Melanie Raabe - The Trap

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The Trap: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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In this twisted debut thriller, a reclusive author sets the perfect trap for her sister's murderer — but is he really the killer? For 11 years, the bestselling author Linda Conrads has mystified fans by never setting foot outside her home. Haunted by the unsolved murder of her younger sister-who she discovered in a pool of blood-and the face of the man she saw fleeing the scene, Linda's hermit existence helps her cope with debilitating anxiety. But the sanctity of her oasis is shattered when she sees her sister's murderer on television. Hobbled by years of isolation, Linda resolves to use the plot of her next novel to lay an irresistible trap for the man. As the plan is set in motion and the past comes rushing back, Linda's memories — and her very sanity — are called into question. Is this man a heartless killer or merely a helpless victim?

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I remember it precisely. He was there. I saw it in his eyes; he recognized me as well. And he hated me for bringing it all back to him. He was there. He killed Anna. Maybe I was wrong all along. Maybe Anna wasn’t an accidental victim. Maybe the two of them knew each other. Just because I didn’t know anything about an affair doesn’t mean there was no affair. Who knows? Perhaps a jealous lover. A stalker. A lunatic.

It’s YOU who’s the lunatic. Maybe you’re schizophrenic. Or have a brain tumor. Maybe that’s what’s causing the pain — and the dizziness and the music.

That ghastly music.

I look out the window. The water glistens and sparkles, and a fair distance away, on the eastern shore of the lake, something stirs. There’s a movement of branches, and it steps out from between the trees, majestic and incredibly big: a red deer — dignified and beautiful, its head held high. I catch my breath and watch it as a painter might, drinking in its movements, its grace, its vigor. For a few moments it stands motionless in the light mist that is rising from the lake, and then it vanishes again between the trees.

So often have I sat here in the hope of seeing an animal, and so seldom have I actually seen one. And a red deer? Never. The animal seems to me like a sign.

There’s no such thing as signs. You see things that aren’t there. For a long time, I remain sitting at the window in the big peaceful house that is my entire world, looking out, hoping that the red deer will return — knowing full well that it won’t, but sitting and waiting all the same. I wouldn’t know what else to do. I sit there, and the sight of the lake, its surface rippled by the wind, soothes my mind. The sun rises higher and higher, unmoved by the chaos that has descended on my world. It has its own world to shine on.

The sun is about 4,500 million years old. I know that kind of thing; I’ve had a lot of time to read over the past ten or eleven years. It’s already shone on a great deal of things. Its morning rays warm me through the glass. It’s as if somebody were touching me and I relish it.

It’s a lovely day. Maybe I can forget what I’ve been through and simply be grateful for this day, for the edge of the woods and the lake and the sunshine. The sun rises higher; it’s not tired, even after 4,500 million years. There’s nothing I have to do, and I’m thinking that I could sit here forever, calm and serene — that it’s best if I don’t budge so much as an inch, because even the slightest change might destroy everything — when I hear it. The music.

Love, love, love.

No. Please, please, no.

Love, love, love.

Not again. Please, I can’t stand it anymore.

I let out a dry sob, curl up on my chair and press my hands to my ears.

The music vanishes. I whimper and hold my head so tight that it hurts, while my heart pumps fear through my body. I don’t know whether it was the despair or the pain or my extreme physical and mental exhaustion, but it’s only now that it occurs to me: if I’m only imagining the music — if the music is only in my head and has only been in my head all along — then how is it possible that it’s silenced as soon as I put my hands over my ears? I take my hands off my ears and listen. Nothing. I’m almost disappointed. I was beginning to think…

Love, love, love.

There it is again. I feel dizzy, like every time I hear it. But this time it sounds different. It swells and fades away and…moves about. The music is moving.

I get up from the chair with aching joints and try to get my bearings. Then, all of a sudden, I understand. The tilted windows all over the house…The music is coming from outside. It’s not a recording of the Beatles; it’s…whistling. Somebody is creeping around the house whistling.

My heart begins to race. Is it Victor Lenzen, come back to kill me after all? That doesn’t make sense, I immediately correct myself; he had ample opportunity.

What a thought. Victor Lenzen is innocent and has proved it, however hard I may be finding it to concede the fact.

Then who was it? On numb legs I step closer to the window, press my face up against the cold glass and try to peer around the corner. I can’t see anybody. The whistling grows fainter — whoever it is has moved away from me. I hurry next door to the dining room, telling myself I’m going to miss him again, fling open the door — and our eyes meet.

27

SOPHIE

Sophie couldn’t stop her teeth chattering as she walked home through the night streets, chilled to the bone and soaked through. She had sat for a long time on that park bench. Several times she had thought she’d seen a shadow break ranks and come toward her, but it had always turned out to be her nerves playing tricks on her. There was nothing there; the only shadow she had set eyes on had been her own.

Sophie turned into her street. It frightened her to think of going into her flat and spending another sleepless night with those horrible pictures in her head.

She unlocked the door to the building, stepped into the hall and started to climb the stairs. She could hear something on the next floor. Her pulse quickened. There was a rustling noise on the landing above her. Somebody was outside her flat.

Sophie’s heart fired a few painful volleys; she could feel the weight of the pepper spray in her coat pocket and she forced herself to keep her nerve — only a few more steps, then she’d be able to see around the corner and the landing outside her flat would come into view. Another eight steps: what would she see? Another seven: the shadow tampering with the lock? Another six: a neighbor dropping off a parcel she’d taken in for her? In the middle of the night? Another five: the annoying little dog from downstairs that often got out? Another four: no, the shadow. Another three: the shadow with his white eyes. Another two…Sophie collided head-on with a man hurtling down the stairs toward her.

“Sophie!” said Jonas Weber.

“Sorry,” gasped Sophie. “Oh God!”

“No, I’m sorry. I didn’t want to scare you. I rang you about a dozen times, and when you didn’t pick up, I got worried.”

“I’d put my phone on silent,” said Sophie. “How long have you been waiting here?”

“Not long. Maybe ten minutes. Where have you been?” Sophie didn’t reply.

“Would you like to come in?” she asked. “If we talk out here on the stairs we’ll wake the whole building.”

A little while later, they were facing one another across the kitchen table, Sophie in clean dry clothes, both of them with a hot cup of tea.

“Those damn flowers,” she said. “I can’t believe I didn’t realize sooner.”

We should have realized sooner. It’s our job, not yours.” Sophie sipped her tea, studying Jonas over her cup. He avoided her gaze.

“What are you keeping from me, Jonas?”

He looked at her with his green eye and his brown eye.

“You need to call it a day, Sophie.”

Furious, Sophie slammed her fist down on the table.

“I can’t, damn it!” she screamed. “Since my sister was murdered, I’ve been suffocating! I can’t breathe again until I’ve found him!”

She fought back her tears. Jonas gently took her hand.

“You know, Sophie,” he said, “I understand you. If this had happened to me, I’d want to do something too. I understand that you feel guilty. All survivors feel guilty. But it’s not your fault.”

Sophie’s eyes filled with tears again.

“Everyone thinks it’s my fault. Everyone!” she sobbed. It did her good to say it out loud at last.

“My parents and…”

“No one believes that,” Jonas interrupted her. “Only you.”

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