The
Secret
Today I am pleased to be able to share
an extract from Katharine Johnson’s new book The Secret. My thanks go to Katharine for providing this
snippet to tempt you.
About
the Book
This is the second book set at Villa
Leonida, the house at the centre of The Silence which was published last year
but it’s a standalone story.
In The Silence some bodies were
discovered at Villa Leonida, an idyllic holiday home, during a children’s game
of hide-and-seek on a family holiday. They
were found to relate back to the summer of 1992.
A year on, in The Secret, the villa
has been put up for sale. Which for elderly resident Sonia can only mean one
thing – that the renewed interest and gossip will lead to the discovery of her
own secret which relates to that same evening at the villa in 1992.
But while she’s desperate to keep the
past hidden another resident, Carlo, can’t leave it alone. He’s determined to
discover the truth about a wartime atrocity in which Sonia’s mother and his own
played a part.
Love, lies and betrayal in wartime Italy. Two girls growing up in
Mussolini’s Italy share a secret that has devastating consequences. Against a
backdrop of fear, poverty and confusion during the Second World War friendship
is tested and loyalties divided. But a chance encounter changes everything. The
girls’ lives diverge when beautiful, daring Martina marries and moves into
Villa Leonida, the most prestigious house I their Tuscan village while plain,
studious Irena trains to be a teacher.
But neither marriage, nor life at Villa Leonida are as Martina
imagined. And as other people’s lives take on a new purpose, Irena finds
herself left behind.
Decades later a tragedy at the villa coincides with the discovery
of an abandoned baby whose identity threatens to re-open old wounds. While
Irena’s son is determined to get to the truth, Martina’s daughter is desperate
to keep the past hidden.
Extract
The
Secret (opening)
1992
A moment
was all it took.
Sonia
heaved open the door of the little church, taking in
the
familiar smell of polished wood, beeswax, and
crumbling
plaster. A shaft of sunlight crept through the
window,
spilling onto the centre of the milky white floor,
leaving
the corners in shadow.
She
fumbled in her purse, pulled out a coin and put it in
the
slot. With a loud click, the painting behind the altar
flared
into life. Although she knew what to expect, she was
still
shocked by its intensity. From the shadows rose a fiery,
wrathful
Mary wielding her club above the head of a small
child.
You’re still here then.
As a
child, the painting had struck terror into Sonia. That
face so
full of anger. But then, she’d reminded herself,
mothers
in a rage could be terrifying.
She lit
the usual candle, placing it in the iron stand in
front of
the painting. Not that it would make any difference,
not now.
You’ve never listened. And now it’s too late.
It was
years since she’d given up on her prayer. Now, her
swollen
stomach and the absence of monthly blood seemed
like a
final mockery of the state she’d longed for all those
years
when she was still young enough for it to bring hope.
But the
ritual was a comfort. It had become so much a
part of
her routine she barely thought about what she was
doing.
She watched the flame flicker and the smoke drift up,
veiling
the glowering Madonna. For ten, perhaps twenty,
minutes
she sat absorbing the quietness and coolness of her
surroundings,
savouring those few moments away from the
world.
A
scrunching of shoes on the stones outside brought her
to her
senses. Sonia felt a tightening in her stomach. Heard
the
grating of iron against wood, the squeaking of the rusty
ring
handle. She shrank back behind the font. The heavy
oak door
juddered. A shaft of light appeared. The silhouette
of a
small figure with plaited hair.
It was
one of the English girls from Villa Leonida. They
came
here sometimes, got up to mischief, messing about
with the
candles, having water fights with the holy water,
leaving
screwed up chewing gum wrappers on the floor.
She’d
found the dusty prints of their trainers on the marble,
empty
drink cans under the pews, and once some disgusting
words
gouged into the panelling. She had also seen them
down at
the pool where she worked, chasing each other
round
and knocking over deckchairs while she was clearing
the café
tables.
But this
time the girl was alone.
Sonia
could seize the moment. She could rise up and
accost
her about the mess and the disrespect. This child
would be
easy to take on. The way her face flushed and she
twisted
her plaits around her fingers when people spoke to
her, let
alone raised their voices. She was pallid except
when she
blushed, which was often, and her eyes were
wistful
and watery. Her awkwardness reminded Sonia of
herself
as a child – in the days before she’d understood why
people
found it so difficult to accept her.
But the
girl didn’t speak much Italian and Sonia didn’t
speak
English. She’d be wasting her breath.
The girl
was carrying something. She seemed to be in a
trance.
That round face, so white and smooth, and the large,
clear
eyes – a lovely face, like the glazed terracotta cherubs
on the
altarpiece. But she was no angel. None of them were.
She laid
the bundle down on the floor in front of the altar.
Stood
up, took a step back, staring up at the painting as
though
she might be about to make the sign of the cross.
But
instead, she slipped something from around her neck
and
dipped down to the floor again.
The
ancient wood of a pew creaked. The girl whipped
round,
her eyes filled with light and fear. A choking noise
escaped
her. The trance had broken. Sonia should say
something
to reassure her, step out of the shadow, see if she
was all
right. But her breath caught.
The door
banged. The girl was gone.
The pile
of rags twitched. It bleated. Sonia’s heart
exploded.
How could this be happening? The
thing she’d
prayed
for so many times brought directly to her. Right here
in this
place where all her secrets were known. She must be
mistaken,
must be mad. If it was a trick, it was the cruellest
yet. But
no, as she got closer and peeked inside the bundle,
she
could see that this was no doll. It was a real baby –
weak but
alive.
She
gathered it up, marvelling at the smallness and
lightness,
nuzzling her face against its soft head. The
wonderful
smell of its skin. The little face was red with
crying,
but the baby stopped just long enough to open one
of its
huge, unfocussed eyes.
“It’s
all right,” Sonia whispered.
Outside,
the air was damp and smelled of pine needles
and
sweet acacia wood. The colour had leached out of the
sky but
there was a residual warmth. The path was deserted
in both
directions – no sign of the girl. Sonia should go after
her,
call her back. She should, but she wasn’t going to. If
she did
that, it would be like rejecting God’s gift. Because
surely
that’s what this was? A bit late in the day perhaps, but
after all her prayers, how could it be
anything else?
About
the Author
Katharine Johnson likes writing about ordinary people in
extraordinary situations. She’s passionate about old houses and the stories
they have to tell. She grew up in Bristol and has lived in Italy. She currently
lives in Berkshire but spends as much time as she can in the Lucca area of
Tuscany. When not writing you’ll find her exploring cities, drinking coffee,
playing netball badly and walking her madcap spaniel
Social
Media Links
To
buy from:
The Secret is published by Crooked Cat Books and is available in
paperback £6.99 and kindle £1.99 Click here
My thanks to Katharine Johnson for providing this excerpt, and the publishers Crooked Cat.
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