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Summary
Summary
From internationally bestselling author of Murder in the Family , a riveting suspense novel about the shocking secrets revealed when a woman is discovered held captive behind a basement wall--and no one is who they appear to be
Do you know what they're hiding in the house next door?
A woman and child are found locked in a basement, barely alive, and unidentifiable: the woman can't speak, there are no missing persons reports that match their profile, and the confused, elderly man who owns the house claims he has never seen them before. The inhabitants of the quiet street are in shock--how could this happen right under their noses? But Detective Inspector Adam Fawley knows nothing is impossible. And no one is as innocent as they seem.
As the police grow desperate for a lead, Fawley stumbles across a breakthrough, a link to a case he worked years before about another young woman and child gone missing, never solved. When he realizes the missing woman's house is directly adjacent to the house in this case, he thinks he might have found the connection that could bring justice for both women. But there's something not quite right about the little boy from the basement, and the truth will send shockwaves through the force that Fawley never could have anticipated.
A deeply unsettling, heart-stopping mystery of long-buried secrets and the monsters who hide in plain sight, In the Dark is the second gripping novel featuring DI Adam Fawley.
Author Notes
Cara Hunter lives and works in Oxford. She also studied for a degree and PhD in English literature at Oxford University.
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Det. Insp. Adam Fawley, the selfdeprecating, ironic narrator of British author Hunter's arresting, unnerving sequel to 2018's Close to Home, leads the investigation into the case of a young woman and a toddler, presumably her son, found imprisoned in the cellar of an old Oxford mansion. The police arrest the house's Alzheimer'safflicted owner, retired professor William Harper, but he claims he knows nothing about them. The unidentified mother and son are taken to a local hospital, where a psychiatrist thinks the mother, who screams when questioned, is suffering from PTSD. The subsequent discovery of a body buried in Harper's garden raises the ante. The painstaking work of Fawley's highly diverse team emerges in transcripts of interrogations, emails, witness interviews, BBC scripts, and other documents that enhance authenticity. Hunter exposes human frailties such as social and governmental missteps and policemen's personal messups while celebrating the essential humanity of those sworn to serve and protect. Readers will eagerly await Fawley's next outing. Agent: Anna Power, Johnson & Alcock (U.K.). (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Hunter's second Adam Fawley procedural after Close to Home (2018) is a tense exploration of manipulation and betrayal. Workmen renovating a semidetached home in a transitioning Oxford, England, neighborhood find a starving woman and a small boy imprisoned in the adjoining home's basement. The homeowner, William Harper, has dementia and angrily denies knowing about the basement prison. The traumatized victim refuses to speak to detectives or see her son. Relying on physical evidence, DI Adam Fawley and his CID team piece together a horrifying narrative: the toddler is linked by DNA to Harper, whose DNA was also found on a mattress in the basement room. Their tidy theory, however, becomes complicated when the body of missing journalist, Hannah Gardiner, is found under Harper's shed. Attempting to quiet doubts about the elderly suspect's ability to kidnap and bury Hannah without witnesses, Fawley's team digs into Hannah's husband's and nanny's accounts of her final days. A solid psychological thriller with carefully developed characters and disturbing, cleverly masked revelations that will appeal to fans of Tana French and Sophie Hannah's procedurals.--Christine Tran Copyright 2018 Booklist
Guardian Review
Chris Morgan Jones has dropped his first name for The Good Sister (Mantle, £16.99), in which Sofia, British Muslim teenager who is alienated from her father, Abraham, and the life in London she sees as corrupt and irreligious, makes the fraught journey to Raqqa in northern Syria. Brimming with zeal, she sees the new caliphate as the greatest goal of her faith. She accepts that marrying a battle-hardened Islamic State fighter is part of her religious duty, as is enduring the hostility of the other jihadi brides from various countries, all confined to a fetid, claustrophobic house that they are not allowed to leave. Its an audacious project for a male English writer, but Sofias visceral chronicle of self-radicalisation is delivered in a persuasive voice. It could have been a literary novel along the lines of Kamila Shamsies award-winning Home Fire, but a tense second strand is added the desperate Abraham, whom she regards as westernised and lost to the faith, travelling to Syria in an attempt to save her. His terrifying encounters with people-traffickers and violent jihadis pulse with tension. But the real achievement of the novel lies in the portrait of a naive young woman realising that the pure religious caliphate she has committed to is a place of betrayal, misogyny and lethal danger. Theres equally topical fare in Zero by Marc Elsberg (Doubleday, £16.99, translated by Simon Pare), already a sizable hit in the authors native Austria and other German-speaking territories. The source of threat here is not a brutal theocracy, but a lifestyle app that promises power and social influence. Journalist Cynthia Bonsant uncovers criminality when she investigates the social media platform Freemee, a Facebook-style enterprise that offers to fulfil subscribers dreams. Cynthia is not the only person concerned about what lies behind the organisation the shadowy activist Zero, high on the wanted lists of several countries, has exposed the dark underbelly of social media giants societal control via the manipulation of data. (Elsberg is nothing if not prescient; this is all pre- Cambridge Analytica Zero was published in Germany in 2014.) Needless to say, Cynthia is soon in the sights of the sinister forces behind Freemee and its battery of surveillance tools, and the final chapters generate a real head of steam. Elsbergs doughty heroine may be cut from a familiar cloth, but this is a thriller with its finger on the zeitgeist. Peter Robinson has now written 25 entries in his DCI Alan Banks series, and the latest, Careless Love (Hodder, £20), is as enthralling a read as the first Banks titles published in the 1980s. This time the detective is investigating two deaths: a university student discovered in an abandoned car on the Yorkshire moors and an elegantly dressed man found at the bottom of a moorland gully, partially devoured by animals. As Banks and his reliable colleague Annie Cabbot struggle to find clues to both deaths, the presence of an old nemesis is slowly revealed a figure who left an indelible mark on both officers. Robinson is prolific, but with each book he manages to ring the changes. Cara Hunters In the Dark (Viking, £7.99) boasts a striking premise: a woman and child are discovered locked in an Oxford basement, both near to death. The ageing resident of the house claims to have no knowledge of either of them, and nor do any other locals. DI Adam Fawley (who appeared to advantage in Hunters Close to Home) is obliged to cut the Gordian knot of a complex mystery in which apparent innocence conceals egregious guilt. Admirers of Jacobean tragedies will find knowing echoes of that genre here, but Hunter incorporates a variety of modern twists. Two very different British thrillers are worthy of attention: the duo who comprise Nicci French, Sean French and Nicci Gerrard, bring their Frieda Klein series to a satisfying end in Day of the Dead (Michael Joseph, £16.99), with the intuitive consultant psychologist finding herself in a nightmare scenario when a criminology student writes a paper about her. Frieda has been in hiding from the serial killer Dean Reeve, who is slaughtering random individuals in a ruthless attempt to flush her out; by halfway through the book, the two are grimly hunting each other. If the Klein series has not possessed the rigour of Frenchs superb standalone novels, it has offered many pleasures, not least the assured development of protagonist Frieda; and it concludes with a suitable flourish. Rod Reynolds is a relative newcomer, but his third novel, Cold Desert Sky (Faber, £12.99), is as assured as its predecessors. Reynolds is a Brit who tackles the outbreak of crime in the US after the second world war, and presents as caustic and unflinching a picture as predecessors such as James Ellroy, a clear influence. Disgraced journalist Charlie Yates, keeping his head down in 1946 Los Angeles, becomes involved with the disappearance of two young Hollywood stars. The trail leads back to the real-life crime boss Bugsy Siegel, who wants Charlie dead. The plot involving Charlie dodging both the FBI and the Mob is much enhanced by an evocative vision of a nascent Las Vegas, the perfect backdrop to the menace of the narrative. - Barry Forshaw.
Library Journal Review
In the historic leafy suburbs of North Oxford, a construction crew renovating a house accidentally breaks through a cellar wall in the house next door to find a young woman and a child imprisoned. Both are starving and psychologically scarred. The elderly homeowner denies any knowledge of the pair or how they came to be trapped in a secret room in his basement. At first, it looks like a horrifyingly familiar case of kidnapping, wrongful imprisonment, and assault-but some facts don't add up. The retired professor's escalating dementia and deteriorating physical condition complicate the case against him. Then there's the unsolved case of a young female BBC reporter, who vanished two years before from a house in the same neighborhood. In the second "DI Fawley" novel, Hunter relates the investigative process of Adam Fawley and his squad through a combination of first- and third-person narration, media coverage, and transcribed police interrogation interviews, gradually unwinding a case that is much more complicated that it initially appears. VERDICT This slow-burning procedural builds with tension as the narrative moves through several cunning twists, offering fans a pleasing follow-up to the first book in the series, Close to Home.-Lindsay Morton, P.L. of Science, San Francisco © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Excerpts
Excerpts
Prologue She opens her eyes to darkness as close as a blindfold. To the heaviness of old dank air that hasn't been breathed for a long time. Her other senses lurch awake. The dripping silence, the cold, the smell. Mildew and something else she can't yet place, something animal and fetid. She moves her fingers, feeling grit and wet under her jeans. It's coming back to her now - how she got here, why this happened. How could she have been so stupid. She stifles the acid rush of panic and tries to sit up, but the movement defeats her. She fills her lungs and shouts, fling- ing echoes against the walls. Shouts and shouts and shouts until her throat is raw. But no one comes. Because no one can hear. She closes her eyes again, feeling hot angry tears seeping down her face. She is rigid with outrage and recrimination and conscious of little else until, in terror, she feels the first sharp little feet start to move across her skin. Someone said, didn't they, that April is the cruellest month. Well, whoever it was, they weren't a detective. Cruelty can happen any time - I know, I've seen it. But the cold and the dark somehow dull the edge. Sunlight and birdsong and blue skies can be brutal in this job. Perhaps it's the contrast that does it. Death and hope. This story starts with hope. May 1st; the first day of spring - real spring. And if you've ever been to Oxford, you'll know: it's all or nothing in this place - when it rains the stone is piss-coloured, but in the light, when the colleges look like they've been carved from cloud, there is no more beautiful place on earth. And I'm just a cynical old copper. As for May Morning, well, that's the city at its most eccentric, its most defiantly 'itself'. Pagan and Christian and a bit mad, and it's hard to tell, a lot of the time, which is which. Choirboys singing in the sunrise on the top of a tower. Hurdy-gurdy bands jostling the all-night burger vans. The pubs open at 6 a.m., and half the student population is still pissed from the night before. Even the sober citizens of North Oxford turn out en masse with flowers in their hair (and you think I'm joking). There were over 25,000 people there last year. One of them was a bloke dressed as a tree. I think you get the picture. So, one way or another it's a big day in the police calendar. But it's a long straw on the uniform roster, not a short one. The early start can be a bit of a killer, but there's rarely any trouble, and we get plied with coffee and bacon sandwiches. Or at least we were, the last time I did it. But that was when I was still in uniform. Before I became a detective; before I made DI. But this year, it's different. This year, it's not just the early start that's the killer. * * * By the time Mark Sexton reaches the house he's nearly an hour late. It should have been a clear run at that time of the morning but the traffic on the M40 was nose to tail, and the queue backed up all the way down the Banbury Road. And when he turns into Frampton Road there's a builder's truck blocking his drive. Sexton curses, slams the Cayenne into reverse and screeches backwards. Then he flings the car door open and steps out on to the street, narrowly missing a splatter of sick on the tarmac. He looks down in distaste, checking his shoes. What is it with this bloody city this morning? He locks the car, strides up to the front door, then digs into his pockets, looking for his keys. At least the scaffolding's gone up now. The sale took far longer than expected, but it should still be done by Christmas, if they're lucky. He lost out on an auction for a place on the far side of the Woodstock Road, and had to up his bid to get this one, but by the time he's finished, it'll be a bloody gold mine. The rest of the housing market might be treading water, but what with the Chinese and the Russians, prices just never seem to go down in this city. Only an hour from London and a top-notch private school for the boys only three streets away. His wife didn't like the idea of semi-detached but he told her, just look at it - it's bloody enormous. Genuine Victorian, four storeys above ground and a basement he plans to fit out as a state-of-the-art wine cellar and home cinema complex (not that he's told his wife that yet). And only some old git living next door - he's not going to be having many all-night parties, now is he. And yes, his garden is a bit of a state, but they can always stick up some trellis. The landscape designer said something about pleached trees. A grand a pop but it's instant cover. Though even that won't solve the problem out the front. He glances across at the rusting Cortina propped up on bricks outside number 33 and the three bicycles chained to a tree; the pile of rotting pallets and the black plastic sacks spilling empty beer cans on to the pavement. They were there the last time he came, two weeks ago. He'd shoved a note through the door asking the old git to get them moved. Clearly, he hasn't. The door opens. It's Tim Knight, his architect, a roll of plans in hand. He smiles broadly and waves his client in. 'Mr Sexton - good to see you again. I think you're going to be pleased with the progress we've made.' 'I bloody well hope so,' says Sexton, with heavy irony. 'This morning can't get much worse.' 'Let's start at the top.' The two men head up, their footsteps booming on the stripped wood. Upstairs, local radio is on full volume and there are builders in most of the rooms. Two plasterers on the top floor, a plumber in the en-suite bathroom and a specialist window restorer working on the sashes. One or two of the workmen glance over at Sexton but he doesn't make eye contact. He's got his tablet out and is annotating every job, and querying most of them. They end up in the extension out at the back, where the old brick lean-to has been knocked down and a huge double-height glass and metal space is being built in its stead. Beyond the trees sloping down at the bottom of the garden they can just see the Georgian elegance of Crescent Square. Sexton wishes he could have afforded one of those, but hey, the market's gone up 5 per cent since he bought this place, so he's not complaining. He gets the architect to take him through the plans for the kitchen ('Jesus, you don't get much for sixty grand, do you? They don't even throw in a sodding dishwasher'), then he turns, looking for the door to the cellar stairs. Knight looks a little apprehensive. 'Ah, I was coming to that. There's been a bit of a hitch on the cellar.' Sexton's eyes narrow. 'What do you mean, hitch?' 'Trevor rang me yesterday. They've hit an issue with the party wall. We may need a proper legal agreement before we can fix it - whatever we do will affect next door.' Sexton makes a face. 'Oh for fuck's sake, we can't afford to get the bloody lawyers involved. What sort of a sodding problem?' 'They started taking off the plaster so they could chase in the new cabling but some of the brickwork was in a pretty bad way. God knows how long it's been since Mrs Pardew went down there.' 'Stupid old bat,' mutters Sexton, which Knight decides to ignore. This is a very lucrative job. 'Anyway,' he says, 'I'm afraid one of the young lads didn't realize quick enough what he was dealing with. Don't worry, though, we're going to get the structural engineer in tomorrow -' But Sexton is already pushing past him. 'Let me see for my bloody self.' The light bulb on the cellar stairs flickers bleakly as the two of them make their way down. The whole place reeks of mildew. 'Mind where you're treading,' says Knight, 'some of these steps aren't safe. You could break your neck down here in the dark.' 'Have you got a torch?' calls Sexton, a few yards ahead. 'I can't see a bloody thing.' Knight passes one down and Sexton snaps it on. He can see the problem straight away. Paint is blistering from what's left of the old yellowing plaster and, underneath, most of the bricks are crumbling with dry grey mould. There's a crack as wide as his finger from floor to ceiling that wasn't there before. 'Christ, are we going to have to underpin the whole bloody house? How come the surveyor missed this?' Knight looks apologetic. 'Mrs Pardew had units all along that wall. He wouldn't have been able to get behind them.' 'And more to the point, how come no one was monitoring that stupid little tosser who's taken lumps out of my fucking wall -' He picks up one of the builder's tools from the floor and starts poking at the bricks. The architect steps forward. 'Seriously, I wouldn't do that -' A brick falls away, then another, and then a chunk of masonry slips and crashes into dust at their feet. This time, Sexton's shoes don't escape the mess, but he doesn't notice. He's staring, mouth open, at the wall. There's a hole, perhaps two inches wide. And in the gloom beyond, a face. * * * At the St Aldate's police station newly promoted Detective Sergeant Gareth Quinn is on his second coffee and his third round of toast, his expensive tie flipped over one shoulder to keep it out of the crumbs. The expensive tie that goes with the expensive suit and the general aura of being just a bit too smart to be an ordinary copper. And that's smart in both senses of the word, needless to say. The rest of the CID office is half empty; just Chris Gislingham and Verity Everett have arrived so far. The team don't have a big case right now and DI Fawley is out all day at a conference, so it's the rare indulgence of a late start followed by the always-enticing prospect of catching up with the paperwork. There's a moment, dust floating in the sun slanting through the blinds, the rustle of Quinn's newspaper, the smell of coffee. And then the phone rings. It's 9.17. Quinn reaches over and picks it up. 'CID.' Then, 'Shit. You sure?' Gislingham and Everett look up. Gislingham, who's always described as 'sturdy' and 'solid', and not just because he's getting a bit chunky round the middle. Gislingham, who - unlike Quinn - hasn't made DS and, given his age, probably won't now. But don't judge him on that. Every CID team needs a Gislingham, and if you were drowning, he's the one you'd want on the other end of the rope. As for Everett, she's someone else you can't afford to judge on appearances: she may look like Miss Marple must have done at thirty-five, but she's every bit as relentless. Or as Gislingham always puts it, Ev was definitely a bloodhound in a previous life. Quinn's still talking into the phone. 'And there's definitely no answer next door? OK. No - we're on it. Tell uniform to meet us there, and make sure they bring at least one female officer.' Gislingham's already reaching for his jacket. Quinn puts the phone down and takes a last bite of his toast as he gets to his feet. 'That was the switchboard. Someone called from Frampton Road - says there's a girl in the cellar next door.' 'In the cellar?' says Everett, her eyes widening. 'Someone knocked through the wall by mistake. There's an old bloke living in the house, apparently. But they can't raise him.' 'Oh fuck.' 'Yup. That's about the size of it.' When they pull up outside the house a crowd is already gathering. Some of them are clearly the builders from number 31, glad of any excuse to stop working that won't get them more shit from Sexton; others are probably neighbours, and thereÕs a scatter of revellers with flowers in their hats and cans of lager in hand who look decidedly the worse for wear. The slightly surreal atmosphere isnÕt helped by the life-size plastic cow pulled up by the kerb, draped in a floral tablecloth with daffodils round its horns. A couple of Morris men have started an impromptu performance on the pavement. 'Blimey,' says Gislingham as Quinn switches off the engine. 'Do you think we can get them for parking that thing without a permit?' They get out and walk across the road, just as two patrol cars draw up on the other side. One of the women in the crowd wolf whistles at Quinn and falls about laughing when he turns to look at her. Three uniformed officers join them from the cars. One of them has a battering ram; the female officer is Erica Somer. Gislingham spots a glance between her and Quinn, and sees the smile in her eyes at his embarrassment. So that's how it is, he thinks. He'd suspected those two might have a thing going. Like he said to Janet the other night, he's caught the two of them at the coffee machine together far too many times to be just coincidence. Not that he can blame Quinn - she's a looker all right, even in uniform and sensible shoes. He just hopes she doesn't expect too much: if Quinn was a dog, no one would call him Fido. 'Do we know the name of the old man who lives here?' asks Quinn. 'A Mr William Harper, Sarge,' says Somer. 'We've called the paramedics, just in case there really is a girl there.' 'I know what I bloody well saw.' Quinn turns. A man in the sort of suit Quinn would buy if he had the money. Slim cut, silk weave, and a claret satin lining that glares with a purple check shirt and a pink spotted tie. He has 'City' written all over him. As well as 'Very Pissed Off'. 'Look,' the man says, 'how long is all this going to take? I have a meeting with my lawyer at three and if the traffic's as bad getting back -' 'Sorry, sir, and you are?' 'Mark Sexton. Next door - I own it.' 'So you were the one who called us?' 'Yeah, that was me. I was down in the cellar with my architect and part of the wall gave way. There's a girl in there. I know what I saw and, unlike this rabble, I'm not half-cut. Ask Knight - he saw it too.' 'Right,' says Quinn, gesturing the officer with the battering ram up to the door. 'Let's get on with it. And get that lot on the pavement under control too, will you? It's like something out of the fucking Wicker Man out here.' As Quinn moves away Sexton calls him back. 'Hey - what about my bloody builders - when can they get back in?' Quinn ignores him, but as Gislingham passes he taps him on the shoulder. 'Sorry, mate,' Gislingham says cheerily, 'that posh refurb is just going to have to wait.' On the front step, Quinn pounds on the door. 'Mr Harper! Thames Valley Police. If you're in there, please open the door or we will be forced to break it down.' Excerpted from In the Dark: A Novel by Cara Hunter All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.