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Should a 12-year-old boy be jailed for life?

Should a 12-year-old boy be jailed for life?

Twelve year old Cristian Fernandez will be charged as an adult for his brother's murder.

A 12-year-old US boy could be sentenced to life in prison after he was charged as an adult for his brother’s murder.

Cristian Fernandez is alleged to have beaten his two-year-old brother David to death at their family home in Jacksonville, Florida, in March.

Prosecutor Angela Corey decided to charge Fernandez as an adult in order to ‘protect the public’ from him.

“The fact that we indicted a 12-year-old in and of itself is a stunning event and a sad event in our prosecutorial lives that we had to do this, but it is the only legal mechanism that we can use to protect the community from this particular defendant at this point,” Corey said.

People under the age of 18 are usually tried as juveniles, leading to more lenient punishments. If Fernandez was convicted as a juvenile, he would be free by the time he was 21.

The decision to charge Fernandez as an adult will result in a mandatory life sentence if he is convicted.

Fernandez’s attorneys say the child has a history of physical and sexual abuse, and should be rehabilitated, not jailed for life.

“The whole system has failed him,” Assistant Public Defender Rob Mason said.

“This child clearly is a victim. We think he can be rehabilitated and, as his lawyers, we will fight for that.”

Your say: Do you think a 12-year-old child should be jailed for life? Email your thoughts to [email protected]

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A royal residence for newlyweds

After making things official in April, the newly titled Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will move into a starter home at Kensington Palace later this month.

The pair will settle down as husband and wife in the Kensington Palace apartment William once lived in with his mother, Princess Diana, following his parents’ divorce, the UK’s Daily Mail reported.

Until now the pair have been living in the Clarence House apartment that William shares with Prince Harry, when in London. While the trio are quite close, it was not an ideal situation for the newlyweds.

It is understood that the couple will live in the residence for only the first few years of their marriage as it is not big enough to raise a family in.

Duke and Duchess of Cambridge at Buckingham Palace

Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry.

An aerial shot of Kensington Palace.

The front gates of Kensington Palace.

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Schapelle Corby’s secret sister revealed

Schapelle Corby’s unknown sister Mele Kisina has shunned the limelight – until now. She tells KATHRYN BONELLA why it’s time to speak out about her beloved sibling.

As Mele Kisina sits in her Gold Coast home, she can’t help the tears falling down her cheeks. She’s never spoken publicly about her big sister Schapelle, and it’s emotional. But she’s determined to break her silence if it will help achieve the family’s goal – to bring Schapelle home.

“I just want to bring my sister back. I love her and miss her so much,” says the 21-year-old. “It’s hell. Not one day do I go without thinking about Schapelle and it breaks my heart that she is stuck in that hellhole.”

In pictures: Schapelle Corby’s life behind bars

Mele was just 14 years old when her adored sister, Schapelle Corby, set off in 2004 on what was meant to be a carefree surfing holiday in Bali. She remembers her leaving for the airport early that morning. “I was half asleep, but I can remember her kissing me goodbye, saying, ‘See you in a couple of weeks. Be good for Mum. I love you’,” she says.

Later that day, the family’s world came crashing down around them as they heard the news Schapelle had been detained at Denpasar Airport with 4.2kg of marijuana in her boogie-board bag. “It was crazy. I was blank, just feeling really shocked – mainly because I knew that my sister would never do that,” Mele says. “I kept thinking Schapelle would come home the next day.

I didn’t have a clue how bad it was going to get, or how long this would go on.”

Story by Kathryn Bonella – www.kathrynbonella.com

Being sent home in handcuffs is not a tempting prospect for the broken Aussie.

A mentally fragile Schapelle Corby is refusing to pin her hopes on Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s heartfelt mission to bring her home to serve out her remaining jail time, fearing it will end in heartbreak.

“She’s aware the Australian Government is supporting her on her lucid days, but most days she’s not really with it or fully comprehending what’s going on,” a family friend tells Woman’s Day. “Also, she’s clung to hopes before that were dashed, so she’s still very depressed most of the time and can’t see the light at the end of the tunnel.”

And given all her avenues of appeal have been exhausted, the bid for clemency to Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, lodged in March this year on the grounds of her failing mental health, is her last hope of having her sentence slashed.

If it fails, she will serve at least another seven years. Speaking publicly about Corby’s case for the first time, in a press conference with Julia Gillard last Tuesday, Dr Yudhoyono said he was “quite optimistic” about a prisoner transfer scheme between Australia and Indonesia, which could apply to Schapelle’s case.

But this isn’t cause for celebration for the Corbys, as politicians have talked about prisoner transfer for more than five years and Schapelle has said numerous times she wants to come home a free person.

Despite her time in maximum security, Pauline tells Warren Gibbs Aussie jails are too good for Schapelle.

As former Prisoner C70079, Pauline Hanson knows all too well the harsh realities of life behind bars. Faced with the prospect of three years locked up in the Brisbane Women’s Correctional Centre’s Maximum Security Unit, Pauline admits she was at her lowest ebb.

Yet, although she knows only too well what life behind razor wire and security check-points feels like, she says if convicted drug trafficker Schapelle Corby is truly guilty, she should serve out the rest of her jail time at Bali’s Kerobokan Prison – not at taxpayer’s expense in Australia.

“The fact is, she was convicted on drug charges in Bali and that’s where she must do her time,” says Pauline. “That’s unless, of course, our government is prepared to seek an exchange program with other countries.

“Non-Australian nationals should be deported back to their country if they are convicted of a criminal offence which carries a sentence of 12 months or more to do their time.

“Our jails, especially in Queensland from my experience, are far too soft for convicted murderers, rapists, drug traffickers, paedophiles and now our ever increasing numbers of people smugglers,” she tells Woman’s Day.

Friends fear Schapelle Corby’s latest humiliation could tip the mentally fragile prisoner over the edge. Following a bashing scandal at her Bali prison, Phillip Koch reports that the Aussie is being treated like an exhibit in a zoo.

It was a humiliation even Schapelle Corby did not expect. The filthy cage she has called home for the past five years was opened to the world’s press with no warning, robbing Schapelle of the tiny bit of privacy she was still allowed – and the last shred of dignity she could cling to in one of the world’s worst prisons.

“She feels like a zoo exhibit or a monkey in a cage,” says a fellow prisoner at Kerobokan.

“The only space she has for herself in the whole world right now is her mattress in the cell, and it’s where she hides when the media is invited into the jail. But this time they were allowed right inside to take photos of her and her belongings.”

When the media arrived unannounced, a shocked and very distressed Schapelle leapt up from eating her lunch and scrambled into the bathroom as a guard unlocked her cell door.

She looked like an animal caught in headlights as flashes went off and questions were fired at her, forcing her to take refuge in the grubby toilet cubicle. It must have seemed like an ambush to Schapelle, who’s been desperately trying to maintain her dignity despite the appalling conditions in which she is forced to live.

She came out of hiding about 15 minutes later, turning away from the wall of lenses pointed through her barred windows. Crouching down, she filled a glass with water before splashing it at the cameras. It was her only defence and she kept hurling glasses of water until the snappers finally moved away.

For the mentally ill 32-year-old, who has spent many nights during the last two years hearing imaginary voices and trying to climb the walls of her cell to see if there are spies in the ceiling, this ill-conceived public relations stunt must have been a terrifying ordeal.

The world’s media were invited to the notorious Bali jail because of recent exposès revealing the shocking conditions there.

As her brother James becomes a dad, Schapelle’s own dream of being a mum is giving her something to live for, her family tells Corby biographer Kathryn Bonella.

Desperately lonely and increasingly despondent, Schapelle Corby plans to make a dramatic last-ditch grab at happiness by having a baby in her Bali jail, according to her mother.

Languishing behind the bars of Indonesia’s infamous Kerobokan prison, Schapelle has always been candid about her desire to have children. But she’s well aware her life-long dream is being slowly eroded as each year of her jail term drags by. Now, on the eve of the fifth anniversary of her sentencing, Schapelle’s mum, Rosleigh Rose, warns that her daughter, 32, will resort to having a baby in prison if her latest plea for clemency falls on deaf ears.

“She is going to have a baby, and she is going to be a good mum,” Rosleigh says.

“If she doesn’t come home this time, she can have one in there … So what?”

If Schapelle falls pregnant in Kerobokan Detention Centre, she would by no means be the first. Given it’s a mixed-sex prison and there’s a long history of guards renting offices for illicit liaisons, pregnancy is not uncommon.

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Playschool reunion!

Playschool reunion!

To mark 45 fun-filled years of the iconic ABC children’s show, Craig Bennett catches up with our favourite presenters (plus Big Ted and Little Ted, of course!).

There are loads of laughs, hugs, a birthday cake, outrageous stories and a rowdy rendition of the famous theme song as Play School’s favourite stars reunite to celebrate the TV classic’s 45th anniversary.

“I can’t believe Play School has hit middle age! What a milestone, and how time flies,” says Lorraine Bayly, one of the original hosts. “It seems like yesterday I was singing the catchy song about ‘bears in there, and chairs as well’, turning egg cartons into caterpillars and playing with the likes of Big Ted, Little Ted, Humpty and Jemima.

“My 12 years with the show are a true career highlight. I loved every moment, and if The Sullivans hadn’t come along, I’d still be there now,” enthuses the actress, now 74. Play School  first lit up our TV screens in 1966. More than 40 years on, it is averaging more than a million viewers per week and has employed around 110 actors as presenters. Don Spencer, who was with the show an amazing 31 years, also hosted the UK version.

“Play School was a British concept and I was blessed to have hosted both versions. I notched up 17 years co-presenting Play School on the BBC,” says Don. “It was a sheer joy to work on, and I think the secret to its tremendous success is that it was – and still is – so beautifully scripted. We didn’t just flop in and make it up, although there was always room for plenty of ad libs.

“And as the show was taped as if it were live, things invariably went wrong – from animals running amok to the set falling down!”Benita Collings, a regular for 30 years, says the magic of the show is its broad appeal. “Millions grew up watching Play School, and it wasn’t just the tots. John Hamblin was the king of double entendres, and the mums and dads loved it. They felt he was secretly winking at them, which he was, with his often outrageously risque humour,” admits Benita.

Which TV show cast would you like to see reunited? Share your thoughts below.

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Life in pictures: Bec Hewitt

We take a look at the life of actress Bec Hewitt

Bec Hewitt

Bec began her acting career at just five years old on TV commercials, but is best known for her role as Hayley Lewis on Home and Away.

Bec Hewitt

Bec earned herself a number of Logie Award nominations and in 2005, after being on Home and Away for six years, she won the silver Logie award for Most Popular Actress.

Bec Hewitt

But 2005 got even bigger for Bec. Her popularity skyrocketed and she won the first ever series of the Australian Dancing with the Stars.

Bec Hewitt

Bec fell in love with her co-star and on screen love interest Beau Brady. The pair dated for four years and were briefly engaged until

Bec called it off.

Bec Hewitt

Not long after, Bec began dating Aussie tennis star Lleyton Hewitt. After just six weeks of dating, Lleyton popped the question after the Australian Open Final. The pair announced not long after that they were expecting their first child and soon after Bec left Home and Away.

Bec Hewitt

The pair married in July 2005 at the Sydney Opera House followed by a reception at Taronga Zoo.

Bec Hewitt

The couple’s first daughter Mia, was born on November 29, 2005.

Bec Hewitt

The couple’s second child, a boy, named Cruz was born three years later.

Bec Hewitt

Since having children Bec has supported Lleyton by travelling with him around the world to various tennis tournaments. She can always be spotted in the front row cheering him on.

Bec Hewitt

And often has her look-alike daughter by her side.

Bec Hewitt

Bec’s kids have grown up on the court and it seems like they are loving life!

Bec Hewitt

In 2010 Bec gave birth to the couple’s third child Ava Sydney Hewitt, who was born six weeks early.

Bec Hewitt

It seems things couldn’t be better for the Hewitt’s with Bec recently posting this comment on her bog. “It is hard to believe Ava is already 6 months old. Mia and Cruz cannot get enough of her!”

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Bec Hewitt: My new life

Bec Hewitt: My new life

In Paris, Bec and Lleyton renew their romance and share precious family time.

She may be a natural homebody who still misses her life Down Under, but devoted wife and mum Bec Hewitt obviously believes the family that travels together stays together.

As a happy and relaxed Bec hit the streets of Paris with her tennis star hubby, Lleyton, and their three gorgeous children, it was clear she’s harbouring no regrets about putting her successful acting career on hold to raise her young family. Taking in the sights of the French capital, the former Home And Away favourite shared lots of laughs and smiles with Lleyton and their energetic brood.

With summer coming early to Paris, the casually dressed clan made the most of their time in the warm and sunny City of Love. “They looked like any happy family with a newborn, and headed out to the Indiana Cafe near the Champs-Elysees for a fun family dinner,” reported one observer.

A laid-back Bec even decided to hop aboard one of the city’s popular double-decker tour buses with her seven-month-old baby daughter, Ava, from which she enjoyed an even better view of iconic tourist hot spots, including the Eiffel Tower. But while Mia, 5, and Cruz, 2, seemed interested in checking out their latest travel destination on foot or from their strollers, Ava was far more absorbed by her colourful book.

Looking as pretty as a picture in pink, she was perfectly behaved for her parents, drawing smiles when she went with Bec to Avenue Montaigne for a couple of hours of designer shopping. “The kids are great and growing up so quickly,” Bec recently wrote on her and Lleyton’s official website. “They interact with each other really well.”

Read the full story in this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 6, 2011.

Your say: Do you think Bec should travel with Lleyton or come back to Australia? Share your thoughts below.

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Brynne Edelsten: I’m having the time of my life

Brynne Edelsten: I'm having the time of my life

Things just keep getting better for the popular Dancing With The Stars contestant, who’s winning legions of fans and dreaming about motherhood.

Ever since she first touched down in Australia three and a half years ago, it’s seems everyone’s had an opinion about Brynne Edelsten. There were those who disapproved of the 40-year age gap between her and then-boyfriend, Dr Geoffrey Edelsten, 68. Then came the nasty comments directed towards her choice of fashion, starting when she wore a sparkly bra to the 2009 Brownlow Medal, and becoming more relentless with every red-carpet appearance.

Then, of course, there was her $3 million wedding to Geoff, complete with hired Hollywood stars, circus performers, and over-the-top merrymaking. Suddenly it seemed Brynne, 28, was public property. And everyone had something to say. But there’s a change in the air when Woman’s Day arrives at Brynne’s inner-city Melbourne 18th-floor apartment, a space she shares with her entrepreneur husband.

“This is the best time of my whole life,” says Brynne, marvelling at how much her life has transformed since setting foot on the Dancing With The Stars dance floor a month before. “I did the show because I wanted to be known as more than just ‘Geoff’s wife’. Up until now, everything I’ve done, I’ve done with him. And this is something I’m doing on my own.”

And she reveals her next major project may be becoming a mum. “I hope so, yes,” she says. “But I am keener than he is. He wants to wait for a while, to travel before he retires. For me, though, it’s like, I may have a lot of time but he doesn’t have as much time as I have. I want him to be around when our kids are growing up.”

The couple have talked about it, and Brynne would like to make it happen in the next few years. But for now she’s content to play mum to her little dog, Juddy, named after AFL star, Carlton’s Chris Judd.

Read more in this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 6, 2011.

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Dannii and Kris: The crisis that tore us apart

Dannii Minogue and Kris Smith: The crisis that tore us apart

The stress of juggling a new baby with high-profile careers is threatening to destroy their relationship.

Lying in a hospital bed recovering from an illness so painful that only hours earlier she feared she was “going to die”, Dannii Minogue knew she had to make some decisions.

In the end, her emergency rush to hospital in the UK over Easter to have her appendix removed turned out to be the wake-up call the Australian singing and small-screen star was waiting for. “Being in that much pain and not knowing what it was, was just horrendous,” Dannii says. “I’m just a new mum, I’ve got a little baby to look after. It was really scary.”

As doctors rushed to remove her appendix, the thought of her baby son Ethan was enough for Dannii to reassess how much stress working on the UK’s The X Factor was causing her, her child – and her partner. “It’s time away from your family and your baby,” explains the 39-year-old, who’s based in Melbourne. “If it’s a show in the UK, it’s a huge uproot and relocation to take the family there.” Sadly, the realisation may have come too late. A spate of reports suggest Dannii’s relationship with her partner of three years, Kris Smith, 32, is collapsing.

Although the pair publicly present a united front – they declared in a statement, “We are committed to our relationship and Ethan as always” – Kris recently acknowledged the private stress of their partnership in an exclusive interview with Woman’s Day. “It’s not necessarily easy,” he said.

“With us both working ridiculous hours, often in different parts of the world, you find yourself at home alone with the child. And it’s not the perfect world you’d like it to be, with both parents helping out. It’s for no other reason than work. But it can push you apart.”

Read more in this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 6, 2011.

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Joh Griggs: My secret weight loss weapon

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Joh Griggs: My secret weightloss weapon

TV star Johanna Griggs seems to have it all, but when she wanted to lose weight she turned to a relatively unknown mum to inspire her.

Meet the reason Johanna Griggs lost 11 very stubborn kilograms. “This is Wonder Woman!” smiles the TV favourite as she greets Janelle Wilson with a warm hug and introduces her.

The pair met last year when Janelle, 50, spoke at a business lunch about her 30kg weight loss – a dramatic drop achieved while balancing a career, family, the care of her disabled son and pursuing a passion for triathlons. Her speech captivated Joh, 37.

“I had thought I was too busy to shape up – but when I met Janelle and heard what she deals with on a daily basis, I decided I’d find the time and stop making excuses,” says the 183cm host of Better Homes And Gardens. She got a home treadmill and started walking after being inspired by Janelle, and now weighs 77kg.

“She’s a genuine person who speaks from the heart. There’s never any bitterness about what life has dished up. She’s just positive and up-beat and gets on with things. In her own gentle way, she’s made a powerful difference to my life and I can’t thank her enough.” Janelle, from Newcastle in NSW, has shed another 8kg since her first meeting with Joh. She says her transformation from size 22 to 12 was “something to do for myself” in the midst of a frantic life.

Key to Janelle’s hectic schedule is her son Jye, 10. Born prematurely weighing just 1800 grams, he fought for his life in hospital for 146 days after his birth. Now, Jye has cerebral palsy, chronic lung disease, global developmental delay, ocular palsy and almost total deafness. “He’s often wheelchair-bound and weighs just 26kg, but Jye is a very strong child we know was put on this earth for a purpose,” explains Janelle, who also has a son named Darian, 14, with her husband Steven. “Jye is non-verbal but communicates in his own way and our family happily revolves around him.”

Cerebral palsy is a physical disability that affects the way that a person moves.

Cerebral palsy is caused by an injury to the developing brain, which usually occurs before birth.

It is a lifelong condition, but its impact varies from person to person. It can be very mild – e.g. a weakness in one hand – or more severe, where a person has almost no voluntary movement.

There is no known cure and, for most people with cerebral palsy, the cause is unknown.

25% of children with cerebral palsy are unable to walk and 60% have impaired speech. There are also a number of other conditions associated with cerebral palsy, including epilepsy and intellectual disability.

To find out more about cerebral palsy, including the latest medical research, services available and how you can help support the charity, go to the Cerebral Palsy Alliance website.

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The housewife and the handyman

There was an ad on TV recently where a

good-looking handyman is in a woman’s home doing some work. She is obviously flirting with him and won’t leave him alone and at the end of the ad the handyman says to the camera “you don’t want me hanging around your house when you’re not there do you?” It reminded me of some of my earlier experiences as a tradie.

I started my working life as an electrician’s apprentice. I spent four years climbing up and down ladders and crawling around doing all the mucky jobs that the tradesman got me to do, and didn’t really have much to do with the clients.

While grafting on building sites, every so often I would hear stories about so-called “desperate housewife” customers who supposedly would throw themselves at some tradies, getting up to all sorts of mischief. However, as a young apprentice I never experienced such a thing firsthand, simply finding customers to be either nice or not and that was about it.

After I had completed my apprenticeship I started working self-employed as a general “handyman” with a mate. We went around together doing odd jobs at peoples’, homes including gardening, electrics, air-conditioning, hanging doors, and fixing fly screens.

In this job I started to deal with clients more closely. With this kind of work ? between the hours of 7am and 6pm in peoples’ homes ? the people you tend to deal with the most are women, generally mums who have sent their kids off to school, or stay-at-home wives.

Leaving my teenage apprentice days behind me I had now grown into the body of a man and due to the hard physical work I was doing, had gotten myself into pretty decent shape.

The first time I realised that some of our clients might be taking a bit of interest in me was on a hot summer’s day when I was doing some gardening. I was using a heavy petrol hedge trimmer and had taken my T-shirt off to work on my tan when my workmate told me that he had seen the client, a lady in her late thirties, watching me from the top window. And he said she wasn’t checking up on the hedges…

…I began to start noticing this sort of behaviour more and more, and was by now becoming worldly enough to work out when someone was flirting with me. It became quite amusing for me and my work partner to see how many drinks, cakes, biscuits or cold beers we got offered by certain ladies who didn’t ever seem particularly keen for us to hurry up and get the job finished.

After a couple of years working with my friend he decided to completely change career and go to uni, and I decided to carry on the business alone and see how it went.

How things changed when I started working solo! I had several women flirt ridiculously with me. On one occasion a customer answered her door in a bath towel (I couldn’t see a reason why she hadn’t got dressed) and then, while discussing the job with her, she brazenly undid the towel in front of me and rearranged it leaving nothing to the imagination. The smile she gave me meant she knew exactly what she was doing. I, for my part just looked away, stunned, and managed to mumble something about getting on with the job.

Then one day, after having avoided or got away from a few similar encounters, I finally let my guard down. I was installing a ducted air-conditioning unit into a large posh house, a job which I would probably finish in two days but gave myself an extra day cushion, just in case.

When I arrived I met the client who was a very attractive brunette lady, I guessed somewhere in her mid-thirties. She was really helpful and incredibly friendly. She started to flirt a bit and hung around chatting to me while I started work.

She jokingly said comments such as “I bet all the ladies love it when you show up” and said because of the heat she didn’t mind if I wanted to take my shirt off, which she gave a bit of a cheeky smile about. Pushing my luck, I jokingly replied “only if you do too”. We spent the rest of day being very chatty and friendly and when I left at 4pm she said how she was looking forward to seeing me again the next day and watched me drive away.

The next day when I arrived she was wearing a skimpy outfit of jean shorts and a revealing, low cut T-shirt. She smiled when I arrived but didn’t really say much. I kept trying to offer small talk but she just pretty much stood around and watched me work for rather a long time…

…I started to feel a bit uncomfortable with her one word answers and the fact she just kept watching what I was doing, so uncomfortable that I started to be incapable of doing anything properly. I became really clumsy and kept dropping things, fumbling around and obviously distracted.

She then spoke and asked if I was uncomfortable with her watching me. I mumbled something along the lines of “no, you’re fine, it’s okay”. She then asked if that meant I enjoyed her watching me. I became very uncomfortable and really didn’t know what to say. She seemed to be gaining pleasure from the fact that I was obviously intimidated.

She walked right up to me with a sort of smirk on her face and then kissed me, pushed me against the wall and the next thing I knew we were tearing at each other’s clothes and soon on the floor.

Afterwards, she just got up and said “now, I think you’ve got some work to do”. She became very aloof and stand-offish with me so I did some more work then left for the day.

The next day when I arrived she didn’t seem to pay me much attention, acting totally normal as if nothing had ever happened. Then around lunchtime the same events as the day before unfolded, although this time it was a lot longer lasting and she seemed much more “normal” afterwards and not so stand-offish.

By now it was Friday and I hadn’t finished the job yet because the constant distractions had got me behind, so she said I better come back the next day to finish off.

So on Saturday I arrived early, looking forward to seeing my temptress again and a little disappointed I would be finishing the job and would probably not see her again after that…

…But when I arrived a man opened the door. This, I discovered, was her husband. He was immediately super-friendly ? thanking me for coming to finish on the weekend and thanking me for the work I had done already. He straight away offered me a drink and some food which I felt too guilty to accept.

She then came to see me, smiling her hello and telling her husband what a hard worker I was and how lucky they were to get someone decent to do the installation. When he was out of the room she was flirting with me again and even when he was in the room she continued, seeming to gain pleasure and amusement in the situation without one hint of shame.

The husband even made some lunch for me, insisting I sit with them and eat. The whole time she just smirked at me and made inappropriate innuendos and comments.

Finally I finished the job and tried to race out of the house as fast as I could. The husband again was really nice and grateful for the job and asked me back to do a twice-yearly routine maintenance on the system, which she was also very insistent upon. I eventually agreed because it seemed the easiest option to get me out the house fastest.

I have never felt so guilty in my life after this. I felt terrible, hating myself and still to this day I feel anger towards that woman when I remember how she treated her husband.

I cancelled the maintenance schedule by mail and have never seen either of them since. I now always work with someone else if I can and I stay very professional and talk only about business issues with clients who I’m even slightly wary of.

I do wonder how many other tradies aren’t as honourable as me and take advantage of Australia’s “desperate housewives”.

Picture posed by models.

Your say: Have your say about this true confession below…

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