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Love Among the Treetops: A feel good holiday read for summer 2018
Love Among the Treetops: A feel good holiday read for summer 2018
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Love Among the Treetops: A feel good holiday read for summer 2018

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Love Among the Treetops: A feel good holiday read for summer 2018
Catherine Ferguson

Can love flourish amongst the tree tops?When pastry chef Twilight Wilson was a young girl, she would hide from school bullies up in the treehouse at the bottom of her garden in her family home in Sussex. It was her special place, and even as an adult she still loves it.So when her family tell her they can’t afford to live there any more, Twilight is devastated. Not only will they lose their home – but the treehouse too!She comes up with a plan to save the family home – she’ll start up a cafe in the treehouse! It’s a brilliant idea, and excitement builds as she starts planning the menus, with the help of Theo – a rather attractive man from the gym. But when former school bully Lucy finds out the plan, she starts plotting – and opens her own rival cafe in the village!Can Twilight save her family home? Will her friendship with Theo ever be anything more? And who will win the cafe wars?Catherine Ferguson is back in this hilarious, heartwarming read perfect for summer.

Catherine Ferguson

A division of HarperCollinsPublishers

www.harpercollins.co.uk (http://www.harpercollins.co.uk)

This novel is entirely a work of fiction.

The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are

the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to

actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is

entirely coincidental.

AVON

A division of HarperCollinsPublishers

1 London Bridge Street

London

SE1 9GF

www.harpercollins.co.uk (http://www.harpercollins.co.uk)

Copyright © Catherine Ferguson 2018

Catherine Ferguson asserts the moral right to

be identified as the author of this work

A catalogue record for this book is

available from the British Library

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.

Ebook Edition © March 2018 ISBN: 9780008215750

Version: 2018-01-08

Table of Contents

Cover (#udcaed1a6-e444-5d5b-bb1b-510adb7dc9fd)

Title Page (#ud6ba5ed6-f8d7-56d3-a361-a1d7420e4cf3)

Copyright (#u57a8fc3a-6ed0-5186-a4ce-08a4ac9aec7b)

Prologue (#u804f1669-1ef5-5f2c-83fb-b4fd2c2ff465)

Chapter 1 (#uaf6a2180-e29e-53ac-8e62-66d4a4bebc6c)

Chapter 2 (#u54444b08-81d3-58b3-b933-bb37c8e94fa6)

Chapter 3 (#u01fe9e2a-269b-57fc-95c7-ad85cf3f9f89)

Chapter 4 (#ue7769c9b-8527-53e3-bd3b-6ce9cc1051e2)

Chapter 5 (#u8f357298-2351-5308-930c-822fa0f8f0b9)

Chapter 6 (#u3712db4d-252f-5b59-88a0-fe99d29cafd4)

Chapter 7 (#u841ea222-00a7-5bfb-a230-edc2ee1736d9)

Chapter 8 (#u038477f1-6bc3-5589-b319-bb1580706d38)

Chapter 9 (#u9e1ed74a-724d-5cda-a1cb-4ba2a498034d)

Chapter 10 (#ub249616a-a8dd-54e7-bf0f-f6d4e9d8b0c3)

Chapter 11 (#u6e5341e9-88cd-51f5-8e4a-4a7ed8c88954)

Chapter 12 (#u277a94e9-adca-53d0-a2d8-759923ae6186)

Chapter 13 (#u90feb402-2ded-56bd-a83c-86564756073c)

Chapter 14 (#u07de6fd1-a906-59d2-ae91-d7563a185ccb)

Chapter 15 (#u6e73c43b-604f-5cfd-9ef4-8fa3fb65fc8a)

Chapter 16 (#u30d5ce31-ca69-54ff-bc64-fb4bea79867e)

Chapter 17 (#ud03f7d4c-fa12-5529-9905-def252239abc)

Chapter 18 (#u2407217e-69a1-500a-a6d3-32fadd0df35f)

Chapter 19 (#u8709e578-0114-54dc-a057-3fac8fd44e47)

Chapter 20 (#u8fc6f9eb-4c2b-501f-80e3-8f917f21c82f)

Chapter 21 (#u1009dfad-538b-5cde-8f8a-809ff60db7e2)

Chapter 22 (#u08adc895-5177-5b8c-860d-54f438802813)

Chapter 23 (#u0ae9e2d2-0494-5766-bcc6-914f2700fee4)

Chapter 24 (#u51232b79-3048-5a81-845e-81f8b532ff3a)

Chapter 25 (#u1dd6d27c-b7d2-5527-a403-eb1807789b93)

Chapter 26 (#u106d7c90-1c6c-5092-be34-7690305c51f6)

Chapter 27 (#u519c1381-94e1-5e42-844e-02b9b2640609)

Chapter 28 (#u157d9654-02bc-5d2e-ada4-9db88cdc44aa)

Chapter 29 (#uf4e08bbf-a755-5920-a677-9925a134ea60)

Chapter 30 (#u197ce31d-fa3f-5d9f-9ba6-e214f25132cb)

Chapter 31 (#u038751e0-be37-5dd9-b6ba-c5720c5ee18d)

Chapter 32 (#u82642651-049c-57f7-b4e5-ff9b8f7985bb)

Chapter 33 (#ue8defb48-24f5-5bcc-a47b-37e0c1b28395)

Chapter 34 (#ud0e0a3db-58be-5fa4-930e-9ae7e95430f8)

Chapter 35 (#u37423238-6ef5-5aac-8f95-9f5e45b756bc)

Chapter 36 (#u76e7a006-da0d-5b06-9f9a-e16e92ec1aa8)

Chapter 37 (#uc8a112fc-d7b0-53d4-b961-7cb85fae017a)

Chapter 38 (#ud96abaf6-4d0c-5bd2-8931-146559c7aab9)

Chapter 39 (#u5a0cc65a-24c0-597a-9f51-5a5bbb80067e)

Chapter 40 (#ucc1b5c6e-9fd5-5ddb-b8f9-22521b8d94f5)

Chapter 41 (#ueb80d965-f159-5874-8c41-844393af664c)

Keep Reading… (#u3e258538-872a-5efd-a316-3b524976c292)

Also by Catherine Ferguson (#uda0e8cbb-f6b3-5c9e-9635-cc3fc347849a)

About the Author (#u6f275368-f061-5c11-89c5-f5e26547405d)

About the Publisher (#ufa8987a3-ca6c-57b7-9344-e0ce5c8b6661)

Prologue (#u3a0aea97-22d2-55bd-b3c8-fd5390bd5788)

They’re catching up with me.

I’m trying to run faster but my heart is banging so hard it hurts, and I can’t get my breath. And now Lucy’s shouting at me to stop or else. She always makes her voice go deeper when she wants to really scare me.

Got to run faster!

The back of my leg stings where one of Lucy’s stones just hit me. I can hear her laughing with her big friend, Sophie, that she’s going to trip me up and send me flying, then they’re going to pull my hair and pinch my arms until I beg them to stop.

Joanna should have been at the school gates. She’s my cousin and she’s twelve and goes to big school, and sometimes Mum asks her to bring me home. But I waited and Joanna didn’t come so I started walking home myself. Mum will be cross if I tell her Joanna wasn’t there, so I’m not going to tell her. I don’t want Joanna to get into trouble.

Nearly home now!

If Mum’s at the kitchen window, peeling the potatoes for dinner or doing the dishes, Lucy and Sophie will slow down and act like they haven’t even noticed me. I’ll tell Mum that Joanna left me at the end of our street because she’s going to her friend Amy’s house for tea. Then Mum won’t be cross with her.

But Mum’s not at the window today and I feel sick. What if she’s got the hoover on and doesn’t hear me ringing the doorbell?

If I dodge round the corner and take the short cut to the back of my house, I might get there before they catch me. They’d never dare come after me into the garden. I’ll be safe there. I can see my treehouse now, sitting high above the fence. A few more steps and I’ll be through the garden gate and safe.

But the back gate always sticks. Please let it open for me today.

I close my eyes and push myself against it.

Yes!

I run in and slam the gate shut behind me.

Made it!

The ladder up to my treehouse is a little bit wobbly and scary sometimes but Dad says it’s perfectly safe. He knows because he made the treehouse for me himself and he’s really clever at stuff like that. He does woodwork when he has time off from selling things to farm people in our shop at the bottom of the garden.

I’m so hot. As I climb up into the sky, the whole treehouse seems to sway, the bright green summer leaves sort of shivering as I move.

I’m crouched down on the wooden floorboards now, hidden among the branches, breathing in the lovely cool leafy smells coming in through the slightly open window. I can tell it’s been raining because the woody scent seems much sharper and tickles my nose. Dad built the treehouse for me when I was just six. That’s a whole year ago now. I’ll stay here for a bit so my face isn’t red and sweaty when Mum sees me – otherwise she might guess that something bad has happened.

Slowly, I stand up and peep through the big square window, getting ready to duck down if Lucy and Sophie are there. But they’re not.

They must have gone!

My eyes are suddenly wet with tears. Lucy Slater is in my class at school and she hates me. She told everyone I smelled like a dustbin and all her friends laughed, so now they call me Stinker Wilson instead of Twilight Wilson, which is my real name.

I feel better now, although my heart is still beating fast and my legs feel funny, like they probably won’t work properly if I try to climb back down the ladder. I’ll just stay here a bit longer to make sure they’ve really gone. I could put the kettle on and have a pretend tea party for my dolls. Mum always says a cuppa makes things better.

If Lucy Slater knew I had my dolls up here, she’d think it was really funny and she’d tell everyone in my class. Like the time she told one of her fibs and said I’d had a wee in my pants in the middle of the shopping centre. It wasn’t true, but it made my face really hot when everyone pointed at me and laughed.

I know I’m too old, really, to play with dolls. But I like them. They make me remember the time when I didn’t have to go to school and see Lucy Slater. I could just play in my treehouse instead. I don’t know why Lucy hates me. I gave her sweets once, but she just made a face and said they looked horrible. Then she threw them over the school wall and ran off with Sophie.

I love my dolls because they never laugh at me or say they’re going to get me on the way home from school. We just sit here quietly and I pour tea into their cups (it’s just water, really) and I tell them what I’ve been doing at school that day. I don’t tell them about the nasty things because that would make them very sad.

Today, I tell them Mum wants me to make the cake for Dad’s birthday on Sunday. She’s going to let me mix the icing and decorate it and everything!