![]() ![]() Some of his letters were threatening, mostly they were gibberish, but the threats and the gibberish were evenly interspersed, regular and anticipatable. The writing was changing, becoming more controlled. She leaned across to the bills drawer and pulled out the pile of blue envelopes, laying all fifteen in chronological rows on the table. The envelope was made of cheap porous paper, her name and address written in a careful hand. She picked it up and went back into the kitchen, sat down and lit a fresh cigarette from the dying tip of the old one. She's still being badgered by the police and has been receiving threatening letters: ![]() She's seeing someone but it isn't working out. Her friendship with Leslie is falling apart. As her father is still in town, she won't see them anyway, but it would maybe be nice if they didn't treat him as the prodigal son. Maureen has a new job, working for the same organization that runs the battered women's shelter where Leslie works. ![]() It's a few months after the events of Garnethill. With the assumption that you've read the first book: Yes, it is possible to read Exile and understand/enjoy it without having read Garnethill. ![]()
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