Catch Me When I Fall
- eBook
- Paperback
- Audiobook
- Hardcover
- Book info
- Sample
- Media
- Author updates
- Lists
Synopsis
Holly Krauss lives life in a whirlwind; her husband Charlie, her business partner Meg, and her colleagues at KS Associates are left breathless by her energy. But sometimes her wild behaviour leads to reckless mistakes. Mistakes which soon leave her life spiralling out of control.
And once her descent begins, Holly can do little to stop it. This is most definitely a woman on the edge of a nervous breakdown.
But is Holly solely responsible for what is happening to her? Are her fears for her own safety caused by the paranoia of her illness, or very real danger?
Release date: November 11, 2009
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Print pages: 336
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
Reader buzz
Author updates
Catch Me When I Fall
Nicci French
CATCH ME WHEN I FALL is one you won’t want to miss.”
—Mystery Scene
“French is a master at generating suspense, and that alone is enough to make this one worth reading.”
—Booklist
“French, a deft hand at placing fetching young women in fear for their lives, performs as expected.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“A harrowing tale… Nicci French is a specialist in the kind of evil that burrows from within … French captures the intimate
horror of watching your enemy smile at you from across the table.”
—New York Times Book Review
“So much fun.”
—Chicago Tribune
“Wickedly eerie.”
—USA Today
“Stunning… Nobody does the dark underside of sex in the city better than Nicci French.”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Fascinating and disturbing.”
—Memphis Commercial Appeal
“Shocking moments and surprise twists.”
—Library Journal
“Chilling in its depiction of a predator pursuing his victim, realistic in characterization, Secret Smile will hold the reader enthralled and cheering for Miranda. Then comes the final unexpected twist…” —Magill Book Reviews
“Chills and page-turning suspense.”
—Entertainment Weekly
“A page-turner.”
—Baltimore Sun
“Brilliant”
—Booklist (starred review)
“Taut terror.”
—Hartford Courant
“Terrifying suspense… a compelling heroine… a first-class shocker.”
—Abilene Reporter-News
“A keep-you-up-all-nighter.”
—People
“Clever plot twists.”
—Washington Post Book World
“A rare… depth of characterization, forceful and unique worldview.”
—San Jose Mercury News
“Brilliant… frightening… a tale of sheer terror.”
—People
“An insinuating tale of sexual obsession.”
—New York Times Book Review
“Genuine suspense keeps pages turning … Don’t plan on doing much else once you start reading this one.”
—Cleveland Plain Dealer
“Textured, elegant… plenty of psychological suspense.”
—Baltimore Sun
“A gripping whodunit.”
—Associated Press
“A compulsive read… peak psychological suspense.
—People
“Undeniably fascinating … You can’t stop reading this book once you’ve picked it up … French whips up a perfect confection.”
—Washington Post Book World
“First rate … genuine chills run down the spine … French can show John Grisham and Patricia Cornwell a thing about good writing.”
—Orlando Sentinel
“Elegantly chilling.”
—Philadelphia Enquirer
I died twice.
The first time, I wanted to die. I thought of death as the place where the pain would stop, where the fear would finally cease.
The second time, I didn’t want to die. In spite of the pain and in spite of the fear, I had at last decided that I was where
I needed to be. Messy, scary, tiring, lovely, hurting life, with all its failures and its sadness, with all its sudden and
unlooked for bits of joy that make you close your eyes and think: Hold on to this, remember this. Memories can carry you through.
Dancing in the dark; seeing the sun rise; striding through the city, lost in a crowd; looking up to meet your smile. You saved
me when I could no longer save myself. You found me when I was lost.
I didn’t want to be dead, but someone else wanted me to be. They tried very hard to make me die. I’ m a person who people
seem to either love or hate. Sometimes it’s been hard to tell the difference between the two. Even now, when it’ s all over
and I can look back at it like a landscape I’ve walked through and left behind, there are things that remain hidden, secrets
lost to me.
Dying takes you to another place. All alone, you cross a line and nobody can join you there. When my father died, I was sixteen
years old. I remember the spring afternoon when he was buried. My mother tried to make me dress in mourning clothes but my
father always hated the color black, so I put on my pink dress and my reddest lipstick and wore high heels that sunk into
the soft earth. I wanted to look like a hussy, like a tart. I smeared blue eye shadow on my eyelids. And I remember the words
the vicar said—ashes to ashes, dust to dust—and that people were crying and holding on to each other. I knew they wanted me to cry as well, and then they could have put
an arm around me and comforted me, but my father hated people weeping. He always liked us to show the world we were happy.
So I smiled all the way through the service, and I think I even laughed a bit because of the way everyone was looking at me.
My mother put a single white rose on his coffin when they lowered it into the ground, the way you’ re supposed to. I took
the bracelets off my arm and tossed those in instead, so for a few seconds it felt more like a pagan burial than a respectable
English funeral. One of the bracelets broke, and its bright plastic beads rolled around crazily on the cheap wooden lid. Rat-a-tat-tatting
on my father’s face.
For a while I thought that I would go mad with loneliness and rage, although I never told anyone about that because I didn’t have the words. For ten years, I tried to get back to him. In despair. In love. In disgust, hilarity, loathing and revenge.
I died twice. Only twice. You y d have thought that with all my frantic striving I could have done a bit better than that.
So here they are then. The people who loved me and
hated me, who wanted me to live and who wished me dead, who tried to save me and who let me go. They all look happy. They
are gazing at each other, holding hands, some of them are kissing. I can tell that they are making promises to each other
for the life ahead. That great and mysterious journey. Only one is missing.
I’M ATTRACTED TO DANGER,’ he said. “Always have been. What can I get you two?”
I thought for a moment. Pace yourself, Holly. It was an hour since Meg and I had left the office but I was still buzzing.
Fizzing. I once had a friend who was working as an actor. He’d told me how after a show it would take him hours to wind down,
which was a bit of a problem if the curtain went down at half past ten and you had any ambitions to fit in with the rest of
the world. Mainly he found himself fitting in with other actors who were the only people who felt like heading out for dinner
at eleven and sleeping until noon every day of the week.
Another friend from college is a long-distance runner. She’s impressive. She almost got into the Olympics. She runs ridiculously
fast and far just to get her body going. Then she runs a properly serious distance and punishes herself up steep hills. After
that, the difficulty is to bring her body back to normal again. She does more running simply to wind herself down. Afterward
she puts ice on her muscles and joints to cool them. I could do with that.
Sometimes I feel I’d like to put my whole head into a chinking barrel of ice.
“It’s not that difficult a decision,” he said. “Meg’s already asked for a white wine.”
“What?” I said.
For a moment I’d forgotten where I was. I had to look around to remind myself. It was just wonderful. It was autumn, but it
was a hot evening and the crowd in the Soho bar was spilling out onto the street. It felt like the summer was going to go
on forever, winter would never come, it would never rain again. Out in the countryside there were fields that needed water,
dry riverbeds, shriveling crops, but in the middle of London it was like being by the Mediterranean.
“What do you want to drink?”
I asked for a white wine and some water. Then I put my arm on Meg’s shoulder and murmured into her ear, “Did you talk to Deborah?”
She looked uneasy. So she hadn’t.
“Not yet,” she said.
“We need to talk about this. Tomorrow, okay?”
“Still or sparkling?” asked the man.
’Tap,” I said. “First thing, Meg, before anything else.”
“All right,” she said. “Nine o’clock then.”
I watched her and she watched the stranger walking over to the bar. He had a nice, open face; what was his name? Todd, that
was it. We’d all staggered over from the office. It had been a hard day. We’d arrived as a group but gradually been diluted
by the crowd. I saw familiar faces around the room. A room full of happy people who had escaped from their offices. Todd was
a client who had come over to the office to check our proposal and he’d tagged along with us. Now he was trying to buy the
drinks at the
crowded bar. He was having difficulty because one of the women behind the bar was being shouted at by a rude customer. She
was foreign—something like Indonesian—and the rude customer was yelling that she had given him the wrong drink. She was having
difficulty understanding what he was saying. Look at me when I’m talking to you, he said.
Todd came back clutching the drink for Meg, the two drinks for me and the beer for himself.
“They wouldn’t give me tap water,” he said. “It’s from a bottle.”
I took a sip.
“So you like danger,” I said.
“You make it sound stupid but yes, in a way.”
Todd proceeded to tell us about a holiday he’d taken. He was cheerily proud of it. He and a group of friends had been celebrating
something so they had undertaken a succession of dangerous sports across southern Africa. They had white-water rafted in Zambia
and canoed past hippos in Botswana and bungee jumped from a cable car going up to Table Mountain and scuba dived with great
white sharks.
“Sounds amazing,” said Meg. “I don’t think I’d have the nerve to do that.”
“It was very exhilarating,” he said. ’Terrifying as well. I think maybe I liked it more in retrospect.”
“Did anybody get eaten?” I asked.
“You go down in cages,” he said. “And we didn’t actually see any.”
“Cages?” I said, pulling a face. “I thought you liked danger.“
He looked bemused.
“Are you kidding?” he said. “I’d like to see you jump
from a cable car hundreds of feet up with just an elastic band for protection.”
I laughed, but not meanly I hoped.
“Haven’t you read our brochure?” I said. “We’ve arranged bungee jumps. We’ve done the risk assessments, we’ve organized the
insurance. I can tell you that it’s less dangerous than crossing the road.”
“It’s an adrenaline rush all the same,” Todd said.
“You can get adrenaline off the shelf,” I said.
Was he going to get offended or was he going to smile? He shrugged self-deprecatingly and smiled.
“So what’s your idea of danger?” he said.
I thought for a moment.
“Real things, where it matters. Searching for unexploded mines and then defusing them. Working as a miner—but not in Britain.
I mean in Russia or the third world.”
“What is it that frightens you most?”
“Lots of things. Lifts, bulls, heights, bad dreams. Almost everything about my job. Failure. Talking in public.”
Todd laughed.
“I don’t believe that,” he said. “That was a good presentation today.”
“I was terrified beforehand. I always am.”
“So you agree with me. You like challenges.”
I shook my head.
“Your bungee jumping and canoeing past hippos, that was in a brochure. You knew how it was going to turn out.” I heard a noise
behind me and turned around. That man was complaining to the woman again but worse this time. She was trying to explain and
she was almost crying.
“What about you, Meg?” Todd asked, turning toward her. She smiled up at him shyly and opened her mouth, but I interrupted
her reply.
“You’re saying you like risk?” I said.
“Yes.”
“Adrenaline?”
“I guess.”
“Do you want to show me?”
“Holly!” said Meg nervously.
Todd’s eyes flickered from side to side. I detected a flutter of excitement but also of nervousness. What was coming?
“What do you mean?”
“You see that man at the bar, the one being rude to the girl?”
“Yes.”
“Do you think he’s being a bully?”
“Probably. Yes.”
“Go and tell him to stop it and to apologize for his behavior.”
Todd tried to speak but he started to cough instead.
“Don’t be daft,” he said finally.
“You think he’ll hit you?” I said. “I thought you were attracted to danger.”
Todd’s expression hardened. This wasn’t funny anymore. And he had stopped liking me.
“It’s just a way of showing off,” he said.
“You’re scared of doing it.”
“Of course I’m scared.”
“If you’re scared of it, then the only way to get rid of the feeling is to do it. It’s like scuba diving with sharks. But
without the cage.”
“No.”
I put my two glasses down on a table.
“All right,” I said. “I’ll do it.”
“No, Holly, don’ t…” said Meg and Todd together.
That was the only encouragement I needed. I walked over to the man at the bar. He was also wearing a suit. Every man in the
room was wearing a suit. He must have been in his mid-thirties, balding, especially on the crown of his head. He was florid-faced
from the heat of the day and maybe from the week’s work and from his agitation. I hadn’t noticed how large he was. His jacket
fitted awkwardly around his broad shoulders. Also I hadn’t noticed that he was with two other men. He was still saying something
basically unintelligible to the woman.
“What’s going on?” I said.
He turned around, startled and angry.
“Who the fuck are you?” he said.
“You need to say sorry to this woman,” I said.
“What?”
“You don’t talk to people like that. You need to apologize.”
“Fuck off.”
He pronounced it with particular emphasis on the “k” sound, so there was a pause between the two words. Did he think I was
going to walk away? Did he think I was going to cry? I picked his drink up from the bar. It was a tumbler. I brandished it
at him, holding it barely an inch from his chin. It would be good to say that the whole bar fell silent, like in an old Western,
but there was no more than a ripple of attention around us. The man himself looked down at the glass, as if he was trying
to see the knot of his own loosened tie. I could see that he was thinking quickly: Is this woman mad? Is she really going
to smash a glass in my face? For this? And I should have been thinking much the same: If he could insult and shout at some
poor woman behind the bar for giving him the wrong drink, what would he do to me for physically threatening him? And I could
have been thinking, as Todd probably had been thinking, that this man might be just out of prison. He might have a propensity
for violence. He might especially enjoy picking on females. None of this occurred to me. I was just looking into his eyes.
I felt the throb of the pulse in my neck. I had the vertiginous feeling of having no idea what would happen in the next five
seconds.
And then the man’s face relaxed into a smile.
“All right,” he said. Delicately he reached up and took the glass from my hand, as if it might go off. He downed it in one.
“On one condition.”
“What’s that?”
“I’ll buy you a drink.”
I started to say no and looked around for Todd. He was gone, as was Meg. I wondered at what point they had fled the scene.
Was it in anticipation of what might happen? Or was it when they saw what actually had happened? I gave a shrug.
“Just do it,” I said.
He was quite gentlemanly about it. He gestured the nervous woman over. He nodded at me.
“This woman—what’s your name?”
“Holly Krauss,” I said.
“Miss Holly Krauss tells me that I was rude to you and that I ought to apologize. On reflection I think she was right. So,
I’m very sorry.” The woman looked at me and then at him again. I don’t think she properly realized what was going on. The
man, whose name was Jim, ordered me a double gin and tonic and another for himself.
“Cheers,” he said. “And incidentally she really is a bloody awful barmaid.”
I downed my drink in one and he ordered me another and from then on the evening speeded up. It was as if I had
been on a big dipper and it had climbed and climbed all day and at the moment when I held the glass under Jim’s chin was
when it got to the highest point where it perched for a moment and then began to descend more and more quickly. The bar began
to feel like a party where I knew quite a lot of the people or wanted to know them or they wanted to know me. I talked to
Jim and his friends, who found the whole episode with the glass very funny and kept on telling it over and over, teasing him
about it.
I was talking to a man who worked in the office across the courtyard from us and when he headed off with some friends along
the road to a private club for supper he asked me along and I went. Events occurred quickly but also in snapshots, like moments
illuminated by a strobe light. The club was in an eighteenth-century town house, all shabby wood paneling and bare boards.
It was an evening where everything seemed easy and available and possible. One of the men at the table where we ate was the
director of the club so he was joking with the waiter and getting special food for us to try. I had a long intense conversation
with a woman who worked for something amazing, a film company or a photographic company or a magazine, and later I couldn’t
remember a word of it. The only thing I remembered was how when she stood up to go she kissed me full and hard on my mouth,
so that I tasted her lipstick.
Someone suggested we go dancing. He said there was a new place that had just opened not far off and it would be getting going
about now. I looked at my watch and saw that it was past midnight; I’d been up since half past five. But it didn’t matter.
We all walked there together, a group of about ten people who until an hour or so ago had been strangers. A man put his arm
around me as we walked and started singing
in Spanish or Portuguese or something. He had a beautiful voice, very deep, which boomed out into the soft autumn air and
I looked up and saw there were stars in the sky. They shone so bright and near I almost felt that if I reached out I would
be able to touch them. I sang something, too, I can’t remember what, and everyone joined in. People were laughing, holding
each other. Our cigarettes glowed in the darkness.
We ended up near the office again. I remember thinking I’d come full circle and I was less tired than I’d been when I left.
I danced with the man who’d sung in Spanish, and then with someone who said his name was Jay, and I was in the women’s toilets
where someone gave me a line of coke. The club was small and crowded. A black man with soft eyes stroked my hair and told
me I was gorgeous. A woman, I think she said she was Julia, came up and said that she was going home now and maybe I should
as well, before something happened and did I want to share a taxi, but I wanted something to happen, everything to happen.
I didn’t want the evening to end yet. I didn’t want to turn out the lights. I danced again, feeling so light on my feet it
was almost like flying, until the sweat poured down my face and stung my eyes and my hair was damp and my shirt stuck to me.
Then we left. Jay was there I think, and maybe the singer, and a woman with amazing black hair who smelled of patchouli and
other people I remember only as silhouettes against the sky. It was so beautifully cool outside. I pulled the air into my
lungs and felt the sweat dry on my skin. We sat by the river, which looked black and deep. You could hear the tiny thwack
of waves on the bank. I wanted to swim in it, to lie in its dark currents and be swept away down to the sea where no one could
follow me. I hurled in
a handful of coins, though only a few of them reached the water, and told everyone to make a wish.
“What’s your wish then, Holly?”
“I want it to be always like this,” I said.
I put a cigarette in my mouth and someone leaned toward me, cupping the lighter in their hands. Someone took it out of my
mouth and held it while he kissed me and I kissed him back, pulling him toward me and gripping his hair in my hands, and then
a different person kissed me as well, his lips on my neck and I tipped back my head and let him. Everyone loved me and I loved
everyone. They all had tender, shining eyes. I said the world was a more magical place than we knew. I stood up and ran across
the bridge. With each step I felt that I might never land on the ground again, but I could hear the sound of my footfalls
echoing around me, and then the sound of other footfalls, too, following me, but they couldn’t catch me. People were calling
my name, like owls hooting. “Holly, Holly!” I laughed to myself. A car swept by, catching me in its headlights and then letting
me go again.
I stopped for breath at last, near an arcade of shops, and they found me there. Two of them I think. Maybe, maybe not. One
grabbed me around the shoulders and pushed me up against a wall, and said he’d got me at last and wasn’t going to let me go.
He said I was wild, but that he could be wild, too. He picked up a brick. His arm arced back over his head, just a few inches
from me, and I saw the brick sailing through the air. There was a loud crack and a violent star spread in the plate glass
window in front of us and a pyramid of tins collapsed on their shelves, and for a tiny second it was as if we were going to
step through the perfect star into a different world and I could be someone entirely new. New and fresh and whole.
Then the alarm broke over us, nasal shrieks that seemed to be coming from every direction, and he took me by the wrist.
“Run.”
We ran together. I think there were still three of us but maybe there were only two by then. Our feet seemed in time. I don’t
know why we stopped running, but I know we were in a taxi, speeding along empty streets, past shops with metal shutters and
dark houses. A fox froze as the taxi approached, orange and still under the street lamps. It slipped into a garden, a slim
shadow, and was gone.
After that, there are things that I remember and don’t remember at the same time, like something happening to someone else,
in a film, in a dream you know you’re having but can’t wake up from. Or rather, it was like something happening to me, but
I was someone else. I was me and not me. I was a woman laughing as she went up the stairs in front of him, a woman standing
in an upstairs room with one dim light in the corner, an old sofa heaped with cushions and hanging from the ceiling, a turquoise
parakeet in a cage. Was there really a parakeet piping away, looking down at her with its knowing eyes, or was that a strange
hallucination that worked its way into the bright fever of the evening? A woman looking out of the window at roofs and nighttime
gardens that she’d never seen before.
“Where the fuck am I?” she said, letting her jacket slide to the floor in a puddle of darkness, but she didn’t really want
to know the answer. “Who the fuck are you?” she asked next, but she didn’t want to know that, either. It didn’t matter at
all. And he just laughed anyway and pulled the curtains closed and lit a cigarette, or perhaps it was a joint, and passed
it to her. She could feel excitement throbbing loose and deep along her veins, and she sat back
in the sofa, against the cushions, and kicked off her shoes and curled her bare legs up under her.
“What shall we do now?” she asked, but of course she knew what they did now. She undid a button on her shirt and he watched
her. The parakeet watched her, too, daft sharp trills coming from its beak. She drank something transparent and fiery and
felt its heat bolt through her body until she was molten at her core. There was music playing and it felt as if it were coming
from inside her skull. She couldn’t tell the difference between the beat of her feelings and the notes of the song. Everything
had joined with everything else.
For a bit she was alone in the room with the music, and then she wasn’t alone any longer. I wasn’t alone any longer. I lay
back, feeling soft as the river we’d sat by, and let him take my skirt off. We were on the sofa, then on the floor. Fingers
fumbling with buttons. If I closed my eyes, lights flashed behind my eyelids and it was as if there were a whole strange world
I had no control of waiting to explode in my brain. So I kept my eyes open on this world, but I don’t know what I actually
saw. Cracks in the ceiling, the leg of a chair, a wall a few inches away, a face coming down against mine, the twist of a
mouth. I tasted blood and ran a tongue against my lips. My blood: good. The carpet burned my skin: good. Hard fingers on my
arms, on my body, digging into me. Me and not me; me and this other woman who was pulling off her shirt, buttons spraying
on the floor, falling back on a bed, hair spreading beneath her, hands pulling off her bra, a weight on her. Closing her eyes
at last and finding herself in a bright lit world, full of shapes and exploding colors and rushing darkness.
“This is so strange,” she said. I said, “Don’t stop.”
THERE WAS SOMETHING crawling along my cheek. A fly trickled down toward the corner of my mouth. Without opening my eyes, I moved my hand and
brushed it off and I could hear it buzz sluggishly away. I could tell without seeing it that it was one of those fat, late-summer
flies, heavy with blood and decay. If I were to squash it, it would leave a purple-brown stain.
I didn’t stir, but I knew something was wrong. I managed to squeeze one eye open and felt pain screw its way into my brain.
. . .
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...