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The Lying Game: A Novel
The Lying Game: A Novel
The Lying Game: A Novel
Ebook544 pages8 hours

The Lying Game: A Novel

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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  • Friendship

  • Secrets

  • Betrayal

  • Family

  • Guilt

  • Power of Friendship

  • Haunted Past

  • Lying Game

  • Prodigal Son

  • Disappearance

  • Friends to Lovers

  • Haunted House

  • Dark Secret

  • Outsider

  • Dark Past

  • Fear

  • Secrets & Lies

  • Trust

  • Mystery

  • Motherhood

About this ebook

Praise for Ruth Ware’s instant New York Times, USA TODAY, and Los Angeles Times bestseller:

“So many questions....Until the very last page! Needless to say, I could not put this book down!” —Reese Witherspoon

“Once again the author of The Woman in Cabin 10 delivers mega-chills.” —People

“Missing Big Little Lies? Dig into this psychological thriller about whether you can really trust your nearest and dearest.” —Cosmopolitan

From the instant New York Times bestselling author of blockbuster thrillers In a Dark, Dark Wood and The Woman in Cabin 10 comes a chilling new novel of friendship, secrets, and the dangerous games teenaged girls play.

On a cool June morning, a woman is walking her dog in the idyllic coastal village of Salten, along a tidal estuary known as the Reach. Before she can stop him, the dog charges into the water to retrieve what first appears to be a wayward stick, but to her horror, turns out to be something much more sinister…

The next morning, three women in and around London—Fatima, Thea, and Isa—receive the text they had always hoped would never come, from the fourth in their formerly inseparable clique, Kate, that says only, “I need you.”

The four girls were best friends at Salten, a second-rate boarding school set near the cliffs of the English Channel. Each different in their own way, the four became inseparable and were notorious for playing the Lying Game, telling lies at every turn to both fellow boarders and faculty. But their little game had consequences, and as the four converge in present-day Salten, they realize their shared past was not as safely buried as they had once hoped…

Atmospheric, twisty, and with just the right amount of chill to keep you wrong-footed, The Lying Game is told in Ruth Ware’s signature suspenseful style, lending itself to becoming another unputdownable thriller from the Agatha Christie of our time.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherSimon & Schuster
Release dateJul 25, 2017
ISBN9781501156199
Author

Ruth Ware

Ruth Ware worked as a waitress, a bookseller, a teacher of English as a foreign language, and a press officer before settling down as a full-time writer. She now lives with her family in Sussex, on the south coast of England. She is the #1 New York Times and Globe and Mail (Toronto) bestselling author of In a Dark, Dark Wood; The Woman in Cabin 10; The Lying Game; The Death of Mrs. Westaway; The Turn of the Key; One by One; The It Girl; Zero Days; One Perfect Couple; and The Woman in Suite 11. Visit her at RuthWare.com or follow her on socials @RuthWareWriter. 

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Reviews for The Lying Game

Rating: 3.555555563030303 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

990 ratings73 reviews

What our readers think

Readers find this title to be a mixed bag. Some enjoy the book and find it to be a great read, with twists and suspense that keep them interested. Others, however, feel that it is tedious and monotonous, with unlikeable characters. The story is convoluted and the ending feels empty. Overall, opinions are divided, but there are positive aspects to the book.

What did you think?

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Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Feb 8, 2018

    Isa gets a text out the blue from her friend Kate saying I need you. She takes her baby and goes to Salten where she was at boarding school. Thea and Fatima both get the same message and all four meet because their past is catching up with them.I have read the two previous books by Ruth Ware and enjoyed both so I was looking forward to reading her new novel. The scenario of a group of friends with a big secret as been told many times, so no originality there. One that readily came to mind was Lace by Shirley Conran.I liked the fact that the story did have flashbacks to when the girls were at school and the lying game is explained. The story then slowly builds so that the reader gets to find out the what really happened and why.The story does have a certain degree of predictability about it. It did remind of perhaps Agatha Christie where there is only a few people who could have been responsible. This is the same, there was only a few characters to guess who and why. I did think that the story didn't have many twists and turns, and it really could only go one way.I enjoyed the book and there was enough to hold my interest. I especially enjoyed the descriptions of the mill and the surrounding area which came over to me very bleak and foreboding. Overall the book was ok, a little bit average at times and didn't have the final big twist, but I still enjoyed the story and would read more by Ruth Ware in the future.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Sep 2, 2024

    Hard to put this book down. Many twists and turns...ending fell flat however. Was hoping for more...
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5

    Mar 23, 2023

    I can see why people may enjoy this book. To me this was monotonous and the characters were unlikeable and uninteresting. Couldn’t wait to finally reach the end.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Jan 12, 2023

    The story is convoluted, and not in a way that brings any mystery. Ware repeats herself quite a bit, using the the same words over and over again. As far as the intrigue—nothing is explained at all. Everything happens in the last couple of chapters, and the ending feels empty. I do love most of her other books, but I struggled to read this one.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Aug 7, 2021

    This is my second Ruth Ware book and I am loving her! Cannot wait to start the next one.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Mar 15, 2021

    This is a really good book, it keeps you interested and not wanting to stop reading. I like how the author leads you in on direction then twist to another. The Lying Game is a great read I definately recommend it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Feb 28, 2021

    Enjoyed the book, but it did not catch my attention with the same suspense that other Ruth Ware books have.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5

    Sep 4, 2020

    I have enjoyed others books by Ruth Warem but this one was tedious. All the women considered each other best friends and come each other's aid but had not seen each other in years. They spent a lot of time going between London and the Reach - more so than necessary.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Jun 11, 2020

    3.5 really.
    Kept me reading. So many lies.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Jul 6, 2019

    Ruth Ware sure does know how to put her readers on the edge of their seats. Page turner from the get-go until the end.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Jan 5, 2022

    Liked the book but I missed the chapters on page
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Feb 28, 2022

    This is the first book I have enjoyed completely in a long time. I could find no fault in the storyline and felt all opened doors were satisfyingly shut at the end. All ends were tied.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Oct 31, 2022

    Compelling, suspenseful mystery about a group of four female friends. Their lives have become bound together by a secret they have jointly kept about a traumatic event that occurred seventeen years ago, while attending boarding school. The story is told by one of the friends, Isa, now 32 years old with a six-month-old infant. I found the portrayal of the mother-infant bond particularly effective. The author is skilled at creating a suspenseful atmosphere, and the story is filled with distinctive characters. Her descriptions of the environment are striking – I could almost smell the sea air from the dock of the rustic Tide Mill. The story unfolds gradually, switching between past and present, leaving the reader a figurative bread crumb trail that leads to the discovery of additional clues. I found that some of my hunches were correct, but there were enough surprises to keep it interesting. Recommended to readers who enjoy slowly-building mysteries and suspense.

    I received this book in a Goodreads giveaway.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Feb 15, 2022

    The Lying Game. Ruth Ware. 2017. Ware is the author of The Woman in Cabin 10, a book I thought was over-hyped when I read it several years ago. This one lived up to the blurbs though. Four girls become fast friend at a boarding school near the English Channel. They play game in which they get points for telling outrageous lies to their fellow students, the teachers, and the town people. Kate is the leader of the group, and her father teaches art at the school. The girls spend a lot of time at the old mill where the father lives. One night Kate calls the girls. She is frantic and almost hysterical. Her father has killed himself, (or did he!) and she convinces the girls to help bury the body. Years later she calls the girls to come back to the mill immediately: a bone has been found in the water! The lies become real! One of the girls who is new mother narrates the story. There is some great commentary on parent-child love and lots of suspense. Some violence.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Dec 8, 2021

    4 1/2 Stars

    Rule One Tell a Lie

    Rule Two Stick to Your Story

    Rule Three Don’t Get Caught

    Rule Four Never Lie to Each Other

    Rule Five Know When to Stop Lying



    What a terrific book. I went into it thinking it might be like Pretty Little Liars YA edition and I couldn’t be more wrong. It’s the story of four adult women dealing with a lie they told 15 years before. and the lie that they have believed about their part in the tragedy and the guilt that they feel because of it.
    This is the first book I’ve read by the author but halfway through this book I picked Ware’s latest “The Turn of the Key”
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Feb 8, 2018

    Book Description:On a cool June morning, a woman is walking her dog in the idyllic coastal village of Salten along a tidal estuary known as the Reach. Before she can stop him, the dog charges into the water to retrieve what first appears to be a wayward stick, but to her horror, turns out to be something much more sinister...The next morning, three women in and around London—Fatima, Thea, and Isabel—receive the text they had always hoped would NEVER come, from the fourth in their formerly inseparable clique, Kate, that says only, “I need you.”The four girls were best friends at Salten, a second rate boarding school set near the cliffs of the English Channel. Each different in their own way, the four became inseparable and were notorious for playing the Lying Game, telling lies at every turn to both fellow boarders and faculty, with varying states of serious and flippant nature that were disturbing enough to ensure that everyone steered clear of them. The myriad and complicated rules of the game are strict: no lying to each other—ever. Bail on the lie when it becomes clear it is about to be found out. But their little game had consequences, and the girls were all expelled in their final year of school under mysterious circumstances surrounding the death of the school’s eccentric art teacher, Ambrose (who also happens to be Kate’s father).Atmospheric, twisty, and with just the right amount of chill that will keep you wrong-footed—which has now become Ruth Ware’s signature style—The Lying Game is sure to be her next big bestseller. Another unputdownable thriller from the Agatha Christie of our time.My Review:I liked this book better than The Woman in Cabin 10. I think the characters were better developed and the plot was a little more interesting. It was a fast read and held my interest but the ending was a bit predictable. The story was told with flashbacks from the present to the past and showed the power and guilt of telling lies. The setting was described very well and made you feel a part of the story. The pace of the story was a little too slow in the beginning but moved faster with twists and turns towards the ending. I would, however, recommend this book to those who like to read about secrets kept from the past.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Jun 9, 2024

    Adolescent girls can be very dangerous and I speak from experience, luckily not as dangerous as these. Genuine friendship- I think not, yet they are bound together by the past and the faulty judgment of youth. What seemed like a good idea at the time was clearly not. For all the faults of the protagonists, this is a great read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Nov 10, 2024

    This one blows Woman in Cabin 10 out of the water, if you'll excuse the pun. A great read; gripping and intense.

    A must read for lovers of this genre.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Mar 19, 2018

    Trite. Ruth Ware's buzzy novels have been on my tbr for awhile. When this one became available at my library, I grabbed it. This was my first Ware, which turned out to be a mistake. It's bad. Without rehashing the plot, here's what irked me the most:Hated the character through whose perspective the story is told. She's insipid and actually a pretty lame excuse of a person. Her entire adult life is unraveled by poor decisions she made in high school, which by the way ruined the lives of other people then and has the potential to negatively impact the life of her current partner and father of their six month daughter.No matter though. When her high school girlfriends text her out of the blue 17 years after she'd last seen them, she upends her life. When her partner questions her behavior, which he is given reasons to do, he is the bad guy and she the affronted and wounded party. And therein lies the biggest issue with the book. It one thing to have even an unsympathetic and unreliable narrator (like Gone Girl, Girl on the Train...all the girls) and another thing to be stuck with a character I didn't like, didn't respect, and thought a simpering fool. There are lots of side plots introduced that go nowhere and have no purpose whatsoever, including but not limited to a gutted sheep with a threatening note that is fretted about briefly and then ignored, numerous accounts of breastfeeding and leaky breasts, which have no bearing on the story, considerable anxiety about secrets from the past haunting the future (whiffff), a tense high school reunion during which nothing happens and more.Based on the good reviews of her other books, this may be the novelist's equivalent of phoning it in. Save your time and your money.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Mar 15, 2021

    3.5-4 stars. Not as great as her other books, but but not awful. I found it to be a bit too cliche. Too easy to guess the ending. Overall, good storyline and decent characters for the most part.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Jan 25, 2021

    Just an okay book, not what I was hoping for. The plot dragged on and I could not relate to any of the characters, Isa in particular.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Oct 26, 2023

    A secret kept by four boarding school girls from Salten House comes back to haunt them fifteen years later. Kate, Fatima, Thea, and Isa form a tight bond as they play The Lying Game. But the truth has a way of surfacing, and it does so with a vengeance.
    The Lying Game by Ruth Ware details the formation and testing of these bonds of friendship and secrets in the atmospheric setting of a small town near the Reach, as Kate's nearby house, known as the Mill, is sinking into the bog.
    How easily the four friends fall back into lying is frightening and incriminating. The leisurely pacing of the story belies the growing menace which the friends struggle to recognize.
    The author's detailed descriptions of the behavior and thoughts of point of view character Isa dive deep into character so human it resonates like harmonics after a chord is played. Lovely twists of plot and surprises all the way to the end keep the reader going.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Oct 2, 2022

    The Lying Game by Ruth Ware

    Fatima, Thea, Isa and Kate have been keeping a secret since their time at Boarding school. When Kate texts the others saying she needs them, they are there for her. Soon they find that some secrets can be hard to keep.

    A fast paced psychological thriller. Told from past to present with twist, turns and secrets. I was hooked from the first page, until the end. I recommend The Lying Game to those who enjoy psychological thrillers.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Jun 26, 2020

    Only the ending kept my rating at 3 stars rather than 2. I found Isa to be an incredibly annoying character who was so self-centered she couldn't see what was going around her. I felt especially sorry for her long-suffering partner Owen, who was also the father of her child. I was annoyed at how Isa repeatedly put her infant daughter in harm's way. Ok, so I know that wasn't the point of the book. There is a cover-up by 4 friends that has haunted them for years but turns out to be not what they had thought it all was. Still, Isa's flaws and actions dominated what I thought as I read. I'm also not sure how I feel about the ultimate message of the book - it's ok to lie, sometimes.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5

    Aug 17, 2022

    Unfortunately, this novel was a disappointment to me. The premise sounds interesting: Four women, who were best friends at boarding school, gather years later because one of them sends a particular text message. Apparently they were an unpopular and even feared group back then, because they were lying and spinning elaborate stories, trying to convince other people that they were true and doing harm in the process. Of course, there is a very dark secret that is about to come out now and putting them in danger.
    What I liked about this story was the setting. It is similar to the setting of the Ruth Galloway novels: A lonely, wooden house on a wide, tidal beach. I loved the descriptions of this. I also enjoyed the writing style, and yes, I did find it gripping and kept guessing until the end.
    Apart from that, though, there was not much that I liked. I only warmed to one of the four main characters - Fatima, a Muslim doctor who has become more religious in recent years and constantly receives comments regarding her hijab and her choice not to drink alcohol. To me, she is the only character in the novel who sees clearly and who suggests sensible and constructive ideas on how to deal with the situation.
    The worst character to me is the narrator, who is unsufferable, because of her stupid actions, her inconsistencies, and how terrible she treats her boyfriend. The addition of her baby to the novel is not a win and just made it more repetitive (because of course the baby cries, needs attention and is another stake in dangerous situations - every time).
    While I liked the plot in the beginning, I did not enjoy how it developed. Maybe I am also getting a little tired of thrillers about dark secrets and events from someone's childhood.
    I will still seek out other novels by Ruth Ware because as said above, I like her style, but this one is not her best.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5

    Jul 30, 2022

    This is my least favorite mystery by Ruth Ware so far. It follows a group of 4 women who were friends at boarding school in their youth, and it slowly reveals the truth of what really happened to the father of one girl (also an art teacher at the school) after he went missing during their time at school.

    I found it predictable and not that suspenseful.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Feb 17, 2020

    Felt a bit like I imagine Pretty Little Liars is, it was a decent mystery with not a lot given away, but I was unsatisfied with the ending.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Feb 3, 2020

    In Ruth Ware's latest mystery, The Lying Game, four friends are reunited after a grisly discovery threatens to expose a secret they have been keeping for the past seventeen years.

    Meeting at an isolated boarding school, Isa, Fatima, Thea and Kate quickly formed a close-knit friendship. They were not particularly well-liked by their classmates since their "lying game" made it impossible to trust them. Following a scandal involving Kate's father, Ambrose, the girls were expelled and Isa, Thea and Fatima have not returned to Salten Reach in the intervening years. However, an urgent text from Kate, who remained in town, brings the other three women running after a shocking discovery on a nearby beach.

    Isa is a new mom to a six month old daughter and they are the first to arrive in town. She is a fretful new mom who is constantly worried about her baby. Despite her best efforts to glean the reason for Kate's summons, her friend refuses to divulge any information until all of the women are together.  They quickly fall back into their close friendship and they while away the hours reminiscing about their many adventures they shared while they were at boarding school.  However, Isa remains very uneasy about why Kate has brought them together.

    The four women are shocked when Kate divulges the reason for their impromptu reunion and each of them are quite concerned about the effect this news will have on their lives.  Each of them has a lot to lose if their secret comes out but they all know it is only a matter of time before they will be answering a lot of uncomfortable questions. Equally stunning is their realization that Kate's stepbrother Luc Rochefort also lives nearby and Isa's recent encounter with him puts the four women on edge since he too has knowledge about the events that separated them seventeen years earlier.

    The Lying Game is a somewhat atmospheric mystery that slowly wends its way to a very action packed conclusion.  Ruth Ware masterfully builds the tension until it reaches a fever pitch as Isa finally begins putting the various pieces of the puzzle into place. There are plenty of unexpected twists and turns in store for the foursome as the truth about the events preceding their expulsion from boarding school are revealed.  A completely enthralling novel that I absolutely love and highly recommend to fans of the genre.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Jan 22, 2019

    4 teenaged girls (Kate, Isa, Thea, and Fatima) attend a boarding school and play a game called "The Lying Game". Now, they are in their early 30s and one of the 4 sends a text to the other 3 that she needs them. They all leave their families and jobs and come running. They return to their childhood school town, and begin to relive what happened on that fateful night 17 years ago - and the night that they have been lying about ever since. What really happened? Who was lying? Who was responsible? Will they ever be able to escape the lies, or will the lies haunt them forever?
    I thought this book was good, but it went on a bit too long. There were many innuendos throughout the book, and sometimes it seemed that the storyline left a few gaps open. Overall, I enjoyed it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Sep 18, 2018

    Another killer read from Ruth Ware!

    When a text comes through to Isa Wilde in the middle of the night, three simple words, her entire life is turned upside-down.

    “ I need you”

    A human body was discovered on the marsh and with it, long ago buried truths are coming to light. With these words, Isa is whisked, both literally and figuratively, back to the idyllic town of her youth where she spent one fateful semester at a boarding school. Something terrible happened, leaving Isa and her three friends to pick up the pieces. This twisty turny thriller leaves you wondering who is lying, who is telling the truth, and unsure of who can be trusted.

    What a wild ride! First of all, I want to highlight the fact that I listened to his one on audiobook and the reader, Imogene Church was, in a word, phenomenal. She brought so much life and feeling into Ware words it just added that extra layer of personality and suspense to the story. And speaking of words, Ware is a master with them. Rich with imagery, her words paint such a robust and full scene from beginning to end. Every detail, feeling, nuance is captured so perfectly and vividly. In true thriller fashion, Ware has a way of parceling out her information to the readers just enough to fill our heads will all sorts of theories, only to have them dashed and second guessed with the next chapter.

    Solid read, one I highly recommend to all my fans of a good thriller. Ware has secured her place on my auto buy list and will gladly gobble up anything she puts out!

    1 person found this helpful

Book preview

The Lying Game - Ruth Ware

The Reach is wide and quiet this morning, the pale blue sky streaked with pink mackerel-belly clouds, the shallow sea barely rippling in the slight breeze, and so the sound of the dog barking breaks into the calm like gunshots, setting flocks of gulls crying and wheeling in the air.

Plovers and terns explode up as the dog bounds joyously down the river bank, scampering down the runnelled side, where the earth turns from spiky grassy dunes to reed-specked mud, where the water wavers between salt and fresh.

In the distance the Tide Mill stands sentinel, black and battered against the cool calm of the morning sky, the only man-made structure in a landscape slowly crumbling back into the sea.

Bob! The woman’s voice rings out above the volley of barks as she pants to catch up. Bob, you rascal. Drop it. Drop it, I say. What’ve you found?

As she draws closer, the dog tugs again at the object protruding from the mud, trying to pull it free.

Bob, you filthy brute, you’re covered. Let it go. Oh God, it’s not another dead sheep, is it?

It’s the last heroic yank that sends the dog staggering back along the shore, something in its jaw. Triumphant, he scrambles up the bank to lay the object at the feet of his owner.

And as she stands, looking dumbstruck, the dog panting at her feet, the silence returns to the bay like a tide coming in.

RULE ONE

TELL A LIE

The sound is just an ordinary text alert, a quiet beep beep in the night that does not wake Owen, and would not have woken me except that I was already awake, lying there, staring into the darkness, the baby at my breast snuffling, not quite feeding, not quite unlatching.

I lie there for a moment thinking about the text, wondering who it could be. Who’d be texting at this hour? None of my friends would be awake… unless it’s Milly gone into labor already… God, it can’t be Milly, can it? I’d promised to take Noah if Milly’s parents couldn’t get up from Devon in time to look after him, but I never really thought…

I can’t quite reach the phone from where I’m lying, and at last I unlatch Freya with a finger in the corner of her mouth, and rock her gently onto her back, milk-sated, her eyes rolling back in her head like someone stoned. I watch her for a moment, my palm resting lightly on her firm little body, feeling the thrum of her heart in the birdcage of her chest as she settles, and then I turn to check my phone, my own heart quickening slightly like a faint echo of my daughter’s.

As I tap in my PIN, squinting slightly at the brightness of the screen, I tell myself to stop being silly—it’s four weeks until Milly’s due, it’s probably just a spam text, Have you considered claiming a refund for your payment protection insurance?

But, when I get the phone unlocked, it’s not Milly. And the text is only three words.

I need you.


IT IS 3:30 A.M., AND I am very, very awake, pacing the cold kitchen floor, biting at my fingernails to try to quell the longing for a cigarette. I haven’t touched one for nearly ten years, but the need for one ambushes me at odd moments of stress and fear.

I need you.

I don’t need to ask what it means—because I know, just as I know who sent it, even though it’s from a number I don’t recognize.

Kate.

Kate Atagon.

Just the sound of her name brings her back to me, like a vivid rush—the smell of her soap, the freckles across the bridge of her nose, cinnamon against olive. Kate. Fatima. Thea. And me.

I close my eyes and picture them all, the phone still warm in my pocket, waiting for the texts to come through.

Fatima will be lying asleep beside Ali, curled into his spine. Her reply will come around 6:00 a.m., when she gets up to make breakfast for Nadia and Samir and get them ready for school.

Thea—Thea is harder to picture. If she’s working nights she’ll be in the casino, where phones are forbidden to staff and shut up in lockers until their shifts are finished. She’ll roll off shift at eight in the morning, perhaps? Then she’ll have a drink with the other girls, and then she’ll reply, wired up with a successful night dealing with punters, collating chips, watching for cardsharps and professional gamblers.

And Kate. Kate must be awake—she sent the text, after all. She’ll be sitting at her dad’s worktable—hers now, I suppose—in the window overlooking the Reach, with the waters turning pale gray in the predawn light, reflecting the clouds and the dark hulk of the Tide Mill. She will be smoking, as she always did. Her eyes will be on the tides, the endlessly shifting, eddying tides, on the view that never changes and yet is never the same from one moment to the next—just like Kate herself.

Her long hair will be drawn back from her face, showing her fine bones, and the lines that thirty-two years of wind and sea have etched at the corners of her eyes. Her fingers will be stained with oil paint, ground into the cuticles, deep beneath the nails, and her eyes will be at their darkest slate blue, deep and unfathomable. She will be waiting for our replies. But she knows what we’ll say—what we’ve always said, whenever we got that text, those three words.

I’m coming.

I’m coming.

I’m coming.

I’m coming!" I shout it up the stairs, as Owen calls something down above Freya’s sleepy squawking cries.

When I get up to the bedroom he’s holding her, pacing back and forth, his face still pink and crumpled from the pillow.

Sorry, he says, stifling a yawn. I tried to calm her down but she wasn’t having any of it. You know what she’s like when she’s hungry.

I crawl onto the bed and scoot backwards into the pillows until I’m sitting against the headboard, and Owen hands me a red-faced, indignant Freya who takes one affronted look up at me and then lunges for my breast with a little grunt of satisfaction.

All is quiet, except for her greedy suckling. Owen yawns again, ruffles his hair, and looks at the clock, and then begins pulling on his underwear.

Are you getting up? I ask in surprise. He nods.

I might as well. No point in going back to sleep when I’ve got to get up at seven anyway. Bloody Mondays.

I look at the clock. Six a.m. It’s later than I thought. I must have been pacing the kitchen for longer than I realized.

What were you doing up, anyway? he asks. Did the bin lorry wake you?

I shake my head.

No, I just couldn’t sleep.

A lie. I’d almost forgotten how they feel on my tongue, slick and sickening. I feel the hard, warm bump of my phone in my dressing gown pocket. I’m waiting for it to vibrate.

Fair enough. He suppresses another yawn and buttons up his shirt. Want a coffee, if I put one on?

Yeah, sure, I say. Then, just as he’s leaving the room, Owen—

But he’s already gone and he doesn’t hear me.

Ten minutes later he comes back with the coffee, and this time I’ve had time to practice my lines, work out what I’m going to say, and the semi-casual way I’m going to say it. Still I swallow and lick my lips, dry-mouthed with nerves.

Owen, I got a text from Kate yesterday.

Kate from work? He puts the coffee down with a little bump, it slops slightly, and I use the sleeve of my dressing gown to mop the puddle, protecting my book, giving me time to reply.

No, Kate Atagon. You know, I went to school with her?

"Oh, that Kate. The one who brought her dog to that wedding we went to?"

That’s right. Shadow.

I think of him. Shadow—a white German shepherd with a black muzzle and soot-speckled back. I think of the way he stands in the doorway, growls at strangers, rolls his snowy belly up to those he loves.

So…? Owen prods, and I realize I’ve stopped talking, lost my thread.

Oh, right. So she’s invited me to come and stay, and I thought I might go.

Sounds like a nice idea. When would you go?

Like… now. She’s invited me now.

And Freya?

I’d take her.

Of course, I nearly add, but I don’t. Freya has never taken a bottle, in spite of a lot of trying on my part, and Owen’s. The one night I went out for a party, she screamed solidly from 7:30 p.m. to 11:58, when I burst through the doors of the flat to snatch her out of Owen’s limp, exhausted arms.

There’s another silence. Freya leans her head back, watching me with a small frown, and then gives a quiet belch and returns to the serious business of getting fed. I can see thoughts flitting across Owen’s face… That he’ll miss us… That he’ll have the bed all to himself… Lie-ins…

I could get on with decorating the nursery, he says at last. I nod, although this is the continuation of a long discussion between the two of us—Owen would like the bedroom, and me, back to himself and thinks that Freya will be going into her own room imminently, when she turns six months. I… don’t. Which is partly why I’ve not found the time to clear the guest room of all our clutter and repaint it in baby-friendly colors.

Sure, I say.

Well, go for it, I reckon, Owen says at last. He turns away and begins sorting through his ties. Do you want the car? he asks over his shoulder.

No, it’s fine. I’ll take the train. Kate will pick me up from the station.

Are you sure? You won’t want to be lugging all Freya’s stuff on the train, will you? Is this straight?

What? For a minute I’m not sure what he’s on about, and then I realize—the tie. Oh, yes, it’s straight. No, honestly, I’m happy to take the train. It’ll be easier; I can feed Freya if she wakes up. I’ll just put all her stuff in the bottom of the pram. He doesn’t respond, and I realize he’s already running through the day ahead, ticking things off a mental checklist just as I used to do a few months ago—only it feels like a different life. Okay, well, look, I might leave today if that’s all right with you.

Today? He scoops his change off the chest of drawers and puts it in his pocket, and then comes over to kiss me good-bye on the top of my head. What’s the hurry?

No hurry, I lie. I feel my cheeks flush. I hate lying. It used to be fun—until I didn’t have a choice. I don’t think about it much now, perhaps because I’ve been doing it for so long, but it’s always there, in the background, like a tooth that always aches and suddenly twinges with pain.

Most of all, though, I hate lying to Owen. Somehow I always managed to keep him out of the web, and now he’s being drawn in. I think of Kate’s text, sitting there on my phone, and it feels as if poison is leaching out of it, into the room—threatening to spoil everything.

It’s just Kate’s between projects, so it’s a good time for her and… well, I’ll be back at work in a few months, so it just feels like now’s as good a time as any.

Okay, he says, bemused but not suspicious. Well, I guess I’d better give you a proper good-bye kiss, then.

He kisses me, properly, deeply, making me remember why I love him, why I hate deceiving him. Then he pulls away and kisses Freya. She swivels her eyes sideways to regard him suspiciously, pausing in her feed for a moment, and then she resumes sucking with the single-minded determination that I love about her.

Love you, too, little vampire, Owen says affectionately. Then, to me, How long is the journey?

Four hours, maybe? Depends how the connections go.

Okay, well, have a great time, and text me when you get there. How long do you think you’ll stay?

A few days? I hazard. I’ll be back before the weekend. Another lie. I don’t know. I have no idea. As long as Kate needs me. I’ll see when I get there.

Okay, he says again. Love you.

I love you, too. And at last, that’s something I can tell the truth about.

I can remember to the day, almost to the hour and minute, the first time I met Kate. It was September. I was catching the train to Salten, an early one, so that I could arrive at the school in time for lunch.

Excuse me! I called nervously up the station platform, my voice reedy with anxiety. The girl ahead of me turned around. She was very tall and extremely beautiful, with a long, slightly haughty face like a Modigliani painting. Her waist-length black hair had been bleached gold at the tips, fading into the black, and her jeans were ripped across the thighs.

Yes?

Excuse me, is this the train for Salten? I panted.

She looked me up and down, and I could feel her appraising me, taking in my Salten House uniform, the navy-blue skirt, stiff with newness, and the pristine blazer I had taken off its hanger for the first time that morning.

I don’t know, she said at last, turning to a girl behind her. Kate, is this the Salten train?

Don’t be a dick, Thee, the girl said. Her husky voice sounded too old for her—I didn’t think she could be more than sixteen or seventeen. She had light brown hair cut very short, framing her face, and when she smiled at me, the nutmeg freckles across her nose crinkled. Yes, this is the Salten train. Make sure you get into the right half, though; it divides at Hampton’s Lee.

Then they turned, and were halfway up the platform before it occurred to me, I hadn’t asked which was the right half.

I looked up at the announcement board.

Use front seven carriages for stations to Salten, read the display, but what did front mean? Front as in the closest to the ticket barrier, or front as in the direction of travel when the train left the station?

There were no officials around to ask, but the clock above my head showed only moments to spare, and in the end I got onto the farther end, where the two other girls had headed, and dragged my heavy trunk after me into the carriage.

It was a compartment, just six seats, and all were empty. Almost as soon as I had slammed the door the guard’s whistle sounded, and, with a horrible feeling that I might be in the wrong part of the train completely, I sat down, feeling the scratchy wool of the train seat harsh against my legs.

With a clank and a screech of metal on metal, the train drew out of the dark cavern of the station, the sun flooding the compartment with a suddenness that blinded me. I put my head back on the seat, closing my eyes against the glare, and as we picked up speed I found myself imagining what would happen if I didn’t turn up in Salten, where the housemistress would be awaiting me. What if I were swept off to Brighton or Canterbury or somewhere else completely, or worse—what if I ended up split down the middle when the train divided, living two lives, each diverging from the other all the time, growing further and further apart from the me I should have become?

Hello, said a voice, and my eyes snapped open. I see you made the train.

It was the tall girl from the platform, the one the other had called Thee. She was standing in the doorway to my compartment, leaning against the wooden frame, twirling an unlit cigarette between her fingers.

Yes, I said, a little resentful that she and her friend had not waited to explain which end to get. At least, I hope so. This is the right end for Salten, isn’t it?

It is, the girl said laconically. She looked me up and down again, tapped her unlit cigarette against the doorframe, and then said, with an air of someone about to confer a favor, Look, don’t think I’m being a bitch, but I just wanted to let you know, people don’t wear their uniforms on the train.

What?

They change into them at Hampton’s Lee. It’s… I don’t know. It’s just a thing. I thought I’d tell you. Only first-years and new girls wear them for the whole journey. It kind of makes you stand out.

So… you’re at Salten House, too?

Yup. For my sins.

Thea got expelled, a voice said from behind her, and I saw that the other girl, the short-haired one, was standing in the corridor, balancing two cups of tea. From three other schools. Salten’s her last-chance saloon. Nowhere else would take her.

At least I’m not a charity case, Thea said, but I could tell from the way she said it that the two were friends, and this goading banter was part of their act. Kate’s father is the art master, she told me. So a free place for his daughter is all part of the deal.

No chance of Thea qualifying for charity, Kate said. Silver spoon, she mouthed over the top of her teas, and winked. I tried not to smile.

She and Thea shared a look and I felt some wordless question and answer pass between them, and then Thea spoke.

What’s your name?

Isa, I said.

Well, Isa. Why don’t you come and join me and Kate? She raised one eyebrow. We’ve got a compartment of our own just up the corridor.

I took a deep breath and, with the feeling that I was about to step off a very high diving board, I gave a short nod. As I picked up my case and followed Thea’s retreating back, I had no idea that that one simple action had changed my life forever.

It’s strange being back at Victoria. The Salten train is new, with open-plan carriages and automatic doors, not the old-fashioned slam-door thing we used to take to school, but the platform has hardly changed, and I realize that I have spent seventeen years unconsciously avoiding this place—avoiding everything associated with that time.

Balancing my takeaway coffee precariously in one hand, I heave Freya’s pram onto the train, dump my coffee on an empty table, and then there’s the same long, struggling moment there always is, as I attempt to unclip the cot attachment—wrestling with clasps that won’t undo and catches that won’t let go. Thank God the train is quiet and the carriage almost empty, so I don’t have the usual hot embarrassment of people queuing in front or behind, or pushing past in the inadequate space. At last—just as the guard’s whistle sounds again, and the train rocks and sighs and begins to heave out of the station—the final clip gives, and Freya’s cot jerks up, light in my hands. I stow her safely, still sleeping, opposite the table where I left my coffee.

I take my cup with me when I go back to sort out my bags. There are sharp images in my head—the train jerking, the hot coffee drenching Freya. I know it’s irrational—she’s on the other side of the aisle. But this is the person I’ve become since having her. All my fears—the ones that used to flit between dividing trains, and lift doors, and strange taxi drivers, and talking to people I didn’t know—all those anxieties have settled to roost on Freya.

At last we’re both comfortable, me with my book and my coffee, Freya asleep, with her blankie clutched to her cheek. Her face, in the bright June sunshine, is cherubic—her skin impossibly fine and clear—and I am flooded with a scalding drench of love for her, as painful and shocking as if that coffee had spilled across my heart. I sit, and for a moment I am nothing but her mother, and there is no one in the world except the two of us in this pool of sunshine and love.

And then I realize that my phone is buzzing.

Fatima Chaudhry, reads the screen. And my heart does a little jump.

I open it up, my fingers shaking.

I’m coming, it reads. Driving down tonight when the kids are in bed. Will be with you 9/10ish.

So it’s begun. Nothing from Thea yet, but I know it will come. The spell has broken—the illusion that it’s just me and Freya, off on a seaside holiday for two. I remember why I am really here. I remember what we did.

I’m on the 12:05 from Victoria, I text back to the others. Pick me up from Salten, Kate?

No reply, but I know she won’t let me down.

I shut my eyes. I put my hand on Freya’s chest so I know she is there. And then I try to sleep.


I WAKE WITH A SHOCK and a belting heart to the sound of crashing and shunting, and my first instinct is to reach out for Freya. For a minute I am not sure what has woken me but then I realize: the train is dividing; we are at Hampton’s Lee. Freya is squirming grumpily in her cot, she looks like she may settle if I’m lucky—but then there’s another shunt, more violent than the first set, and her eyes fly open in offended shock, her face crumpling in a sudden wail of annoyance and hunger.

Shh… I croon, scooping her up, warm and struggling from the cocoon of blankets and toys. Shh… it’s okay, sweetie pie. It’s all right, my poppet. Nothing to worry about.

She is dark-eyed and angry, bashing her cross little face against my chest as I get my top undone and feel the by now routine, yet always alien, rush of the milk letting down.

As she feeds, there is another bang and a crunch, and then a whistle blows, and we begin to move slowly out of the station, the platforms giving way to sidings, and then to houses, and then at last to fields and telegraph poles.

It is heart-stoppingly familiar. London, in all the years I’ve lived there, has been constantly changing. It’s like Freya, never the same from one day to the next. A shop opens here; a pub closes there. Buildings spring up—the Gherkin, the Shard—a supermarket sprawls across a piece of wasteland and apartment blocks seem to seed themselves like mushrooms, thrusting up from damp earth and broken concrete overnight.

But this line, this journey—it hasn’t changed at all.

There’s the burned-out elm.

There’s the crumbling World War II pillbox.

There’s the rickety bridge, the train’s wheels sounding hollow above the void.

I shut my eyes, and I am back there in the compartment with Kate and Thea, laughing as they pull school skirts on over their jeans, button-up shirts and ties over their summery tops. Thea was wearing stockings; I remember her rolling them up her impossibly long, slender legs, and then reaching up beneath the regulation school skirt to fasten her suspenders. I remember the hot flush that stained my cheeks at the flash of her thigh, and looking away, out across the fields of autumn wheat, with my heart pounding as she laughed at my prudery.

You’d better hurry, Kate said lazily to Thea. She was dressed, and had packed her jeans and boots away in the case resting on the luggage rack. We’ll be at Westridge soon. There’s always piles of beachgoers there; you don’t want to give a tourist a heart attack.

Thea only stuck out her tongue, but she finished hooking her suspenders and smoothed down her skirt just as we pulled into Westridge station.

Sure enough, just as Kate had predicted, there was a scattering of tourists on the platform, and Thea let out a groan as the train drew to a halt. Our compartment door was level with a family of three beach-trippers: a mother, a father, and a little boy of about six with his bucket and spade in one hand and a dripping choc ice in the other.

Room for three more? the father said jovially as he opened the door and they clambered in, slamming the door behind them. The little compartment felt suddenly very crowded.

I’m so sorry, Thea said, and she did sound sorry. We’d love to have you, but my friend here—she indicated me—she’s out on day release, and part of the terms of her probation is no contact with minors. The court judgment was very specific about that.

The man blinked, and his wife gave a nervous giggle. The boy wasn’t listening; he was busy picking bits of chocolate off his T-shirt.

It’s your child I’m thinking of, Thea said seriously. "Plus, of course, Ariadne really doesn’t want to go back to the young offenders institute."

There’s an empty compartment next door, Kate said, and I could see she was trying to keep her face straight. She stood and opened the door out onto the corridor. I’m so sorry. We don’t want to inconvenience you, but I think it’s for the best, for everyone’s safety.

The man shot us all a suspicious look and then ushered his wife and little boy out into the corridor.

Thea burst into snorts of laughter as they left, barely waiting even until the compartment door had slid shut, but Kate was shaking her head.

You do not get a point for that, she said. Her face was twisted with suppressed laughter. They didn’t believe you.

Oh, come on! Thea took a cigarette out of a packet in her blazer pocket and lit it, taking a deep drag in defiance of the NO SMOKING sign on the window. They left, didn’t they?

Yes, but only because they thought you were a fucking weirdo. That doesn’t count!

Is… is this a game? I said uncertainly.

There was a long pause.

Thea and Kate looked at each other, and I saw that wordless communication pass between them again, like an electric charge flowing from one to another, as if they were deciding how to answer. And then Kate smiled, a small, almost secretive smile, and leaned forwards across the gap between the bench seats, so close that I could see the dark streaks in her gray-blue eyes.

"It’s not a game, she said. It’s the game. It’s the Lying Game."


THE LYING GAME.

It comes back to me now as sharp and vivid as the smell of the sea, and the scream of gulls over the Reach, and I can’t believe that I had almost forgotten it—forgotten the tally sheet Kate kept above her bed, covered with cryptic marks for her elaborate scoring system. This much for a new victim. That much for complete belief. The extras awarded for elaborate detail, or managing to rehook someone who had almost called your bluff. I haven’t thought of it for so many years, but in a way, I’ve been playing it all this time.

I sigh and look down at Freya’s peaceful face as she suckles, her complete absorption in the moment of it all. And I don’t know if I can do it. I don’t know if I can go back.

What has happened, to make Kate call us so suddenly and so urgently in the middle of the night?

I can only think of one thing… and I can’t bear to believe it.

It is just as the train is drawing into Salten that my phone beeps for the last time, and I draw it out, thinking it will be Kate confirming my lift. But it’s not. It’s Thea.

I’m coming.

The platform at Salten is almost empty. As the sound of the train dies away, the peace of the countryside rolls back in, and I can hear the noises of Salten in summer—crickets chirping, the sound of birds, the faraway noise of a combine harvester across the fields. Always, before, when I arrived here there would be the Salten House minivan waiting, with its navy and ice-blue livery. Now the car park is hot dust and emptiness, and there is no one here, not even Kate.

I wheel Freya down the platform towards the exit, my heavy bag weighing down one shoulder, wondering what to do. Phone Kate? I should have confirmed the time with her. I’d been assuming she got my message, but what if her phone was out of charge? There’s no landline at the Mill anyway, no other number I can try.

I put the brake on the pram and then pull out my phone to check for text messages and find out the time. I’m just tapping in my code when I hear the roar of an engine, funneled by the sunken lanes, and I turn to see a car pulling into the station car park. I was expecting it to be the huge disreputable Land Rover Kate drove down to Fatima’s wedding seven years ago, with its bench seats and Shadow sticking his head out the window, tongue flapping. But it’s not. It’s a taxi. For a minute I’m not sure if it’s her, and then I see her, struggling with the rear passenger door, and my heart does a little flip-flop, and I’m no longer a civil service lawyer and a mother, I’m just a girl, running down the platform towards my friend.

Kate!

She’s exactly the same. Same slim, bony wrists; same nut-brown hair and honey-colored skin; her nose still tip-tilted and sprinkled with freckles. Her hair is longer now, held back in a rubber band, and there are lines in the fine skin around her eyes and mouth, but otherwise she is Kate, my Kate, and as we hug, I inhale, and her own particular scent of cigarettes and turpentine and soap is just as I remember. I hold her at arm’s length and find myself grinning, stupidly, in spite of everything.

Kate, I repeat foolishly, and she pulls me into another hug, her face in my hair, squeezing me so I can feel her bones.

And then I hear a squawk and I remember who I am, the person I’ve become—and all that’s passed since Kate and I last met.

Kate, I say again, the sound of her name on my tongue so perfect, Kate, come and meet my daughter.

I pull back the sunshade and pick up the wriggling, cross little bundle, and hold her out.

Kate takes her, her expression full of trepidation, and then her thin, mobile face breaks into a smile.

You’re beautiful, she says to Freya, and her voice is soft and husky just as I remember. Just like your mum. She’s lovely, Isa.

Isn’t she? I look at Freya, staring up, bemused, into Kate’s face, blue eyes fixed on blue eyes. She reaches out a chubby hand towards Kate’s hair but then stops, mesmerized by some quality of the light. She’s got Owen’s eyes, I say. I always longed for blue eyes as a child.

Come on, Kate says at last, speaking to Freya, not me. She takes Freya’s hand, her fingers stroking the silken baby pudge, the dimpled knuckles. Let’s get going.


WHAT HAPPENED TO YOUR CAR? I say as we walk towards the taxi, Kate holding Freya, me pushing the pram, with the bag inside it.

Oh, it’s broken down again. I’ll get it fixed but I’ve got no money, as usual.

Oh, Kate.

Oh, Kate, when are you going to get a proper job? I could ask. When are you going to sell the Mill, go somewhere people appreciate your work instead of relying on the dwindling supply of tourists who want to holiday in Salten? But I know the answer. Never. Kate will never leave the Tide Mill. Never leave Salten.

Back to the Mill, ladies? the taxi driver calls out his window, and Kate nods.

Thanks, Rick.

I’ll sling the pram in the back for you, he says, getting out. Folds, does it?

Yes. I’m struggling with the clips again, and then I realize. Damn, I forgot the car seat. I brought the cot attachment instead, I was thinking she could sleep in it.

Ah, we won’t see no police down here, Rick says comfortably, pushing the boot shut on the folded pram. ’Cept Mary’s boy, and he’s not going to arrest one of my passengers.

It wasn’t the police I was worried about, but the name snags at me, distracting me.

Mary’s boy? I look at Kate. Not Mark Wren?

The very same, Kate says, with a dry smile, so that her mouth creases at one side. Sergeant Wren, now.

I can’t believe he’s old enough!

He’s only a couple of years younger than us, Kate points out, and I realize she’s right. Thirty is plenty old enough to be a policeman. But I can’t think of Mark Wren as a thirty-year-old man—I think of him as a fourteen-year-old kid with acne and a fluffy upper lip, stooping to try to hide his six-foot-two frame. I wonder if he still remembers us. If he remembers the Game.

Sorry, Kate says as we buckle in. Hold her on your lap—I know it’s not ideal.

I’ll drive careful, Rick says, as we bounce off, out of the rutted car park and into the sunken lane. And besides, it’s only a few miles.

Less across the marsh, Kate says. She squeezes my hand and I know she’s thinking of all the times she and I made that trip, picking our way across the salt marsh to school and back. But we couldn’t do that with the buggy.

Hot for June, in’t it? Rick says conversationally as we round the corner, and the trees break into a flash of bright dappled sunlight, hot on my face. I blink, wondering if I packed my sunglasses.

Scorching, I say. It wasn’t nearly so warm in London.

So what brings you back then? Rick’s eyes meet mine in the mirror. You was at school with Kate, that right?

That’s right, I say. And then I stop. What did bring me back? A text? Three words? I meet Kate’s eyes and I know there’s nothing she can say now, not in front of Rick.

Isa’s come down for the reunion, Kate says unexpectedly. At Salten House.

I blink, and she gives my hand a warning squeeze, but then we bump across the level crossing, the car shaking and bouncing over the rails, and I have to let go to hold Freya with both hands.

Very posh, them Salten House dinners are, so I hear, Rick says comfortably. My youngest does a bit of waitressing up there for pocket money, and I hear all sorts. Canapés, champagne, the works.

So I hear, Kate says. I’ve never been to one before, but it’s fifteen years since our class graduated, and I thought this year might be the one to go to.

Fifteen? For a minute I think she’s got the maths wrong, but then I realize. It’s seventeen years since we left, after GCSEs, but if we’d stayed on for sixth form, she’d be right. For the rest of our class it will be their fifteen-year anniversary.

We swing round the corner of the lane and I hold Freya tighter, my heart in my mouth, wishing I’d brought the car seat. It was stupid of me not to think of it.

You come down here much? Rick says to me in the mirror.

No, I say. I—I haven’t been back for a while. You know what it’s like. I shift awkwardly in the seat, knowing I am gripping Freya too tight but unable to loosen my hold. It’s hard to find the time.

Beautiful bit of the world, Rick throws back. I can’t imagine living anywhere else, meself, but I suppose it’s different if you wasn’t born and bred here. Where are your parents from?

They are—were— I stumble, and I feel Kate’s supportive presence at my side and take a breath. My father lives in Scotland now, but I grew up in London.

We rattle over a cattle grid, and then the trees open up and we are out on the marsh.

And suddenly it’s there. The Reach. Wide and gray and speckled with reeds, the wind-rippled waters reflecting the lazy streaks of sun-bleached cloud above, and the whole thing is so bright and clear and wide that I feel a lump in my throat.

Kate is watching my face, and I see her smile.

Had you forgotten? she asks softly. I shake my head.

Never. But it’s not true—I had forgotten. I had forgotten what it was like. There is nothing, nowhere, like the Reach. I have seen many rivers, crossed other estuaries. But none as beautiful as this, where the land and the sky and the sea bleed into one another, soaking each other, mingling and mixing until it’s hard to know which is which, and where the clouds end and the water starts.

The road is dwindling down to a single lane, and then to a pebbled track, with grass between the tire marks.

And then I see it—the Tide Mill: a black silhouette against the cloud-streaked water, even shabbier and more drunken than I remember. It’s not a building so much as a collection of driftwood thrown together by the winds, and looking as if it might be torn apart by them at any point. My heart lurches in my chest, and the memories come unbidden, beating at the inside of my head

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