The Night Rainbow A Novel - By Claire King Page 0,93

them. Claude comes every day. He brings food and flowers from his garden and he has been doing some mending. Every day Maman says things like, Really, that’s enough now, I’ll never be able to pay you back for this, you’ve done enough. And Claude just ignores her. It’s not that he can’t hear her, but that he is ignoring her. Sometimes he will say things back like, That’s enough, you just worry about yourself and that baby.

Mami Lafont has also visited a lot, and Tante Brigitte. They come and they pass Pablo around and jiggle him and talk nonsense to him. They bring jam and cakes and olives and sausages. Every day. Mami has done washing and pegged it out. She has cleaned the windows. She has even sneaked into the barn and cleaned the peachy mess off Papa’s tractor.

Josette has been here twice. The first time she brought a quiche and some beer. She said Maman should drink the beer. It would be good for her and good for her milk. Maman has not drunk the beer, but after Josette left she cried a little bit and said how nice people were being. That was the sadness you feel when you’re happy, I think. When Josette came the second time she brought me a bunch of her grapes, which were only just ripe and they tasted sweet and sour and burst in my mouth. She also brought a cardigan for Pablo. It is yellow and red; she made it herself. It is a funny cardigan because it is very tiny, but at the same time it is much too big for Pablo. Josette says he will grow into it in time for autumn. Like his skin maybe.

Autumn is not far away. The holiday people in the market are not so many and the days are not so hot, hot, hot. But they are still sunny. The yellow beds are going to be for the holiday people. Claude has already organised it and we have two people coming next week. They are going to pay Maman some money to sleep in the summer rooms and to have their suppers with us. Maman has been stewing the last of the tomatoes to make sauces.

Tonight we are having our supper outside. On the green plastic table is the yellow oilcloth, covered with black olives and blue gentians. Bread and tomatoes and olives are all laid out in bowls, and on a big white plate is the fruit that Maman has already cut up for our dessert. Each fruit has its own curving stripe on the plate – strawberries, cantaloupe, yellow peaches, grapes, blueberries, plums and figs.

The smell of sausages and honey-covered pork ribs sizzles up from the barbecue and paints smoky patterns in the air. Maman is standing by the barbecue. She has a fork in her hand but she is not turning the sausages. She is singing. So softly that you can only just hear the tune, and the words are lost, all tangled up in the rising smoke. She is swaying like a flower in the breeze.

Acknowledgements

Writing a novel is very much a solitary pursuit, but bringing it to life has been the work of many and I am filled with gratitude.

My heartfelt thanks to Annette Green, my agent, and Helen Garnons-Williams, my editor at Bloomsbury UK, for their enthusiastic championing of this novel and this author.

A huge thank you to the whole team at Bloomsbury, and to my copyeditor Sarah-Jane Forder, for their passionate and painstaking attention to detail. It’s a pleasure and a privilege to work with you all.

Many thanks to the friends who read early extracts of this novel – Janet, Tracey, Alison and Mary – for offering advice and enthusiasm, and to all the other friends too numerous to name (yes, that means you!) for encouragement along the way. Greatest of these has been Charlie, my best friend and cheerleader, who understands it all. Thank you.

Finally, many people have asked me if The Night Rainbow is pure fiction, or if there is some truth hidden in there. Did any of this really happen? As Pea would say, the truth is stranger than that. A word of thanks, then, to my mum, Jenny, who taught me through example that even when you don’t think you can go on, you can, and you will.

A NOTE ON THE AUTHOR

Claire King has found success and acclaim with her prize-winning short stories. Having graduated from Cambridge she now lives and works in France. The Night Rainbow is her first novel.

Reading Group Guide

Copyright © 2013 by Claire King

All rights reserved

You may not copy, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise

make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means

(including without limitation electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying,

printing, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the

publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication

may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages

Published by Bloomsbury USA, New York

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA HAS BEEN APPLIED FOR.

eISBN 978-1-62040-021-0

First U.S. edition 2013

This electronic edition published in April 2013

www.bloomsbury.com

Table of Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Acknowledgements

A Note on the Author

Reading Group

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