• Home
  • Polly Babbington
  • Lovely Little Things in Pretty Beach : A magical feel-good romance book to escape with in summer 2021.

Lovely Little Things in Pretty Beach : A magical feel-good romance book to escape with in summer 2021. Read online




  Lovely Little Things in Pretty Beach

  Polly Babbington

  Contents

  Author

  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

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Notes for Polly B.

  Love Polly

  Be part of Polly’s World!

  Author

  Hi, I’m Polly Babbington and I love to write.

  I live with my husband and family in a beautiful old Edwardian house by the sea, with white French windows, a huge old tree out the back and a Summer House right down the end of the garden where I spend long days spinning stories and drinking tea.

  I began writing years ago working for various online publications, my work published worldwide and started writing and publishing books not long after, juggling the stories in my head with bringing up babies.

  These days I potter around the house writing, taking care of my family, and plotting my next feel-good romance stories, ready to launch them out into the world to my lovely readers.

  I also love flowers, taking photos, cooking, walking in the woods, sitting on the beach, pottering with things in the house and love nothing better after a day of writing than an evening gardening with a drink.

  You’ll find me on my days off lazing in the hammock under the fruit tree, or cosy on the sofa next to the fire, with a cup of tea and a new book.

  We live in a sweet little village complete with a gorgeous old cricket pitch, village green with a few lovely old pubs.

  Follow Polly on Instagram and Facebook @PollyBabbingtonwrites

  PollyBabbington.com

  For the Pretty Beach delicious simple dahl recipe and more subscribe to Babbington Letters

  © Copyright 2021 Polly Babbington

  Pretty Beach Kindle Edition

  All rights reserved.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  1

  Lulu Drinkwater, in a cream crew neck jumper and pale wide-leg trousers, gripped the steering wheel of her midnight blue Audi and cringed as she thought about how stupid, naive, and head-stuck-in-the-sand she had been over the past few months. As she sped along, she couldn’t stop reiterating everything that had gone on. Everything that had been said. Over and over it went in her head. Most of all, she couldn’t quite come to terms with the fact the only thing she had to show for years of marriage was a German car, a broken heart, many, many pairs of shoes and a tiny little online shop. So basically, it was a car and a whole lot of hurt.

  Mabel, her fluffy little white rescue dog, let out a tiny bark from the passenger seat and Lulu stroked her, ‘Sorry, Mabel. Yes, of course, I have you too. I would never forget about you, would I? You’re the only good thing to have come out of this whole sorry mess. There was no way he was getting you too.’

  She pressed the button for the passenger seat window and as it wound its way down, she took in deep breaths of Pretty Beach air. Even though she’d chosen to drive the long way from town, making her way along the coast road and the coastal air had hit her as soon as she’d got near to the sea, nothing was the same as Pretty Beach air. Pretty Beach air was like nothing else, and as she inhaled deeply, she remembered its goodness. Up a level or six from the best sea air and then some. Could it heal a broken heart and a whole lot of mess? Possibly.

  She looked left out at the bay and the Pretty Beach lighthouse in the distance. It was good to be back. Was it? She hoped so. Even after her sister Willow had warned her that her new place, Seafolly House, was barely habitable, it was somewhere to live and right now, thanks to her ex-husband, there weren’t many alternative offers on the table.

  Lulu took the sweeping turn to the right as the bay of Pretty Beach opened up fully, pushed a button on the steering wheel to turn on the radio, and pressed another one until the technology scrolled through and found Pretty Beach Radio.

  ‘A beautiful day on the bay today. The sun is shining, the sky is blue and Pretty Beach is warming up. Life is looking good out there!’ A voice she vaguely recognised from the past informed her from the speakers.

  ‘It can’t look a whole lot worse for me right now,’ Lulu said aloud and Mabel let out another little bark in agreement. ‘The only way is up from where I’m standing, Mabel. What do you reckon? Agree?’

  Mabel barked again and Lulu laughed and gave her a little stroke.

  Ten minutes later, Lulu was pulling into Pretty Beach, stopping at the traffic lights near Princess Pier. She drummed on the steering wheel as she looked out to sea. As she made her way down Pretty Beach’s laneway, she peered out the windscreen at the pastel bunting and fairy lights crisscrossing overhead. In the old days when she was growing up in Pretty Beach, she couldn’t wait to escape from it. She’d felt suffocated by the ins and outs of small seaside life.

  Now, after years of being away, she could see how very beautiful it all appeared. It was, in fact, stunning. The gorgeous little shops in the Pretty Beach regulation colours, the ferry horn sounding in the distance, even the old eyesore Boat House building had been spruced up. Older, wiser, and a whole lot more realistic, Lulu Drinkwater now saw everything with new, appreciative eyes.

  Stopping at a pedestrian crossing, a young mummy with a pram actually looked into the car, caught her eye, smiled, and waved to say thank you. Unbelievable. Lulu raised her eyebrows, shook her head slightly, and smiled back in astonishment. There was no way that would have happened in her old life - there, people rarely looked up as they went about their day and tutted if you got in their way. Maybe life in Pretty Beach wouldn't be quite as bad after all.

  As Lulu made her way through the tiny roads of Pretty Beach, her mind went back to the last few months. It yet again went over the day when the bailiffs had knocked on the door, the day she got made redundant, the day her ex-husband Fenton didn’t come home, and the day when she realised that the only reason she was able to keep her car and business was because they were both actually in her sister Willow’s company names.

  Lulu finally indicated to turn into Seafolly Passage to arrive at the old house she had inherited from her grandma. As she stopped behind a car reversing into a space, she looked around; to the left, a long row of
beautiful old Victorian villas with tiny patches of front garden loomed, and on the other side of the road, a line of huge bay-fronted 1920s semis with beautiful old windows stood proudly alongside each other.

  Lulu smiled as she remembered flying along Seafolly Passage on her bike when she was young, in the days before her dad had left her mum for a twenty-year-old from Pettacombe, and life for her had changed forever.

  As she drove slowly along and as the road turned and got wider at the end, Lulu could see glimpses of the sea glinting in the sunshine through the spaces between the houses.

  Lulu remembered Seafolly Passage and its little alleyways down to a tiny row of kiosk shops sitting on a little lane, and how the houses right down at the end backed directly onto the shingle sand which in turn weaved down and around to Darling Beach, only accessible by boat. A narrow strip of beach and jetties reaching out into the water ran along the back, and fishing boats were moored out in the water. It all seemed to look much lovelier now than she had remembered - the neat houses with their beautifully kept gardens, the wide tree-lined road, the patches of blue sea peeking out from behind.

  Lulu looked over at Mabel, who had snoozed and snored her way through most of the journey and was completely oblivious to the fact that she was about to live in a completely new area and blissfully unaware of everything that had gone on.

  Passing the lovely houses on both sides of the road, with their beautifully kept lawns and sparkly windows, Lulu drove along slowly, taking everything in. She smiled at the cosy small-town scene and even found herself humming along to the radio. That was until she came to Seafolly House.

  Indicating left, she pulled into the side of the road and glanced over to the right and, leaning on the door handle, she put her chin on her hand and let out a huge sigh. Willow had been correct. Seafolly House was in a very bad way and it did look close to derelict.

  It was in a much worse state than she had anticipated. Willow had tried to tell her that she wouldn’t be able to move in but she hadn’t listened. She’d waved her hand at Willow on the video call, and told her that was because Willow lived in an architect-designed mansion with expensive cars on the drive and a boat moored alongside that cost more than a flat.

  Lulu sighed and closed her eyes. Perhaps Willow did have a point. As she opened her eyes and tried squinting to see if it changed anything, she shook her head. Seafolly House was absolutely awful.

  She sat there and stared at the sad, tired place with Pretty Beach Radio playing in the background. A huge, old, overgrown willow tree at the front trailed down onto a lawn with waist-high weeds. Behind a falling down wall at the front, a gate was propped up against the side, a line of brambly old roses ran from left to right, and the Seafolly House sign over the front porch was hanging off and swaying in the wind.

  As Lulu sat there staring glumly at the scene with Mabel on her lap peering out the window, the double-fronted house with its high French paned windows looked down sadly onto the street. The old willow tree almost seemed to have a downward turned mouth on it, daring anyone to enter, and a boarded-up window on the right looked as if it had been fixed in haste.

  Dilapidated timber shingling hung woefully from the bricks on the first floor, the roof looked as if it had a hole to the rear, and two of the downstairs windows wore huge long cracks in the glass. Lulu sighed and shuddered at the thought of what the house might look like on a grey rainy day if it looked like this in the sunshine.

  ‘Right, Mabel. Welcome to your new home,’ Lulu said with a wry smile. Mabel looked up at Lulu with her big brown eyes and Lulu patted her on the head. At least she had Mabel, a sister, and a car.

  Opening the car door, Lulu popped on Mabel's lead and locked the car behind them. They crossed the road, stepped up onto the pavement and stood at the wall looking along the path towards the wide double-width front door.

  Mabel sniffed the wall, did a little wee to mark her territory, looked up at the house, let out a huge sigh, and slumped down beside Lulu.

  Lulu laughed. ‘You nailed it in one, Mabel. You look exactly how I feel and that is not full of enthusiasm.’

  Dubiously walking along what must have once been a beautiful old tiled path but was now full of mossy weeds, Lulu pulled her small tan satchel around to the front and took out the keys to the house.

  She walked up to the front door, slipped on a loose edging stone, and shrieked as she walked straight into a huge spider web running across the whole of the wide covered porch. Flailing her arms wildly to get rid of the web from her hair, Mabel let out a sad whine and plonked herself down on the step. As Lulu pulled stuff out of her hair, she looked down at her cream jumper in disgust.

  Finally free of the web, Lulu put the key in the door and after wrangling with the two locks for what seemed like an eternity, she eventually pulled open the door to a small window-lined porch with a narrow bench running around the whole room. Dust an inch thick lined the windowsills, spider’s webs lodged in the corners, and a cluster of beetles welcomed Lulu and Mabel to their new home.

  As she stepped in and unlocked the main door, she sighed again at the sight of a long, wide, dark entrance hallway. Grim wasn’t the word. Huge cracks in the walls, a faded timber floor, and rotting burgundy velvet curtains on a window to the side of the door aided the gloomy, almost spooky aura of the place. A sweeping staircase curved down from the right, a filthy porthole window to the left of the door and a skylight on the upper landing did nothing to aid the dark dismal light.

  The smell wasn’t much better either. Years of dirt, dust, and emptiness filled the air with its stale smell. Ivy crawled through a broken window on the right trying to claim a piece of wall for itself and an old vine protruded in through a gap over the door.

  Mabel kept herself close to Lulu as they walked across the hallway and peeked into a large sitting room with three tall French windows to the front and a timber fireplace in the middle of the far wall. Floral wallpaper peeled away from the high ceilings revealing huge damp patches, and as Lulu glanced at the thick old window seat butted up to the window, an army of flying ants marched across making the whole thing seem as if it was moving on its own.

  Lulu shook her head, left the sitting room, and headed to the other side of the hallway where a doorway led to a dining room with the same large windows, an old fireplace, and French doors to the side. The dining room wasn’t much better than the sitting room on the other side, though as far as she could see there weren’t as many damp patches and there was a distinct lack of marching insects. So that was a bonus.

  Walking past the stairs and two other rooms, the hallway continued to a door to a back dining room, through to a back hallway running horizontally across the house. On the wall of the inner hallway, a huge old railway clock hung perilously from an old rusty hook, its hands stuck at ten to three. A tiny set of stairs led off the back hallway beside a fireplace nook with a rusty old potbelly stove, and a door led to a tiny bathroom which, when she opened it, made her gag.

  Finally, Lulu opened the door to the kitchen and was nearly knocked sideways by the musty smell.

  Give me strength. Can this really get any worse?

  All along the back wall, French paned windows thick with grime ran from left to right looking out onto a garden gently shelving down to a white picket fence. Not that she could see it through the brambles and high weeds, but Lulu knew that the fence backed onto another stretch of what was once lawn down to a narrow sandy beach.

  Old timber cupboards, some with their doors falling off their hinges, lined every available wall and a huge, old, darkly stained table sat in the middle of the gloomy non-inviting scene. An alcove on the left housed space for a fire, an old Aga was set into a matching alcove on the right, and open shelving and a wide dresser took up the whole of the back wall.

  Lulu, with Mabel alongside her, stepped judiciously around the table towards a hallway and double French doors into a conservatory off the side. As she carefully opened the door to the conservatory, mou
ld on the glass roof cast dim light throughout and weeds grew up past the window ledges outside. Whatever the smell was, it made Lulu put her hand over her mouth and quickly shut the door.

  Mabel sniffed the edges of the tessellated floor of the boot room leading off the kitchen, and then looked up at the roof as if in disgust as Lulu tried the handle on the back door to the terrace. The old vintage doorknob slowly turned and Lulu pushed open the door and stepped out onto a mossy block paved terrace where weeds grew through every crevice and an old cracked bird table leant perilously to the right.

  Flopping down in the sunshine, Mabel sighed again as Lulu closed her eyes, put her head up to the sun, and tried to remain positive.

  Be grateful you have a house. It could be much, much worse.

  As she stood there looking at the overgrown garden, an old swing seat hanging from an apple tree creaked back and forth in the breeze coming in off the sea. Behind it, an aged outdoor fireplace looked in dire need of some love and a double-width shed halfway down on the left had seen better days.