t stay with Mrs Raisin forever. We call her Agatha at the
office.’
    Mrs Bloxby smiled. ‘It is a very old-fashioned tradition in the village to use second names. I gather you don’t want to go home again.’
    ‘It’s difficult,’ said

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