Synopsis
Set in the second half of the twentieth century, Lisa Green
comes from a world of privilege, but only in the way of wealth, not in love.
When a turn of events leaves her single, with an Autistic child to raise,
without the means to support herself, Lisa gets stuck in an abusive new
relationship that she is desperate to get out of. BETRAYAL catalogs one woman’s
search for love without conditions, sexual or otherwise, in a world that seems
bent against her.
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Excerpt
Prologue
Together they stood beside the five foot high cake, hands
clasped on the ivory-handled knife, and Lisa looked out at the sea of faces.
None of them were friends, many were enemies.
She saw Toby again; Bishop and the girls; and the Italian,
now leaning against a wall in order to minimise his height. Glancing quickly
away from him, she smiled up at her—husband as the flashbulbs exploded.
As most people suspected, it was a one-sided love match ,
yet she was determined to be a good wife. Aware of her own emotional
shortcomings she believed that with her husband's understanding it would be a
sound marriage. She was also certain that in Neal Gueras she had found the
perfect solution to the problem of Jessica.
Her confidence on both counts was totally misplaced.
About the Author
Margaret Bingley was born in Sutton, Surrey and educated at
Sutton High School for Girls GPDST, where she won the school English prize, and
then at Rickard’s Lodge Secretarial College in Wimbledon. After that she went
to work at the BBC in London, and later moved to work for The Heinemann Group
of Publishers at Lower Kingswood in Surrey, where she met her future husband,
Alan.
In 1974, Margaret and Alan moved to Grantham in Lincolnshire
and In 1976 their son, Alex, was born. One day, after reading a particularly
boring book, she decided to try and write one herself and eventually, after
many trials and tribulations, her first book THE DEVIL’S CHILD was published.
Much of the book was based on those early, halcyon days of motherhood.
She continued writing steadily from 1983 onwards, and in
February 2000 she also started writing a weekly column of 400 words for the
local paper, The Grantham Journal, entitled ‘The Way I See It’.
Apart from her work, Margaret enjoys reading, opera, dry
white wine, Foyle’s War (or anything else with Michael Kitchen in it!) and
gardening.
She does not like reality TV shows, ‘alternative’ comedians
or Political Correctness.
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