The next day she followed her morning routine of walking and swimming. Every step and stroke took her farther away from John Grabowski, made her believe that he had really gone, that he was no longer on her heels. She shook him off. She found her balance. He would still be looking for her, and he would never understand that the person he was looking for was no longer to be found.
She couldn’t think of any more tasks to do around the house. She mopped the kitchen floor again. Then she went to the boxes and flipped through the gardening magazines. She looked at an atlas. She picked up the coverless novel and started reading, still sitting on the floor.
She moved up to the couch and read on. It was about a character called Ivan Denisovich Shukhov, an inmate in some kind of prison camp. She turned the book over and flicked through, trying to find the author’s name. All the characters’ names were Russian so the author was probably Russian too. It was an easy book to read, short sentences and nobody spoke like Lawrence, straight from the dictionary. The prisoners had to work at a construction site and they were so cold and hungry that all they could think about was how to survive another day. It was forty degrees below zero and the prisoners were badly clothed. If they added extra layers beneath the prison uniform they were punished. Shukhov thought about the piece of bread he’d saved from breakfast and sewn in his mattress.
She thought he would die by the end of the book, that would be the story. The conditions were so extreme, that would be what would happen. She read on. Can a man who’s warm understand one who’s freezing?
At the end of the book Shukhov was grateful to have lived another day. He’d decided it was a good day, he’d managed to get some extra rations. She closed the book and sat there filled with a longing, a yearning, so strong that it made her tremble.
She walked outside to look up at the stars. When she came back inside there was a new text on her phone, and this time it was from Carson. Where are you? I miss you. Can we try again?
For a while she sat and stared at the screen. She hadn’t decided what was possible. Was she going to leap again into the unknown?
Acknowledgments
My research for Untold Story relied on many books, articles, and websites about the institution of royalty, how it has evolved in recent years, and the role that the paparazzi have played in that change. In particular, I drew inspiration from the facts and insightful analysis contained in The Diana Chronicles by Tina Brown. I would also like to acknowledge my debt to four other books: Diana: Her True Story by Andrew Morton, Diana: The Life of a Troubled Princess by Sally Bedell Smith, Diana and the Paparazzi by Glenn Harvey and Mark Saunders, and Paparazzi by Peter Howe. I am grateful to all these authors.