Author:Robert Goddard
One fateful summer evening, businessman Robin Timariot meets a strikingly beautiful woman while out walking. They exchange only a few words, but those words prove to be unforgettable. A few days later, the newspapers are full of the rape and murder of Lady Louise Paxton - and to his horror, Timariot realises that this was the woman he met just hours before her death.
A man is swiftly charged and convicted of the crime, but a series of bizarre events begin to convince Timariot that all is not what it seems. Against his better judgement, he is soon sucked into the tortuous complexity of the dead woman's life. But the closer Timariot gets to the truth, the more hideous and uncertain it seems to be. And far too late, he realizes that anybody who uncovers it is unlikely to live...
A thriller in the classic storytelling sense... hugely enjoyable
—— The TimesAn atmosphere of taut menace... suspense is heightened by shadows of betrayal and revenge
—— Daily TelegraphThis is more than just a gripping page-turner. Morton combines his skill as a story-teller with the literary flair that readers will recognise from his other books
—— Jeff Zycinski, head of BBC Radio ScotlandMorton is up there with the best of Scotland's almost-young literary lions
—— Highland News'Lives up to the promise of its remarkable predecessor, Shadow Dancer...confirms Bradby's considerable promise as a a thriller writer'
—— Daily MailHaunting in every sense. An absorbing novel that finds its eloquence in what is left unsaid and its most vivid imagery in what has been lost, possibly for ever
—— Sunday TimesMatar suffuses Nuri's education in love and loss with an erotic frisson and fragile grace that lend the book an inner radiance
—— IndependentSubmerged grief gives this fine novel the mythic inexorability of Greek tragedy
—— EconomistSensually written, there is an extravagant feel even to the simplest sentence. From start to finish that exquisitely profound quality of uncertainty is the most wrenching aspect of all
—— Sunday TelegraphA thrilling read
—— Sunday Times