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The Guest List
The Guest List
The Guest List
Ebook369 pages6 hours

The Guest List

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this ebook

*The brand new thriller from Lucy Foley – THE MIDNIGHT FEAST – is available to buy now*

The No.1 Sunday Times bestseller

*Over 1 million copies sold worldwide*

*One of The Times and Sunday Times Crime Books of the Year*

*Goodreads Choice Awards winner for Crime & Mystery 2020*

A gripping, twisty murder mystery thriller from the No.1 bestselling author of The Hunting Party.

‘Lucy Foley is really very clever’ Anthony Horowitz
‘Thrilling’ The Times
‘A classic whodunnit’ Kate Mosse
‘Sharp and atmospheric and addictive’ Louise Candlish
‘A furiously twisty thriller’ Clare Mackintosh

On an island off the windswept Irish coast, guests gather for the wedding of the year – the marriage of Jules Keegan and Will Slater.

Old friends.
Past grudges.

Happy families.
Hidden jealousies.

Thirteen guests.
One body.

The wedding cake has barely been cut when one of the guests is found dead. And as a storm unleashes its fury on the island, everyone is trapped.

All have a secret. All have a motive.
One guest won’t leave this wedding alive . . .

Editor's Note

Reese’s book club…

Reese Witherspoon picked “The Guest List” as one of her June/July 2020 book club picks, along with “I’m Still Here” by Austin Channing Brown. “A very stormy seaside destination wedding is the back drop for this thrilling June book pick. … Get ready for so many twists and turns as you try to figure out the who, what and when of this mystery. It reminds me of some of my favorite mysteries from Agatha Christie,” Witherspoon wrote in her Instagram announcement post.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 20, 2020
ISBN9780008297183
Author

Lucy Foley

Lucy Foley studied English Literature at Durham and UCL universities. She then worked for several years as a fiction editor in the publishing industry – during which time she also wrote her debut, The Book of Lost and Found. Lucy now writes full-time, and is busy travelling (for research, naturally!) and working on her next novel. Visit her Facebook page at www.facebook.com/LucyFoleyAuthor and follow her on Twitter @lucyfoleytweets

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Reviews for The Guest List

Rating: 3.6910544247630335 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

1,688 ratings108 reviews

What our readers think

Readers find this title to be a thrilling and enjoyable read. The story is fast-paced and difficult to put down, with multiple twists and turns. The characters are complex and the pacing is superb. Although some reviewers found the plot arrangement to be a bit confusing and the ending to be a letdown, overall, readers loved the book and found it to be a page-turner. The prose, vibe, and atmosphere of the book are highly praised, making it a wake-up call for readers who enjoy thrillers and horror genres.

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Great pulp fiction. Lots of murdery fun.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The definition of thrilling, I completed it in 48 hours! Absolutely amazing.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book is a nightmare in so many ways. When Julia Keegan (Jules), a beautiful, self-made woman, meets Will Slater, the famous star of a survival reality show, he seems perfect—honestly, the man of her dreams. So, when they decide to marry, Jules is determined to find the most romantic, original, and exciting venue. Right on cue, Aoife and her husband, Freddy, who has just opened an exclusive wedding site on Cormorant, a small, deserted island off West Galway, Ireland, book it and start planning the event of the year. Their first mistake, of course, is the guest list. Never mix antagonistic family members with rowdy, boozing college buddies. Throw in Olive, a suicidal younger sister with a past, Charlie, the bride’s best friend and old crush, and the ‘plus one,’ Hannah, Charlie’s wife, with her own secrets. Then, when a horrendous storm hits the island, the weather turns dark, and so do the guests, as lie after lie is revealed. The plot twists keep the story moving as the author keeps you guessing who will snap until the very end.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Eh. I don't understand why this won so many awards. I found it very difficult to get into and the ending left a lot to be desired. I prefer mysteries with more three-dimensional characters. When is the next Elizabeth George book coming out?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    So much suspense! Each chapter switches between different character perspectives. Everyone is on an Irish island for a wedding weekend - what could possibly go wrong? Every single character has some dark secret and each chapter is essentially a cliff hanger. I really enjoyed this and the way that Lucy Foley builds the suspense chapter to chapter.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I'm so glad I finally got around to reading this book! I've been seeing it get checked out from my library a lot, and I decided it was about time I saw what all the fuss was about.
    Listening to this book was THE BEST way to read it--multiple characters in a story such as this NEED multiple people voicing them! It's the ONLY way to do it!!!
    This story had me hanging on every word. It was very relatable, in many ways.... I totally got where many of the female characters were coming from.
    I can also see that there are enough male characters that any men reading this would likely find someone to relate to, as well.
    Very well-rounded, inclusive, EDGY story! Loved it!!!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Guest List was an exceptionally gripping novel, with bags of atmosphere and a febrile energy that just sweeps you along. I read it in a single day.

    I just thought it was wonderful - the setting, the way the unravelling of the mystery is handled, the characterisation which is sharp but a shade more compassionate than in The Hunting Party, which I also loved. It never puts a foot wrong and it's so damned smart.

    I can wholeheartedly recommend it.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Read about 1/4 of it, couldn't get into it, didn't care about the characters.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Pure entertainment. Exactly what I needed. Excellent audiobook reading.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I didn't like the way the author kept switching the points of view. With so many characters, it became a useless distraction. The characters were mostly self-centered, shallow and unlikeable people. The story kept me interested, even though it was a bit predictable.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I really liked this book.

    It kept me guessing and just kept adding layer upon layer.

    Apparently my review was able to be read even though I flagged as spoilery. This makes me sad. I wanted to be able to voice my opinion, but it ended up spoiling this book for some people. If that was you, I'm sorry.

    But seriously, I hate Charlie.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I don't read many mystery novels, but I loved this. It was fantastic and I was entranced the entire time. I did correctly guess most of the reveals before they happened, but I kind of liked that because it meant that it all made sense by the end which is important to me. I thought the ending was satisfying and there were no loose ends. Also, even though I did figure some things out, I felt like I never figured them out too soon since that might have made things boring. I loved the multi-pov and all the characters were well written. Overall, I just thought this was great.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Gripping, you are drawn right in with different voices telling their stories. It was bleak, though. If you like cold, hard, gripping murder mysteries, this is it! But I'm headed back to tales with a little more humanity and hope than is found here. So 4 stars for "can't put it down" and 3 stars for "this might not be the best thing to read during a pandemic."
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Gripping
    Outstanding. Loved every word of it. Loved it alot!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    While this book started off slowly and I was unsure that I would finish it - I am so glad I did. The slowness at the start of the book helped set up the information we would need for the end. The Guest List is a very twisty, turny kind of thriller that makes you think one thing while showing you hints that your thoughts may be wrong. By the mid-point of the story, things definitely began to pick up speed and you can see the entire story coming together. The end was not what I expected at all and am overall very happy with the time spent reading and delving into the lives of these twisted characters.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Love it. Everything people have been throwing about this book, it's true. Page turner. Complex characters. Superb pacing, with a bit of a draggy beginning when nothing really happen. And most important of all, oh, the prose, the vibe, the atmosphere! My first thriller / horror in a long time, and this actually feels like a wake up call of how I can get a bit of goosebumps by reading a book, like where have i been all this time?

    Ngl, the wrap up is good, but I still have this weird aftertaste about the major reveal at the end. Not my favourite thing, this big of a coincidence, but, yeah, I don't mind because how good this book makes me feel.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I thoroughly enjoyed this story, I found myself needing to know what happened that it literally was a page-turner. I could definitely see this as movie or tv series. Now I'm finding I need to read everything from this author after reading this book, The Hunting Party, and an excerpt from The Paris Apartment. Loved the characters and how almost everyone has a motive.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    It’s such a well written book. I loved every twist and turn. A worthwhile read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Spoiler Free Review
    Thrillers give me a different kind of kick and this book does not fail to do so. Lucy Foley is such an intelligent author. I had so much fun reading this thriller. It kept me hooked till the very last page.
    I love how the story took different turns. You see it coming but you still did not see that coming(if that makes sense).
    The story has multiple POVs over the course of a weekend and what I love the most is how seamlessly they are interwoven. You will love it even more if you are a fan of short and crisp chapters.
    Fast-paced, difficult to put down, this book will definitely quench your thirst for a good thriller.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I couldn't stop thinking how awfully similar this was to 'Then there were none' by Agatha Christie. To say that I loved the book would be an understatement. I was enthralled by it. An unputdownable book with plenty of plot twists.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the kind of book I tend to love. A huge wedding on a remote island during a storm brings together a group of people with ties both known and unknown. Foley does an amazing job of building suspense by cutting between past and present, and there were so many twists and turns that I never saw coming.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I love good ol fashioned murder mystery and like a lot of reviews have said - it's reminiscent of Agatha Christie. One of the cool things is that it opens up with a dead body at a wedding.... but you don't know who it is! It's told through flashbacks leading up to the murder so it keeps you guessing as to who the murderer and the victim. The setting is a bleak little island off the coast of Ireland, it's a really posh wedding and of course their is loads of drama leading up to the ceremony and during the reception. The story is told through several perspectives. The best man, a plus one, the wedding organizer, the bride, the maid of honor, and the groom. The story moves quickly and you're on the edge of your seat as you try to put all the pieces together. I didn't even come close to getting the ending right, which made me love it more! A fantastic murder mystery!!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book was very good on audio! I couldn't wait to get in the car so I could listen to it! The narrators did an excellent job! A fun thriller for the summer.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I was scathing about The Book of Lost and Found so if I'd remembered Lucy Foley's name I might not have chosen this book, but it must have popped up in one of the many lists that I use to find new reads.

    A very good mystery - perhaps I say that because - while mystery is probably my second most read category of fiction at present - it would only be one in 6 or 7. Its biggest failing was the wholesale use to the point of ridiculousness of coincidence to create the who-dunnit that came together on the wedding day. In Agatha Christie style, the murderer could have been one of half dozen characters.

    Each of the characters had their own narrator on the audiobook, which is quite unusual and does make for a rich audio experience.

    The more I read the more this struck me as an ideal book club book as it has many aspects to discuss, and it would be interesting to hear different people's views on the moral dilemmas it poses.

    Will's beauty - is it a boon or a cross ultimately? Jules' focus and determination - is she an egocentric bitch or someone with admirable ambition? and so on. Can Hannah find "the happiness she deserves" with Charlie? Will Olivia overcome insecurities and find herself? Was Jonathan just as culpable as Will but was he a better human being? Was Aoife justified? ... all the questions it poses is why it gets 4 stars from me - on mystery value alone it is 3.5 stars.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I thought there was a lot of jumping back and forth to the past and present. It was a fairly good story line but I think that there was quite a bit going on.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Looking for a modern day who done it thriller against a wedding setting, then this is for you. I enjoyed the structure of how the story is told from the different characters perspectives, I'm thinking from a movie standpoint it would be as if the camera is panning from one individual's perspective to the next and in some cases within the same scene which is pretty cool. In fact, this book is great material for a movie. There is a great buildup through the story that is supported by the descriptions of the weather, the island, the wedding venue, the arrangements for the wedding and the night before events as it all builds up to a crescendo with the murder being committed and the different characters revealing their motives for doing the deed. It certainly kept me turning the pages all the way till the end. This was my first book by Lucy, will give the Hunting Party a read next.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Definitely better than the hunting party but honestly nothing special

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This isn't a bad book by any means. It's pretty well-written and it kept my attention to the end, so I don't feel like reading this was a waste or anything. But at the end of the day, there was nothing remarkable about this either. It also relied heavily on hinting at things that the characters know but you don't, and that gets tired really fast for me. The characters were okay in that while they were unlikeable (well, not everyone), the point of view shifts managed to make them at least tolerable. In the end, how everything wrapped up felt a lot too convenient for me, though, so three stars it where this landed.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Definitely surprised me. The ending was a bit of a let down. Overall a solid read that captured me from the first few pages.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I listened to the audiobook for "The Guest List" and instantly fell in love with the accents of the multi-cast narration team. The story was told from many different perspectives, showcasing each of the main characters, as the author intertwined their lives. As the story came to an end though, their true involvement with each other really flourished and the final few pages twisted in amazing thriller fashion.

    While this isn't gory or particularly thrilling, the ending neatly wrapped everything up. It was satisfying and the stories of each character interesting.

Book preview

The Guest List - Lucy Foley

NOW

The wedding night

The lights go out.

In an instant, everything is in darkness. The band stop their playing. Inside the marquee the wedding guests squeal and clutch at one another. The light from the candles on the tables only adds to the confusion, sends shadows racing up the canvas walls. It’s impossible to see where anyone is or hear what anyone is saying: above the guests’ voices the wind rises in a frenzy.

Outside a storm is raging. It shrieks around them, it batters the marquee. At each assault the whole structure seems to flex and shudder with a loud groaning of metal; the guests cower in alarm. The doors have come free from their ties and flap at the entrance. The flames of the paraffin torches that illuminate the doorway snicker.

It feels personal, this storm. It feels as though it has saved all its fury for them.

This isn’t the first time the electrics have shorted. But last time the lights snapped back on again within minutes. The guests returned to their dancing, their drinking, their pill-popping, their screwing, their eating, their laughing … and forgot it ever happened.

How long has it been now? In the dark it’s difficult to tell. A few minutes? Fifteen? Twenty?

They’re beginning to feel afraid. This darkness feels somehow ominous, intent. As though anything could be happening beneath its cover.

Finally, the bulbs flicker back on. Whoops and cheers from the guests. They’re embarrassed now about how the lights find them: crouched as though ready to fend off an attack. They laugh it off. They almost manage to convince themselves that they weren’t frightened.

The scene illuminated in the marquee’s three adjoining tents should be one of celebration, but it looks more like one of devastation. In the main dining section, clots of wine spatter the laminate floor, a crimson stain spreads across white linen. Bottles of champagne cluster on every surface, testament to an evening of toasts and celebrations. A forlorn pair of silver sandals peeks from beneath a tablecloth.

The Irish band begin to play again in the dance tent – a rousing ditty to restore the spirit of celebration. Many of the guests hurry in that direction, eager for some light relief. If you were to look closely at where they step you might see the marks where one barefoot guest has trodden in broken glass and left bloody footprints across the laminate, drying to a rusty stain. No one notices.

Other guests drift and gather in the corners of the main tent, nebulous as leftover cigarette smoke. Loath to stay, but also loath to step outside the sanctuary of the marquee while the storm still rages. And no one can leave the island. Not yet. The boats can’t come until the wind dies down.

In the centre of everything stands the huge cake. It has appeared whole and perfect before them for most of the day, its train of sugar foliage glittering beneath the lights. But only minutes before the lights went out the guests gathered around to watch its ceremonial disembowelling. Now the deep red sponge gapes from within.

Then from outside comes a new sound. You might almost mistake it for the wind. But it rises in pitch and volume until it is unmistakable.

The guests freeze. They stare at one another. They are suddenly afraid again. More so than they were when the lights went out. They all know what they are hearing. It is a scream of terror.

The day before

AOIFE

The Wedding Planner

Nearly all of the wedding party are here now. Things are about to crank into another gear: there’s the rehearsal dinner this evening, with the chosen guests, so the wedding really begins tonight.

I’ve put the champagne on ice ready for the pre-dinner drinks. It’s vintage Bollinger: eight bottles of it, plus the wine for dinner and a couple of crates of Guinness – all as per the bride’s instructions. It is not for me to comment, but it seems rather a lot. They’re all adults, though. I’m sure they know how to restrain themselves. Or maybe not. That best man seems a bit of a liability – all of the ushers do, to be honest. And the bridesmaid – the bride’s half-sister – I’ve seen her on her solitary wanderings of the island, hunched over and walking fast like she’s trying to outpace something.

You learn all the insider secrets, doing this sort of work. You see the things no one else is privileged to see. All the gossip that the guests would kill to have. As a wedding planner you can’t afford to miss anything. You have to be alert to every detail, all the smaller eddies beneath the surface. If I didn’t pay attention, one of those currents could grow into a huge riptide, destroying all my careful planning. And here’s another thing I’ve learned – sometimes the smallest currents are the strongest.

I move through the Folly’s downstairs rooms, lighting the blocks of turf in the grates, so they can get a good smoulder on for this evening. Freddy and I have started cutting and drying our own turf from the bog, as has been done for centuries past. The smoky, earthy smell of the turf fires will add to the sense of local atmosphere. The guests should like that. It may be midsummer but it gets cool at night on the island. The Folly’s old stone walls keep the warmth out and aren’t so good at holding it in.

Today has been surprisingly warm, at least by the standards of these parts, but the same’s not looking likely for tomorrow. The end of the weather forecast I caught on the radio mentioned wind. We get the brunt of all the weather here; often the storms are much worse than they end up being on the mainland, as if they’ve exhausted themselves on us. It’s still sunny out but this afternoon the needle on the old barometer in the hallway swung from FAIR to CHANGEABLE. I’ve taken it down. I don’t want the bride to see it. Though I’m not sure that she is the sort to panic. More the sort to get angry and look for someone to blame. And I know just who would be in the firing line.

‘Freddy,’ I call into the kitchen, ‘will you be starting on the dinner soon?’

‘Yeah,’ he calls back, ‘got it all under control.’

Tonight they’ll eat a fish stew based on a traditional Connemara fisherman’s chowder: smoked fish, lots of cream. I ate it the first time I ever visited this place, when there were still people here. This evening’s will be a more refined take on the usual recipe, as this is a refined group we have staying. Or at least I suppose they like to think of themselves as such. We’ll see what happens when the drink hits them.

‘Then we’ll be needing to start prepping the canapés for tomorrow,’ I call, running through the list in my head.

‘I’m on it.’

‘And the cake: we’ll be wanting to assemble that in good time.’

The cake is quite something to behold. It should be. I know how much it cost. The bride didn’t bat an eyelid at the expense. I believe she’s used to having the best of everything. Four tiers of deep red velvet sponge, encased in immaculate white icing and strewn with sugar greenery, to match the foliage in the chapel and the marquee. Extremely fragile and made according to the bride’s exact specifications, it travelled all the way here from a very exclusive cake-makers in Dublin: it was no small effort getting it across the water in one piece. Tomorrow, of course, it will be destroyed. But it’s all about the moment, a wedding. All about the day. It’s not really about the marriage at all, in spite of what everyone says.

See, mine is a profession in which you orchestrate happiness. It is why I became a wedding planner. Life is messy. We all know this. Terrible things happen, I learned that while I was still a child. But no matter what happens, life is only a series of days. You can’t control more than a single day. But you can control one of them. Twenty-four hours can be curated. A wedding day is a neat little parcel of time in which I can create something whole and perfect to be cherished for a lifetime, a pearl from a broken necklace.

Freddy emerges from the kitchen in his stained butcher’s apron. ‘How are you feeling?’

I shrug. ‘A little nervous, to be honest.’

‘You’ve got this, love. Think how many times you’ve done this.’

‘But this is different. Because of who it is—’ It was a real coup, getting Will Slater and Julia Keegan to hold their wedding here. I worked as an event planner in Dublin, before. Setting up here was all my idea, restoring the island’s crumbling, half-ruined folly into an elegant ten-bedroom property with a dining room, drawing room and kitchen. Freddy and I live here permanently but use only a tiny fraction of the space when it’s just the two of us.

‘Shush.’ Freddy steps forward and enfolds me in a hug. I feel myself stiffening at first. I’m so focused on my to-do list that it feels like a diversion we don’t have time for. Then I allow myself to relax into the embrace, to appreciate his comforting, familiar warmth. Freddy is a good hugger. He’s what you might call ‘cuddly’. He likes his food – it’s his job. He ran a restaurant in Dublin before we moved here.

‘It’s all going to work out fine,’ he says. ‘I promise. It will all be perfect.’ He kisses the top of my head. I’ve had a great deal of experience in this business. But then I’ve never worked on an event I’ve been so invested in. And the bride is very particular – which, to be fair to her, probably goes with the territory of what she does, running her own magazine. Someone else might have been run a little ragged by her requests. But I’ve enjoyed it. I like a challenge.

Anyway. That’s enough about me. This weekend is about the happy couple, after all. The bride and groom haven’t been together for very long, by all accounts. Seeing as our bedroom is in the Folly too, with all the others, we could hear them last night. ‘Jesus,’ Freddy said as we lay in bed. ‘I can’t listen to this.’ I knew what he meant. Strange how when someone is in the throes of pleasure it can sound like pain. They seem very much in love, but a cynic might say that’s why they can’t seem to keep their hands off each other. Very much in lust might be a more accurate description.

Freddy and I have been together for the best part of two decades and even now there are things I keep from him and, I’m sure, vice versa. Makes you wonder how much they know about each other, those two.

Whether they really know all of each other’s dark secrets.

HANNAH

The Plus-One

The waves rise in front of us, white-capped. On land it’s a beautiful summer’s day, but it’s pretty rough out here. A few minutes ago we left the safety of the mainland harbour and as we did the water seemed to darken in colour and the waves grew by several feet.

It’s the evening before the wedding and we’re on our way to the island. As ‘special guests’, we’re staying there tonight. I’m looking forward to it. At least – I think I am. I need a bit of a distraction at the moment, anyway.

‘Hold on!’ A shout from the captain’s cabin, behind us. Mattie, the man’s called. Before we have time to think the little boat launches off one wave and straight into the crest of another. Water sprays up over us in a huge arc.

‘Christ!’ Charlie shouts and I see that he’s got soaked on one side. Miraculously I’m only a little damp.

‘Would you be a bit wet up there?’ Mattie calls.

I’m laughing but I’m having to force it a bit because it was pretty frightening. The boat’s motion, somehow back and forth and side to side all at once, has my stomach turning somersaults.

‘Oof,’ I say, feeling the nausea sinking through me. The thought of the cream tea we ate before we got on the boat suddenly makes me want to hurl.

Charlie looks at me, puts a hand on my knee and gives a squeeze. ‘Oh God. It’s started already?’ I always get terrible motion sickness. Anything sickness really; when I was pregnant it was the worst.

‘Mm hmm. I’ve taken a couple of pills, but they’ve hardly taken the edge off.’

‘Look,’ Charlie says quickly, ‘I’ll read about the place, take your mind off it.’ He scrolls through his phone. He’s got a guidebook downloaded; ever the teacher, my husband. The boat lurches again and the iPhone nearly jumps out of his grasp. He swears, grips it with both hands; we can’t afford to replace it.

‘There’s not that much here,’ he says, a bit apologetically, once he’s managed to load the page. ‘Loads on Connemara, yeah, but on the island itself – I suppose it’s so small …’ He stares at the screen as though willing it to deliver. ‘Oh, here, I’ve found a bit.’ He clears his throat, then starts to read in what I think is probably the voice he uses in his lessons. ‘Inis an Amplóra, or Cormorant Island, in the English translation, is two miles from one end to the other, longer than it is wide. The island is formed of a lump of granite emerging majestically from the Atlantic, several miles off the Connemara coastline. A large bog comprised of peat, or turf as it is called locally, covers much of its surface. The best, indeed the only, way to see the island is from a private boat. The channel between the mainland and the island can get particularly choppy—’

‘They’re right about that,’ I mutter, clutching the side as we seesaw over another wave and slam down again. My stomach turns over again.

‘I can tell you more than all that,’ Mattie calls from his cabin. I hadn’t realised he could overhear us from there. ‘You won’t be getting much about Inis an Amplóra from a guidebook.’

Charlie and I shuffle nearer to the cabin so we can hear. He’s got a lovely rich accent, does Mattie. ‘First people that settled the place,’ he tells us, ‘far as it’s known, were a religious sect, persecuted by some on the mainland.’

‘Oh yes,’ Charlie says, looking at his guide. ‘I think I saw a bit about that—’

‘You can’t get everything from that thing,’ Mattie says, frowning and clearly unimpressed by the interruption. ‘I’ve lived here all my life, see – and my people have been here for centuries. I can tell you more than your man on the internet.’

‘Sorry,’ Charlie says, flushing.

‘Anyway,’ Mattie says. ‘Twenty years or so ago the archaeologists found them. All together in the turf bog they were, side by side, packed in tight.’ Something tells me that he is enjoying himself. ‘Perfectly preserved, it’s said, because there’s no air down in there. It was a massacre. They’d all been hacked to death.’

‘Oh,’ Charlie says, with a glance at me, ‘I’m not sure—’

It’s too late, the idea is in my head now: long-buried corpses emerging from black earth. I try not to think about it but the image keeps reasserting itself like a glitch in a video. The swoop of nausea that comes as we ride over the next wave is almost a relief, requiring all my focus.

‘And there’s no one living there now?’ Charlie asks brightly, trying for a change of conversation. ‘Other than the new owners?’

‘No,’ Mattie says. ‘Nothing but ghosts.’

Charlie taps his screen. ‘It says here the island was inhabited until the nineties, when the last few people decided to return to the mainland in favour of running water, electricity and modern life.’

‘Oh that’s what it says there, is it?’ Mattie sounds amused.

‘Why?’ I ask, managing to find my voice. ‘Was there some other reason they left?’

Mattie seems to be about to speak. Then his face changes. ‘Look out for yourselves!’ he roars. Charlie and I manage to grab the rail seconds before the bottom seems to drop out of everything and we are sent plunging down the side of one wave, then smashed into the side of another. Jesus.

You’re meant to find a fixed point with motion-sickness. I train my gaze on the island. It has been in view the whole way from the mainland, a bluish smudge on the horizon, shaped like a flattened anvil. Jules wouldn’t pick anywhere less than stunning, but I can’t help feeling that the dark shape of it seems to hunch and glower, in contrast to the bright day.

‘Pretty stunning, isn’t it?’ Charlie says.

‘Mm,’ I say noncommittally. ‘Well, let’s hope there’s running water and electricity there these days. I’m going to need a nice bath after this.’

Charlie grins. ‘Knowing Jules, if they hadn’t plumbed and wired the place before, they’ll have done so by now. You know what she’s like. She’s so efficient.’

I’m sure Charlie didn’t mean it, but it feels like a comparison. I’m not the world’s most efficient. I can’t seem to enter a room without making a mess and since we’ve had the kids our house is a permanent tip. When we – rarely – have people round I end up throwing stuff in cupboards and cramming them closed, so that it feels like the whole place is holding its breath, trying not to explode. When we first went round for dinner at Jules’s elegant Victorian house in Islington it was like something out of a magazine; like something out of her magazine – an online one called The Download. I kept thinking she might try and tidy me away somewhere, aware of how I stuck out like a sore thumb with my inch of dark roots and high street clothes. I found myself trying to smooth out my accent even, soften my Mancunian vowels.

We couldn’t be more different, Jules and I. The two most important women in my husband’s life. I lean over the rail, taking deep breaths of the sea air.

‘I read a good bit in that article,’ Charlie says, ‘about the island. Apparently it’s got white sand beaches, which are famous in this part of Ireland. And the colour of the sand means the water in the coves turns a beautiful turquoise colour.’

‘Oh,’ I say. ‘Well that sounds better than a peat bog.’

‘Yep,’ Charlie says. ‘Maybe we’ll have a chance to go swimming.’ He smiles at me.

I look at the water, which is more of a chilly slate green than turquoise, and shiver. But I swim off the beach in Brighton, and that’s the English Channel, isn’t it? Still. There it feels so much tamer than this wild, brutal sea.

‘This weekend will be a good distraction, won’t it?’ Charlie says.

‘Yeah,’ I say. ‘I hope so.’ This will be the closest we’ll have had to a holiday for a long time. And I really need one right now. ‘I can’t work out why Jules would choose a random island off the coast of Ireland,’ I add. It seems particularly her to choose somewhere so exclusive that her guests might actually drown trying to get there. ‘It’s not like she couldn’t have afforded to hold it anywhere she wanted.’

Charlie frowns. He doesn’t like to talk about money, it embarrasses him. It’s one of the reasons I love him. Except sometimes, just sometimes, I can’t help wondering what it would be like to have a tiny bit more. We agonised over the gift list and had a bit of an argument about it. Our max is normally fifty quid, but Charlie insisted that we had to do more, because he and Jules go back so far. As everything listed was from Liberty’s, the £150 we finally agreed to only bought us a rather ordinary-looking ceramic bowl. There was a scented candle on there for £200.

‘You know Jules,’ Charlie says now, as the boat makes another swoop downwards before hitting something that feels much harder than mere water, bouncing up again with a few sideways spasms for good measure. ‘She likes to do things differently. And it could be to do with her dad being Irish.’

‘But I thought she doesn’t get on with her dad?’

‘It’s more complicated than that. He was never really around and he’s a bit of a dick, but I think she’s always kind of idolised him. That’s why she wanted me to give her sailing lessons all those years ago. He had this yacht, and she wanted him to be proud of her.’

It’s difficult to imagine Jules in the inferior position of wanting to make someone proud. I know her dad’s a big deal property developer, a self-made man. As the daughter of a train driver and a nurse who grew up constantly strapped for cash, I’m fascinated by – and a little bit suspicious of – people who have made loads of money. To me they’re like another species altogether, a breed of sleek and dangerous big cats.

‘Or maybe Will chose it,’ I say. ‘It seems very him, very outward bound.’ I feel a little leap of excitement in my stomach at the thought of meeting someone so famous. It’s hard to think of Jules’s fiancé as a completely real person.

I’ve been catching up on the show in secret. It’s pretty good, though it’s hard to be objective. I’ve been fascinated by the idea of Jules being with this man … touching him, kissing him, sleeping with him. About to get married to him.

The basic premise of the show, Survive the Night, is that Will gets left somewhere, tied up and blindfolded, in the middle of the night. A forest, say, or the middle of an Arctic tundra, with nothing but the clothes he’s wearing and maybe a knife in his belt. He then has to free himself and make his way to a rendezvous point using his wits and navigational skills alone. There’s lots of high drama: in one episode he has to cross a waterfall in the dark; in another he’s stalked by wolves. At times you’ll suddenly remember that the camera crew is there watching him, filming him. If it were really all that bad, surely they’d step in to help? But they certainly do a good job of making you feel the danger.

At my mention of Will, Charlie’s face has darkened. ‘I still don’t get why she’s marrying him after such a short time,’ he says. ‘I suppose that’s what Jules is like. When she’s made up her mind, she acts quickly. But you mark my words, Han: he’s hiding something. I don’t think he’s everything he pretends to be.’

This is why I’ve been so secretive about watching the show. I know Charlie wouldn’t like it. At times I can’t help feeling that his dislike of Will seems a little like jealousy. I really hope it’s not jealousy. Because what would that mean?

It could also be to do with Will’s stag do. Charlie went, which seemed all wrong, as he’s Jules’s friend. He came home from the weekend in Sweden a bit out of sorts. Every time I even alluded to it he’d go all weird and stiff. So I shrugged it off. He came back in one piece, didn’t he?

The sea seems to have got even rougher. The old fishing boat is pitching and rolling now in all directions at once, like one of those rodeo-bull machines, like it’s trying to throw us overboard. ‘Is it really safe to keep going?’ I call to Mattie.

‘Yep!’ he calls back, over the crash of the spray, the shriek of the wind. ‘This is a good day, as they go. Not far to Inis an Amplóra now.’

I can feel wet hanks of hair stuck to my forehead, while the rest of it seems to have lifted into a huge tangled cloud around my head. I can only imagine how I’ll look to Jules and Will and the rest of them, when we finally arrive.

‘Cormorant!’ Charlie shouts, pointing. He’s trying to distract me from my nausea, I know. I feel like one of the children being taken to the doctor’s for an injection. But I follow his finger to a sleek dark head, emerging from the waves like the periscope of a miniature submarine. Then it swoops down beneath the surface, a swift black streak. Imagine feeling so at home in such hostile conditions.

‘I saw something in the article specifically about cormorants,’ Charlie says. He picks up his phone again. ‘Ah, here. They’re particularly common along this stretch of coast, apparently.’ He puts on his schoolteacher voice: ‘the cormorant is a bird much maligned in local folklore. Oh dear. Historically, the bird has been represented as a symbol of greed, bad luck and evil.’ We both watch as the cormorant emerges from the water again. There’s a tiny fish in its sharp beak, a brief flash of silver, before the bird opens its gullet and swallows the thing whole.

My stomach flips. I feel as though it’s me that has swallowed the fish, quick and slippery, swimming about in my belly. And as the boat begins to list in the other direction, I lurch to the side and throw up my cream tea.

JULES

The Bride

I’m standing in front of the mirror in our room, the biggest and most elegant of the Folly’s ten bedrooms, naturally. From here I only need to turn my head a fraction to look out through the windows towards the sea. The weather today is perfect, the sun shimmering off the waves so brightly you can hardly look at it. It bloody well better stay like this for tomorrow.

Our room is on the western side of the building and this is the westernmost island off this part of the coast, so there is nothing, and no one, for thousands of miles between me and the Americas. I like the drama of that. The Folly itself is a beautifully restored fifteenth-century building, treading the line between luxury and timelessness, grandeur and comfort: antique rugs on the flagstone floors, claw-footed baths, fireplaces lit with smouldering peat. It’s large enough to fit all our guests, yet small enough to feel intimate. It’s perfect. Everything is going to be perfect.

Don’t think about the note, Jules.

I will not think about the note.

Fuck. Fuck. I don’t know why it’s got to me so much. I have never been a worrier, the sort of person who wakes up at three in the morning, fretting. Not until recently anyway.

The note was delivered through our letter box three weeks ago. It told me not to marry Will. To call it off.

Somehow the idea of it has gained this dark power over me. Whenever I think about it, it gives me a sour feeling in the pit of my stomach. A feeling like dread.

Which is ridiculous. I wouldn’t normally give a second thought to this sort of thing.

I look back at the mirror. I’m currently wearing the dress. The dress. I thought it important to try it on one last time, the eve of my wedding, to double-check. I had a fitting last week but I never leave anything to chance. As expected, it’s perfect. Heavy cream silk that looks as though it has been poured over me, the corsetry within creating the quintessential hourglass. No lace or other fripperies, that’s not me. The nap of the silk is so fine it can only be handled with special white gloves which, obviously, I’m wearing now. It cost an absolute bomb. It was worth it. I’m not interested in fashion for

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