from the moment sheâd been brought home to her grandparentsâ place to live and it had became obvious that his mother preferred her estranged daughterâs daughter to the son he and Cynthia had produced.
Laura didnât think this should have been a surprise, since all the men in the Stone family were odious. Her grandfather especially. Jim Stone had been a male chauvinistic pig of the first order. His son and his grandson had taken after him, believing they were superior beings and that women were only put on this earth to pander to their needs. After actually living in her grandfatherâs house, Laura understood fully why her mother had run away from home as soon as she was old enough and why sheâd married a man like her father who, though a strong man, had been compassionate and gentle in his dealings with people, especially women. Heâd been a lawyer also; Laura had adored him.
Sheâd disliked her grandfather intensely and hadnât been at all sad when he had died. But even in death Jim Stone had been able to make her angry, leaving the family property to his son rather than his long-suffering wife. Sheâd tried to get her gran to contest the will but she wouldnât, saying that it didnât matter, that Bill promised to look after her until she died.
But that wasnât good enough, in Lauraâs opinion. The home which Gran had lovingly tended for over fifty years should have been hers until she died. Instead, sheâd been relegated to the role of a poor relative, reliant on her son for charity. All her gran had been left was a miserable twenty-thousand dollars a year, not much more than the old-age pension. That was until Laura had had a little chat with her uncle and insisted that he bump the amount up to forty thousand at least, warning him that if he didnât then she would use every bit of her power and influence to get his mother to contest the will.
Naturally, her firm stance hadnât gone down too well, but heâd done what she had asked. Of course, heâd made it sound like it was all his idea. When Laura had seen how touched her grandmother had beenâshe probably wasnât used to the men in her life treating her nicelyâshe hadnât said a word. Several times, during the five years since her grandfather had died, Laura had tried to persuade her grandmother to come to Sydney to live with her, but to no avail. Her gran said she was a country girl and wouldnât be happy living in the city.
Yet I have a very nice home , Laura thought as she pushed open the gate which led up the path to the three-bedroomed cottage which had belonged to her parents and which had come to her when they were so tragically killed. Her grandfather had tried to sell it after sheâd gone to live with him, but her darling grandmotherâwho had been sole executor of her daughterâs willâhad refused to give permission for the sale. So the contents had been stored and the house had been rented out until Laura had left school and moved back to Sydney to attend university, at which point sheâd taken possession of it again.
Sheâd lived there ever since, mostly happily. Only once had the house been instrumental in bringing her unhappiness. But that hadnât really been the houseâs fault.
Laura inserted the key in the front door, knowing that as soon as she turned the lock and opened the door Rambo would come bolting down the hallway, meowing for food.
And there he was, right on cue. Putting her bag down on the hall table, she scooped him up into her arms and stroked his sleek brown fur. It was better to pick him up, sheâd found, than to leave him down on the floor to trip her up.
âHow was your day, sweetie?â she said as she made her way down to the kitchen.
His answer was some very contented purring.
Once in the kitchen she plopped Rambo down on the tiled floor and set about getting him his favourite âfussy