Sabtu, 22 Maret 2014

Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

Find the key to improve the quality of life by reading this Maiden Of Inverness, By Arnette Lamb This is a type of book that you require currently. Besides, it can be your preferred publication to review after having this publication Maiden Of Inverness, By Arnette Lamb Do you ask why? Well, Maiden Of Inverness, By Arnette Lamb is a publication that has different characteristic with others. You may not need to recognize that the author is, exactly how well-known the work is. As smart word, never judge the words from that speaks, but make the words as your inexpensive to your life.

Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb



Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

Free Ebook PDF Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

From the New York Times bestselling, award-winning author of Chieftain comes a magnificent new tale of love and intrigue set in the regal and sensual age of medieval Scotland.Barely on the threshold of womanhood, Meridene prepares to assume her responsibilities as the revered Maiden of Inverness, until a sinister act by King Edward I causes Meridene to be betrothed to a lowly butcher’s son.

Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #190953 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-03-10
  • Released on: 2015-03-10
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

From School Library Journal YA?Meridene is destined by birth to turn the rule of Scotland over to her husband, but her cruel father would rather kill her than give up his kingdom. His enemy, King Edward of England, arranged the marriage between Meridene and Revas, a butcher's son, when she was only a child. For her safety, she is raised in an English convent, but 13 years later Revas kidnaps her to fulfill the legacy that will enable him to become king. He also wants her to learn to love the Scottish people, their culture, and himself. Lamb has provided a detailed, entertaining plot set in 14th-century Scotland with well-drawn central characters. Although somewhat similar to the novels of Julie Garwood, the dialogue is not as witty and the story itself moves at a slower pace.Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review By tradition, the Maiden of Inverness is the only one who can demand the sword of Chapling from her father and place it in the hands of her husband, making him king of the Highlands. Meridene Macgillivray is by birth the Maiden of Inverness, but for the past thirteen years she has lived in England. Used as a political pawn by the king, she was married to the butcher's son at the age of eight, then sent to England for her protection. Her father would rather see her dead than married to someone not of his choosing. She despises her homeland and all the people in it, even her family. When she is kidnapped by her husband and brought back to Scotland, she hates him most of all. Revas Macduff was born a commoner, but he aspired to greatness. Now a grown man, his dream is to unite the clans and bring peace to the Highlands. The only way to guarantee that is to return the Maiden of Inverness to her rightful home-- by his side, as his wife. He has spent many years thinking about the young girl who was so brave, but Meridene has changed. She has hardened her heart to Scotland and to him. He is determined to win her heart for both her homeland and her husband. Meridene is frustrated by the loyalty everyone shows Revas. Her only desire is to return to England, but she can't help being a little proud of Revas and all that he has accomplished. She knows she must protect herself from his charming ways because all he wants from her is the sword that will make him king. But she sees in him the dreams of her heart-- as a husband and father to her children. Can there be a future for Meridene and Revas beyond fulfilling the legend of the Maiden?A truly enchanting tale of the Scottish Highlands! Arnette Lamb has a remarkable gift for creating passionate tales of medieval Scotland! MAIDEN OF INVERNESS is a wonderful story of romance in a time of chivalry and adventure! Once again, Arnette Lamb leaves us breathless! Her fans will love her newest creation! Each of Arnette Lamb's books is like a long awaited vacation to another time and place! You can't wait to get there and you hate when it's over!Kristina Wright -- Copyright © 1994-97 Literary Times, Inc. All rights reserved -- From Literary Times

About the Author Arnette Lamb (1947-1998) was the New York Times bestselling author of Chieftain, Border Lord, and other historical romance novels. She won multiple awards for her writing, including the Romantic Times Best New Historical Author award.


Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

Where to Download Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. "I'm A Lambkin..." By Not Now...Mommy's Reading Enjoyable read. Meridene is betrothed to Revas when they are both no more than children. King Edward sends her away to England shortly after the wedding ceremony is performed when an attempt is made on her life by her own kin. Young Revas vows he will come for his child-bride.Thirteen years later, Revas makes good on his vow. Unfortunately, Meridene wants nothing to do with him or Scotland.Revas was adorable...a strong, handsome warrior determined to win over his bride. Meridene was a bit stubborn but her fears were not unfounded. I found this to be a charming story with a likable hero and heroine and secondary characters guaranteed to bring a smile to one's face.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Maiden of Inverness By Brenda Thatcher This book is close to being her BEST. Revas Macduff is a special kind of hero, the kind that is equally virile as loveable, and the relationship between he and Gibby brings tears to the eyes. While The Maiden herself gets somewhat trying, Revas and the entire cast of supporting characters more than make up for the heroine's somewhat less than sterling performance. There were times I laughed out loud, with tears in my eyes. If you get the chance, GET THE SERIES! Border Lord, Chieftain, and The Maiden. You may even break down and get the rest of the Scottish Fold, Border Bride and a short story inside A Holiday of Love. Hurrah for a man like Revas!

3 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Inventive Tale Without Much Punch By Kat K. Munro This book was nothing spectacular. While a well written account of early Highland myth and history, it lacks the sparkle and punch to set itself asside from similar themed romance.The main characters are uni-dimensional. Revas MacDuff is a butcher's son turned warrior whose eye is on the Highland crown. His humor is forced and his might questionable. Meridene holds the legendary office of the Maiden of Inverness. Hers is the power to bestow the kingdom to her husband. She rebels against her own involvement in Scottish politics and yearns to return to the English abbey she grew up in. Her character comes off as a fearful, weak, and dull individual.The problems of the characters are rehashed ad nauseum throughout the book until the ending, where the ties are neatly bound and everything rather amazingly resolves itself within mere pages.The novel's backdrop of ancient Scotland was a plus. The legend of the Maiden, and its almost druid/magical references was a well-planned tale of pure fancy. Maiden of Inverness mentions some of the lesser appreciated clans that many historical fiction writers pass over. I believe with a better planned climax and plotting, this author has the ability to shine. I shall certainly check a few of her other Highland related titles to see if I fair any better.

See all 9 customer reviews... Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb


Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb PDF
Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb iBooks
Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb ePub
Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb rtf
Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb AZW
Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb Kindle

Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb
Maiden of Inverness, by Arnette Lamb

Jumat, 21 Maret 2014

Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel),

Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

Obtain the perks of checking out habit for your lifestyle. Reserve Dreaming Spies: A Novel Of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell And Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), By Laurie R. King message will certainly constantly connect to the life. The real life, expertise, scientific research, health, faith, entertainment, and a lot more could be found in composed publications. Many writers offer their experience, scientific research, research study, and also all points to show you. One of them is with this Dreaming Spies: A Novel Of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell And Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), By Laurie R. King This publication Dreaming Spies: A Novel Of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell And Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), By Laurie R. King will certainly provide the needed of notification and declaration of the life. Life will certainly be finished if you recognize a lot more points via reading publications.

Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King



Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

Download Ebook PDF Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

A New York Times Bestselling Author After a lengthy case in India, Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes sail for California to deal with family business, breaking up the voyage with a sojourn in southern Japan. Russell looks forward to a change of focus and a chance to travel to a location Holmes has not visited. But aboard the ship, intrigue stirs almost immediately. Holmes recognizes a suspected blackmailer, and Russell is befriended by a young Japanese woman who seems not what she claims to be.

Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3621784 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-03-04
  • Format: Large Print
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.20" h x 5.80" w x 8.70" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 561 pages
Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

Review 'A story that keeps the reader enthralled... one of the most consistently outstanding mystery series out there. Any time spent with the Russell-Holmes duo is a delight' Booklist 'intricate mystery' Historical Novels Review

About the Author LAURIE R KING has has been writing crime fiction since 1987 and won many awards for her work in fiction including the prestigious John Creasey Dagger, the Edgar, the Nero and Macavity Awards. Her background includes such diverse interests as Old Testament theology and construction work, and she is the author of highly praised stand-alone suspense novels and a contemporary mystery series, as well as the Mary Russell & Sherlock Holmes series. She lives in North California. Follow her on Twitter: @LaurieRKing Follow Mary Russell's tweets: @mary_russell Author's Website: www.laurierking.com

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter OneOld grey stone travelsMoss-­covered, cradled in straw,Blinks at English spring.“It’s a rock, Holmes.”Sherlock Holmes raised his tea-­cup to his lips. He swallowed absently, then glanced down in surprise, as if the homecoming drink had brought to mind the face of a long-­forgotten friend. “Is it the water from our well that makes Mrs Hudson’s tea so distinctive,” he mused, “or the milk from Mrs Philpott’s cows?”My lack of reply had no effect on his pursuit of the idea.“It would make for an interesting monograph,” he continued. “The significance of a society’s hallmark beverage. Tea: Moroccan mint, Japanese green, English black. In America, there is—­well, one can hardly call it ‘coffee.’ The Bedouin, of course . . .”I only half-­listened to his reverie. Truth to tell, I was enjoying not only the contents of my cup, but the lack of fretting waves beneath my feet and the peace of this cool spring afternoon. We had just returned, after what began as a brief, light-­hearted trip to Lisbon became (need I even add the word “inevitably”?) tumultuous months in several countries. This was far from the first time I had stood on the terrace with a cup of tea, appreciating not being elsewhere. Although it did seem that no sooner was I enjoying the peace than something would come along to shatter it: an urgent telegram, a bleeding stranger at the door. I stirred.“Holmes, the rock.”“You are right, it’s probably best to leave America out of the matter. Although possibly—­”“Holmes!”“Yes, Russell, it is a rock. A rather fine rock, would you not agree? An almost . . . Japanese sort of a rock?”I turned my eyes from husband to granitic intruder.Higher than my knee, with an interesting pattern of moss and lichen and a tracery of dark veins running through it, the stone had been planted—­for “planted” was the word—­in the flower bed encircling the terrace. And not in a central position, but asymmetrically, half-­concealed behind a rounded juniper. In the spring, it would almost disappear beneath Mrs Hudson’s peonies.Almost disappear. As it was almost Japanese. As I reflected on the massive and permanent shape, I realised that it looked as if it had risen from the Sussex earth long before juniper and peony were introduced. Before the old flint house behind me was built, for that matter—­although it had definitely not been there when I left for Portugal the previous November.“It was most peculiar.” Mrs Hudson’s voice behind us sounded apologetic. “These four Oriental gentlemen drove up in a lorry, and while the three young ones began to unpack the thing—­it was wearing a sort of straw overcoat!—­the older one marched back here to look at the terrace. He poked at the ground for a few minutes—­hard as stone itself, it being that cold snap we had in December—­and asked me what colour my peonies were. It’s beyond me how he knew there were peonies at all. He was polite, you understand, but a little . . . quiet.”We both turned sharply to look at her. “Did he threaten you?” Holmes demanded.“Heavens, no. I told you he was polite. Just . . . well, once or twice you’ve had folk here who, shall we say, give one the feeling that it’s good they’re on your side. If you know what I mean?”“Dangerous.”“I suppose. Although honestly, it was only his nature, not in the least aimed at us. In any event, Patrick was here.” A complete non-­sequitur, since our farm-­manager looked about as threatening as one of his draught horses. “But the fellow clearly wasn’t about to explain. So I told him—what colour they were, that is—and he said he was terribly sorry, his men would need to move one of them, but that the darker one should be fine where it was, and that’s what they did. They were careful, give them that. Seemed to know what they were doing. After they left, I’d have had Patrick put Daisy into harness and drag the thing away into the orchard, but I thought it might be something you’d arranged and forgot to mention. In any event, once I’d lived with it for a few days, it grew on me, like. Peculiar ornament for an herbaceous border, but not all that bad. And I could see that the peony would be better where the Oriental gentlemen put it. So, shall I have Patrick remove it?”“No!”Under other circumstances, I’d have read Holmes’ quick reply as an urgent need to keep her from danger, but I thought it pretty unlikely that this massive object could be hiding a bomb. Instead, I took his fast refusal to mean that this drastic addition to our accustomed view was having the same effect on him as it was on me: once the eyes had accepted the shape, the mind began to rearrange the entire garden around it. In less than the time it took to drain one cup of tea, I was beginning to suspect that, were Patrick to hitch up his horse and haul this foreign stone into the fields, our terrace would forever be a lesser place.As Mrs Hudson said, the thing grew on a person.“They didn’t leave a message?” I asked our housekeeper.“Not as such. Although he did say one odd thing. When they were done, the others went back to the lorry but he sat, all cross-­legged and right on the paving stones, just looking at his rock. In the cold! I brought him out a travelling rug, I was that worried that he would freeze, but he took no notice.“I went back inside, looking out at him every so often, and I was just wondering if what I needed was Constable Beckett or the doctor, when the fellow stood up again. He walked all the way around the thing, then came and knocked on the kitchen door to give me back the rug. Neatly folded, too. I offered him a cup of tea, but he said thank you, he had to be getting on. And then he said, ‘Tell your master he has a chrysanthemum in his garden,’ although how he’d know that at this time of—­”At the name of the flower, Holmes and I looked at each other, startled.“Mrs Hudson,” I interrupted, “what did the fellow look like? Other than being Oriental.”“Well, I suppose he was a bit taller than usual. Certainly he was bigger than the other three.”“With a scar on his hand?” Holmes asked.“Yes, now that you ask. All down the back of his hand, it was—­”But we didn’t wait to hear the rest of it. As one, we set our cups upon the table and strode across the terrace to the steps leading to the orchard and the Downs beyond. At the small inner gate, we turned to look. This, the more hidden side, looked as if someone had tried to carve a flower on it, a thousand years before.Not a chrysanthemum: the Chrysanthemum.A venerable stone we had last seen a year ago in the Emperor’s garden in Tokyo.Chapter TwoScholar-­gipsy, I,Homecoming to a strange land,Trinity Term’s mist.The following morning was wet and blustery. We took our breakfast in front of the fire, reading an accumulation of newspapers. Inevitably, the news was all about the horrors of the weather (a woman killed when a tree fell across her house), imminent threats to world peace, and the attempts at good-humoured news that convince one the human race is a lost cause. With yesterday’s reminder of Japan, my eyes were caught no fewer than three times by the country’s name: an art display in London, the Japanese-­Russian treaty that was going into effect soon, and the results of an inquest into a drowned Japanese translator named Hirakawa. At this last, I glanced out the window at the rain-­soaked rock, and closed the newspaper.Minutes later, I abandoned Holmes to The Mystery of the Emperor’s Stone (as well as a meeting he had that afternoon in London, concerning Turkey’s upcoming Hat Law) to turn my face towards Oxford. I took the Morris, having tasks to do along the way, and although the drive promised to be difficult, as I passed through tiny East Dean, I found myself humming in time with the pistons. When I crossed the Cuckmere, I was singing aloud—­tunelessly, yes, but with modern music, who cares?Once my business in Eastleigh was concluded (an elderly tutor, installed there and in need of good cheer and enticing reading material), I turned north. Traffic crept around an overturned wagon outside of Winchester, and again slowed out in the countryside twenty miles later, for some reason I never did see. As a result, although I’d intended to be in Oxford before tea-­time, I could tell that it would not be until after dark. I was glumly bent over the wheel, bleary-­eyed and trying to ignore the growing headache (a bad knock in December had yet to heal completely), when a snug and ancient building rose up alongside the road ahead: grey stone, heavy vines, yellow glow from ancient windows, wood-­smoke curling from a chimney dating to Elizabeth. With Japan so recently in my mind, for a brief instant I saw the building as a ryokan—­an ancient inn, with steaming baths and a waiting masseur. A cook who had worked there his entire life, a welcoming tray of pale, scalding, deliciously bitter tea . . . But no, it was just a pub.Still, my arms were already turning the steering wheel. The quiet of shutting down the engine made my ears tingle. I picked up my bag and, coat pinched over my head against the heavy drops, scurried for the door.Heaven lay within, an ancient gathering space that could only be in England, every breath testifying to its centuries of smoke and beer, damp dogs, and the sweat of working men. I made for the massive stone fireplace, and stood close enough to feel the scorch of the glowing coals through the back of my coat. A placid barmaid took my order, while I continued to stand, revolving slowly, divesting myself bit by bit of the layers. Heavy gloves, woollen scarf, and fur hat migrated to a nearby chair, eventually joined by my fur-­lined driving coat. When my food came, I was down to a heavy cardigan, and my bright pink fingers were restored enough to grasp fork and knife.After a few bites, I paused to retrieve a pair of books from the bag. The first was an unlikely but colourful novel I had bought in the Gare de Lyon two days earlier, by an Englishman named Forster. It was a year since Holmes and I had watched Bombay fade behind us—­almost exactly a year, come to that: seemed like a decade—­and I’d bought it thinking that Forster’s Passage might remind me of the pleasanter aspects of our trip. Instead, I was finding the plot increasingly difficult, and after another chapter I closed the covers on Dr Aziz and the criminally ridiculous Adela, to pick up the other volume, a melancholy old friend.What is it about Oxford that puts one in a poetical state of mind? One would think that a long-­time resident like me would grow inured to Oxford poetry, if for no other reason than the sheer volume of the stuff. Every undergraduate (and most tourists) who walked through one of her doors found it necessary to sit down and compose verse about the experience, all of it romantic and most of it twaddle. But still, in private moments, Matthew Arnold crept under my guard. Who would not wish to be a scholar-­gipsy, leaving the safe walls—­this strange disease of modern life, with its sick hurry, its divided aims—­to learn the eternal secrets of the gipsies, like some latter-­day Merlin? Which of us had not deliberately chosen to return to the city by way of Boar’s Hill, in hopes of glimpsing one of the few remaining views of the city below, and thus be given an excuse to murmur Arnold’s enchanting phrase:And that sweet city with her dreaming spires,She needs not June for beauty’s heightening.I sighed, and squinted at the pub’s rain-­streaked window. Not much of June’s beauty-­heightening today. Were it not for the pull of Oxford—­less its dreaming spires than its comfortable bed and waiting fire—­I would have taken a room here and ordered another pint of the man’s very decent beer. Instead, warm through and well fed, I paid for my meal and dashed back through the rain, wishing I had Arnold’s luck. This winter-­eve is warm, Humid the air; leafless, yet soft as spring.It was spring by the calendar alone, with no softness in sight. I got the wiper-­blades going and turned cautiously back out onto the road, hoping the headlamps would last until I got in.Newbury. Abingdon. Here came I often, in old days. Too rare, too rare grow now my visits . . . Rare, indeed. Every time I set out with the firm intention of installing myself as a fixture amongst the stacks in Oxford’s ever-­blessed libraries, some figurative bomb went off under my feet and hauled me away. Once, a literal bomb.Littlemore; Iffley. The morning’s singing had long given way to groans of tedium. To keep myself awake, I recited mathematical formulae, irregular verbs, and poetry. Haiku was ideal for the purpose, being both mathematical and poetic: the 5/7/5 structure was deceptively simple, which I supposed was why old Bashō came up with so many of them on his wanderings. What would the man have produced if he’d been driving through rain? Perhaps—­Sweet city of minds:Her spires dream, wrapped in earth’s folds.June gilds the lily.Or what about:Dark tyres splash along,Wanting nothing better thanA place for the night.I snorted. Matsuo Bashō need feel no threat from me.The tyres did indeed splash along, down the darkening road, until the edges of civilisation came down to greet me. Much more of this weather and the two Hinkseys would again be separated by swamp—­despite the efforts of that other poet, Oscar Wilde, during his unlikely road-­building days at Magdalene. I noticed (as Matthew Arnold had foretold) that yet more houses had been raised since I last drove this way: the dreaming spires would soon vanish beneath a tide of suburban villas.At Folly Bridge, the heavy raindrops turned to sleet. Grandpont was all but afloat. Christchurch probably had a lake at its door instead of a meadow. Even the Scholar-­Gipsy would require a roof over his head tonight. The shops on the High were shuttered, the restaurants closing, and only the drinking establishments glowed in contentment. Chapter Two Scholar-gipsy, I, Homecoming to a strange land, Trinity Term’s mist.The following morning was wet and blustery. We took our breakfast in front of the fire, reading an accumulation of newspapers. Inevitably, the news was all about the horrors of the weather (a woman killed when a tree fell across her house), imminent threats to world peace, and the attempts at good-humoured news that convince one the human race is a lost cause. With yesterday’s reminder of Japan, my eyes were caught no fewer than three times by the country’s name: an art display in London, the Japanese­Russian treaty that was going into effect soon, and the results of an inquest into a drowned Japanese translator named Hirakawa. At this last, I glanced out the window at the rain-soaked rock, and closed the newspaper.Minutes later, I abandoned Holmes to The Mystery of the Emperor’s Stone (as well as a meeting he had that afternoon in London, concerning Turkey’s upcoming Hat Law) to turn my face towards Oxford. I took the Morris, having tasks to do along the way, and although the drive promised to be difficult, as I passed through tiny East Dean, I found myself humming in time with the pistons. When I crossed the Cuckmere, I was singing aloud—tunelessly, yes, but with modern music, who cares?Once my business in Eastleigh was concluded (an elderly tutor, installed there and in need of good cheer and enticing reading material), I turned north. Traffic crept around an overturned wagon outside of Winchester, and again slowed out in the countryside twenty miles later, for some reason I never did see. As a result, although I’d intended to be in Oxford before tea­time, I could tell that it would not be until after dark. I was glumly bent over the wheel, bleary-­eyed and trying to ignore the growing headache (a bad knock in December had yet to heal completely), when a snug and ancient building rose up alongside the road ahead: grey stone, heavy vines, yellow glow from ancient windows, wood­smoke curling from a chimney dating to Elizabeth. With Japan so recently in my mind, for a brief instant I saw the building as a ryokan—an ancient inn, with steaming baths and a waiting masseur. A cook who had worked there his entire life, a welcoming tray of pale, scalding, deliciously bitter tea . . . But no, it was just a pub.Still, my arms were already turning the steering wheel. The quiet of shutting down the engine made my ears tingle. I picked up my bag and, coat pinched over my head against the heavy drops, scurried for the door.Heaven lay within, an ancient gathering space that could only be in England, every breath testifying to its centuries of smoke and beer, damp dogs, and the sweat of working men. I made for the massive stone fireplace, and stood close enough to feel the scorch of the glowing coals through the back of my coat. A placid barmaid took my order, while I continued to stand, revolving slowly, divesting myself bit by bit of the layers. Heavy gloves, woollen scarf, and fur hat migrated to a nearby chair, eventually joined by my fur­lined driving coat. When my food came, I was down to a heavy cardigan, and my bright pink fingers were restored enough to grasp fork and knife.After a few bites, I paused to retrieve a pair of books from the bag. The first was an unlikely but colourful novel I had bought in the Gare de Lyon two days earlier, by an Englishman named Forster. It was a year since Holmes and I had watched Bombay fade behind us—almost exactly a year, come to that: seemed like a decade—and I’d bought it thinking that Forster’s Passage might remind me of the pleasanter aspects of our trip. Instead, I was finding the plot increasingly difficult, and after another chapter I closed the covers on Dr Aziz and the criminally ridiculous Adela, to pick up the other volume, a melancholy old friend.What is it about Oxford that puts one in a poetical state of mind? One would think that a long-time resident like me would grow inured to Oxford poetry, if for no other reason than the sheer volume of the stuff. Every undergraduate (and most tourists) who walked through one of her doors found it necessary to sit down and compose verse about the experience, all of it romantic and most of it twaddle. But still, in private moments, Matthew Arnold crept under my guard. Who would not wish to be a scholar-gipsy, leaving the safe walls—this strange disease of modern life, with its sick hurry, its divided aims—to learn the eternal secrets of the gipsies, like some latter­day Merlin? Which of us had not deliberately chosen to return to the city by way of Boar’s Hill, in hopes of glimpsing one of the few remaining views of the city below, and thus be given an excuse to murmur Arnold’s enchanting phrase:And that sweet city with her dreaming spires, She needs not June for beauty’s heightening. I sighed, and squinted at the pub’s rain­streaked window. Not much of June’s beauty-heightening today. Were it not for the pull of Oxford—less its dreaming spires than its comfortable bed and waiting fire—I would have taken a room here and ordered another pint of the man’s very decent beer. Instead, warm through and well fed, I paid for my meal and dashed back through the rain, wishing I had Arnold’s luck. This winter­eve is warm, Humid the air; leafless, yet soft as spring.It was spring by the calendar alone, with no softness in sight. I got the wiper­blades going and turned cautiously back out onto the road, hoping the headlamps would last until I got in.Newbury. Abingdon. Here came I often, in old days. Too rare, too rare grow now my visits . . . Rare, indeed. Every time I set out with the firm intention of installing myself as a fixture amongst the stacks in Oxford’s ever­blessed libraries, some figurative bomb went off under my feet and hauled me away. Once, a literal bomb.Littlemore; Iffley. The morning’s singing had long given way to groans of tedium. To keep myself awake, I recited mathematical formulae, irregular verbs, and poetry. Haiku was ideal for the purpose, being both mathematical and poetic: the 5/7/5 structure was deceptively simple, which I supposed was why old Bashō came up with so many of them on his wanderings. What would the man have produced if he’d been driving through rain? Perhaps—Sweet city of minds: Her spires dream, wrapped in earth’s folds. June gilds the lily.Or what about:Dark tyres splash along, Wanting nothing better than A place for the night.I snorted. Matsuo Bashō need feel no threat from me.The tyres did indeed splash along, down the darkening road, until the edges of civilisation came down to greet me. Much more of this weather and the two Hinkseys would again be separated by swamp—despite the efforts of that other poet, Oscar Wilde, during his unlikely road­building days at Magdalene. I noticed (as Matthew Arnold had foretold) that yet more houses had been raised since I last drove this way: the dreaming spires would soon vanish beneath a tide of suburban villas.At Folly Bridge, the heavy raindrops turned to sleet. Grandpont was all but afloat. Christchurch probably had a lake at its door instead of a meadow. Even the Scholar­Gipsy would require a roof over his head tonight. The shops on the High were shuttered, the restaurants closing, and only the drinking establishments glowed in contentment.Dodging trams and the odd umbrella­blinded pedestrian, I wound my way through Carfax and Cornmarket, past St Michael’s and the martyr’s memorial, giving a tip of the hat to the Ashmolean (without actually taking my eyes from the road). At long last, more than half a day since I’d left Sussex, I turned off the many­named Banbury Road into my own lane, and my own front gate, left standing open for me.The car tyres eased into their place for the night. The engine gave a small shudder of gratitude, and went still.I had been blessed, three years earlier, to find a house and a housekeeper in one, when one of my aged college dons died and her lifelong companion fell on hard times. Miss Pidgeon understood the conflicting urges of comfort and privacy, and provided the first without threatening the second. She lived in what had once been the servants’ quarters, separated by a small garden from the house proper, and with so much as a few hours’ warning, I would arrive to find the ice­box filled with milk and essentials, a fire laid (if not actually burning), newspapers beside the settee, and never more sign of an actual person than a brief note of welcome on the kitchen table. She never made the mistake of tidying my papers, and she had an unexpectedly good eye for who might be an intruder and who looked like one of the owner’s odd friends.I could, therefore, rest assured that although I should have to carry my own belongings from car to door, once inside I would find warmth, refreshment . . . and silence. Holmes and I had been in each other’s pockets for a bit too long.The house was still, weighty with the comfort of a thousand books. The air was warm from the radiators, and fragrant with the housekeeper’s lemon­scented wax. As I drew closer to the kitchen, the scent gave way to bay and onions: a soup kept warm on the back of the stove.Tea caddy, pot, and cup were on an ancient tray beside the modern electrical kettle. I checked it for water—full, of course—switched it on, and carried my bag upstairs.I was rather longer than I anticipated, since halfway up I decided to change out of my driving clothes into more comfortable garments, and needed to dig slippers from the depths of the wardrobe. I came back down the stairway at a trot, hearing the kettle spouting furious gusts of steam into the kitchen, but even with that distraction, my head snapped up the moment I left the last step: the air from the kitchen doorway was nowhere near as warm and moist as it should have been. In fact, it felt decidedly chilly—and scented with the sharp tang of rosemary.A rosemary bush grew outside of the back door.One of Miss Pidgeon’s estimable qualities was her horror of invading my privacy: even when she suspected the house was empty she would first knock, then ring the bell, and finally call loudly as she ventured inside. For her simply to walk in was unthinkable.My response was automatic: I took three steps to the side, stretched for a high shelf, thumbed a latch, and wrapped my fingers around one of the house’s three resident revolvers. The weight assured me it was loaded. I laid it against my thigh as I moved stealthily towards the kitchen door.From the hallway, I could see that the door to the garden was shut. I could also see footprints marring the clean tiles: prints composed of rain, and mud, and something more brilliant than mud.I raised the weapon. “I am armed. Stand where I can see you.”The sound of movement came—not from just inside the door, where an attacker would wait, but from the pantry across the room. Its light was off, but enough spilled from the kitchen to show me the dim figure inside.A tiny woman with short black hair and the epicanthic fold of Asia about her eyes. Her muscular body was inadequately clothed, as if she had fled into the rain too fast to grab a coat. Her shoes were sodden, her trousers showed mud to the knees.Her right arm lay across her chest, the fingers encircling the left biceps dark with blood.“Mary­san,” she said. “Help me.”


Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

Where to Download Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

Most helpful customer reviews

134 of 144 people found the following review helpful. Not quite enough of a mystery or a protagonist for me By Maine Colonial After I read the 12th Russell/Holmes book, The Pirate King, I thought I was done with the series I'd previously enjoyed so much. In that book, Holmes was offstage almost the entire time and Mary was at her self-satisfied and complaining worst. And that boat trip was the dullest ever. But Dreaming Spies, with its title that plays on the "dreaming spires" that Matthew Arnold attributed to Oxford drew me in. I've always enjoyed Oxford-based mysteries.Sure enough, Oxford book-ends the story, but the action mainly takes place in flashback, on another boat trip (oh, no!) and in the Far East. This is another slow boat, but not to China; instead, to Japan. Aboard ship, Russell and Holmes meet a young woman named Haruki Sato who may not be what she seems. Holmes also spots an aristocrat he suspects of being a blackmailer. And then a passenger goes missing . . .In this series, Laurie R. King has taken to emphasize, more and more, the culture and politics of whatever country or society she has her characters visit or infiltrate. This time around, we read a lot about cruise ship culture and Japan in the 1920s. It's not that it's not interesting; it's just that it can feel a bit more like a travelog than elements blended to create a sense of time and place for a mystery.All this world-setting also has a tendency to slow the plot down to a crawl. And so it is here. Well over half the book goes by before there is any actual detective work. If you are a particular fan of Mary Russell and enjoy reading about cruise ships and Japan in the 1920s, that leisurely pace won't be a problem. Readers expecting to have a mystery to solve may become impatient, though.The final third of the book is where the meat of the detection and the action occur. If there had been more of this and less of the travelog, I would have easily given the book at least four stars.If you love the Russell/Holmes series already, I would describe this as a mid-level entry. It's certainly better than The Pirate King, because Mary is on much better behavior here than in that book, and Holmes is present more of the time.Maybe it's just me, though, but I find I'm no longer much of a fan of Mary Russell. I like strong female protagonists, and being an Oxford scholar is a fantasy for me, but in these later books in the series, Russell mainly operates on her own; that sparkling dialog and challenge of wits she used to have with Holmes is nearly nonexistent, and Russell on her own just isn't an interesting enough character to carry the books. I prefer to have my protagonist, however strong he or she is, play off another character more.It seems clear at this point, based on the last few titles in the series, that the direction Laurie R. King is taking the story is to put Holmes very much in the background. As she is currently developed, the Mary Russell character isn't quite dimensional enough for me to be enthusiastic about that direction.

49 of 52 people found the following review helpful. Not the place for beginners to start the Holmes/Russell series. For existing fans, a solid blackmail caper based around Japan. By Peter J. Ward A quick note before I begin, if you have not read the other books in this series, immediately go read "The Beekeeper's Apprentice" and get started properly. The Mary Russell/Sherlock Holmes series is fantastic and I am a fan, but this is the wrong place for a new reader to get on board. Without any background, you'll continually be irritated that Sherlock Holmes is barely doing anything and that his wife (who is most definitely NOT present in the canonical stories) is doing all the heavy-lifting and narration. For those who are fans of the series, this outing is pretty solid. It is another travelogue/mystery, this time involving Japan. Russell and Holmes get pulled in to intrigue involving the Emperor of Japan, the English aristocracy, and an elaborate blackmail scheme. For any Nippon-o-phile readers, there's not a great deal of detail on life in the early 1900's Japan, although it is clear that Laurie R. King did her homework on the onsen, the traditional Japanese bath-houses. Those passages really made me envious of such an involved and relaxing affair. But anyhow, the third section of the book takes place around Oxford and pulls together the threads that were left from the slow boat excursion (part one) and travels in Japan (part two). I do think that the Japanese character who was introduced early and becomes pivotal will show up again in another sequel. Not only does she have an interesting backstory and skill set, she does most of the intricate crime-solving in the third part, with our titular heroes helping but not front-and-center.

62 of 70 people found the following review helpful. One of the best in the series By Jessica Weissman This latest novel in the Mary Russell suspense series is a satisfying and riveting tale of what happens when the two detectives travel once again to exotic lands, figure out who the murderer is, all part of a grand adventure that includes a rare book, royalty and the fate of an empire or two.The characters stand out especially - and are easy to talk about without giving away the puzzles within puzzles that make up the plot. Miss Sato Haruki is not what she seems and yet remains utterly fascinating as we discover more about her relationship with Mar. Or there is Masuo Basho, wandering poet, enigmatic, long dead but able to have an impact on Japanese politics current in the setting of the book. Then there’s Lady Darley, a quicksilver member of the aristocracy with hidden motives and her blackmailing husband, his sleazy son, Tommy Darley, all three girt round with rumors.There’s a delightful moment wherein Ms. Haruki does not hide her disdain for English tea, especially the habit of having it with milk.Dreaming Spies is closer in tone and fantastic plot elements to the original Doyle novels than some other books in this series. Certainly it hews more tightly to the original than the disappointing Pirate King, and engages without the sad bewilderment of the amnesia in Garment of Shadows. With the cameo appearances of Miss Pidgeon (“Your Irregular,” as Holmes describes her to Mary), the housekeeper Mrs. Hudson, and sundry other familiar people, the tone rings true throughout. The story also benefits from the servants’ gossip, the descriptions of Oxford and the Bodleian Library and the telling details of the life onboard the ship and the ordinary diet at that time of the Japanese people. This novel can be read independently of the series, but why deprive yourself of the fun of the rest?

See all 491 customer reviews... Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King


Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King PDF
Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King iBooks
Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King ePub
Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King rtf
Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King AZW
Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King Kindle

Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King
Dreaming Spies: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes (A Mary Russell Novel), by Laurie R. King

Senin, 17 Maret 2014

A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread

A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread

As known, adventure and experience concerning session, amusement, and also understanding can be acquired by just reviewing a publication A Spool Of Blue Thread By Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, By Instaread Even it is not directly done, you could recognize more concerning this life, concerning the world. We offer you this correct and also easy method to gain those all. We provide A Spool Of Blue Thread By Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, By Instaread and many book collections from fictions to scientific research at all. Among them is this A Spool Of Blue Thread By Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, By Instaread that can be your companion.

A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by  Instaread

A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread



A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by  Instaread

Ebook Download : A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread

A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler is the poignant story of four generations of the Whitshank family living in Baltimore. They are an ordinary family like any other, but they are also special in their own quirky ways. The members of the family love and care for each other, but they also harbor jealousies, rivalries, and carry secrets.

Red Whitshank runs the family business, Whitshank Construction. His wife, Abby, is a social worker, and they are the parents of four children. Their third child, Denny, is a frequent source of worry for them. Over the years he is in and out of trouble, holds various jobs, and is in numerous unsuccessful relationships. His visits and phone calls are sporadic.

Two stories are often repeated in the Whitshank family. The first is the story of Junior Whitshank, Red's father and the founder of Whitshank Construction.

Please note: This is an unofficial summary and analysis of the book and not the original book.

What you'll hear when you listen to this Instaread summary & analysis of A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler:

  • Summary of entire book
  • Introduction to the important people in the book
  • Analysis of the themes and author's style

About the author With Instaread, you can get a summary and analysis of a book in 15 minutes. We read every chapter, summarize it, and analyze it for your convenience.

A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #102280 in Audible
  • Published on: 2015-03-31
  • Format: Unabridged
  • Original language: English
  • Running time: 34 minutes
A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread


A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by  Instaread

Where to Download A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Moderately useful By Jean H. Lowe As an Ann Tyler fan, I enjoyed A Spool of Blue Thread but there were some things I din't understand about the characters and their lives. I had hoped that this analysis would help me. But it tunrs out that the things I didn't understand, such as Denny's relationship with Alison, were not explained any better in this summary. It wa just something Ann Tyler never fleshed out. I had the same experience concerning the relationship of Stem and Denny. I thought there must have been something in ther childhood interactions that would explain their rivalry, but what I read was all there was, according to the summary.It was a fine summary, but it didn't reveal any hidden meanings that I had hoped to understand.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. The book was one of the best summaries I have read till now By Victoria Alexander The book was one of the best summaries I have read till now. The author has a great grasp of the english language and wrote a brilliant summary for the original. The whole book of hundread pages was brilliantly embedded in to a small write upwithout missing the details. I would recommend reading the book.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. I was very disappointed, but it was my fault By will kuniagent 1 will I was very disappointed, but it was my fault. I meant to order the book, not a review! I can't imagine why anyone would order it. I love to read but I want the whole book.

See all 8 customer reviews... A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread


A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread PDF
A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread iBooks
A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread ePub
A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread rtf
A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread AZW
A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread Kindle

A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread

A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread

A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread
A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler: A 15-Minute Summary & Analysis, by Instaread

Sabtu, 15 Maret 2014

El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

El Sombrero De Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), By Pedro Antonio De Alarcón. Change your practice to put up or squander the time to only talk with your buddies. It is done by your everyday, do not you really feel burnt out? Now, we will certainly reveal you the new routine that, actually it's an older practice to do that can make your life much more qualified. When really feeling bored of consistently chatting with your buddies all free time, you can locate guide entitle El Sombrero De Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), By Pedro Antonio De Alarcón and then review it.

El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón



El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

Read Online and Download Ebook El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

La historia sucede en un pueblo andaluz. Tío Lucas es el astuto y malicioso dueño del molino y esposo de la bella frasquita. De tantos encantos era portadora que con ellos atraía al molino a las gentes de cierto abolengo. El corregidor del pueblo, hombre veleidoso y libertino, se ha prendado de los atributos de la hermosa molinera y decide hacerla suya a toda costa. Para lograr su propósito, urde la patraña de hacer detener y comparecer a Lucas ante el alcalde del pueblo vecino con el pretexto pueril y con el fin de tenerlo tras las rejas hasta la mañana siguientes. A sabiendas de que frasquita se encontraba completamente sola, el corregidor se dirige hacia el molino con el fin de refocilarse con la molinera. Para desgracia suya, al intentar ingresar por una puerta falsa y siendo la media noche, cae dentro de una acequia (canal). La molinera, temiendo que el del accidente sea su marido, sale a investigar; mas, al enterarse de que es el corregidor, sale huyendo en busca de su esposo. Tío ludas sospecha a estas alturas que el alcalde no tiene nada que tratar con él, por lo menos hasta el día siguiente, y decide escapar del pajar que se le asignado como sitio de reclusión. El corregidor, que ha logrado salir de la acequia decide poner a secar sus ropas al fuego, se desnuda y se mete en la cama de la pareja de molineros. Llega Lucas a su casa, observa las ropas del corregidor y decide espiar por la cerradura y descubre al corregidor pero no puede establecer claramente si su mujer se halla con él. Considerándose herido en su honra, no piensa más que en vengar la afrenta; se enfunda las ropas del corregidor para meterse en su cama y tomar revancha. El manejo perfecto que de la trama hace Alarcón permite que después de algunos incidentes, ni el molinero ni el corregidor logren sus propósitos, y así queda comprobada la virtud de la corregidora y de la molinera.

El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2273469 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-03-29
  • Original language: Spanish
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .31" w x 6.00" l, .42 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 122 pages
El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

About the Author Pedro Antonio Joaquín Melitón de Alarcón y Ariza fue un narrador español que perteneció al movimiento realista en el que destacó como uno de los artífices del fin de la prosa romántica.


El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

Where to Download El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Un cuento encantador By Medimundo No puedo imaginar una narración más encantadora que la que nos brinda don Pedro Antonio de Alarcón en El sombrero de tres picos. El autor toma los hilos variantes de una antigua «historieta vulgar» de la tradición oral española y junta carne a los huesos de la leyenda de El corregidor y la molinera para crear su versión literaria y definitiva. Aquí no hay nada de profundidad, sólo un cuento sumamente bien tramado y narrado de tal manera que el lector, como un niño escuchando a su abuelo contarle historias, se pierde en la magia de la voz de Alarcón.Alarcón escribió un prefacio de El sombrero en el que habla de como y cuando escuchó por primera vez la historieta en que se basa. Lamentablemente el prefacio no figura en esta edición. También hay tal vez media docena de palabras mal deletreadas o mal espaciadas. Una curiosidad: hay dos notas a pie—definiciones de las palabras caz y trabuco. ¿Por qué solamente estas dos? A pesar de estos comentarios, la presentación de la página imprenta es generalmente excelente y facil de leer, y el precio es razonable. ¡Cinco estrellas con entusiasmo!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. perfect for my By jackie payette perfect for my class

See all 2 customer reviews... El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón


El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón PDF
El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón iBooks
El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón ePub
El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón rtf
El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón AZW
El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón Kindle

El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón
El Sombrero de Tres Picos (Spanish Edition), by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón

Senin, 10 Maret 2014

The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

When obtaining this publication The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, By Kitrell Andis as referral to read, you could get not only motivation but also brand-new expertise as well as sessions. It has even more than typical advantages to take. What kind of book that you review it will be beneficial for you? So, why must obtain this book qualified The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, By Kitrell Andis in this short article? As in web link download, you could get guide The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, By Kitrell Andis by on the internet.

The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis



The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

Ebook PDF The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

In the summer of 1969, as America's intervention in Vietnam moves toward its ugly climax in Southeast Asia and it's even uglier corruption of the home-front commonweal, a group of young boys and girls in a small midwestern town find themselves faced with an existential crisis generations in the making. The narrator Joe and his friends Frank, Benny, Dallas, Moon Man, Tina and Carol, though barely conscious of the larger picture, are all nevertheless sucked into a vortex of self-delusion, betrayal and violent tragedy.

The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3427145 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-03-22
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .38" w x 6.00" l,
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 166 pages
The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis


The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

Where to Download The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. that reading the pages was like finding a box of old photographs you hadn't looked ... By moviemark A brief period in a young man's life sets him on an inextricable path, pulling him along as a witness to the last gasps of the 1960's. The story is about a young man facing the dim prospects of military service during the Viet Nam war. The author accomplishes this by creating a world so precise, that reading the pages was like finding a box of old photographs you hadn't looked at for 40 years. And at once, you were in that place smelling weed burning, listening to Cream on the stereo, an anxiety creeping over you as you dare to imagine a future.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A great read! Brought back memories of how life used ... By stacey a stacey A great read! Brought back memories of how life used to be. i grew up in the 60s and 70s,no cell phones, no computers. We spent time outside cruising, drinking,and a few other unmentionables,life was fun then.Loved the references to the old music,old cars(when we actually had to shift gear and know how to use a clutch). Recommend this to anyone who grew up in this era or not,loved it!!!

See all 2 customer reviews... The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis


The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis PDF
The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis iBooks
The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis ePub
The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis rtf
The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis AZW
The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis Kindle

The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis
The Summer Ho Chi Minh Died, by Kitrell Andis

Sabtu, 08 Maret 2014

Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume

Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn

Yeah, checking out a publication Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), By D. Thorn could add your buddies listings. This is just one of the formulas for you to be effective. As understood, success does not imply that you have terrific points. Recognizing and also understanding greater than other will certainly provide each success. Close to, the notification and impression of this Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), By D. Thorn could be taken and also picked to act.

Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn

Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn



Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn

Best PDF Ebook Online Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn

Did You Know That One Of The Most Common Issues That Break Up Couples Is Sexual Satisfaction Or Dissatisfaction, For That Matter?

Once you, as a couple, have passed the honeymoon phase of the relationship, sex becomes infrequent and less satisfying. Now, do you want to know the secret to a much more fulfilling sex life, deeper intimacy and lasting relationships?

The secret is in Tantra.

Pleasure is such a wonderful word wrapped in bad reputation. The truth is desire and pleasure are completely natural. There is nothing to be ashamed of wanting it and craving for more. Tantra teaches us to embrace pleasure; to surrender ourselves to inhibitions and open up our senses. By being more aware and by being more welcoming to new possibilities, you create a more positive relationship.

Are you curious about Tantra?

-Understand the principles of tantra on a deeper level through the information laid out in this book. Are you cynical about the effects of Tantric massage? -Get to know the powerful benefits of tantric massage and find out how tantric massage can help you as a couple. Are you feeling stressed to the point that it takes a toll on your relationship? -Achieve deep relaxation like you never have before through tantric breathing. Do you wonder why you feel so negative and imbalanced? -Learn how to balance the chakras and each chakra’s role to overall well-being. Are you itching to try something new to spice up your relationship? -Learn basic tantric massage techniques and how to get started. Do you want to know how to get him hooked to you? -Discover new and creative ways to please your man. Are you dying to know how to stop her from faking and truly please your woman? -Explore different paths to give your woman an unforgettable experience. You don’t have to buy expensive gifts and seductive but complex lingerie. The answer to pleasing your man or woman is much simpler. Blow his/her mind by giving him/her an unforgettable experience through tantric massage. Your partner will appreciate you more than you know for it. If you want an amplified sex life, share more and deeper intimate moments, rekindle romance, tantric massage can make sparks fly between you and your lover. You just have to be open to the idea. If you are ready to make a change in your relationship then you are probably ready for tantra.

Take Action - Act Now!

Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #837578 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-10-02
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .13" w x 6.00" l, .19 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 56 pages
Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn


Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn

Where to Download Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Ultimate guide indeed! By Amazon Customer This book discusses tantric massage in a broader sense breaking the notion and misconceptions that tantric massage is akin to erotic massage. This book expertly explains the deeper meaning and goals of tantric massage and its powerful effects and benefits. It also touches on the rules of tantra and its connection to chakras. Brilliant book!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. I liked the "full-body orgasm" part By Billy Mac Daddy I don't understand why the author denies tantric massage as not erotic. Maybe it is a popular conclusion but based on what I learned here, I saw it as erotic to the next level. Especially that full-body orgasm part. I mean c'mon, I'd die for that lol. My girlfriend couldn't catch on with the whole thing. I mean we have chemistry but all those spiritual and chakra stuff fell flat and we just ended up doing it our way. Will I find a tantric massage service elsewhere? Deep inside tells me yes I do because this book is such a horrible influence. If only somewhere in the book told me that seeking tantric massage doesn't count as cheating, I'd feel compelled to do so.It's a tantric massage advertisement in disguise and that's why I am so hooked to it!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. very fantastic and satisfying read By Laurelyn This has been a very fantastic and satisfying read that I had in a long time. I'm quite familiar about tantric massage but not really about the finer details of this amazing massage that not only brings pleasure but also gives you a feeling of happiness and contentment. The secrets of tantra exposed in this book will certainly help the readers with their sexual lives. This could be a very helpful read especially to married couple who are going thru some hard time with their marriages. I believe this type of solution will certainly bring back the love and fire of the marriage and brings a lot of positives to it. Great book to read and have.

See all 22 customer reviews... Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn


Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn PDF
Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn iBooks
Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn ePub
Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn rtf
Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn AZW
Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn Kindle

Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn

Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn

Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn
Tantric Massage: The Ultimate Guide For Exploding Couples' Sex Life With The Tantra Massage (Kama Sutra, Sex Positions, Tantric Sex) (Volume 1), by D. Thorn

Kamis, 06 Maret 2014

The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

Why ought to be The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), By Susan Hill in this site? Obtain much more profits as exactly what we have told you. You could locate the other alleviates besides the previous one. Alleviate of getting the book The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), By Susan Hill as just what you desire is likewise provided. Why? We provide you numerous type of the books that will certainly not make you feel weary. You could download them in the web link that we give. By downloading The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), By Susan Hill, you have taken the proper way to select the ease one, compared with the inconvenience one.

The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill



The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

Download Ebook PDF The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

From the outside, the cathedral town of Lafferton seems idyllic, but in many ways it is just like any number of towns. When Simon Serrailler is called in by Lafferton’s new Chief Constable, he’s asked to take the principal role in a difficult, potentially dangerous undercover operation. He must leave town without telling anyone and he must inhabit the mind of the worst kind of criminal. This takes its toll on Simon ― and eventually on the town.

The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5586277 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-03-04
  • Format: Large Print
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.10" h x 5.50" w x 8.60" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 513 pages
The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

Review • "What you know about human nature is simultaneously being enlarged and improved upon thanks to Hill's almost Shakespearean insights into what it is to be." --Christopher Bray, Daily Express

About the Author SUSAN HILL has been a professional writer for over fifty years. Her books have won awards and prizes including the Whitbread, the John Llewellyn Rhys and the Somerset Maugham; and have been shortlisted for the Booker. She was awarded a CBE in the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Honours. Her novels include Strange Meeting, I'm the King of the Castle and A Kind Man; and she has also published autobiographical works and collections of short stories. The play of her ghost story The Woman in Black has been running in London's West End since 1988. She is married with two adult daughters and lives in North Norfolk.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

BY THE SAME AUTHOR

The Simon Serrailler Crime Novels

THE VARIOUS HAUNTS OF MEN

THE PURE IN HEART

THE RISK OF DARKNESS

THE VOWS OF SILENCE

THE SHADOWS IN THE STREET

THE BETRAYAL OF TRUST

A QUESTION OF IDENTITY

Fiction

GENTLEMAN AND LADIES

A CHANGE FOR THE BETTER

I’M THE KING OF THE CASTLE

THE ALBATROSS AND OTHER STORIES

STRANGE MEETING

THE BIRD OF NIGHT

A BIT OF SINGING AND DANCING

IN THE SPRINGTIME OF THE

YEAR THE WOMAN IN BLACK

MRS DE WINTER

THE MIST IN THE MIRROR

AIR AND ANGELS

THE SERVICE OF CLOUDS

THE BOY WHO TAUGHT THE BEEKEEPER TO READ

THE MAN IN THE PICTURE

THE BEACON

THE SMALL HAND

A KIND MAN

BLACK SHEEP

Non-Fiction

THE MAGIC APPLE TREE

FAMILY

HOWARDS END IS ON THE LANDING

For Children

THE BATTLE FOR GULLYWITH

THE GLASS ANGELS

CAN IT BE TRUE?

Copyright

To my friend Mrs Green(Candida Lycett Green 1942–2014)

This novel is a work of fiction. Names and characters are the product of the author’s imagination and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

PART ONE

One

APRIL 2007

Lafferton, and a night in early spring. After a week of frosts, the wind had swung to the west, bringing milder air. Snowdrops and crocuses were over, daffodils were flowering. Quiet, empty streets. No footsteps.

Jeff Barclay and Robbie Freeman sat on a low wall near the bus stop in the square, finishing off a shared kebab. They only had enough money for one, and a tea. Robbie screwed up the greasy paper and lifted his arm to throw it into a nearby bin. But his arm froze in mid-air.

‘What?’

‘Bloody hell.’

‘What?’ Jeff shoved him so that he almost fell off the wall. Robbie did not protest or shove back, he just stared at the entrance to the Lanes, the cobbled pedestrian-only street to their left.

‘Shit, did you see that?’

‘Didn’t see anything. What was it – a ghost?’ Jeff snorted.

‘No.’ Robbie said quietly, getting off the wall and walking towards the Lanes. ‘I saw a kid.’

‘What sort of kid?’

‘A little kid. It … it had no clothes on.’

‘You’re taking the piss. I never saw any naked kid.’

Jeff levelled with him as they reached the top of the Lanes. There were old-fashioned lamps at either end and a couple of shops had lighted front windows. The whole street was empty.

‘Stupid.’

‘No. I saw it. There was a little kid, it sort of – just ran and then it vanished.’

‘Yeah, right. Come on, let’s see if there’s anyone outside the Magpie.’

But Robbie was walking slowly away from him, looking closely to right and left. In the end, Jeff followed.

‘How could there be a kid?’

‘I know what I saw.’

‘What are you on, Rob? You start seeing things, you got a problem.’

There was a passageway between the deli and a smart clothes shop, and as Robbie looked into it, he saw a quick movement – something pale. He ran down, but he had to push past two wheelie bins, and by the time he had got through, if there had been anyone, they’d gone.

‘Cat.’

‘No.’

‘You’re mad.’

‘No.’

‘Oh, for fuck’s sake! I’m off home.’

It was another five minutes before Robbie followed him. They walked slowly along the kerb, thumbs out every time a vehicle went by. Not many did.

‘Wanker.’ Jeff gave two fingers to a speeding car. Robbie said nothing. His head was full of what he knew he had seen – not imagined, not hallucinated, seen. A child, maybe three or four years old, naked, slithering out of sight into the shadows, dodging down the alley and passageway. He couldn’t get it out of his mind.

A patrol car took the call at twenty to three.

PC Bev Willet sighed. ‘Wind-up,’ she said.

‘Sounds like it. But just in case – hold onto your hat.’

It had been a quiet night. Even a wind-up was better than trying to keep awake with more plastic coffee. The car raced up the bypass.

‘How old did he say?’

‘Little kid, three or so. Couldn’t say if it was a boy or girl.’

‘And naked?’

‘Naked.’

‘They piss me off, these hoaxers. I’d have them dunked in the canal on a freezing night.’ Bev snorted as she pulled up at the entrance to the Lanes. One taxi was in the rank, the driver asleep with a copy of the Sun over his face. He didn’t stir at the sound of the patrol car.

‘Talk to him in a mo. Come on.’

Ten minutes later they had scoured the area, including every alley and passageway, every wheelie bin and recycling area.

‘Diddly squat,’ Bev said.

‘Pisses me off, this sort of thing.’

‘You said.’

‘Only why would he invent a naked child, for heaven’s sake?’

‘Guaranteed to make us move fast.’

‘Right. Just someone’s idea of a good laugh then. Better go and wake up our cabby.’

But their cabby had been out on jobs all evening and then fallen asleep. He was going home now. He’d keep an eye out.

‘His face said it all.’

‘Wind-up.’

‘Wind-up.’

Jess Honeywell’s baby woke for a feed at four. She picked him up out of his crib and moved the curtain aside briefly to look out at the night. Starry, with a big moon. A front-bedroom light was on a few doors down. Another wakeful baby. She and Katie Green sometimes chanced to look out at the same time and then they’d wave, sharing the small hours of new babies. They had propped one another up through pregnancy and the first weeks and went on doing so now, meeting almost every day, walking their buggies together, swapping notes. It had made all the difference. St Luke’s Road was in the grid of small Victorian terraced houses known as the Apostles, friendly, neighbourly, and near to the shops, coffee bars and restaurants of Lafferton’s centre. They were lucky, Jess thought as she dropped the curtain, even if the houses were small. She hated the idea of being stuck out in the sticks, even with bigger rooms and a garden, but no life nearby and needing a car to get you anywhere. They couldn’t afford a car. Matt walked to work.

The Green bedroom was in darkness, the moon shining on quiet pavements, but as she turned, Jess thought she saw something move. Turned back and lifted the curtain again. No. Trick of the light. Nothing. And then her hand went to her mouth. Noah was grizzling himself back to sleep but she barely noticed.

Matt was hard to wake and when he did, he stumbled out of bed assuming he had to pick up the baby and was almost able to do so in his sleep.

He came awake fully as Jess shook his arm.

‘What? You’ve been dreaming –’

‘NO. Matt, go down, go out there … I was not dreaming. You’ve got to go.’ Noah cried again as her voice rose. She picked him up and sat on the edge of the bed, putting him to the breast and gesturing to Matt to hurry.

It was not that he refused to believe her, just that he was still not fully awake, and he felt foolish, standing half dressed and in slippers, looking up and down St Luke’s Road and seeing nothing, Nothing at all. But she had been wide awake and he knew that she thought she had seen …

And then he saw.

The child was squatting down behind the gate of a house opposite.

‘It’s OK,’ Matt said. ‘It’s all right, it’s all right.’

He went through the gate and stopped. Later, he said that he would never forget the child’s face until his dying day. Later, he could not sleep because the face was in front of him. Later, he was haunted during his waking hours by sudden flashbacks to the child’s face as it looked up at him.

‘It’s all right. Dear God. Listen, I won’t hurt you. I’m going to look after you, OK?’ But even as he spoke, gently, quietly, the child tried to shrink into a hedge, as if it might find a safe place among the rough bare twigs and earth.

Very slowly, Matt inched his way, his hand out, talking softly in what he desperately hoped was a voice of reassurance. The child continued to shrink from him and now it turned its face away from him out of fear.

It was a girl. She was perhaps four years old. She was filthy, she had smears of blood on her arms and legs. Her long, fine, fair hair was matted to her scalp. She was completely naked.

There was silence and stillness and fear for long minutes before the child lurched forward, the hedge catching at her again as she moved and drawing fresh pinpoints of blood, and then she was clinging to Matt, climbing up him like a terrified small animal and pressing her little body to him. He put his arm round her carefully and edged backwards down the path. She did not move, only clung fast to him. Matt hurried across the road, back into the house, calling to Jess. But she had already seen him through the window and only seconds later, blue lights turning, the police car stopped outside.

Two

MAY 2007

Year 2 at St Luke’s Primary School had been talking about Things I Like and Things I Don’t Like, as part of the week’s topic on food and drink. Sue Norwood had found it informative. Most of the likes were as expected – sweet things, crisps, sometimes the odd grape – and the dislikes she could have predicted – milk, green vegetables, stew, runny egg. The next part of the topic would be more challenging – why we should try the things we don’t like again, in case we find we do like them after all. Why we shouldn’t eat too many sweets, even if we like them very much. Why our bodies need a variety of foods, including green vegetables … they would dutifully chant the ‘dislikes’ list and promise to try them again, go home and forget all about it. They would still come to school each morning carrying a half-empty pack of sticky sweets and an egg would never pass their lips. Some of them had even picked up on the words ‘wheat’ and ‘dairy’ in the same breath as the words ‘allergy’ and ‘intolerance’.

But they were still one of the best classes she had ever taught, alert, funny, loyal to one another and relatively well behaved. One or two had problems, including the boy who still wore nappies and the girl who never spoke, problems which were not easy to solve, and ought to involve the parents.

Sue sighed. She knew that the parents of the boy who still wore nappies would never come through the school gates, let alone come to see her.

The silent child was sitting at the far end of the second table now, head bent to the paper so that her face was barely visible. Glory Dorfner. There were some colourful names in Years 1 and 2 but what parent called their child ‘Glory’? And why not? she asked herself smartly. Better than … well, better than quite a few.

The classroom was quiet, apart from the odd sniff, cough and shuffle. They were drawing and labelling with some glee six things they disliked to eat or drink. She stood behind Alfie Starman. His ears needed a wash, but his careful picture of a cabbage was very good indeed and she said so. Alfie glanced round, flushed with pride and pleasure. Rikki O’Mara kicked him in the shin. But, as Rikki would have said, if challenged, ‘in a good way, Mrs Norwood’. She had a soft spot for Rikki.

Glory bent her head even further and her arm was curved across the paper to hide it. Sue waited a moment. She could feel the child’s tension.

‘May I see?’

Glory shook her head slightly.

‘Shall I guess?’

The child was absolutely still.

‘You don’t like – chips?’ Shouts from all sides, arms waving. Everyone liked chips. ‘All right, I know. Chip pictures, all of you.’

Much giggling.

‘But maybe Glory doesn’t like chips.’

Silence.

‘I think you don’t like – tea?’

Silence.

‘Tomatoes?’

Sue did not continue. She waited a moment, went round three others, looking, admiring, querying. Then got a spare low chair and sat next to Glory. But the child was immovable. She said nothing. Would not lift her arm.

It was early evening before she finally opened the big folder containing Year 2’s work, setting the pile on the table next to a box of gold paper stars. Alice was marking Year 12 English essays, swearing from time to time.

‘OFFS, Damian Cross, try reading the text.’

Sue smiled, and turned over the next sheet.

For a second, she thought it had ended up in her folder by mistake, except that she could not possibly imagine how.

Glory could barely write and what she did manage was still in mirror-writing. Well, that would sort itself out, it always did.

‘I don’t like …’ was in smudged dark pastel, large letters copied in almost violently.

Sue felt her face flush as she looked at the drawing.

Then she called Alice over.

‘Police,’ Alice said almost immediately.

‘What on earth can they do?’

‘Or family welfare officers … NSPCC? I don’t know, but you’ve got to show this to someone.’

‘Maybe Glory’s parents …’

Alice gave her a look.

‘No, you’re right.’

‘Take it to Eleanor first thing, cover your back. Let her decide.’

Alice went back to the essays on To Kill a Mockingbird, muttering as usual about wishing they could read a more challenging novel, vowing yet again to start them on Great Expectations the moment they were done with the set text.

Glory’s picture seemed to come in front of every one of the others that she looked at. She gave up. Turned on the news.

‘I wonder if they’ve found out about that little girl yet?’

Alice just nodded, head down in her essays.

‘Look at me,’ Sue said, hands on the table in front of her.

Alice looked.

‘I’m seriously worried about this child. I mean it, Al.’

‘I know, hon, I’m sorry. And so you should be.’

‘I’m going to the police station now.’

‘Want me to come with you? I can leave these.’

‘No, it could take half the night. I’ll be fine. Finish those. I’ll ring you.

Three

SEPTEMBER 2007

It seemed such a little time ago. They’d often gone out, had a drink at the Ox, met friends for bingo, a walk to the Hill when the evenings were light, even a spin in the car to one of the village pubs. They’d gone to a film occasionally, had a fish-and-chip supper on the way back. Having no children, sorry though they both were, meant a bit more money for them to enjoy treats together. Tom had worked hard all his life, she’d had part-time work so that she could be in, with his tea on the table, when he got home.

Jean Mason stood waiting for the kettle to boil. Such a little time ago. She remembered everything. And Tom remembered nothing. Most days now he didn’t even remember her. Most days there seemed no point in even going to see him because it upset them both. He kept asking her who she was and why Jean hadn’t been to visit him, she couldn’t think of a thing to say to this man she no longer knew. This wasn’t Tom, the Tom she’d known since they were both eleven, the person she’d shared her entire adult life with, day in, day out. So who was it?

She poured boiling water into the teapot and took her tray through. They had never been a noisy couple, and the street had always been a quiet street, but now it was uncanny, the empty silence. They had lived in the flat above the shop for the last ten years, since their old street had been demolished. When they came, there had been a dozen shops in the row – launderette, baker, butcher, greengrocer, hardware, and then a Chinese take-away, a minicab office. Below them had been a wool shop, then a toy shop, then a cafe. One by one, they’d all closed. Now there was a charity shop at one end, a letting agency office at the other, and in between, nothing but windows boarded up. It was lonely and it was bleak and Tom had said they’d try and find somewhere else. But where else was there? So long as he’d been well she hadn’t minded. She minded now.

She started to watch a crime drama but it was too violent, turned over to a comedian who was too crude. The last ten minutes of a cookery programme was entertaining enough, but after that she switched off.

She would go to bed with a book she’d bought from the charity shop. Travels with my Elephant – she loved animals, she loved reading about places she would never see. Tom would have picked it up, smiled, teased her about it.

Now, he had forgotten how to smile.

A child was screaming.

She went to the window but the street was empty and silent. She opened the window. Nothing.

It had stopped.

Maybe it was a cat. A fox. The foxes still came scavenging round.

As she was getting into bed ten minutes later, she heard the scream again and this time it was in the street. This time, there were people – a car, pulled up outside the boarded-up shop next door, two men, one of them pulling a small child by the hand. They were too far from the street lamp for her to see clearly and in a few seconds the child was pushed into the car, one of the men in the back with it, and the car was moving away, accelerating fast as it reached the corner.

Then nothing. The street was silent, empty, dark. Jean wondered if she had been hallucinating, or was half-asleep, and somehow begun to dream while still awake.

Did that happen?

She went back to her bed but when she tried to read, the image of the child being pulled towards the car came between her and the words, and the sound of its cry seemed to echo again and again through her head.

She wondered what she should do.

She knew what she ought to do but her story sounded so fanciful that she could not bring herself to make the call.

It was four nights later that the child screamed again. There was no car in the street; the sound came from somewhere nearby but indoors. And almost as soon as she had heard it, the noise stopped quite suddenly. Then nothing.

Jean lay for a long time, listening, but the only sound she heard was the beat of her own heart.

She had fallen deeply asleep by the time the car drove up the street, lights doused, and stopped outside the empty shop next door. She was asleep when the child, silent now, was carried out and driven away.

There were no neighbours left to talk to. She was used to it by now. She had never been unfriendly, it was just that she and Tom had been company enough for one another, but now she remembered the sounds she had heard, of the child screaming in the night, she needed someone to talk to – just no one official, not the police or anyone else in authority. She had not been over to see Kath Latimer for months, partly because she found it hard to deal with questions about Tom, questions to which she didn’t really have any answers, partly because it was either a long walk or hanging round waiting for one of the few buses that went anywhere near Spalding Green. But Kath and Dennis Latimer had been the closest to best friends that either she or Tom had ever had, all at school together, all living in and around Lafferton most of their lives. Dennis had died ten years earlier and then Kath had shut herself away, before moving to be near her sister in Bognor. It had been a disaster, they had fallen out and Kath had returned to a smaller house in her old road.

‘I feel bad about you,’ Jean said later that morning, sitting in Kath’s tiny cluttered front room with a cup of milky coffee. The budgerigar hopped to and fro, to and fro, on the bar inside its cage until Jean had to look away, it irritated her so much. ‘Does he never settle down?’

Kath glared. ‘He’s perfectly happy.’

‘I’m sure. Just seems a bit restless.’

Funny, Jean thought, how you forgot things. There had always been a budgie – it was one of the things that had put her off visiting. Tom had never been able to stand them either. The only way they managed to stay friendly was if Dennis and Kath came to them, then halfway through an evening, Kath would say she was worried about Charlie or Pippy or some other silly thing, so they ought to get back.

Kath got up and fiddled with a stick of millet on the side of the cage, pursed her lips and made a tweeting noise. The budgie hopped about madly, tweeting back.

People’s lives. Jean finished her coffee. People’s narrow lives.

They couldn’t find anything to say.

‘I suppose there’s no real point in you visiting him, is there? As he doesn’t know who you are. No point in troubling him.’

‘It doesn’t trouble him, he likes me to go.’

‘Are you sure?’

Jean was not sure but would have cut out her tongue rather than say so.

‘I wouldn’t dream of not going.’

‘Well, I suppose if it’s a comfort to you, it’s worth it.’

Was it? A comfort? Worth it? Worth what?

She had made a mistake in coming. Kath was the last person she could confide in about the sounds she had heard. In any case, sitting here in the hot room with the hopping budgerigar, she wondered if she had heard anything. Sometimes, you hovered about the edge of a dream, sure you were awake and heard a sound that was never there. Kath would have made her feel a fool.

But she stayed for a second coffee, and a chocolate shortcake. It would have been rude not to when it was so long since she’d made the effort. It was only when she was finally waiting for the bus into town that it occurred to her Kath could equally well have come over to see her. She never did.

The sound of the child’s scream, real or dreamed, stayed with her. She did some shopping in town, caught another bus, walked the last half-mile, and all the time, it was there, in her head, it kept repeating itself. It wasn’t the sort of sound you forgot.

If it had been a sound.

Four

JULY 2010

Kath never admitted to sleeping in the afternoon, but nevertheless, when the phone rang and rang on that Sunday, she did not hear it and it was almost half past five when she picked up the message.

‘Kath? Are you there? Kath?’ Jean’s voice sounded odd. ‘Can you ring me please, Kath? I don’t feel well …’

There was no reply when she called back, and none fifteen minutes later. Kath panicked and called a taxi.

The hospital said Mrs Mason was in intensive care and could have no visitors, unless Kath was next of kin. She waited for a couple of hours before she was told that Jean’s condition was stable and that she could come back tomorrow.

‘And,’ the woman said, ‘do you have contact details for her next of kin?’

It seemed terrible to say that so far as she knew, there were none. No Tom any more. No parents, sisters, brothers, children, aunts, uncles. She had no idea about cousins. ‘But I’ve known her many years and I’ve never heard her mention one.’

No next of kin. No relatives. No one. How could that be? On her way home Kath felt both exhausted and guilty. She and Dennis had been friends with Jean and Tom for a lifetime, yet there was nothing left to show for it.

She was back at the hospital the next day.

‘I want you to do something for me.’ It took a long time for her to form the words.

‘In my bag …’

Kath pulled the handbag out of the bedside cupboard. Jean had no movement in her arms. ‘No, I don’t like to rummage about it your bag.’ But Jean was so agitated, she opened it. Not much. Purse. Pension book. Compact, worn shiny, the words Love from Tom hardly visible any longer. Pen. Diary. A small red ruled notebook.

Jean nodded. ‘Take it home with you. Keep it.’

‘Where do you want me to keep it?’

‘Safe. Just safe. Don’t throw it out.’

Jean closed her eyes and drifted off. Kath waited ten minutes longer but it was clear she wouldn’t wake for a while. She put the handbag back into the cupboard, and the red notebook into her own.

When she got home, she opened the notebook and glanced through. Dates. Times. A line or two in Jean’s writing. Then she locked it into the bureau drawer, on top of her birth certificate and her will.

Five

OCTOBER 2010

The duty sergeant flipped through the red soft-covered notebook. Dates. Times. The entries had been made over the last three years, mostly two or three times a month. He began to read, but after a couple of pages, looked across at the woman sitting on the bench opposite his desk.

‘Mrs Latimer?’ She got up. ‘I think you should have a word about this with someone from CID. I’ll take you into an interview room and someone will come down.’

‘So I didn’t do the wrong thing?’

‘You did absolutely the right thing.’

She only had to wait a few minutes.

‘Mrs Latimer? I’m DC Bethan Waites. Can I get you a tea? Coffee?’

They both had tea. ‘Wise,’ the young woman said, sitting down on the small, uncomfortable sofa next to Kath. ‘The coffee’s disgusting. Actually the best is the hot chocolate.’ How many times had she gone through this bit of beverage chit-chat to help settle the interviewee down? But oddly, it usually did.

She’s young, was all Kath thought. Not pretty but nicely presented. Emerald-green jacket, dark skirt, plain blouse, hair neat.

‘Do you ever wear a uniform?’

DC Waites smiled. ‘Not any more.’

‘Very nice.’

‘It is. Now … the duty sergeant filled me in briefly but I’d like you to tell me about this notebook – I didn’t get the full story before he had to take a phone call.’ Not true. They never got the full story. Starting over was what CID did.

Kath told it. ‘That was in late July … she never left the hospital. It was awful to watch her … couldn’t do anything for herself and then another stroke meant she lost her speech. It was a blessing when the next one came and carried her away.’

‘I’m sorry. Always hard to lose an old friend – just as hard as losing a relative sometimes.’

I wonder how many of either you’ve lost though, Kath thought, at your tender age? How do you know what’s hardest?

‘So Mrs Mason died when, exactly?’

‘The third of September … early hours of the morning. I wish she hadn’t been alone. I do wish that.’

‘Yes, indeed. But maybe she …’

‘Didn’t know anything about it? That’s what I tell myself. You see …’

Bethan was adept at getting them back on track without apparent rudeness or any sense of hurry. It was a useful skill.

‘And it’s now the twelfth of October. Why didn’t you bring the notebook in to us sooner?’

‘I just forgot all about it. Truth be told, I’d forgotten about it more or less as soon as she gave it to me for safe keeping and I put it in that drawer.’

‘Did Mrs Mason give you any idea at all why she wanted you to have it and keep it safe for her?’

‘No.’

‘Did she give you anything else to look after?’

‘No.’

‘Did you read through the notebook?’

‘I glanced inside. None of it meant anything except … well, some of the things she wrote down worried me – that’s why I brought it to you. These things about hearing children … hearing them crying … hearing a scream … seeing … I don’t know. It upset me.’

‘Yes,’ the young woman said. ‘Did Mrs Latimer ever write things – stories or poems or that sort of thing? A lot of people do. I was wondering if these were notes for some sort of story …’

‘If she did she never mentioned it and I knew her for over sixty years. She wasn’t like that.’

‘Like what?’

‘Well … arty. Fanciful.’

‘Right. Did she keep any other sort of diary?’

‘Not that I know of. I shouldn’t think so. She had a kitchen calendar, same one every year, from the Donkey Protection place … she had it hanging up in the kitchen but that was just, you know, hairdresser, dentist sort of thing.’

‘And there’s nothing else you can think of to explain this notebook? Anything about Mrs Mason that might help us?’

‘I just can’t think of anything. I’m sorry.’

‘Please don’t be.’

‘It’s only …’

Kath fiddled with her coat button. ‘I feel I’ve let her down, somehow … I don’t know … she gave it to me to keep safe and I’ve … looked into it, brought it here, shown it to you. I feel as if I’ve …’

The DC put her hand briefly on Kath’s. ‘No,’ she said quietly, ‘you haven’t let her down, you haven’t betrayed her. You have done exactly what she would have done if she had been alive.’

‘Are you sure about that?’

‘Yes.’ The young woman held her gaze. ‘I am.’

PART TWO

Six

2013

‘Good morning, Superintendent.’

A Tuesday morning in late May and there were four others round the table in the meeting room at Bevham HQ. The only one already known to Serrailler was the Chief Constable, Kieron Bright. The man who had succeeded Paula Devenish was the youngest in the country ever to be appointed Chief, a fast-tracker who had swiftly worked his way up through the ranks and then served in a high-security special unit before being an ACC for under two years. He was impressive, taller than Simon, fit, shrewd, and he had hit the ground running. The force had felt the shock but responded to it well. Simon had expected not to like the man but he did – liked and respected. The only area of disagreement they had was over drugs ops, which the new Chief had pepped up and which Serrailler regarded as a waste of time and resources. They had agreed to differ. ‘I respect your arguments, Simon,’ the Chief had said. ‘I’ve met them before and in quite high places. But they’re wrong. It’s my mission to bring you over to my side.’

The mission was not yet accomplished because there was never time for the luxury of exhaustive debates.

The Chief had called him in, without explanation, but Serrailler was fairly sure this was not going to be about drugs ops.

‘Thank you for coming over. I’m sorry I wasn’t very forthcoming but this was not for any sort of communication other than face-to-face. I’m only in for the first few minutes and then I’ll leave you with the officers here to give you a full brief. I don’t think you’ve met any of them before.’

Simon looked round again quickly. Blank and all unfamiliar faces. ‘No, sir, I’m sure not.’

‘Right. This meeting is to discuss a very sensitive covert operation. It isn’t going to be an easy one. But I wanted to say that the operation has my full support, and that I suggested your involvement because you’re not only one of the most experienced but also one of the most trusted officers I’ve ever worked with.’ He looked straight at Serrailler. ‘That isn’t bullshit,’ he said.

‘Sir.’

‘But in the same way that you’ve never met the people here before, I know you’ve never done anything like this op before.’

So the Chief had been through his career file. Serrailler had done most things in his time, except terrorism ops. Right. The Chief left. Coffee was brought in. The room went still.

‘I’m DCS Lochie Craig. I work in the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre.’

‘DCI Linda Warren. Also from CEOP.’

‘DCS Harry Borling.’ He gave no more information.

Not terrorism then. Child protection was something Serrailler had been involved in from time to time, as almost all police officers were, but as he had risen through the ranks he had left much of it to the specialists. He said so now.

‘This is actually a side shoot from CEOP, Chief Superintendent.’

‘Simon.’

‘Thank you. And it’s Lochie.’

The other two nodded. Everyone relaxed slightly.

‘First off, I’d like you to look at some images. Three men. No names for the moment.’

He passed his laptop across the table. The older man in the photos was clearly related to one of the younger ones – they were probably father and son, Simon thought. The older was in his late sixties or early seventies, with thick white hair, a strong jaw and a beaky nose. The younger man – late thirties? – had brown hair, worn slightly long, the same nose, softer jaw. Their eyes were exactly the same shape – the family resemblance was strong. The third man looked rather less like the others but he had the same beaked nose as the first. Probably mid-forties. Simon looked hard at each of them for several minutes before passing the laptop back.

‘Well,’ he said, ‘I’m certain I’ve never seen any of them. My memory for names is OK, but for faces it’s extremely good. I don’t recognise them at all.’

‘Good. Glad we’ve got that out of the way. Right, let me go into detail.’ Lochie Craig was a balding, burly man in his fifties. A measure of strain had become moulded onto his features but he spoke calmly enough.

‘Lafferton, 2007.’ He had his laptop open.

‘Hmm, 2007. That was the year of the serial murders here. I don’t remember much else, though there must have been plenty of other stuff going on.’

‘There was. In April, a girl approximately four years old was found wandering the streets at night, naked and distressed. She was sighted twice before being brought into safety by a resident. She was initially taken to hospital, later into foster care and finally adopted. She had been physically abused, badly enough to need surgery. Her identity has never been discovered. No one came forward despite widespread appeals – no parents, family, neighbours, no one. She suffered almost total blanking of the events and we could never even find out her name. She now lives in another part of the country and is settled with her adoptive family, but, inevitably, she is scarred in most senses and has educational and emotional problems.’

‘I was certainly aware of the case,’ Serrailler said. ‘Even in the middle of very complex murder inquiries, it couldn’t fail to be noted.’

‘Right, case two. A child called Glory Dorfner presented some artwork in her primary-school class. It depicted crudely drawn figures engaged in sexual activity. One was of a small girl apparently being buggered by a man. The other was of a small girl performing an oral sex act on a man – the male’s sexual organ was made to appear much larger than the rest of the figure. The child’s teacher came to Lafferton Police Station. Officers and members of the social services child-protection team visited Glory’s house an hour after the teacher reported with the drawings. The child was asleep, but there was sufficient concern and a certain amount of evidence of her being sexually abused to warrant her being subject to an emergency court order and taken into care immediately. Her stepfather and her stepbrother were subsequently found guilty of sexual abuse, and computers and other material were taken from the home. These contained hundreds of images of child abuse. This case is being looked into again at the present time, because of certain new evidence and in spite of the fact that the two men are still serving sentences.’ He paused to pour himself a glass of water. Drank it.

The faces of the other two were impassive. They had heard all this before, and far worse. They dealt with child abuse every day of their working lives and it was beyond Serrailler to know how they coped with it.

The DCS looked at him. ‘OK?’

Simon nodded.

‘Right. Case three. Mrs Jean Mason of Plimmer Road, Lafferton, died in 2010, and while in hospital during her last illness she left a notebook in the safe keeping of her friend, Mrs Kathleen Latimer. Mrs Latimer looked at it and brought it into Lafferton Police Station. It took a little while to work out what the list of dates and times meant – there were notes, but they were not very full. Do you know Plimmer Road?’

‘I do and I didn’t realise anyone still lived there. It’s been a derelict bit of Lafferton for a long time. Shops closed, didn’t reopen, got boarded up, accommodation above them was usually empty. There was a plan for its redevelopment but once the recession bit every developer pulled out. I haven’t been along there for a while but I doubt if anything has changed.’

‘Mrs Mason had lived above one of the shops for upwards of thirty years. Her friend Mrs Latimer, who died last year, was interviewed several times and said that the Masons had never wanted to leave. When they first went there it was a bustling area of shops, offices and residential, and Mrs Mason had stuck it out while everything shut up round her. But according to the notebook, she started to hear sounds from the disused shop next door – children crying, children screaming – then she recorded seeing cars draw up and men get out with small children, and, twice, men coming out of the shop carrying a child. She knew the property was empty.’

‘Did she call us in?’

‘No. And she didn’t tell Mrs Latimer anything, just asked her to keep the notebook safe.’

‘What action was taken at the time?’

‘I’ve a copy of the report here, if you’d like to read it.’ He handed over a single sheet of paper.

A routine patrol car had checked out 11 Plimmer Road, at 4 p.m. on 20 October. The shop had formerly been a bookmakers with living accommodation above but was boarded and padlocked. The garden behind was overgrown and needles and other drug paraphernalia were found, none recently used. Steps led from the back door down to a cellar which was also boarded, and bolted. The patrol reported all this and then left, but one of the patrol officers wasn’t happy and reported to CID. It was over a week before anyone investigated – low priority at a time when they were overwhelmed with a murder inquiry. Two officers went to the shop equipped with a rammer and broke down the cellar door. An outer room contained some old cardboard boxes and newspapers, but was otherwise empty. A door, slightly concealed by an old wooden chest, was then discovered and that led to an inner cellar. Here, a camera and other recording equipment were found, together with some rugs, a couch, a couple of upright chairs, plus cigarette butts, sandwich wrappers, empty plastic coffee cups and drinks cans. Unfortunately, no one had the presence of mind to make this inner room a crime scene. But all the items were removed, bagged and taken for forensic examination.

Serrailler put the sheet down. ‘Findings?’

DCS Lochie Craig looked at his laptop.

‘There was a small amount of footage left on one of the camcorders – probably test images, perhaps when the equipment appeared to have a fault. They were blurred and disconnected but there was enough to show us that children were being filmed during the course of sessions of sexual abuse. Nothing else except a feast of fingerprints – they were obviously either planning to return or sure they were safe and undetected. Cups, recording equipment, chairs … clear prints were taken from all of these. There was also some DNA – on the rug, on the sofa – taken from semen and saliva and also from blood.’

There was a pause. Their faces were still impassive, even that of the woman DCI.

Serrailler felt anger and nausea bubble up into his throat. He suppressed them.

‘Fingerprints lead anywhere?’

‘Only one set. A man called William – always known as Will – Fernley. Mean anything?’

‘No, nothing at all. He isn’t local, is he?’

‘Not local to Lafferton, no – the family live in Devon. William is the third son of Lord Fernley.’

‘Sorry, no, I’ve never heard of him.’

‘Fine.’ The laptop lid was closed.

‘Linda, would you like to take over at this point?’ Craig poured another glass of water and drank all of it.

She was probably in her early forties and, until now, she had sat listening with that impassive expression. Now, though, she looked directly at him with a warm, open smile.

‘This isn’t an area you’re very familiar with and I know it can be difficult. We deal with it every day, we get used to it, but we don’t get hardened, Simon – the minute that happens, it’s time for a transfer to another line of work. Not everyone can cope with it – it takes its toll. On the other hand, it is so important, it’s vital – and we owe it to the children to stick at it, so we find ways of coping and continuing. I want to say this now because if you do take on what we’re hoping you will, you need to understand that fully.’

Simon nodded.

‘Do you have any questions at this stage, before we get down another layer?’

Did he? How the hell did you light on me for whatever it is? Why? It’s something I’ve steered clear of for the whole of my career, I’m not well informed about CEOP, so why me? But whatever the answer and then whatever you’re going to ask me to do, it’s no. No.

He folded his arms. ‘No, no questions,’ he said. ‘Carry on.’

Seven

‘Yes, you are interrupting, and I’m very glad about that.’ Cat Deerbon led Emma, manager of the Lafferton bookshop, into the kitchen.

‘I brought you the Julian Barnes,’ Emma said, glancing down at a parcel on the table in Amazon packaging. ‘And what did they send?’

‘Oh God, sorry. I needed a textbook quickly.’

‘And cheaply.’

‘Emma, I do try to be fair but that textbook would cost seventy-five pounds from you and I got it for less than half. I just can’t afford not to. But I’ve almost finished my thesis and then I won’t need any more ridiculously expensive tomes. Coffee? Glass of wine? Slice of my humble pie?’

‘Don’t be silly. Coffee would be good, thanks, Cat. I’m sorry you didn’t get to the book group. Are you feeling better?’

‘Fine. I swear I felt more sick than in my entire life, and that includes three pregnancies. Short but ugh.’

‘Judith didn’t make it either.’

Cat looked at her sharply. ‘Did she say why?’

‘Only that she wasn’t well. It was probably the same bug.’

Cat did not reply, just scooped coffee into the cafetière.

‘How are the young ones?’

‘Felix has the bug, he’s in the den wrapped in a fleece with a bucket to hand. He missed school which he really minded. Hannah is rehearsing for The Sound of Music. Sam – well, as Sam rarely speaks, only grunts, I can’t be sure but he seems OK – he’s going to the under 18 county cricket trials tomorrow.’

‘I’m impressed – that and the hockey.’

‘No, his cricket isn’t as good and he’s only fifteen. He won’t get in but it’ll be good experience for next time. I am sorry about Amazon, Emma – you do understand?’

Emma sighed. ‘I wish I didn’t.’

‘How is business in general?’

‘So-so. Children’s books are doing well – I could almost live off those sales, but not quite.’

‘But you have to stay open. You’ve worked so hard at that bookshop, Lafferton couldn’t do without you now.’

Emma made a face. ‘Try telling that to the people who come in, browse for ages, make a list and go home to order online.’ She failed to keep the note of bitterness out of her voice.

After Emma had gone, Cat went to check on Felix, who was asleep under his fleece. She woke him and managed to get him to stumble upstairs and into bed, with only a quick wash. He had a little more colour in his cheeks so the bug was probably on the wane. He’d had a growth spurt but he was chunky, not a beanpole, like Sam. Like Simon. Chris would have loved him, of course, but been surprised by him too. He was a thoughtful, inward-looking boy, and a good musician. But he was also lacking in confidence, young for his age in some ways, and he clung to her as Sam and Hannah had never done. Cat loved his quiet company. She knew she needed to be on her guard against loving it too much and encouraging his clinginess.

She went back to her desk and the expensive textbook and set it beside her laptop. She ought not to feel guilty, but she did. Emma had to make a living and her bookshop was not making much profit. On the other hand … Cat’s anxiety about her finances came to haunt her every night. She sometimes dreamed of bank statements.

When Chris died, he had left her a modest pension and the proceeds of a life insurance policy, whose value had declined steadily, and now it was worth less than half what it had been immediately after his death. They had never been a rich couple but hadn’t had to worry about money either, and as a new widow Cat had found that financially things could continue more or less as before. Now, her income had slumped. The school fees were a drain, since she was no longer a regular GP and the hospice job had folded. Her private pension income from Chris had paid the bills. Now, it was in danger of not paying them.

Molly, her medical student lodger, had qualified and left to work for a year in Vietnam, so her room was empty. She had lived at the farmhouse free in exchange for help with babysitting and some cooking but any replacement could simply pay rent. That would help but only a little. Locum work as a GP was quite well paid, but it was insecure as well as unrewarding, and her job as medical officer at Imogen House had more or less ended when the hospice had changed from being one with bedded wards to day care only. She had a small retainer – the operative word being ‘small’. She had spent the past year working on her PhD, attached to the Cicely Saunders Institute at King’s in London, and she had found it absorbing, but that cost money, it did not generate any.

She needed to talk to someone about her situation, but, other than the bank manager, who was there? Not her father, not Judith. Simon? But a member of the family might assume she was asking for a loan or a gift and Cat was emphatic that she would never do that, she just needed a listening ear and some suggestions. Yes, Si then. The problem was that he was either taken up with work, as ever, or with Rachel – even more so now that she had moved in with him. Cat was anxious not to make any more demands on his time.

She sat fiddling with a pencil, jotting down odd, rather unconnected sums on paper, getting nowhere.

Chris. The loss of him overwhelmed her again in a way she had half forgotten. It was not linked to an anniversary or any physical reminder, just a pure sense of loss, a desperate longing and missing which seem to search every corner of her heart and mind, only to find them empty of him. After all this time, she thought, and it is still yesterday. So I know it will never be any different, I will never stop being knocked over by the force of this feeling.

And I’ll never forget him, I know that too. Immediately after her husband’s death, she had been panic-stricken that in time the memory of him might actually fade away completely. It was a small comfort to be sure now that it would not.

Eight

They broke for ten minutes. More coffee came in. Serrailler returned a couple of calls. Then back.

Linda Warren was working from written notes, not a laptop, but she did no more than glance at them occasionally.


The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

Where to Download The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

Most helpful customer reviews

46 of 47 people found the following review helpful. The Soul of Discretion By Damaskcat Simon Serrailler is asked to take on the most dangerous and difficult job of his career. Naturally he has mixed feelings about it but his overwhelming feeling is that the job must be done. His family - sister Cat and her children and his father, Richard and stepmother Judith - are used to him being incommunicado from time to time but for Rachel, his partner, it is difficult to deal with. She isn't finding it easy living with Simon.While Simon is preparing for his new undercover existence there is a rape in Lafferton and an elderly woman hears strange noises at night in the empty building next door to her flat. Simon's sister, Cat, needs to find another source of income and their stepmother, Judith is wondering whether her marriage was all a mistake.I found this a tense and harrowing read and probably, in my opinion, one of the best books in this excellent series. It does not shirk the difficult issues of terminally ill people, child abuse and rape and it deals with them sensitively and well. There is little graphic violence but the book is all the more horrific for its absence.The book could be read as a standalone novel as there is enough background information to inform the new reader about the things they need to know. However, reading the whole series in the order of publication gives a more in depth picture of the series characters. I received a free copy of this book from NetGalley for review purposes

21 of 22 people found the following review helpful. Just when I thought the Serrailler series might be running out of steam....... By Lady Fancifull Susan Hill was a fabulous and thoughtful writer of complex and often dark psychology long before she embarked on the crime genreSo when, all those years ago, she joined the ranks of detective novel writers, with an on-going cast of characters, to appear novel by novel, she was never going to abandon her initial writerly strengths and vision, and would instead bring these to her interpretation of the genre.She begins with a particular person DCI Simon Serrailler, as her detective to follow and over the years (this is outing 8) traces the development not just of Serrailler himself, and relationships he has as a professional, the development of and relationships of individuals within his team, but also looks at Serrailler himself and his immediate and wider family. That family of course also being set within a particular time and place `Lafferton' a small cathedral town, somewhere in Southern England.This gives, as the series wears on, Hill a chance to explore much wider themes, within the lives of her characters, and the culture of the times. The particular `crime' which may be the page turning element of the plot will spread out into the lives of the community at large, and Hill may also investigate further ethical and philosophical themes and sub-themes in each novel, as well as charting how decisions from Central Government may be filtering down onto the ground. These will obviously be around the policing and judiciary, and may deal with issues such as economic migrants and how they are viewed, but, as Serrailler's sister Cat Deerbon is a doctor, the exploration of the changing face of health-care and policies relating to this, are also, increasingly, at the centre.This might make her sound dry, white-paper minded and pedantic. Anything but - it adds depth, integrity and interest. Continuing readers of the series know all the above, and my advice of course for the first time reader would be that though this (book 8) is absolutely fine, as they all are, to read as a stand-alone first book, if you enjoyed it, go and explore, in order, the rest of the series, from book 1, and work your way through, then reading this again, for even more enjoyment.Later books in the series have explored strong meta-themes.In this one, we are back into the territory of sexual crimes - and the wide context is about consent, and who is capable of giving consent; without consent, is always violation. Centrally, we are in the horrid territory of organised paedophilia, but there is also another story going on around adult rape and issues of power between the sexes. Hill is never salacious, there are no accounts designed half to titillate as they repel, but she does not hesitate to make the reader understand difficulties, injustices, ambiguities and still bleak challenges within the legal system.She also continues to explore a theme which surfaced in Serrailler 6, around terminal care, and assisted dying, death itself - both un-natural, visited through violence by one on another, and the process itself which comes to all, which in the main we find so difficult to engage with. As a contrast to the difficulties in Serrailler 6, we have here, through Cat Deerbon's medical practice, an exploration of what proper hospice care could offer, what is being lost through cost-cutting policies, and indeed a humbling (for Deerbon) and revealing series of conversations with a patient in the process of dying (this is no spoiler, it is very obvious, immediately, known to Deerbon, known to the family) This is part of the `heart' of the book, an exploration of communities, both what is supportive about communities - and of course, that flip-side, the community of perversion which the police story is all about.Initially, I started this book with a sense that maybe the series had run its course, that there was nowhere else to go. I do believe Hill proved me wrong. There are very certain developments, and onwards, not to mention an ending which has beautiful poise.So yes, I will be interested in Serrailler 9, should Hill want to take us from that poise, onwards.Her books are not really about guessing plot, we know who, we often can surmise, through the meta-themes, `and who else'; we often also know generally why (the litany of human chosen wrongdoing often comes down to simple motives), but the trick, or the point, is to get down to the particular weft and weave of individuals.I received this as a digital ARC, via the publishers, Random House Vintage, complete with a few strange vanished sentence or clause endings, and the odd typo, which I assume will be corrected by an eagle-eyed and diligent final proof reading. That aside, recommendedPublication date in the UK 2nd October, Stateside has the same date for Kindle, but next year for the `proper bookie book'

12 of 12 people found the following review helpful. Top notch crime fiction! Tight plot and awesome characters. By Maxine (Booklover Catlady) This was my first of the Simon Serrailler series, and my first Susan Hill book ever. I know right? Have I been hiding under a rock or something? Avid crime fan, somehow I missed this talented author. No more. Whilst this was book eight in the series, for me, the newcomer it read totally fine as a stand alone book. I didn't feel I missed out by not reading prior books in the series.I knew from the opening chapter I was going to like this book, first chapters are good indicators sometimes.From the outside, the cathedral town of Lafferton seems idyllic, but in many ways it just like any other place. It suffers from the same kinds of crime, is subject to the same pressures from a rapidly changing world, has the same hopes and fears as any number of towns up and down the land.When one day DC Simon Serrailler is called in by Lafferton's new Chief Constable, Kieran Bright, he is met by two plainclothes officers. He is asked to take the principal role in a difficult, potentially dangerous undercover operation and must leave town immediately, without telling anyone - not even his girlfriend Rachel, who has only just moved in with him.This book has so much going for it. A clever, tight plot that continues to throw up surprises. Exceptional characters, flawed and interesting. Story lines that work well in tandem then flow together into one brilliantly executed finale, like two rivers flowing into the great big blue ocean.The book tackles some dark elements, some very real and disturbing crimes are committed and the focus of this book. Child pornography, child sex crimes, child killings. Not nice stuff. I seriously take my hat off to the men and women that work in this department of child sex crimes in any police force around the world, the images, the horrific things they see would send anyone around the bend with madness from the sheer evil of it all.Pretty soon DC Simon Serrailler is asked to get closer to this evil than he ever imagined he would. He is to play a key role in bringing evil men to justice, to see their day in court and pay the ultimate price for their crimes. I loved the way his role was played out in the story line for this book, very interesting reading.Can he play his role in cracking open secret networks of criminals? What's more can he do it without rocking anyone's boat and alerting them he is on the case?There is an interesting sub-plot weaving through the novel at the same time as Simon is on his secret case. Again, the plot tackles difficult subject matter, but is written so well, it had me, the reader also wanting to know the outcome of this story too.Not your average crime novel by any means, I liked a lot of aspects of this book. It flows and it sucks you in and makes you want to keep reading until the final outcome. My only criticism if any, is that in the middle I felt it hit a bit of a lull period, but wasn't long before it picked up into first gear again.Most crime fiction fans usually are hardened to most things in crime books, graphic scenes, kill methods, torture etc. Thankfully, Susan Hill does not go into graphic detail around the child sex crimes, thank God, thank God, thank God - as THAT is hard stuff to read, even for the hardened crime reader like me.A brilliant novel, entertaining, intriguing and one to put on your "to-read" list for sure. I am going to be finding more of this series to bury my crime lovers nose into in the very near future. 4 stars from me.

See all 120 customer reviews... The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill


The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill PDF
The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill iBooks
The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill ePub
The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill rtf
The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill AZW
The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill Kindle

The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill

The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill
The Soul Of Discretion (A Chief Superintendent Simon Serrailler Mystery), by Susan Hill