Хилари Боннер - A Deep Deceit

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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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‘Who told you? Was it someone who knew Carl... I mean Harry.’

‘I don’t think so,’ said Jim. ‘I was just told Frank Harvey is the man who definitely knew him, knew the family. There’s a story...’

He paused.

‘Go on,’ I coaxed.

Jim looked uncertain. ‘No,’ he said eventually. ‘You should get it from the horse’s mouth, I reckon.’

Frank Harvey looked more like a retired farmer than a doctor. And one who had led a pretty hard life at that. He was very tall and thin, and had a weathered, leathery brown face, framed by wisps of white hair, from which shone the brightest of blue eyes. It was difficult to guess his age but I thought he must be well over seventy.

He had not been difficult to find. The barman pointed him out at once. He was sitting on a bar stool with a bottle of beer and a newspaper in front of him.

I introduced myself as Suzanne Adams. He put down his bottle of beer and peered at me curiously.

‘Would you like another?’ I enquired.

He nodded. ‘English?’

I confirmed that both Mariette and I were.

‘Where ya from?’

I told him St Ives. He asked where that was.

‘Cornwall.’

‘Anywhere near a place called Penzance?’

‘About seven miles.’

He nodded, removed the pair of heavy framed spectacles he was wearing. ‘Can’t see to read without these danged things on but can’t see beyond a yard when I got ’em on either.’ He stopped abruptly. ‘I should have known it,’ he murmured.

‘Known what?’ I asked.

‘No, you first.’

‘I’m looking for someone,’ I said. ‘His name’s Harry Mendleson... I think you knew him once.’

Frank Harvey nodded, almost as if this was what he had expected to hear. ‘So you’re Suzanne,’ he murmured, still staring at me. ‘Why isn’t he with you?’

I was startled. ‘What do you mean?’ I asked.

Frank Harvey took a long pull at the neck of his beer bottle. ‘I had a letter from him a few weeks back, first thing I’ve heard in fifteen years. Said he wanted to get in touch again, maybe wanted to come back here. And there was someone he wanted to bring, someone he loved, someone called Suzanne...’

My heart lurched. I hadn’t expected anything like this, not so soon, anyway, and with so little detective work. Thank you, DC Carter, I said to myself, you were right. Maybe, just maybe, Carl was actually here in Key West. ‘But you haven’t seen him? Or have you? Have you seen him, Doctor Harvey? Please tell me.’ I was falling over my words.

The old man was too slow for me. ‘Not in fifteen years.’ he said. ‘Not since it all happened and he went away. He telephoned me then, from Miami airport, to say goodbye. Then I never heard a thing, not until this letter. I was fond of Harry...’

‘I have to find him,’ I blurted out. ‘He’s gone missing. I... I don’t think he’s well. Can you tell me anything that might help me find him.’

The doctor seemed to consider my words carefully. But he did not speak.

I realised I had no choice if I was going to get him to trust me, so I filled the silence by telling him, as briefly as I thought I could get away with, about how I had met Carl, about Robert’s death, about how Carl came to be charged with abduction and how, finally, he had escaped from the court jail in Penzance.

Frank Harvey looked sad but not all that surprised. ‘Still running, then,’ he murmured. He leaned closer to me. ‘The years you were together, were they good years?’

‘Well, yes, mostly, sort of...’ I mumbled.

‘Mostly, sort of,’ he repeated. ‘That sounds like Harry. Don’t suppose he ever let you out of his sight, did he?’

I had to agree that was so, more or less. But I was somehow instantly defensive. ‘I know what happened in Key Largo. I know why he had to leave the States. We’ve been to Largo, talked to Claire and to the policeman, Theodore Grant, who investigated the case. But I am convinced there must be something more that they weren’t telling me.’

‘Are you indeed? Well, you might be right, young lady. I don’t suppose either of them told you that Claire Mendleson’s affair was with Theodore Grant and that he was Harry’s closest friend, did they?’

I turned to Mariette. ‘There, I knew there was more. No wonder Carl, I mean Harry, went off the rails.’

Mariette didn’t look impressed. ‘If every man whose wife had an affair with his best friend started locking her up there’d be a lot fewer people walking the streets, that’s for sure,’ she said.

I frowned at her. But Frank Harvey had started to talk again. He sounded tired. ‘Claire once complained to me that Harry used to call up the stores when she went shopping to check she was where she was supposed to be. Couldn’t have been easy for a woman like that. Maybe you can’t blame her for turning against him.’ He sighed deeply. ‘Harry was always off the rails, I guess, Suzanne. I was fond of him, still am. He’s not a bad man, is Harry. Too much history, that’s all...’

I waited expectantly.

Frank Harvey was staring into my eyes. ‘You don’t know do you?’

‘Know what?’

What happened here in Key West when Harry was just a teenager, the baggage he’s always had to carry with him?’

He started talking then about the old days, about Carl’s father, Billy Mendleson and how he had never had the talent as a painter that he thought he had and how he had taken to drowning his sorrows in drink and drugs. ‘Bit like we’re all inclined to do in Key West,’ the doctor muttered ruefully, lifting his bottle again.

I was almost impatient at first because he talked so slowly and much of this I knew already. Not all of it, though. Not by a long way, as it turned out.

‘Billy took to knocking young Harry’s mother around in the end,’ he related. ‘She denied it for years, of course. Why do women always try to hide it?’

He shook his head sorrowfully. I didn’t know the answer, but I knew he was right. I always used to try to hide what Robert Foster did to me. He had expected me to and I did my best to do so. I began to realise why Carl had been so exceptionally moved when he discovered how badly Robert had beaten me.

Frank Harvey was still speaking. ‘Harry had an awful childhood. His father ignored him most of the time, gave him the odd clout too, I shouldn’t wonder, and his mother was too caught up with coping with his father to take much notice of him. They both took solace in drugs. Harry used to try and help his mother; from when he was a little lad, he did what he could. But I never thought she wanted helping.

‘Harry was a bright kid, though, and a much more talented artist than his father was ever going to be. Billy wouldn’t admit it, of course. True, though. There was a schoolteacher who encouraged the boy and, right against the odds, Harry won a place at a top art school in Miami.

‘He did well there and he didn’t come home for almost a year. Can’t say I blamed him. Then he got a call from his mother begging him to come back and talk to his father. The beatings were getting worse, that was the truth of it, but she told Harry she wanted his help to get his father off the drugs, to get him to seek help.

‘Harry came home all right. But he took one look at his father and saw an even more hopeless case than he remembered. He told his mother she had to leave. Harry was still only eighteen, but he’d had to grow up fast. He wanted his mother to go back to Miami with him. He was selling paintings and he had a grant. He had a two-roomed flat and they’d manage, he told her. She’d always hung on to Billy like a limpet in spite of everything, but she agreed in the end. Harry wanted them to take off without telling anyone, but Jeana said she had to tell Billy. Couldn’t just leave him. Couldn’t live with herself if she did that.

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