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- Strictly for Adults Novels >
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Tales from Portlaw
>
- No Need to Look for Love
- 'The Love Quartet' >
-
The Priest's Calling Card
>
- Chapter One - The Irish Custom
- Chapter Two - Patrick Duffy's Family Background
- Chapter Three - Patrick Duffy Junior's Vocation to Priesthood
- Chapter Four - The first years of the priesthood
- Chapter Five - Father Patrick Duffy in Seattle
- Chapter Six - Father Patrick Duffy, Portlaw Priest
- Chapter Seven - Patrick Duffy Priest Power
- Chapter Eight - Patrick Duffy Groundless Gossip
- Chapter Nine - Monsignor Duffy of Portlaw
- Chapter Ten - The Portlaw Inheritance of Patrick Duffy
- Bigger and Better >
- The Oldest Woman in the World >
-
Sean and Sarah
>
- Chapter 1 - 'Return of the Prodigal Son'
- Chapter 2 - 'The early years of sweet innocence in Portlaw'
- Chapter 3 - 'The Separation'
- Chapter 4 - 'Separation and Betrayal'
- Chapter 5 - 'Portlaw to Manchester'
- Chapter 6 - 'Salford Choices'
- Chapter 7 - 'Life inside Prison'
- Chapter 8 - 'The Aylesbury Pilgrimage'
- Chapter 9 - Sean's interest in stone masonary'
- Chapter 10 - 'Sean's and Tony's Partnership'
- Chapter 11 - 'Return of the Prodigal Son'
- The Alternative Christmas Party >
-
The Life of Liam Lafferty
>
- Chapter One: ' Liam Lafferty is born'
- Chapter Two : 'The Baptism of Liam Lafferty'
- Chapter Three: 'The early years of Liam Lafferty'
- Chapter Four : Early Manhood
- Chapter Five : Ned's Secret Past
- Chapter Six : Courtship and Marriage
- Chapter Seven : Liam and Trish marry
- Chapter Eight : Farley meets Ned
- Chapter Nine : 'Ned comes clean to Farley'
- Chapter Ten : Tragedy hits the family
- Chapter Eleven : The future is brighter
-
The life and times of Joe Walsh
>
- Chapter One : 'The marriage of Margaret Mawd and Thomas Walsh’
- Chapter Two 'The birth of Joe Walsh'
- Chapter Three 'Marriage breakup and betrayal'
- Chapter Four: ' The Walsh family breakup'
- Chapter Five : ' Liverpool Lodgings'
- Chapter Six: ' Settled times are established and tested'
- Chapter Seven : 'Haworth is heaven is a place on earth'
- Chapter Eight: 'Coming out'
- Chapter Nine: Portlaw revenge
- Chapter Ten: ' The murder trial of Paddy Groggy'
- Chapter Eleven: 'New beginnings'
-
The Woman Who Hated Christmas
>
- Chapter One: 'The Christmas Enigma'
- Chapter Two: ' The Breakup of Beth's Family''
- Chapter Three: From Teenager to Adulthood.'
- Chapter Four: 'The Mills of West Yorkshire.'
- Chapter Five: 'Harrison Garner Showdown.'
- Chapter Six : 'The Christmas Dance'
- Chapter Seven : 'The ballot for Shop Steward.'
- Chapter Eight: ' Leaving the Mill'
- Chapter Ten: ' Beth buries her Ghosts'
- Chapter Eleven: Beth and Dermot start off married life in Galway.
- Chapter Twelve: The Twin Tragedy of Christmas, 1992.'
- Chapter Thirteen: 'The Christmas star returns'
- Chapter Fourteen: ' Beth's future in Portlaw'
-
The Last Dance
>
- Chapter One - ‘Nancy Swales becomes the Widow Swales’
- Chapter Two ‘The secret night life of Widow Swales’
- Chapter Three ‘Meeting Richard again’
- Chapter Four ‘Clancy’s Ballroom: March 1961’
- Chapter Five ‘The All Ireland Dancing Rounds’
- Chapter Six ‘James Mountford’
- Chapter Seven ‘The All Ireland Ballroom Latin American Dance Final.’
- Chapter Eight ‘The Final Arrives’
- Chapter Nine: 'Beth in Manchester.'
- 'Two Sisters' >
- Fourteen Days >
-
‘The Postman Always Knocks Twice’
>
- Author's Foreword
- Contents
- 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
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Celebrity Contacts
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Thoughts and Musings
- Bereavement >
- Nature >
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Bill's Personal Development
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- What I'd like to be remembered for
- Second Chances
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- 'Early life at my Grandparents'
- Family Holidays
- 'Mother /Child Bond'
- Childhood Pain
- The Death of Lady
- 'Soldiering On'
- 'Romantic Holidays'
- 'On the roof'
- Always wear clean shoes
- 'Family Tree'
- The importance of poise
- 'Growing up with grandparents'
- Love & Romance >
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Chapter Three
'Marriage breakup and betrayal'

As is always the case and forever will be so, it's impossible for the inhabitants of any village, not to be host to at least one extra-marital affair during any given month of the year.
Unknown to the rest of Portlaw, the Headmaster of its primary school, Thomas Walsh had been seeing a married woman clandestinely for some ten months; even before his own child had reached the landmark of her first birthday. Even his Deputy Head's wife, Rosie Groggy had been up to her shenanigans in the fidelity stakes for a number of years without her love-struck husband cottoning on.
Unknown to the rest of Portlaw, the Headmaster of its primary school, Thomas Walsh had been seeing a married woman clandestinely for some ten months; even before his own child had reached the landmark of her first birthday. Even his Deputy Head's wife, Rosie Groggy had been up to her shenanigans in the fidelity stakes for a number of years without her love-struck husband cottoning on.

Matters seemed to come to a head with regard to Rosie’s affair after she fell pregnant to her then lover. Having missed her menstrual period for two months and not having made love with her husband for the past three and a half months, effectively told her that her expectant child was not the natural product of Paddy Groggy’s sexual outlet.
At first Rosie intended to brazen it out. She would ensure that she made love with her husband tonight and if necessary, for every night over the next week. Then, when the child was born, she could plausibly claim that the birth had been premature by a few months. She was convinced that her gullible husband would unquestioningly accept her word and be taken in by it.
At first Rosie intended to brazen it out. She would ensure that she made love with her husband tonight and if necessary, for every night over the next week. Then, when the child was born, she could plausibly claim that the birth had been premature by a few months. She was convinced that her gullible husband would unquestioningly accept her word and be taken in by it.

However, Rosie was not to be allowed the opportunity of escaping scot free with her planned deception. Unknown to her, a young village farm hand at ‘Green Meadows Farm’ called Shamus Doolie had accidentally seen her hiding in a field adjacent to the unused barn one evening. Then Shamus witnessed a man approach the barn entrance and saw Rosie go to join him there. She and her lover then entered the barn.

Prior to spotting the two barn visitors, Shamus had been about to enter the barn to obtain a pitch fork he needed. So he approached stealthily and slowly entered the barn. Once inside he heard the rustling of garments and the movement of bodies. Then he heard the pants, grunts and heavy breathing coming from the bales of straw at the rear of the dwelling.
The barn had served 'Green Meadows Farm' and its workers for almost two centuries, but was now used to store hay and winter fodder and Shamus was the only official visitor to it.
The barn had served 'Green Meadows Farm' and its workers for almost two centuries, but was now used to store hay and winter fodder and Shamus was the only official visitor to it.

Rather than beating a hasty retreat, 19-year-old Shamus moved closer for a sneaky peak. While he couldn’t see the man she was with, he could tell that the woman on her back with her panties around her legs was none other than Rosie Groggy; daughter-in-law to the owner of the farm, the Widow Groggy.
At first he considered if it could possibly have been Paddy Groggy and his wife having a quickie during an evening visit to see the Widow Groggy, but concluded that it wasn't when Rosie suddenly said, “Yes...............yes! You do it so much better than my old man. You will always be head and shoulders above him in my bed!” Shamus knew that whomever Rosie was rolling around in the hay with, it wasn’t Paddy Groggy, her husband!
After having given the matter much thought as to what he should do with finding out about the love birds in the barn, Shamus Doolie decided that he’d try a spot of good old-fashioned blackmail. Three days after his discovery when he knew her husband to be teaching at his school, Shamus made a visit to see the wife of the Deputy Head at her home.
At first he considered if it could possibly have been Paddy Groggy and his wife having a quickie during an evening visit to see the Widow Groggy, but concluded that it wasn't when Rosie suddenly said, “Yes...............yes! You do it so much better than my old man. You will always be head and shoulders above him in my bed!” Shamus knew that whomever Rosie was rolling around in the hay with, it wasn’t Paddy Groggy, her husband!
After having given the matter much thought as to what he should do with finding out about the love birds in the barn, Shamus Doolie decided that he’d try a spot of good old-fashioned blackmail. Three days after his discovery when he knew her husband to be teaching at his school, Shamus made a visit to see the wife of the Deputy Head at her home.

While obviously shocked to have had her affair discovered by the young farmhand, the price that the blackmailer was asking to maintain his silence fitted in nicely with the amorous desires of the sensual Rosie Groggy. So she paid the blackmailer’s price without an ounce of protest and over the months to come, she entertained two lovers and a husband simultaneously; the lovers in the barn on different evenings of the week and her cuckcolded husband in the marital bed. She even dyed her hair blonde to satisfy her blackmailer's preferences.

When Paddy Groggy heard from his wife about her pregnancy, he was simply elated. The very next day when he attended school, he couldn’t help but to crow at every opportunity to anyone he met about his impending status of fatherhood.
Thomas Walsh said to a young female teacher in an amusing aside, “Of all the things one would choose to boast about, I wouldn’t rate putting the missus in the pudding club as ranking highest on anyone's list. Any drip of a man with the slightest bit of spunk can achieve that!”
Rosie went ahead with her original plan to pass off her new-born child as being her husband’s and she continued seeing the two lovers in her life behind Paddy Groggy’s back until her sixth month of pregnancy, before ending contact with each of them.
Rosie would probably have got away with her little plan if she hadn’t decided to continue with her extra-marital relationships after the birth of her daughter Bridget in March 1954. Before Bridget was six weeks old, Rosie had added a new lover to her string of sexual conquests.
Thomas Walsh said to a young female teacher in an amusing aside, “Of all the things one would choose to boast about, I wouldn’t rate putting the missus in the pudding club as ranking highest on anyone's list. Any drip of a man with the slightest bit of spunk can achieve that!”
Rosie went ahead with her original plan to pass off her new-born child as being her husband’s and she continued seeing the two lovers in her life behind Paddy Groggy’s back until her sixth month of pregnancy, before ending contact with each of them.
Rosie would probably have got away with her little plan if she hadn’t decided to continue with her extra-marital relationships after the birth of her daughter Bridget in March 1954. Before Bridget was six weeks old, Rosie had added a new lover to her string of sexual conquests.

Rosie struck up a dalliance with a soldier from Kilkenny. Although the barn dwelling at ‘Green Meadows Farm’ was on the land of her mother-in-law, it was a place which presented no access difficulty and it was so close to hand with the certainty of no disturbance during evening hours.
However, Rosie did not count upon the lengths that jealousy can take a young man to who feels slighted in his loving conquests. She wasn’t aware of the grave things that fallen pride can bring about in the changing fortunes of one’s life.
One evening whilst working later than usual, Shamus Doolie saw Rosie Groggy enter the barn and shortly after, he witnessed a man go in also. It had only been a good four months earlier when Rosie had told young Shamus that they would have to stop meeting as her husband was starting to get suspicious that she was seeing someone else.
Shamus was very angry when he realised that Rosie had dumped him only to take on a new conquest. He knew that this lover of Rosie’s to be a different chap to the man he’d originally seen her with in the barn. This lover wore the uniform of a soldier, whereas the former lover he'd seen her with was undoubtedly a civilian.
However, Rosie did not count upon the lengths that jealousy can take a young man to who feels slighted in his loving conquests. She wasn’t aware of the grave things that fallen pride can bring about in the changing fortunes of one’s life.
One evening whilst working later than usual, Shamus Doolie saw Rosie Groggy enter the barn and shortly after, he witnessed a man go in also. It had only been a good four months earlier when Rosie had told young Shamus that they would have to stop meeting as her husband was starting to get suspicious that she was seeing someone else.
Shamus was very angry when he realised that Rosie had dumped him only to take on a new conquest. He knew that this lover of Rosie’s to be a different chap to the man he’d originally seen her with in the barn. This lover wore the uniform of a soldier, whereas the former lover he'd seen her with was undoubtedly a civilian.

Knowing why his employer's daughter–in-law was there in the barn and filled with anger and jealousy, Shamus ran to tell the Widow Groggy that she had intruders in the barn. He was determined to spoil his ex-lover’s guilty pleasure. If he could no longer bed Rosie in the barn once a week, he couldn't get his head around how he could allow another to do so and still maintain his manly pride.
However, spiteful intent often produces dangerous consequences and he couldn’t have possibly known how bad a move he’d made informing his employer.
Ten minutes later, the Widow Groggy gingerly made her way towards the barn with a loaded shot gun and entered, wholly prepared to do whatever damage was required to protect her land and buildings. Shamus Doolie knew what she’d find inside the barn, but never in his wildest dreams could he have known the widow’s precise response. As the Widow Groggy entered the barn with a loaded shotgun, Shamus instantly took fright and regretted telling her as he began to fear the possible outcome. He initially held back and didn’t proceed beyond the barn door entrance.
However, spiteful intent often produces dangerous consequences and he couldn’t have possibly known how bad a move he’d made informing his employer.
Ten minutes later, the Widow Groggy gingerly made her way towards the barn with a loaded shot gun and entered, wholly prepared to do whatever damage was required to protect her land and buildings. Shamus Doolie knew what she’d find inside the barn, but never in his wildest dreams could he have known the widow’s precise response. As the Widow Groggy entered the barn with a loaded shotgun, Shamus instantly took fright and regretted telling her as he began to fear the possible outcome. He initially held back and didn’t proceed beyond the barn door entrance.

What seemed like ages, but could only have been a matter of minutes later made Shamus Doolie sweat sheets of regret. Then, he heard both barrels of the widow’s shotgun being discharged and was fearful as he ran to see what had happened.
Shamus Doolie ran towards the spot inside the barn where Widow Groggy stood motionless. As he approached, he could see the widow looking stunned as she stood there silently in a discharge of gun-barrel smoke.
Shamus looked inside the section strewn with hay and straw and let out a gasp. Before him lay the lifeless body of Rosie Groggy and her gravely wounded soldier lover. Both Rosie and soldier were partially clothed. Rosie had been killed outright whereas her lover was in the throes of imminent death as he writhed in agonised pain. As he stared on transfixed at the bloody site of carnage before him, Shamus heard the familiar sound of a double-barrelled shotgun being reloaded by Widow Groggy behind him.
For one brief and terrified moment, he feared that his time on this earth was up and that the widow had somehow also learned of his sexual encounter with her son’s wife and intended to shoot him as well. Then, almost instantaneously, another consideration came to mind. Perhaps the widow planned to kill the only witness to the shootings and blame their deaths on him. Either way, Shamus started to fear for his life.
Before he realised what was actually in the process of happening, the widow placed the barrel of the shot gun beneath her chin and pulled the trigger; splattering the matter of her brains against the surrounding straw bales. As she lay there dead, the soldier groaned his last breath. All three corpses lay there as dead as doornails.

Shamus Doolie ran for the Garda and though the fear of what he’d just witnessed still coursed through his veins, he felt a tremendous surge of relief to still be alive. Between informing the Garda and being formally interviewed by them, Shamus had decided that there was nothing to be gained by his telling them that he’d known Rosie Groggy far better than he’d let on and for a number of months had been her blackmailing lover.
XXXXX

Naturally, Paddy Groggy was emotionally distraught to discover that his wife had been unfaithful to him. He was probably less surprised than he publicly admitted at his mother’s reaction to finding her daughter-in-law ‘in flagrante delicto’. He knew how easily his mother could lose her temper and fly off the handle if someone crossed her. He still remembered the beating she’d given him as a four year old boy for having wet his bed and thereby creating extra work for her. In fact, having been reared by her strict hand had made him grow up feeling insecure and somewhat inconsequential.

Undoubtedly, his mother had always been a hard woman, but one thing concerned her above all others; losing face in the community and having the family name of 'Groggy' fall from grace into shame. For his mother to have discovered her son’s wife acting unfaithfully, and doing it with a soldier who wore an English uniform in her barn would have been unthinkable and demanding of the gravest punishment. For any married woman to have acted like her daughter-in-law had done outside her marriage was unforgivable in the widow’s eyes, but to have acted so shamelessly less than a mere six months after giving birth to a child that bore the proud name of 'Groggy' drove the widow into a blind sense of rage and distraction. It also brought into question the merits of the Groggy inheritance; 'Green Meadows Farm,' its lands, farm stock and other assets.
Widow Groggy had been more than happy to leave the bulk of her estate to her only grandchild and her own son. Indeed, she had recently modified her last will and testament to this effect, but having discovered that her wanton daughter-in-law had been prepared to raise her skirts for any man who fancied her was more than her pride could bear. No longer could she be sure that the child she thought of as granddaughter was a 'Groggy' or the spawn seed of a lover; perhaps even that of an English soldier.
The widow was a strong-willed woman who had never brooked nonsense throughout her life and being so inclined, Paddy Groggy believed deep down that had it been him and a lover that his mother had discovered in her barn instead of his wife and her lover, the Widow Groggy would have treated him with no more regard than she'd treated Rosie and the Kilkenny soldier. She would have undoubtedly shot him also for having shamed the family name! None of this however, lessened the pain and sheer sense of loss that Paddy Groggy felt at losing both wife and mother in one day.
Widow Groggy had been more than happy to leave the bulk of her estate to her only grandchild and her own son. Indeed, she had recently modified her last will and testament to this effect, but having discovered that her wanton daughter-in-law had been prepared to raise her skirts for any man who fancied her was more than her pride could bear. No longer could she be sure that the child she thought of as granddaughter was a 'Groggy' or the spawn seed of a lover; perhaps even that of an English soldier.
The widow was a strong-willed woman who had never brooked nonsense throughout her life and being so inclined, Paddy Groggy believed deep down that had it been him and a lover that his mother had discovered in her barn instead of his wife and her lover, the Widow Groggy would have treated him with no more regard than she'd treated Rosie and the Kilkenny soldier. She would have undoubtedly shot him also for having shamed the family name! None of this however, lessened the pain and sheer sense of loss that Paddy Groggy felt at losing both wife and mother in one day.

The Widow Groggy had always been wary of her son’s wife and had never really taken to her. Over the previous month, the widow had also been far from her normal self. She’d been told by the family doctor three weeks earlier that she’d only months left to live and had been in considerable pain with the incessant pressure of an ever-growing tumour in her pancreas.
For the past two days she had even considered taking an overdose to end her suffering. Hence, the decision to end her own life there and then after she’d shot and killed her daughter-in-law and the soldier had not been too difficult a decision for the widow to make.
For the past two days she had even considered taking an overdose to end her suffering. Hence, the decision to end her own life there and then after she’d shot and killed her daughter-in-law and the soldier had not been too difficult a decision for the widow to make.
XXXXX

After the inquest, preparations for the Widow Groggy's burial arrangements needed to take place. Because of her suicide being regarded as 'a mortal sin' in the eyes of the Catholic Church, the parish priest agreed to bury her on church ground, but without the full church service and coffin blessing that usually preceded the burial.
As he stood at the side of his mother’s grave plot holding his infant daughter in his arms, Paddy Groggy looked a most pitiful sight. Apart from the child he held on to so tightly in his arms, he had no other known living relative apart from distant cousins in Australia and America.
Few of the Portlaw residents attended at the grave side as Rosie Groggy was laid to rest, while being perfectly content to gossip in the village shops, pubs and neighbours' houses as to the reason of her sudden demise. Margaret Walsh was shocked to discover that her husband intended to allow his Deputy Head to bury his wife and mother without attending the burial service himself as a school representative, so she got her own daughter Joe wrapped up warmly and they attended in his stead.
As he stood at the side of his mother’s grave plot holding his infant daughter in his arms, Paddy Groggy looked a most pitiful sight. Apart from the child he held on to so tightly in his arms, he had no other known living relative apart from distant cousins in Australia and America.
Few of the Portlaw residents attended at the grave side as Rosie Groggy was laid to rest, while being perfectly content to gossip in the village shops, pubs and neighbours' houses as to the reason of her sudden demise. Margaret Walsh was shocked to discover that her husband intended to allow his Deputy Head to bury his wife and mother without attending the burial service himself as a school representative, so she got her own daughter Joe wrapped up warmly and they attended in his stead.

There were fewer than six people at the graveside; the parish priest, Paddy Groggy and his infant daughter Bridget, Margaret Walsh and her daughter Joe. As Rosie's coffin was lowered into the ground, Margaret Walsh looked across at Paddy Groggy and felt heartbroken for the man as he stood there with streams of sadness coming down his face as he silently mourned the loss of his unfaithful wife and the tragic nature of her death.
When Rosie Groggy’s coffin had been lowered into the ground, the hearse that had carried it left the graveyard and another hearse entered in its place. The next coffin to be lowered into a grave plot adjacent to that of Rosie Groggy was the corpse of the Widow Groggy. Paddy Groggy seemed overwhelmed in his sadness and to prevent him constantly shaking, Margaret kindly squeezed his hand, simply to let him know that he wasn't alone in his grief.
Margaret Walsh later learnt that the only way that the Catholic Church would allow Widow Groggy’s body to be buried in its grounds was if the daughter-in-law she had murdered was buried in the grave plot alongside her! Margaret thought that only the Catholic Church could have come up with such a penitence for a sin that could not be forgiven; only the church could place the person who'd killed and the adulteress she had killed alongside each other beneath the green sod for the rest of eternity!
So poor Paddy Groggy buried both adulterous wife and monstrous mother on the same day, side-by-side as though they’d lived life as the closest of relatives. Paddy viewed this final irony as perhaps being fitting for the two most influential women in his life to press.
When Rosie Groggy’s coffin had been lowered into the ground, the hearse that had carried it left the graveyard and another hearse entered in its place. The next coffin to be lowered into a grave plot adjacent to that of Rosie Groggy was the corpse of the Widow Groggy. Paddy Groggy seemed overwhelmed in his sadness and to prevent him constantly shaking, Margaret kindly squeezed his hand, simply to let him know that he wasn't alone in his grief.
Margaret Walsh later learnt that the only way that the Catholic Church would allow Widow Groggy’s body to be buried in its grounds was if the daughter-in-law she had murdered was buried in the grave plot alongside her! Margaret thought that only the Catholic Church could have come up with such a penitence for a sin that could not be forgiven; only the church could place the person who'd killed and the adulteress she had killed alongside each other beneath the green sod for the rest of eternity!
So poor Paddy Groggy buried both adulterous wife and monstrous mother on the same day, side-by-side as though they’d lived life as the closest of relatives. Paddy viewed this final irony as perhaps being fitting for the two most influential women in his life to press.

Three months after the burial of his wife and mother, ‘Green Meadows Farm’ and Paddy Groggy’s house were put up for sale. Each was sold quickly, the farm and its land and stock, it was rumoured, for a much-reduced price. Within two weeks after the sale of the farm, Paddy Groggy and his young daughter left the area and were never seen in Portlaw again.
Nobody knew where the Deputy Head and his child had gone, although the absence of any factual information didn’t stop all manner of fiction spreading amongst the idle gossip from pub to pub and between house and house during the months ahead.
“He must have got over £200,000 for the farm, I reckon, even at its knock down price for a quick sale,” Jasper Ware was heard telling a friend. “With such an amount, the world is one’s oyster! They could afford to settle anywhere with such an amount behind them; and that's not to forget the £80,000 he got for his own house!”
As with all times and places however, the newspapers of today invariably provides the wrapping for tomorrow’s fish and chips, and within a few years the name of Groggy graced no more Portlaw gossip. It was as though Paddy Groggy and his daughter, Bridget had never lived there.
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