Some Girls Do

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Authors: Clodagh Murphy

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BOOK: Some Girls Do
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Praise for Clodagh Murphy

‘Clodagh Murphy is an exceptionally talented (and hilarious) Irish writer’
Irish Independent

‘Witty, warm-hearted, refreshingly original and very sexy’

Novelicious

‘I was hooked until the very last page’

Chick Lit Plus

‘I can’t wait to read more from Clodagh Murphy’

Novel Escapes

‘It entertained me right to the last page’

Evening Echo

‘I just couldn’t put it down and I was desperate (desperate I tell you!) to find out how it was all going to end’

Chick Lit Reviews and News

‘I can’t wait to read more from [Clodagh Murphy]’

Novel Escapes

‘Fast-paced escapism which does what it promises – transports readers out of their daily lives’

Woman’s Way

‘A heart-warming romantic comedy… hilarious’

Beauty and Lace

Clodagh Murphy was born in Dublin. She spent some time during her twenties living in London before returning to Dublin, where she currently lives (with her beloved laptop). She is an aunt to five nephews and one niece.

@ClodaghMMurphy

www.facebook.com/ClodaghMurphyAuthor

www.clodaghmurphy.com

Also by Clodagh Murphy

The Disengagement Ring

Girl in a Spin

Frisky Business

Scenes of a Sexual Nature
(digital original)

Clodagh Murphy

Copyright

Copyright © 2014 Clodagh Murphy

The right of Clodagh Murphy to be identified as the author of the work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

First published in Ireland in 2014 by

HACHETTE BOOKS IRELAND

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

All characters and places in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious. All events and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to real life or real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

Cataloguing in Publication Data is available from the British Library.

ISBN 978 1444 726 282

Hachette Books Ireland

8 Castlecourt Centre

Castleknock

Dublin 15, Ireland

A division of Hachette UK Ltd

338 Euston Road, London NW1 3BH

www.hachette.ie

Contents

Praise for Clodagh Murphy

About the Author

Also by Clodagh Murphy

Copyright

Dedication

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Chapter Thirty-Three

Acknowledgements

To Jordan and Will

Chapter One

I’ll try anything once (but I won’t try that)

You never know what’s going to end a relationship, do you? People break up for all sorts of reasons: money; infidelity; simply falling out of love; irreconcilable differences, like one of you wanting children when the other doesn’t. With me and Mr Handy, it was a disagreement over poo. I wonder if that’s a first.

If you’d asked me at the start what would make me end it with Mr Handy, I might have said it would be his cultural snobbery, the annoying habit he had of putting empty containers back in the fridge or that he was very stingy with his kisses during sex. In the beginning, I could see any number of reasons why I might break up with him. Poo was not one of them.

He was a slow burn for me. When we began dating, I didn’t think he was a keeper. He was too neat, too serious, too intense. He could be a bit tight with money. But he kept showing up, and eventually he made it into my regular rotation by dint of his persistence and his mad oral skills. He grew on me, and I started to consider going exclusive with him. He was perfect boyfriend material – nice house, good job, lovely chubby dick. And his hands! I’ve written whole blog posts about his hands. His incredible sense of touch more than made up for the lack of kissing.

But this week, over coffee and cake at Starbucks, I broke up with him. There were no tears, no recriminations, no bitterness. No one’s heart got broken – we weren’t in love. But it was sad. We cared deeply about each other and we always had fun together, both in bed and out of it. We were sad that it was over.

In the end there were irreconcilable differences: he wanted to take a dump on me and I didn’t want him to. It may not seem like enough of a reason to finish things. We could probably have compromised, worked around it. But I saw how disappointed he was by my refusal. I could tell that he saw me as his best shot for making something happen. I’m the most adventurous girl he knows – he’s told me so many times – and I wondered if that was the reason he’d stuck around. Had he been building up to this all along? When I realised how much the idea excited him, I knew it was time to let him go. Because the point is, we don’t have to compromise – either of us. That’s the beauty of not being in love.

I’ll miss his tongue, the way he would go down on me for hours on end, his snarky commentaries on movies and, most of all, his amazing hands. I hope he can find another girl who will be everything he wants. Someone who can deal with his shit – literally.

As for me, I’m an open-minded person, and I’ll try most things. But I won’t try that. It’s not a turn-on for me, and I don’t want to bear the brunt just because some guy failed his—

‘Toilet training!’

‘Sorry?’ Claire’s head snapped up as she simultaneously clicked out of her blog. A woman was standing in front of the cash desk, agitated, a toddler grizzling in a buggy beside her.

‘I’m looking for a book on toilet training,’ the woman said breathlessly, almost hopping from foot to foot, as if she was desperate for the loo herself, while she jiggled the buggy.

‘Okay, follow me,’ Claire said, jumping up from her seat. ‘I’ll show you where they are.’ As she stepped away from the desk, she glanced back at her computer screen to make sure that her blog was definitely closed. She led the customer across the shop floor to the Babies and Parenting shelves, and pointed out the section devoted to books on toilet training.

‘Oh, there are so many.’ The woman sighed. ‘Which one is the best?’

‘Why don’t you have a look through them and decide which you think would—’

‘I don’t have time for browsing. Can’t you recommend one?’

‘Well, this is very popular,’ Claire said, pulling out a book and handing it to her. ‘It’s got lots of great reader feedback online, and it’s recommended by Unholy Mother – you know, the blogger?’

‘I don’t do mummy blogs,’ the woman said, flicking through the pages impatiently and far too rapidly to take anything in.

‘Oh, you should read Unholy Mother.’ Claire smiled. ‘She’s hilarious. I don’t even have children and I love it. She’s done this really funny series of posts recently about toilet training her son that I think you’d find—’

‘Yes, well, I do have a child and I’m far too busy actually being a mother to have time to read about some bint’s hilarious escapades with her special little snowflake.’

‘Oh … right.’ It was on the tip of Claire’s tongue to say that Unholy Mother wasn’t like the typical mummy blogger, but she thought better of it.

‘I’ll take it,’ the woman said, shoving the book at Claire. Her child had kept up a low-level wail throughout the exchange and cranked it up a notch as they all trooped back to the cash desk.

When she had paid, Claire put the book into a bag and handed it to her customer with a smile.

‘Thank you.’ The woman tucked it under her arm. ‘Do you have a bathroom?’ she shouted, over her child, who had now graduated to piercing screams.

‘Er … no, sorry. Not for public use, I’m afraid.’

The woman tutted, rolling her eyes. She stuffed the book into the bottom of the buggy and turned towards the door, the child’s howls fading as they exited the shop. Yvonne was restocking shelves near the door and held it open for them.

‘Another satisfied customer, I see,’ Yvonne said, as she joined Claire at the desk. ‘What was her problem?’

‘She bought a book on toilet training, then asked if we had a loo she could use. I think she wanted to get stuck in right away.’

Yvonne laughed. ‘Pity she didn’t buy the latest Jamie Oliver. She might have made us lunch if we’d let her use the kitchen.’

‘At least she’ll bump up my weird-customer score,’ Claire said. ‘Put it on the chart.’

‘It’s a tough field this week.’ Yvonne pulled a chart from one of the desk drawers. ‘You’re going to have to up your game if
you want to topple the supreme champion,’ she said, gesturing to herself with a smug smile. ‘I’ve been top of the league every week since I started here.’

‘You have an unfair advantage,’ Claire said.

‘I do seem to be a bit of a magnet for the unhinged.’

‘It’s not that you’re a magnet for them. You encourage them, so you get all the loony repeat business.’

‘I just try to be helpful.’

‘Right, like the time that customer was looking for signed copies of Jane Austen’s books and you said you could get them for him.’ Jane Austen was his wife’s favourite author, he had explained, and he wanted them as a gift for her birthday.

‘And I did!’

‘Yes, signed by
you
. It’s fraudulent.’

‘No, it’s not. I signed them “on behalf of”, so it’s not like it was forgery.’

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