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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She had tossed her head in familiar fashion, sending a waft of smoke-laden whiskey fumes across the churchyard, and set off over the wet grass. But after a few steps she stopped abruptly and swung round to face me again. She was wearing a big shiny black cape instead of a raincoat. It billowed out behind her as she moved, making her appearance quite dramatic. ‘Another thing,’ she instructed in that familiarly centurion way of hers, one arm stretched out before her, finger pointed towards me. ‘Don’t let this ruin your life. That’s the last thing Carl would have wanted. Rise above it, Suzanne. Have a good life. Be happy. You owe him that. After all, it’s all he ever wanted for you, isn’t it?’ I studied her retreating back in amazement.

I continued to receive support from my friends in St Ives throughout the weeks and months that followed the funeral. I had never known that kind of support before and I had frankly not realised that I had friends, apart, of course, from Mariette and her mother. Small towns are like that. The gossip can drive you out of your mind, but the people do rally round in times of need.

I never saw Will Jones again. Apparently he left St Ives soon after Carl’s funeral – which fortunately he made no attempt to attend – and a little later ‘For Sale’ signs appeared in the window of the Logan Gallery and outside his bungalow. Mariette heard on the jungle drums that Fenella Austen had popped round to the gallery, along with two particularly brawny fishermen drinking pals, and had a quiet word with him.

You never know quite what to believe when it comes to local gossip, but I found I could easily imagine the scene and I doubted there had been anything very quiet about it. Fenella Austen in full flow was enough to frighten anyone off, with or without muscle-men to back her up. I was beginning to have to revise my opinion of St Ives’s raddled doyenne artist.

Apart from taking a few days off after the shock of Carl’s body being found in Rose Cottage and the week’s holiday I arranged for the funeral – following the autopsy, which had predictably confirmed that Carl had died of dehydration – I carried on working at the Archive Centre. It kept my mind busy and gave me a small income to supplement the interest on Robert’s legacy, the bulk of which, with advice from yet another friend of Mariette’s, I had invested.

One way and another all that had happened in my life seemed finally to have given me a strength I did not know that I was capable of. When I look back on my time with Carl now, and the way it ended, I do not do so with the degree of distress I would expect. Instead, I remember the great love and happiness that we shared.

‘Not many of us get that lucky,’ Fenella Austen had said. And I knew she was right.

It has been almost a year, now, since Carl’s body was discovered. DS Perry has become a friend. Nowadays I call her Julie. She is bright and down to earth, and has experienced so much. She has proven to be a terrific shoulder to lean on. Mariette remains as supportive as ever. And fun. God, how I need to have fun. Out of the blue she has become engaged to marry her fitness instructor, although there’s something about the way she talks of him that makes me wonder just how serious she is.

Perhaps curiously, I never really considered leaving St Ives. I reckoned I had done enough running. And in any case, where else would I have gone?

I have bought myself a tiny terraced house not far from the flat I rented off the Hale Road. It is even smaller than Rose Cottage, but has been recently modernised to quite a high standard. The one bedroom is fully fitted in smart pale oak, and the kitchen even has a microwave and a small dishwasher. I find it quite luxurious. Again there is no sea view, I could not afford anywhere with one if I wanted to keep enough of Robert’s legacy invested to give me some kind of financial security. But I am content knowing that this is my space in which I can make my own decisions.

I am learning to drive. To have both a car and a home of my own seems to me the ultimate in independence. In spite of the horrors and the great sadnesses of my past I am almost happy. I no longer have nightmares. I have learned to play tennis and I am taking swimming lessons. After work I often go to the cinema with my new friends or for a drink in the pub or to a restaurant for a meal. I am now leading the ordinary, perhaps rather dull, unexciting life I had always yearned for – but it is a normal life. And so many of the simple pleasures and pursuits that I enjoy were denied me by my various ‘protectors’.

It’s hard to explain what that means when you have spent a lifetime believing that all those kinds of things were always going to be impossible for you.

The only thing absent is a lover and I do miss that. But I can put up with it. I have to put up with it, because I am not yet ready to cope with that sort of intimacy. And I think it will be a long time before I am.

A single dad, unusually perhaps these days a widower rather than a divorce, lives next door. I have been to the cinema with him once or twice and out to dinner and for a drink several times when he has been able to get a babysitter for his four-year-old daughter. He is good company and he knows what pain is, having nursed his wife through a long terminal illness. I enjoy being with him and am growing quite fond of him. Mariette teases me relentlessly and refers to him as ‘your chap’.

He isn’t quite that and there has certainly been nothing physical between us so far other than a few brief goodnight kisses. But I like him and I like the fact that he seems to sense that I’m not ready for anything more just yet. Perhaps he isn’t either. I don’t really know.

I do know that Carl is a hard act to follow and I am beginning to understand just how special our relationship was. I no longer think of it as having been founded on a lie. Our feelings were not a lie. Our love was an overwhelming truth and nothing that has happened could ever change that.

Indeed, Carl had loved me so much that it had, in a way, been his final undoing. That was a painful legacy, but there are worse ones.

Nor do I feel guilty any more. In fact, far from it. I sometimes wonder if Carl’s death was not a kind of release. I regret terribly that he died alone and such a dreadful death. But I am no longer sure how much I regret his death in itself. Sometimes I wonder if Carl could ever have coped with the real world instead of the pretend one we had built around us.

Could he ever have sufficiently conquered his obsessiveness in order to share his life with a woman who wanted more than just him, one no longer prepared to live only in his shadow? I would never have been able to go back to being the Suzanne I had been before, the Suzanne he had created. I am now quite sure of that.

Never again would I rely on one human being. Never again would I let a man or anyone else make my decisions for me, let alone run my entire life.

I could never love anyone more than I loved Carl. But now that I have tasted normality and freedom, or as close to it as any of us can get, I realise that nothing less will do.

Imagine being let out of prison. You would never want to go back, would you, however kind the jailer, however warm and pleasant the jail?

That may be a cruel analogy, but it is what my life with Carl became – not just because of his behaviour, but also because of my own belief that I needed to hide, living in fear of discovery for so long, convinced that I could never have the kind of life others enjoyed. I had been imprisoned all right, not only in that awful old shed, but throughout all my time with Carl. It had been at times an almost glorious imprisonment, but an imprisonment nonetheless. And it is only since I accepted this, that I have been able to go forward.

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