Between Us – Tour Stop

4 min read

Hello bookworms! I hope you are doing well. Today I bring you a new Romantic novel for you: Between Us by Mhairi McFarlane. Below you will find information about the book and an excerpt!

Between Us

When Joe and Roisin join their group of friends for a weekend at a country house, it’s a triple celebration – a birthday, an engagement and the launch of Joe’s shiny new crime drama on TV.

For Roisin, it’s a chance to connect with the group of friends she made a decade before, working at Waterstones. But for Joe, it’s a distraction as his writing career soars.

As the weekend unfolds, tensions are revealed between the group and Roisin’s sense of foreboding about her own relationship grows.

And when the friends watch the first episode of Joe’s drama, she realises that the secrets she told him are right there on the screen.

But is that all he’s used? What if the fictional hero’s infidelity also isn’t fictional after all?

Excerpt from Between Us

2003
Stockport Plaza Theatre 

Wythenshawe’s No. 1 Psychic! proclaimed a poster on an easel on stage, for tonight’s show: a clairvoyant called Queenie Mook. The name was so peculiar, it couldn’t be made up. 

‘You wonder who decides that?’ Roisin said. ‘It’s not like you can get . . . accredited.’ 

Aged twelve, she was proud of accredited

Her mother looked at her with narrowing eyes, under Lancôme-blacked lashes, sensing sedition. 

When Roisin had been permitted to join her girls’ night out, it came with a warning. 

‘Don’t bother if you’re going to be a smart arse – it’s rude to Diana and Kim,’ her mum had said. ‘Di’s dad, Rodney, died of acute pancreatitis last November. She’s hoping he’ll come through.’ 

‘Oh, right,’ Roisin said, thinking that treating Queenie Mook as a switchboard for the Afterlife didn’t seem destined for success. Her promotional material showed she mainly worked cruise ships. 

‘They’ve been at sixes and sevens since. Rod still ran the financial side of the drain-cleaning business.’ Lorraine made it sound as if Diana had a pressing but functional enquiry: where is the 2001 VAT return, or similar. 

Roisin wanted to attend for two reasons: curiosity about mediums, and because this was a properly exciting jolly. Her mum was drenched in a forcefield of Guerlain Shalimar, a lion’s mane of salon-blown hair, satin dress stretched across her hips, sheer tights and patent heels. 

It was fun to be in her mother’s orbit on such occasions, seeing the heads she turned. Like being PA to someone famous. There was a taxi from Webberley, Lorraine’s perfumed coven demanding that Lionel Richie’s ‘All Night Long’ was TURNED UP, PLEASE

Fifteen minutes to curtain up. Thanks to the carafes of pink wine they’d seen off during the pre-show brasserie dinner, there was a flurry of trips to the ladies. 

Lorraine went first, then Di and Kim together. 

‘Don’t you need a wee?’ said her mum, after a minute of concerted pouting into her make-up compact. Roisin vaguely wondered if Lorraine wanted her out of the way. For the purposes of a surreptitious phone call, perhaps? Her parents kept secrets. Roisin was always caught between wanting to know what they were, and not wanting to know what they were. 

‘Nah.’ 

‘Hmmm, I think you should go. We’re in the middle of a row and those seats will fill up.’ 

Roisin’s conviction that her mother had an ulterior motive deepened. But she knew it was easier to comply, so she stood up and headed to the toilets.All the stall doors were closed. As she plonked down on the cold seat in her cubicle, she heard the acoustics of the other occupants exiting theirs. 

Flush. Door bang. Tap gush. Flush. Door bang. Tap gush. 

‘With the way Lorraine’s hitting the Pinot Blush, I assume she’s no longer with child?’ said a disembodied Kim. 

For a split second, Roisin thought they meant her.

‘Oh no. She got rid. A couple of weeks ago.’

‘She never told Glen?’

Glen. Roisin’s dad was called Kent. (A pub landlord called Kent. His name was a gift to customers he kicked out.)

‘God, no. As she says, what would be the point? He’d not want her to keep it, and two’s enough. Who’d go back to night feeds?’

‘What about Kent? Did he know?’

‘Doubt it, don’t you? Don’t ask, don’t tell.’

‘Mmmm. She wants to be more careful.’

‘Says she had a dodgy omelette at the Fox & Hounds, threw up her pill. Never thought.’

‘You know, I’ve wondered about the food at the Fox’s. I had coleslaw once that tasted like tuna. I’m sure it gave me the shits.’ 

There was a blast of an air dryer, which obscured the next part, until Roisin could tune back in: 

‘. . . does what he likes, too. She and Kent are like a couple of carefree teenagers, aren’t they?’ 


About Mhairi McFarlane

Sunday Times bestselling author Mhairi McFarlane was born in Scotland in 1976 and her unnecessarily confusing name is pronounced Vah-Ree.

After some efforts at journalism, she started writing novels and her first book, You Had Me At Hello, was an instant success. She’s now written eight books and she lives in Nottingham with a man and a cat.


Many thanks to Random Things Tour for having me. Check out posts from other reviewers:

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Kriti K Written by:

I am Kriti, an avid reader and collector of books. I bring you my thoughts on known and hidden gems of the book world and creators in all domains.

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