Хилари Боннер - A Deep Deceit

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A Deep Deceit: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Although to all appearances Suzanne and Carl Peters live an idyllic life in pretty St Ives, beneath the veneer of domestic bliss lurks a dark secret which threatens to destroy everything they hold dear. For the last seven years they have lived a lie, lived in fear that the violence of the past will catch up with them, and now it seems that their worst nightmares are coming true.
Suzanne was a damaged child, and she has grown into a damaged woman. For seven years Carl has protected her from her terrors, sheltered her from the world for which she seems ill-equipped, but when a series of poison pen letters disturb long-buried ghosts, Suzanne and Carl's carefully guarded world explodes with shocking consequences.
Engrossing, chilling and utterly compelling, A Deep Deceit is a tour de force of sexual intrigue and obsessive love with a startling sting in its tail.

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WPC Braintree was despatched upstairs. Carter looked carefully around the dining room and made something of a show of peering under the table. I pulled one of the chairs back from the old table and sat down to wait. It wouldn’t take long to search Rose Cottage, that was for certain.

Carter began to head for the kitchen. Just in time I remembered that I had not replaced the flagstone. ‘Careful,’ I warned. ‘The cellar’s open.’

‘What’s down there anyway?’ he asked.

I explained about the old forgotten cellar, which Carl and I had discovered and which we used as a store-room.

‘Right, better have a gander, then.’ I could see him through the kitchen door bending over looking down into the hole in the floor. ‘Can’t see a darned thing; pitch black down there. Gotta torch?’ he called.

I joined him in the kitchen, picked up the torch, still sitting quite obviously where I had left it on the worktop as it happened, and passed it to him. He climbed down the ladder and shone it meticulously into every corner. Completely unnecessary. It was, after all, very small and all that was left in it were the few discarded bits and pieces from Carl’s studio and our old Christmas decorations. Clearly, there was nowhere for anyone to hide.

After emerging up the ladder, he made his way out into the backyard, He asked for a key to Carl’s studio, which I gave him even though you could actually see into it well enough from outside through the big windows that ran along its entire length.

Eventually he seemed satisfied and WPC Braintree had by then come down from upstairs to announce, predictably, that there was no one up there either, nor anything of any interest.

‘Right,’ said DC Carter. ‘I don’t think you should stay here, Mrs Peters.’

‘Why ever not?’ I asked.

Carter sighed. ‘Because your husband is a dangerous man. He has already held you in captivity. He could well be intending to harm you.’

I still could not get my head around it. I listened in amazement.

‘Have you anywhere you could go?’ asked WPC Braintree.

I could only think of one place: poor Mariette and her mother. They really didn’t deserve to be lumbered with me again and in any case I wasn’t at all sure that was what I wanted, either. ‘I’d much rather stay here,’ I said. ‘I’m sure Carl won’t hurt me. Anyway, I doubt he’ll even try to come back to the cottage. He must know that you’d be looking here...’

‘Mrs Peters, if there’s one thing I’ve learned in thirty years of policing it is that birds always come home to roost.’ DC Carter sounded weary.

‘Pardon?’ I said.

Carter sighed again. ‘People escape, build a new identity, all of that, but they can’t shrug off the past.’ He was echoing Rob Partridge and, whatever my reservations about both policemen, I had to accept that they presumably had some experience of the situation I had suddenly found myself in. I had none.

Carter was still talking. ‘... You put people on witness protection schemes, resettle them with a new name, new history, new home, the lot. All they want to do is go back where they came from. They know it’s bloody dangerous but they don’t seem able to stop themselves. You’d be surprised how often they take themselves off back to their old stamping grounds. Happens all the time.’

‘Look, I’ll be fine...’ I suddenly longed to be alone.

‘Mrs Peters, I don’t think you quite understand. I’m not asking you, I’m telling you. I can’t take responsibility for your safety if you stay here.’

It was my turn to sigh. ‘All right, all right,’ I said.

‘Now, is there someone you’d like to call?’

I nodded dumbly. He passed me his mobile phone. I called Mariette.

She had been in the library all day and had not heard the news. ‘I just don’t believe it, Suzanne,’ she exclaimed. ‘Are you all right?’

‘Of course I’m all right,’ I said. ‘It’s just that the police won’t let me stay here. They think Carl’s dangerous. It’s nonsense, of course...’

‘I don’t think it’s nonsense,’ said Mariette. ‘He is dangerous. He kidnapped you, tied you up and drugged you, for God’s sake. He killed his own daughter, didn’t he?’

Why did everybody have to keep telling me these things? Did they think I didn’t know?

‘Of course you must come to us. I’ll call Mum, and I’ll meet you there.’ Mariette hung up before I could make polite noises about not having to leave work early for me.

‘Right,’ said Carter. ‘Pack what you want, only be quick.’

I nodded glumly.

‘I’ll close that trapdoor up for you,’ he added.

I began to climb the stairs and could hear him in the kitchen dragging the ladder up from the cellar.

Then his mobile telephone rang.

‘Right,’ he said. His favourite word, it seemed. I heard his footsteps clumping through the dining room. ‘Sorry, Mrs Peters, we’ve got to go right away,’ he shouted up the stairs. ‘Can’t wait for you to pack any more.’

I had got as far as picking up a small bag and throwing my nightclothes into it. Obediently I trotted downstairs carrying just that. ‘What’s happened?’ I asked.

Carter and WPC Braintree had gone into a huddle in a corner of the dining room. They ignored me at first.

‘Tell me, for goodness’ sake,’ I shouted. I knew that I sounded hysterical, I was beginning to feel hysterical.

Carter turned to face me. ‘Mrs Peters, please... calm down.’

‘Just tell me what’s going on, then I’ll calm down.’

Carter appeared to decide to take the route of least resistance. Something that came fairly naturally to him, I reckoned.

‘It’s your husband. A lorry driver reckons he picked him up and took him to Plymouth, just before we got the roadblocks set up. Must have moved damned fast. Trucker reported it to Plymouth nick when he heard the news and Carl’s description on the radio...’

They drove me down the hill to Mariette’s house in Fore Street. All along the way I pleaded with them to take me to Plymouth.

DC Carter had had about enough of me, I think. ‘What earthly good would that do?’

‘If Carl’s there I’d find him, I know I would,’ I said, although I knew I was being ridiculous.

Brenda Powell was waiting for us. She must have been looking out of the window because she opened the front door as soon as our car drew to a halt outside her house. Why did I never seem to be allowed to make my own choices, I wondered, and was immediately ashamed of myself because both she and her daughter had been so kind to me.

Carter did not budge from the driver’s seat when I got out of the car. Neither did he shut down the engine. Carol Braintree, who had been sitting in the back, quickly clambered out and installed herself in the front passenger seat as soon as I vacated it.

‘C’mon, my luvver,’ said Mariette’s mum. Then she stepped forward and wrapped her arms round me. Not for the first time I wondered what it must be like to have a mother like Brenda Powell. I had been loved, no question of that, but I was only just beginning to realise that both the people who had loved me so much, Gran and Carl, had also wanted to control me. Did Mrs Powell want to control her daughter, or even me? I didn’t think so. I was just finding any kind of concern for my well-being oppressive.

‘Don’t worry, I’ll look after her,’ Mrs Powell called after the two police officers, who seemed to consider their duty done as far as I was concerned, and had already roared off up the hill before Mariette’s mum and I had even begun to retreat inside the house.

‘Please let me know what happens,’ I shouted at the top of my voice. But I doubt they even heard me.

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