The Beauty of the End is a gripping psychological thriller from Debbie Howells, author of the bestselling Richard and Judy Book Club success, The Bones of You.
I was fourteen when I fell in love with a goddess . . .
A love he'd never forget
Ex-lawyer Noah has never forgotten his first love. When, years later, he hears that she's suspected of murder, he knows with certainty that she's innocent. With April on life-support and the evidence pointing towards her guilt, he's compelled to help her. But he's also unprepared as he's forced to confront what happened between them all those years ago.
A secret she would never reveal
April Moon had loved Noah. She never wanted to hurt him. But there was something - and someone - dark in her life which made happiness together impossible.
A family she could never forgive
Ella is a troubled teenager with her own secrets to tell. But no one will listen. What Ella knows holds the key to finding the killer. But as Noah, April and Ella's stories converge, shocking revelations come to the surface. The truth is obvious. Or so everyone believes . . .
Release date:
July 26, 2016
Publisher:
Kensington Books
Print pages:
320
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You think you know what it is to live. About those moments seized, battles fought, love yearned for. But you don’t. Not really, until it’s slipping away from you. When your body no longer listens to you, but becomes a trap, inside which you can’t move, can’t breathe, can’t reach out. No one can hear you. Not even the one person who could help you . . .
The memory is bittersweet, splinter sharp. A transitory flash of long, red hair damp from the mist; bone-chilling cold; the starkness of trees in winter. My heart quickening, as it always did. A girl I knew once, when the world was different, who filled my every waking thought, my dreams.
Nor can you know, we’re like stars. At their brightest, most vibrant, before they die; a trail fading until the naked eye can’t see it; the brilliant crescendo of a life that builds to silence.
Just as quickly it fades, a memory I’ve buried since I arrived here, years ago, when my Aunt Delilah died and left me her cottage. I’m questioning what’s triggered it, glancing up from my desk just as the old black phone rings, past and present overlapping for a moment. It continues to ring, and though I’d rather not, I have to answer it.
Sliding my chair back, I get up and walk over to the windowsill. Feel behind the heaviness of the curtain to where it sits untouched. Unaware of the hope that flickers, like the flecks of dust stirred, caught in the dull glow of my reading light.
“Hello?”
“Hello? Noah? Is that you?”
I pause, startled, as fifteen years fall away. The clipped, precise tone is instantly recognizable, making my skin prickle, as I’m jolted back to the present, because the phone isn’t part of the memory that’s consumed me.
“Hello. Yes.”
There’s another brief silence, before he speaks again, clearer this time. “It’s Will.”
I watch the moth that’s taken refuge, camouflaged perfectly against the stone of the inglenook, as the fire I lit earlier sparks into life. My cottage has thick, stone walls that hold fast to the chill of winter.
He adds, “Thank Christ. I thought I’d got the wrong number.”
Take the forest that’s three-dimensional in the black depths of a still lake, each branch defined, every subtle shade perfectly mirrored, the sun looking out at you, so that if you stare for long enough, you forget. It’s just a picture; hides the cold darkness that can close over you, that’s silent.
Will and I were friends—once, a long time ago. But too much has happened, things that belong in the past.
As this, and much more, flashes through my head, common sense kicks in because I owe Will nothing. I’m about to put the phone down, when he says two words that alter everything.
“It’s April.”
Even now, my heart skips a beat at the sound of her name.
A moment, a few words, the single thought they provoke, can be devastating. Shatter what you’ve painstakingly constructed. Reveal who you really are.
“What about her?” I keep my voice neutral, my eyes fixing on the fireplace, on the moth’s wings, twitching unevenly.
“There was an accident.” He follows it up with, “She’s in hospital. It’s not looking good.”
He speaks fast, impatient, his voice level, unemotional. I wonder if calling me is an inconvenience. And I’m sorry, of course I am. April and I were close, but it was a long time ago. Accidents happen every day. It’s sad, but I’ve no idea why he’s calling me.
There’s only so long you can do this. Fake the pretense, dance to the piper’s discordant tune. Hide an agonizing, unbearable truth that’s been silent too long, that’s hammering on the door, screaming, to be heard, for someone to listen.
“I’m not sure what happened, exactly. Look . . .” He hesitates. “I only called you because it’ll be all over the papers. A guy was murdered—in Musgrove, of all places. Knifed to death in his car, parked behind the pub. The North Star—can you believe that?” He pauses again. “The thing is . . . Well, it looks as though she may have killed him.”
I’m struggling to take in what he’s saying, because the North Star was once our local hangout. There’s a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach. Then I dismiss the possibility outright, because some knowledge is instinctive and I know this, with a certainty that’s blinding, absolute. Will’s wrong. I watch the moth launch itself into flight, its wings beating a slow, undulating trail that circles the room twice, before battering itself at the closed window.
“That’s impossible. She couldn’t have.”
Only no one comes, because no one knows, that you’re bound and gagged, invisibly chained to a monster. There is no escape. There never can be, because wherever you go, he finds you. Won’t let go of you.
“The police think there’s evidence.”
But as I know, it isn’t always that simple. “They could have missed something.”
And what about hope? That eternal optimism of the human mind, as vital as blood and lungs and your beating heart, which carries you through suffering and heartbreak? Because when hope goes, you have nothing.
My jaw tightens. “When did it happen?”
“Last night. Late, after the pub . . .”
“Exactly,” I flash back. “It’s far too soon. They need to carry out forensic tests. They can’t possibly know.” I pause. “How did you find out?”
“They were seen together in the pub. The police found a woman’s glove in his car, along with the murder weapon—and her phone. They traced it to her address, but by the time they got there, she’d taken an overdose.” His voice is low. “They called an ambulance; then they called me. They must have found my number on her phone. Anyway, she’s in the Princess Royal, near Tonbridge.”
“Why’s she there?” I ask stupidly.
“It’s where she lives. Of course—I’m forgetting. You wouldn’t know.”
Suddenly your whole life is like a car crash, no brakes, gaining momentum, piling up behind you. Your mistakes, missed opportunities, all the time you’ve wasted, a twisted, rusting heap of scrap metal that can’t be salvaged. Overwhelming you. Crushing you.
Even now, even though once he loved her, too, I hate that Will knows all this, how dispassionately he speaks, the condescension he barely conceals. That all these years later, he’s still in touch with her, when I’m not.
“She’s hardly going to want to see me.”
He hesitates. “She’s not exactly up to seeing anyone. She hasn’t come round, mate. She’s on life support. God only knows what she took.”
The mate is automatic, a throwback to our friendship—and out of place. But as I listen, I’m shocked, trying to absorb what he’s saying, unable to picture April as someone who isn’t vital and beautiful and brilliantly alive.
“The police are looking for witnesses. People who were in the pub, security cameras . . . If she’s guilty, it won’t be hard to prove,” he says.
“If she is,” I say pointedly.
“It’s almost a foregone conclusion.”
I used to think he was confident, not arrogant, but he really is so fucking arrogant. “Will. You know as well as I do she wouldn’t hurt anyone. She couldn’t.”
You can play the part for so long. Wear the mask, say what people expect you to say. Fight for as long as there is air in your lungs. Fly if you have wings.
But you can never be free from someone who won’t let you go.
He makes a sound, a staccato laugh shot with cynicism. “When you haven’t seen her for all these years, how can you possibly say that?”
He’s a bastard, Will. Uses his surgeon’s precision to dig the knife in, but he’s forgetting, I knew her soul. I stay calm.
“The same way you know who you can trust.”
He knows exactly what I’m saying. An uneasy silence falls between us.
“Fair enough.” Will sounds dismissive. “I thought you should know, that’s all.”
“Fine. Hey, before you go, who was the guy?”
Will hesitates again. As he tells me, I watch the moth spiral into the flames.
It’s surreal. My flashback, seconds before Will’s call, telling me that April is suspected of murder. There’s a tidal drift of willow seed across the fields as I step outside, but then it’s a warm spring after the wettest winter in a decade. Pollen levels are high, willow seed prolific.
As I drive the half mile to the run-down garage that stocks a few basic groceries, I’m strangely removed from myself, the countryside I know so well suddenly unfamiliar under the onward, imperceptible flow of the willow seed, to the soundtrack of Will’s words replaying in my head. I’m waiting for my brain to slot them into place, only it doesn’t. Instead I’m trying to work out why, after years of silence between us, after everything, Will should be concerned that I know.
None of it makes sense—unless there’s something he isn’t telling me. I found that out about Will, too late. The half-truths; the lies by omission that were no less lies for being unspoken, set in a past that I can’t change, that’s woven into the essence of who I’ve become—like April is.
And whether I want him there or not, so is Will.
That evening, I’m still thinking, trying to decide what, if anything, I should do, aware of old scars that were long forgotten, newly inflamed by Will’s call; by the thought of April, unconscious in a hospital bed, like the memory of an amputated limb.
I’m wondering if anyone’s with her. Even though I knew her well, I never met her family. By the time we were together, it was as though she’d moved on, shedding them like a skin. There’d been a brother she didn’t speak to. Her mother had died shortly after April left home; she’d never mentioned her father.
Not that I can help her. I’m in Devon, April’s in Kent. Anyway, if Will’s in her life, he’ll have everything covered, which should fill me with relief—only Will made no attempt to disguise it. I heard it in his voice. He thinks she’s guilty.
I stare through the window into the darkness, my feeble excuses reflecting back at me—how far away I live; that I left my London law firm four years ago; that, apart from the occasional day’s work for Jed Luxton’s small local practice, I’m ill prepared to defend a murder suspect; that my one suit is pushed to the back of my wardrobe and I’m not even sure it still fits—as a fleeting image comes to me of April driven to an extreme of desperation I can only guess at, plunging a knife into a faceless someone. An image so inconceivable that just as quickly it’s gone.
For so long I’d believed she was my future. My sun, my stars, my April Moon, I told her once, carried away by the moment, by being alive, by the depth of my feelings for her.
Believing love was enough. That we were meant to be together. Never expecting it to change.
1991
I was fourteen when I fell in love with a goddess. Goddesses have that effect, even on teenagers such as I was. Being plump or uncool has no bearing on the ability to fall in love—and my fate was sealed.
It was the beginning of my first term at Musgrove High. We’d moved to Musgrove at the start of the longest, hottest summer I could remember, when my father started a new job. The first I’d heard of it was when he proudly showed me the car he could now afford, a shiny, silver BMW 3 Series.
I’d climbed in excitedly, inhaling soft leather and a faint petrol smell. Things were changing, my father told me, as he got in and showed me how the seat adjusted. We were moving up. I didn’t really understand what he meant. A job was a job as far as I could see, but I pretended to share his enthusiasm—until he told me we’d have to move.
The thought filled me with a horror I couldn’t talk about, but the opinion of my fourteen-year-old self was of no consequence. In my small, sheltered, middle-class world, adults made decisions, children did as they were told. But that didn’t stop me from dreading it.
I distinctly remember packing up my things—reluctantly, resentfully, overwhelmed by a need to hold on to the familiar, the childish, the outgrown. My mother’s insistence, too, that this was a good time for clearing out clutter, whatever that meant, and that there was no sense paying the removal people to take what I didn’t use. As if it wasn’t enough dragging me away from my friends and my home, by the time she’d ruthlessly been through my books, my model car collection, my secret cache of action figures, half my childhood had been ripped away, too.
As we drove off from everything that defined me, my very identity seemed in question. I closed my ears to my parents’ insistence that this was a new start for me. Swotty Noah Calaway, with his small, dark bedroom and nerdy friend next door was gone forever. I’d no idea who I was.
Musgrove was an uncomfortable four-hour drive away, four hours that I filled with imaginings of hostile new classmates and dread. My face turned to the open window, I fought off waves of nausea in the back of my father’s new car, a car I’d come to hate as symbolic of unwanted change.
The first I saw of our new home was as we slowed down and turned up a wide, quiet road, and my father pulled up at the roadside. It wasn’t unattractive, a red brick Victorian house surrounded by others that were similar, and after the modest, terraced street we’d left behind, it was big.
The first thing I did was run round the back to look at the garden, which disappointingly wasn’t big at all but long and narrow, with a massive tree right at the end, which made up for it. But as I stared into its branches, so high they almost tangled with the clouds in the faintest hint of a breeze, I felt myself shiver.
What tortured me most was the thought of school. If only I could have changed my name—to reference someone important, perhaps, or a meaning that I could wear, like strength or slayer of dragons. But, I mean, Noah . . . What were my parents thinking? My mother said that they had liked its biblical connotations and that it meant rest or comfort, which was nice, she told me. Nice and solid and reassuring, which was no good at all when it made you a figure of fun.
Over the years, I’d lost count of the number of times so-called friends turned up in their waterproofs on my doorstep—even when the sun was shining and there wasn’t a cloud in the sky. Crapping themselves laughing, while I was forced to endure yet another episode of ritual humiliation. I knew here it would be no different.
The first morning, I was so nervous I ate my breakfast then threw it all up. Inside, I was silently crying out for my parents to leave Musgrove and move back to our old house, for my father to give up the new car and return to his old job, to take me back to my old school because I knew from experience that the devil you knew was a whole lot easier to live with than the devil you didn’t.
But in my heavy heart, I knew also it wasn’t going to happen and instead somehow found myself keeping my eyes down and staying out of everyone’s way, as I shuffled along the corridor to my classroom.
Being teenaged and awkward, with an odd name and old-fashioned hair to boot, my expectations were at an all-time low. Being a nerd further handicapped me. I was as incapable of not handing homework in as I was of keeping my arm from springing up whenever the teacher posed a question.
Today was no exception. It was my first math class here and short of nailing my hand to the desk, there was no stopping it.
“Yes? Your name, boy . . .”
“Noah. Calaway. Sir,” Pulling my arm down and waiting for the titter. I wasn’t disappointed.
“Noah, eh? Don’t think we’ve had one of those before,” boomed Mr. Matthews. Completely unnecessarily, I remember thinking. “Well, speak up, boy. Better still, get up here and write it on the board.”
How I hated that arm. I hated feeling everyone’s eyes boring into me. I’m sure I detected a sadistic gleam in the teacher’s eyes as he relished my discomfort. As I scrawled scratchily on the board, my hands clammy, my heart thumping in my chest, the piece of chalk snapped in two. I reached down to pick it up, completely mortified, but as I stood up again, something extraordinary happened.
The classroom door opened and a girl walked in. She was slender, with this way of walking, her head held high, her long, red hair falling in heavy waves down her back. I felt my jaw drop open as I stared at her.
“Boy!” roared Mr. Matthews, completely ignoring her. “In your own time . . .”
I felt my cheeks turn scarlet as the sniggers and mutterings behind me started up, but I didn’t care. Suddenly my head was filled with the image of that girl. I’d never seen anyone like her. Quite simply, she was a goddess.
1991
I glimpsed the goddess after school again, outside in the stifling heat as we blinked in the sunlight. She was with two other girls, one with fair hair, the other mousy brown with a bleached streak in it, their socks rolled down and skirts hitched up, whispering to each other before pointing and giggling loudly.
“Oy! Tosser!” yelled the brown-haired one above the general level of chitchat. Across the road, a group of boys turned round, terrified. “Yeah, that’s right, you! ’As it dropped off yet? Yer cock . . .”
Everyone must have heard. Though I stared in awe at the girls, at the red-haired one, who looked astonished, I couldn’t help my heart going out to Tosser, who’d turned a shade of beetroot, wondering what he’d done to deserve such a public lashing. The girls, meanwhile, were teetering up the road on their wedge-heeled shoes, still giggling.
“I’d stay out of their way if I were you.” The voice, friendly, came from beside me.
Surprised, I turned to see that he was talking to me.
“Farrington,” said the boy. Slightly shorter than me, he had ginger hair and freckles. I’d noticed him in my English class. “William. You can call me Will. Those are scary chicks, believe me. There’s this rumor they’re witches—well, except for the long-haired one. She’s new. But the others meet on Reynard’s Hill after dark and cast spells and shit. I’ve seen them.”
I was even more enthralled. Spells and shit sounded awesome, and as I walked home, already I’d conjured up this picture of the three of them sitting in the woods, lit by an eerie, greenish light as they stirred a cauldron and muttered incantations, unleashing their mighty powers across the whole of Musgrove. Of course, the goddess with hair the color of autumn leaves, she’d turn out to be the chief witch. I could tell she was no ordinary mortal. Already I was under her spell.
“You can come and swim in our pool, if you like,” he continued cheerfully. “I’ll get my mum to phone yours. What’s your number?”
I scribbled it on a scrap of paper, hardly believing my luck. This was turning out way better than I’d expected.
With a new friend and a major crush to take my mind off things, I settled in quite quickly after that. Will and I started hanging out and I was thrown into a whole other world, where money was plentiful and success seemingly effortless. Will’s parents held flawlessly orchestrated parties in their large, elegant home. There was the lure, too, of their pool, with its crystalline depths, into which we’d plummet to the bottom, holding our breath, the blood rushing in our ears, until one of us raced to the surface gasping for air.
It was a world I wanted a piece of. And meanwhile, each day I lived in hope of catching another glimpse of that living, breathing deity with the long red hair, though she proved somewhat elusive. I would go several, desolate days without seeing her, and then suddenly, she’d be there, round every corner.
In my head I’d constructed her entire life story. On the downside, I was sure she hadn’t even noticed me; there wasn’t really anything that set me apart. Until one extraordinary, magical day the following week, she walked into my chemistry class and looked directly at me—or so it seemed at the time.
“Good of you to join us, Miss Moon,” our teacher, Dr. Jones, said dryly. “For your information, class started five minutes ago. Kindly take a seat over there.”
At last . . . I had her name. Her surname, at least. Out of the corner of my eye, I watched her as she arranged herself on a chair, as I breathed in the alien spicy scent that seemed to come from her general direction as if it were the most sublime perfume on this earth.
“You got a cold or something?” Will muttered at me. “Your breathing’s gone funny.”
I shook my head and tried my hardest to concentrate on the lesson. When Dr. Jones finished and a low-level, general mumbling started up, Will stared at me.
“What is wrong with you?”
“What do you mean?” I could feel my cheeks growing hot under his scrutiny.
“Usually,” said Will, who, unlike me, was completely unabashed at being in the presence of a goddess, “you’re, like, jumping up and getting shit organized before I’ve even worked out what we’re doing. Something’s weird.”
‘It’s not,’ I said hastily, leaping up to prove him wrong and promptly knocking over a tripod, which clattered noisily to the floor. Picking it up, I tried to pull myself together.
But as Will titrated sodium hydroxide with hydrochloric acid, for the first time I let him get on with it, instead eavesdropping shamelessly on the conversation going on behind me. As I listened to the goddess’s soft voice, finally I learned her name. April. Her friends were Beatrice and Emily.
By now, I was totally in awe, not just of her beauty, but her confidence, which was surely yet another manifestation of her otherworldly status. And as for her name . . . It seemed the most exotic, most beautiful name I could imagine. April Moon.
And as I whispered it over and over, I knew I was madly, irrevocably in love.
April Moon, April Moon, April Moon . . . Over and over I silently repeated her name, in time with my footsteps as I walked home after school, not caring about the rain that was soaking into me, nor almost getting knocked over by a car.
After that, she appeared in more of my classes, near enough for the spicy scent of her to torture me, but always with others seated between us, and so I learned to be content to worship her from afar. Such was the lot of lowly creatures like myself, I decided, wallowing in my misery. It was enough to know she was there.
I was wildly curious to see what April and her friends did in the woods. It made perfect sense that April was a witch—a good one, of course. I knew they existed, but when I pushed Will on the subject, I got nowhere.
“You’ve seen what they’re like,” he said, looking at me as though I was mad. “What if they put a curse on you?”
I couldn’t tell him that I’d been under April’s spell since the first day I saw her. That was a secret, even from Will. In the end I took matters into my own hands.
It was autumn, dusk falling earlier by the day, the air rich with the scent of wood smoke, when I decided to follow them. Just as Will had told me, they were headed toward the woods below Reynard’s Hill.
Staying far enough back to remain unnoticed by them, I didn’t see how it happened, just that a car sped past, too fast, sending a cloud of feathers into the air as something somersaulted onto the pavement. I heard April’s cry, saw her run, then crouch slowly, reaching toward a small bird.
Careful not to move its awkwardly outstretched wing, she picked it up. After that, their pace slowed and the chatter became quiet. Suddenly I realized what they were doing, and that as witches, they were taking the little bird to their magical place, where they’d weave a spell and heal it. I knew also this was something I had to see.
I fol. . .
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