Alison is as close to anonymous as she can get: with no ties, no home, a backroom job, hers is a life lived under the radar. She's a nobody; she has no-one and that's how she wants it.
But once Alison was someone else: once she was Esme Grace, a teenager whose bedroom sat at the top of a remote and dilapidated house on the edge of a bleak estuary. A girl whose family, if not happy, exactly, was no unhappier than anyone else's—or so she thought.
Then one night a terrible thing happened in the crooked house, a nightmare of violence out of which Alison emerged the only witness and sole survivor and from which she has been running ever since. Only when she meets academic Paul Bartlett does Alison realize that if she's to have any chance of happiness, she has to return to her old life and confront the darkness that worked its way inside her family and has pursued her ever since.
Extract:
But once Alison was someone else: once she was Esme Grace, a teenager whose bedroom sat at the top of a remote and dilapidated house on the edge of a bleak estuary. A girl whose family, if not happy, exactly, was no unhappier than anyone else's—or so she thought.
Then one night a terrible thing happened in the crooked house, a nightmare of violence out of which Alison emerged the only witness and sole survivor and from which she has been running ever since. Only when she meets academic Paul Bartlett does Alison realize that if she's to have any chance of happiness, she has to return to her old life and confront the darkness that worked its way inside her family and has pursued her ever since.
*****
Extract:
Thirteen
Years Ago
When it
starts again she is face down on her bed with her hands over her ears and she
feels it more than hears it. A vibration through the mattress, through the
flowered duvet, through the damp pillow she’s buried her face in. It comes up
from below, through the house’s lower three storeys. BOOM. She feels
it in her throat.
Wait,
listen: one, two, three. BOOM.
Is this how
it begins?
Leaning on
the shelf over the desk, wooden letters spelling her name jitter against the
wall. They were a present on her seventh birthday, jigsawn by Dad, E.S.M.E. The
family’d just moved in, unloading their stuff outside this house they called
the crooked house, she and Joe, as the sun went down over the dark marsh
inland. Creek House to Crooked House, after the tilt to its roofline, its
foundations unsteady in the mud, out on its own in the dusk. Mum was gigantic
with the twins, a Zeppelin staggering inside with bags in each hand. We
need more space now, is how they told her and Joe they were moving. It was
seven years ago, seven plus seven. Now she’s fourteen, nearly. Fourteen next
week.
Ah, go
on, Gina had said. Just
down it. Then, changing tack, You can give it me back, then.
Esme’s been
back an hour. She isn’t even sure Joe saw her pass the sitting-room door,
jammed back on the sofa and frowning under his headphones: since he hit sixteen
he’s stopped looking anyone in the eye. The girls, a two-headed caterpillar in
an old sleeping bag on the floor, wriggled back from in front of the TV,
twisting to see her. Letty’s lolling head, the pirate gap between Mads’s front
teeth as she grins up at her, knowing. She mouths something. Boyfriend.
Esme turns her face away and stomps past.
Mum opening
the kitchen door a crack, leaning back from the counter to see who it is.
Frowning like she can’t place her, she gets like that a lot these days. What
are you doing back? Esme doesn’t answer: she is taking the stairs
three at a time, raging.
Outside the
dark presses on the window, the squat power station stands on the horizon, the
church out on the spit that looks no bigger than a shed from here, the village
lights distant. Make all the noise you like out here, Dad’s always saying, no
one can hear.
Hands over
your ears and never tell.
On the bed
she lies very still, willing it to go, to leave the house. Whatever it is.
Her hands
were already over her ears, before it started. Why? The boom expands in her
head and she can’t even remember now. All she knows is, she was standing at the
window, now she’s on the bed.
She
grapples with detail. She heard a car. There were voices below in the yard and,
after, noises downstairs. Something scraping across the floor, a low voice
muttering and she didn’t want to deal with it, with his questions; she flung
herself down on the bed and the tears began to leak into the pillow. She would
have put on her music but she didn’t want him to know she was back.
Now. A
sound, a human sound, just barely: a wounded shout, a gasp, trying to climb to
a scream that just stops, vanishes. And in the silence after it she hears
breathing, heavy and ragged; up through three storeys and a closed door, it is
as if the house is breathing. And Esme is off the bed, scrabbling for a place to
hide.
BOOM.
On the
marsh behind the house there are the remains of an old hut with a little rotted
jetty. The tide is beginning to come up, gurgling in its channels, trickling
across the mud that stretches inland, flooding the clumps of samphire and marsh
grass and the buried timbers. Behind her the house stands crooked in the wind
freshening off the estuary.
The lights
of the police cars come slowly, bumping down the long track, an ambulance, the
cab lit. It is three in the morning but the inky dark is already leaching to
grey behind the church on the spit. One of the coldest June nights on record,
and it takes them a while to find her. She doesn’t make a sound.
*****
Praise for The Crooked House
'A tense, gripping thriller, and utterly compulsive. I loved it' S J WATSON
‘A spooky, gripping and affecting story’ GUARDIAN
‘Echoes of Christie and du Maurier in this fine thriller’ SUNDAY TIMES
‘Atmospheric and eerily menacing, this cracking psychological thriller demands to be read with the lights on’ PSYCHOLOGIES
‘Compulsive, unsettling and scary as hell’ SUNDAY MIRROR
‘Demands to be devoured in one sitting’ GOOD HOUSEKEEPING
‘A spooky, gripping and affecting story’ GUARDIAN
‘Echoes of Christie and du Maurier in this fine thriller’ SUNDAY TIMES
‘Atmospheric and eerily menacing, this cracking psychological thriller demands to be read with the lights on’ PSYCHOLOGIES
‘Compulsive, unsettling and scary as hell’ SUNDAY MIRROR
‘Demands to be devoured in one sitting’ GOOD HOUSEKEEPING
*****
With thanks to Little, Brown Books I have a signed copy of The Crooked House up for grabs.
+Giveaway Open to Entrants in the UK & Republic of Ireland.
+Winners details will be supplied to the publicity department at Little, Brown UK.
+Prize will be sent directly from Little, Brown UK.
+I bear no responsibility for prizes lost or undelivered - alternative prizes will not be offered.
+This is a sponsored giveaway: please refer to T&C's for further information.
+Winners details will be supplied to the publicity department at Little, Brown UK.
+Prize will be sent directly from Little, Brown UK.
+I bear no responsibility for prizes lost or undelivered - alternative prizes will not be offered.
+This is a sponsored giveaway: please refer to T&C's for further information.
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