The Hunting Party: A Novel
By Lucy Foley
3.5/5
()
About this ebook
THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
“My favorite kind of whodunit, kept me guessing all the way through, and reminiscent of Agatha Christie at her best -- with an extra dose of acid.” -- Alex Michaelides, author of the #1 New York Times bestseller The Silent Patient
Everyone's invited...everyone's a suspect...
During the languid days of the Christmas break, a group of thirtysomething friends from Oxford meet to welcome in the New Year together, a tradition they began as students ten years ago. For this vacation, they’ve chosen an idyllic and isolated estate in the Scottish Highlands—the perfect place to get away and unwind by themselves.
The trip begins innocently enough: admiring the stunning if foreboding scenery, champagne in front of a crackling fire, and reminiscences about the past. But after a decade, the weight of secret resentments has grown too heavy for the group’s tenuous nostalgia to bear. Amid the boisterous revelry of New Year’s Eve, the cord holding them together snaps, just as a historic blizzard seals the lodge off from the outside world.
Two days later, on New Year’s Day, one of them is dead. . . and another of them did it.
Keep your friends close, the old adage says. But how close is too close?
DON'T BE LEFT OUT. JOIN THE PARTY NOW.
Lucy Foley
Lucy Foley studied English literature at Durham University and University College London and worked for several years as a fiction editor in the publishing industry. She is the author of six novels including The Paris Apartment and The Guest List. She lives in London.
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Reviews for The Hunting Party
1,174 ratings71 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title to be a gripping murder mystery with surprising twists. While some reviewers found the plot predictable and the ending underwhelming, others enjoyed the suspense and the engaging writing style. The book keeps readers on the edge until the end, with a captivating storyline and well-developed characters. Overall, it is recommended for fans of thrillers who enjoy a page-turner with a dark atmosphere. However, it is important to note that some reviewers found similarities to the author's previous work. Despite this, the majority of readers found it to be an enjoyable and worth reading book.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I’m a fan of thrillers and it did keep me engaged as it should have. However, as an avid reader of the genre, I saw the ending- almost every twist- coming. The small ‘hints’ were almost red flags in my opinion. So much was happening and there was rarely any scenes without the main girl in it which is sad because it would have created depth. Even with that case, I did have fun.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5One of my fav books!! Soo good!! I don’t reread books but this is one I could!!
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Took entirely too long to build characters, while the prolonging of telling each guest’s secretive past was intentional, it made for a long, tough read. The plot line itself and ending were good, which brought up the rating. I’m not sure this book would encourage people to read more Lucy Foley novels though.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I really enjoyed this book and the author’s writing style of having each chapter from another character’s perspective.
Lots of twists and turns and it kept me guessing until the end! - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5An interesting book, because I didn't like most of the characters - but you'll have strong feelings about who you want to get theirs in the end.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Promising start, but an underwhelming ending. Some cliche plot twists sprinkled throughout too. Easy read.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This was a really great “closed room” mystery! A posh group of old college friends gets snowed in during a holiday weekend away and one of them is found murdered.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5The Hunting Party: meh..
.
Having read Lucy Foley’s The Hunting Party, I have little to say.
9 longtime friends go to a remote hunting lodge for new years. While snowed in and blocked from communication with local police, one of them is murdered.
Good but predictable. Glad I read it. Glad I didn’t pay money for it (review copy). Solid characters, but a tedious ‘gotta draw out the secret ending’ delivery. But don’t let my opinion sway you. This may be right up your alley. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A group of friends spend New Years weekend at a remote resort in Scotland. Each chapter is narrated by a different character which helps paint the backstory and personality of each character. The story flashes back to days before and after the murder which takes place on New Years Eve. The author initially keeps the reader guessing about the identity of the murder victim. As secrets surface and drugs and alcohol wreak havoc, several potential murder suspects come to mind.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I really liked it! It has a lot of back and forth between internal memories of prior events and several days at the hunting lodge which might be confusing to some. Foley doesn't tell you right away who gets murdered and the last third of the book is a wild ride.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Not my favorite reading material but once I was into it I had to work toward he conclusion and I'm sorry it felt more like work than any kind of reading enjoyment....way too much drinking and drunken behavior. I didn't care for the "guests"---what a collection of people! The "results" in the end for the ones who made it out were....the right ones!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This was my first book by Lucy Foley and I really did enjoy it. I wasn’t quite sure what to expect but it turned out to be pretty suspenseful. The author was able to keep me guessing until almost the very end and that’s saying a lot. We were able to get to know the characters, some better than others, and it was nice to see that they all had real faults. None of them was perfect which made each of them a good suspect. I did find the ending surprising.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/53.5 stars I thought the setting was perfect and was surprised by the ending. However, it had more detail and backstory than I think it needed. It also had a bit more language and sex than I personally prefer reading.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Kept me guessing until the end but separating who was who was a chore.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5An enjoyable read, interesting format but it was a little predictable. The journey was still engaging, nevertheless.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is a great murder mystery. I wasn't sure who the murderer was until the author made it know. Great book!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I'd recommend it to my friends. Hey, author, keep it up.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Somewhat less 'high stakes' than The Guest List, but still a page turner.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5its a slow burn all the way to the end. Skipping pages makes it better.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/53.5 stars
Novel is definitely a slow burn. The pace didn’t pick up until the last 100 pages. However, I didn’t see the twists coming. The ending could have been flushed out more. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It has all the elements of surprise however it didn't quite hit the mark! I didn't particularly enjoy the part where the author kept the guest's identity a surprise not did I enjoy the ending. I caught myself so many times thinking, this isn't how it should happen. Overall though it does keep you on tenterhooks, so 3/5 starts for me
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5it took me a few days to clear all the relationships among those people, Miranda andJulien, Emma and Mark, Nick and Bo, Samira and Giles and Priya, Heather and Doug, Lain. all those people, their stories and personal traits, their intentions and desires are too complicated. but luckily, i can understand most of the vocabulary the author used. i wouldn't say the plot of this story surprises me most, but it's definitely worth reading.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I received this book for free free as part of an Instagram tour (TLC Book Tours specifically) I did to promote the book.As a whole, this was an okay thriller. There were some things I liked and some things I didn’t.My main issue was that the story was a little slow. It takes a while for the storyline to pick up. Usually with thrillers, I’ll be turning the pages like crazy trying to find out what happens next. But that didn’t happen with this book until the last 100 pages. There were also a lot of characters and it was hard at first to differentiate them all, especially with the point of view shifts. Speaking of points of view, there was a tad bit too much of inner dialogue whenever there was a switch. It sometimes felt a little unnecessary. As for what I liked, I found that the mood and tone were very effective. It really helped set the scene. The book was very atmospheric and really captured the eerie vibe of the Scottish woods. The reveal at the end was a little underwhelming but in a way I liked that simplicity. Sometimes thrillers go way out there, so it was nice to see one that didn’t. Overall, this wasn’t a mind blowing thriller in any way but I still found it entertaining.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5It kept my attention the whole time! Definitely did not know who it was till the very end!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I was enjoying this book; I liked the way it built the story. I liked the way it made me feel about certain characters. I liked the way that you knew there had been a murder right at the start of the book, but not who the victim was - that detail being slowly revealed over the course of the book.
But then we got to the big reveal, and it highlighted what had been bothering me. The characters - the group of frenemies coming together for their annual meet to celebrate a new year. A collection of college graduates (in this case, Oxford) now in those 30s. And all the stereotypes are here. The glamorous one; the earnest one, the one with a dark side, the mousy one, the one not quite a proper member of the group. The exact same group of character stereotypes were in E Lockhart’s We Were Liars. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I'm not quite sure why I enjoyed The Hunting Party, but I did. I was looking for a light, festive-themed murder mystery, and this book definitely fits the bill. The story centres on a group of thirtysomething college friends who are celebrating New Year in a remote Scottish hunting lodge. It is told largely in flashback, using four first-person narratives and one third-person perspective. Sadly, the delineation of character lets the book down; some characters are flat and play no real part in the story; the men are particularly two-dimensional. The 'shared narration' conceit is less effective than it could have been because the narrators are so similar and their tones of voice so uniform. It is also unclear why and how these narratives emerged. The plot features the usual dodges and misdirections, but its pacing is perfectly judged. Despite its flaws it is well worth reading – especially in winter.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A New Year’s reunion for 8 friends in the remote Scottish wilderness and one is a murderer and one won’t make it out alive! Historic blizzard seals the lodge from the outside world. Story is full of suspense, secrets and surprises. Interesting characters that find out how keeping your friends close can be harmful! Reminded me of Agatha Christie’s Orient Express mystery. Kept me guessing all the way thru! Recommended for mystery thriller lovers!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A book about a group of friends from Oxford and their significant others who spend the New Year's holiday in a secluded Lodge in Scotland. One ends up dead and everyone has a motive. This book starts with the discovery of the body, the day after New Year's and goes back and forth between Three Days Before when the guests arrive and Now, working its way up (and the suspense) to the murder. You don't find out until pretty late in the book who the victim is, and then you have to wait until the end to find out who and why. I really liked this book. I am giving it four stars just because it lacked that "WOW, I didn't see that coming" (for me anyway). However I would definitely recommend!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I found the story line captivating! If you have some great stories like this one, you can publish it on Novel Star, just submit your story to [email protected] or [email protected]
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
breathtaking! a masterpiece. If you have some great stories like this one, you can publish it on Novel Star, just submit your story to [email protected] or [email protected]
Book preview
The Hunting Party - Lucy Foley
1
Heather
Now
January 2, 2019
I See a Man Coming Through The Falling Snow. From a Distance, through the curtain of white, he looks hardly human, like a shadow figure.
As he nears me I see that it is Doug, the gamekeeper.
He is hurrying toward the Lodge, I realize, trying to run. But the fallen, falling snow hampers him. He stumbles with each step. Something bad. I know this without being able to see his face.
As he comes closer I see that his features are frozen with shock. I know this look. I have seen it before. This is the expression of someone who has witnessed something horrific, beyond the bounds of normal human experience.
I open the door of the Lodge, let him in. He brings with him a rush of freezing air, a spill of snow.
What’s happened?
I ask him.
There is a moment—a long pause—in which he tries to catch his breath. But his eyes tell the story before he can, a mute communication of horror.
Finally, he speaks. I’ve found the missing guest.
Well, that’s great,
I say. Where—
He shakes his head, and I feel the question expire on my lips.
I found a body.
2
Emma
Three days earlier
December 30, 2018
New Year. All of us together for the first time in ages. Me and Mark, Miranda and Julien, Nick and Bo, Samira and Giles, their six-month-old baby, Priya. And Katie.
Four days in a winter Highland wilderness. Loch Corrin, it’s called. Very exclusive: they only let four parties stay there each year—the rest of the time it’s kept as a private residence. This time of year, as you might guess, is the most popular. I had to reserve it pretty much the day after New Year last year, as soon as the bookings opened up. The woman I spoke with assured me that with our group taking over most of the accommodations we should have the whole place to ourselves.
I take the brochure out of my bag again. A thick card, expensive affair. It shows a fir-lined loch, heather-red peaks rising behind, though they may well be snow-covered now. According to the photographs, the Lodge itself—the New Lodge,
as the brochure describes it—is a big glass construction, über-modern, designed by a top architect who recently constructed the summer pavilion at the Serpentine Gallery. I think the idea is that it’s meant to blend seamlessly with the still waters of the loch, reflecting the landscape and the uncompromising lines of the big peak, the Munro, rising behind.
Near the Lodge, dwarfed by it, you can make out a small cluster of dwellings that look as though they are huddling together to keep warm. These are the cabins; there’s one for each couple, but we’ll come together to have meals in the shooting lodge, the bigger building in the middle. Apart from the Highland Dinner on the first night—a showcase of local, seasonal produce
—we’ll be cooking for ourselves. They’ve ordered food in for me. I sent a long list in advance—fresh truffles, foie gras, oysters. I’m planning a real feast for New Year’s Eve, which I’m very excited about. I love to cook. Food brings people together, doesn’t it?
This part of the journey is particularly dramatic. we have the sea on one side of us, and every so often the land sheers away so that it feels as if one wrong move might send us careering over the edge. The water is slate gray, violent-looking. In one cliff-top field the sheep huddle together in a group as though trying to keep warm. You can hear the wind; every so often it throws itself against the windows, and the train shudders.
All of the others seem to have fallen asleep, even baby Priya. Giles is actually snoring.
Look, I want to say, look how beautiful it is!
I’ve planned this trip, so I feel a certain ownership of it—the anxiety that people won’t enjoy themselves, that things might go wrong. And also a sense of pride, already, in its small successes … like this, the wild beauty outside the window.
It’s hardly a surprise that they’re all asleep. We got up so early this morning to catch the train—Miranda looked particularly cross at the hour. And then everyone got on the booze, of course. Mark, Giles, and Julien hit the drinks trolley early, somewhere around Doncaster, even though it was only eleven. They got happily tipsy, affectionate, and loud (the next few seats along did not look impressed). They seem to be able to fall back into the easy camaraderie of years gone by no matter how much time has passed since they last saw each other, especially with the help of a couple of beers.
Nick and Bo, Nick’s American boyfriend, aren’t so much a feature of this boys’ club, because Nick wasn’t part of their group at Oxford … although Katie has claimed in the past that there’s more to it than that, some tacit homophobia on the part of the other boys. Nick is Katie’s friend, first and foremost. Sometimes I have the distinct impression that he doesn’t particularly like the rest of us, that he tolerates us only because of Katie. I’ve always suspected a bit of coolness between Nick and Miranda, probably because they’re both such strong characters. And yet this morning the two of them seemed thick as thieves, hurrying off across the station concourse, arm in arm, to buy sustenance
for the trip. This turned out to be a perfectly chilled bottle of Sancerre, which Nick pulled from the cool-bag to slightly envious looks from the beer drinkers. He was trying to get those G-and-Ts in cans,
Miranda told us, but I wouldn’t let him. We have to start as we mean to go on.
Miranda, Nick, Bo, and I each had some wine. Even Samira decided to have a small one, too, at the last minute: There’s all this new evidence that says you can drink when you’re breastfeeding.
Katie shook her head at first; she had a bottle of fizzy water. Oh, come on, Kay-tee,
Miranda pleaded, with a winning smile, proffering a glass. We’re on holiday!
It’s difficult to refuse Miranda anything when she’s trying to persuade you to do something, so Katie took it, of course, and had a tentative sip.
The booze helped lighten the atmosphere a bit; we’d had a bit of a mix-up with the seating when we first got on. Everyone was tired and cross, halfheartedly trying to work it out. It turned out that one of the nine seats on the booking had somehow ended up in the next carriage, completely on its own. The train was packed, for the holidays, so there was no possibility of shuffling things around.
Obviously that’s my one,
Katie said. Katie, you see, is the odd one out, not being in a couple. In a way, I suppose you could say that she is more of an interloper than I am these days.
Oh, Katie,
I said. I’m so sorry—I feel like an idiot. I don’t know how that happened. I was sure I’d reserved them all in the middle, to try to make sure we’d all be together. The system must have changed it. Look, you come and sit here … I’ll go there.
No,
Katie said, hefting her suitcase awkwardly over the heads of the passengers already in their seats. That doesn’t make any sense. I don’t mind.
Her tone suggested otherwise. For goodness’ sake, I found myself thinking. It’s only a train journey. Does it really matter?
The other eight seats were facing each other around two tables in the middle of the carriage. Just beyond, there was an elderly woman sitting next to a pierced teenager—two solitary travelers. It didn’t look likely that we’d be able to do anything about the mess-up. But then Miranda bent across to speak to the elderly woman, her curtain of hair shining like gold, and worked her magic. I could see how charmed the woman was by her: the looks, the cut-glass—almost antique—accent. Miranda, when she wants to, can exert serious charm. Anyone who knows her has been on the receiving end of it.
Oh yes, the woman said, of course she would move. It would probably be more peaceful in the next carriage anyway: You young people, aha!
—though none of us are all that young anymore—And I prefer sitting forward, as it is.
Thanks, Manda,
Katie said, with a brief smile. (She sounded grateful, but she didn’t look it, exactly.) Katie and Miranda are best friends from way back. I know they haven’t seen as much of each other lately, those two; Miranda says Katie has been busy with work. And because Samira and Giles have been tied up in baby land, Miranda and I have spent more time together than ever before. We’ve been shopping, we’ve gone for drinks. We’ve gossiped together. I have begun to feel that she’s accepted me as her friend, rather than merely Mark’s girlfriend, last to the group by almost a decade.
Katie has always been there to usurp me, in the past. She and Miranda have always been so tight-knit. So much so that they’re almost more like sisters than friends. In the past I’ve felt excluded by this, all that closeness and history. It doesn’t leave any new friendship with room to breathe. So a secret part of me is—well, rather pleased.
I Really want everyone to have a good time on this trip, for it all to be a success. The New Year’s Eve getaway is a big deal. They’ve done it every year, this group. They’ve been doing it for long before I came onto the scene. And I suppose, in a way, planning this trip is a rather pitiful attempt at proving that I am really one of them. At saying I should be properly accepted into the inner circle
at last. You’d think that three years—which is the time it has been since Mark and I got together—would be long enough. But it’s not. They all go back a very long way, you see: to Oxford, where they first became friends.
It’s tricky—as anyone who has been in this situation will know—to be the latest addition to a group of old friends. It seems that I will always be the new girl, however many years pass. I will always be the last in, the trespasser.
I look again at the brochure in my lap. Perhaps this trip—so carefully planned—will change things. Prove that I am one of them. I’m so excited.
3
Katie
So we’re finally here. And yet I have a sudden longing to be back in the city. Even my office desk would do. The Loch Corrin station is laughably tiny. A solitary platform, with the steel-covered slope of a mountain shearing up behind, the top lost in cloud. The signpost, the National Rail standard, looks like a practical joke. The platform is covered in a thin dusting of snow, not a single footprint marring the perfect white. I think of London snow—how it’s dirty almost as soon as it has fallen, trodden underfoot by thousands. If I needed any further proof of how far we are from the city, it is this, that no one has been here to step in it, let alone clear it. Toto, I’ve a feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore. We passed through miles and miles of this wild-looking countryside on the train. I can’t remember the last time I saw a human structure before this one, let alone a person.
We walk gingerly along the frozen platform—you can see the glint of black ice through the fallen snow—past the tiny station building. It looks completely deserted. I wonder how often the Waiting Room,
with its painted sign and optimistic shelf of books, gets used. Now we’re passing a small cubicle with a pane of dirty glass: a ticket booth, or tiny office. I peer in, fascinated by the idea of an office here in the middle of all this wilderness, and feel a small shock as I realize it isn’t empty. There’s actually someone sitting there, in the gloom. I can only make out the shape of him: broad-shouldered, hunched, and then the brief gleam of eyes, watching us as we pass.
What is it?
Giles, in front of me, turns around. I must have made a noise of surprise.
There’s someone in there,
I whisper. A train guard or something—it just gave me a shock.
Giles peers through the window. You’re right.
He pretends to tip an imaginary cap from his bald head. Top o’ the morning to ya,
he says, with a grin. Giles is the clown of our group: lovable, silly—sometimes to a fault.
That’s Irish, idiot,
says Samira affectionately. Those two do everything affectionately. I never feel more aware of my single status than when I’m in their company.
The man in the booth does not respond at first. And then, slowly, he raises one hand, a greeting of sorts.
There’s a land rover waiting to pick us up: Splattered with mud, one of the old kind. I see the door open, and a tall man unfolds himself.
That must be the gamekeeper,
Emma says. The email said he’d pick us up.
He doesn’t look like a gamekeeper, I think. What had I imagined, though? I think, mainly, I’d expected him to be old. He’s probably only about our age. There’s the bulk, I suppose: the shoulders, the height, that speak of a life lived outdoors, and the rather wild dark hair. As he welcomes us, in a low mumble, his voice has a cracked quality to it, as though it doesn’t get put to much use.
I see him look us over. I don’t think he likes what he sees. Is that a sneer, as he takes in Nick’s spotless Barbour coat, Samira’s Hunter wellies, Miranda’s fox-fur collar? If so, who knows what he makes of my city dweller’s clothes and wheeled Samsonite. I hardly thought about what I was packing, because I was so distracted.
I see Julien, Bo, and Mark try to help him with the bags, but he brushes them aside. Beside him they look as neat as schoolboys on the first day of the new term. I bet they don’t love the contrast.
I suppose it will have to be two lots,
Giles says. Can’t get all of us in there safely.
The gamekeeper raises his eyebrows. Whatever you like.
You girls go first,
Mark says, with an attempt at chivalry, us lads will stay behind.
I wait, cringing, for him to make a joke about Nick and Bo being honorary girls. Luckily it doesn’t seem to have occurred to him—or he’s managed to hold his tongue. We’re all on our best behavior today, in tolerant holiday-with-friends mode.
It’s been ages since we’ve all been together like this—not since last New Year’s Eve, probably. I always forget what it’s like. We fit back so quickly, so easily, into our old roles, the ones we have always occupied in this group. I’m the quiet one—to Miranda and Samira, my old housemates, the group extroverts. I revert: we all do. I’m sure Giles, say, isn’t nearly such a clown in the hospital where he’s a highly respected department head. We clamber into the Land Rover. It smells of wet dog and earth in here. I imagine that’s what the gamekeeper would smell like, too, if you got close enough. Miranda is up front, next to him. Every so often I catch a whiff of her perfume: heavy, smoky, mingling oddly with the earthiness. Only she could get away with it. I turn my head to breathe in the fresh air coming through the cracked window.
On one side of us now a rather steep bank falls away to the loch. On the other, though it’s not quite dark, the forest is already impenetrably black. The road is nothing more than a track, pitted and very thin, so a false move would send us plunging down toward the water, or crashing into the thickets. We seesaw our way along and then suddenly the brakes come on, hard. All of us are thrown forward in our seats and then slammed back against them.
Fuck!
Miranda shouts as Priya—so quiet for the journey up—begins to howl in Samira’s arms.
A stag is lit up in the track in front of us. It must have detached itself from the shadow of the trees without any of us noticing. The huge head looks almost too big for the slender reddish body, crowned by a vast bristle of antlers, both majestic and lethal-looking. In the headlights its eyes gleam a weird, alien green. Finally it stops staring at us and moves away with an unhurried grace, into the trees. I put a hand to my chest and feel the fast drumbeat of my heart.
Wow,
Miranda breathes. What was that?
The gamekeeper turns to her and says, deadpan, A deer.
I mean,
she says, a little flustered—unusually for her—I mean, what sort of deer?
Red,
the gamekeeper says. A red stag.
He turns back to the road. Exchange over.
Miranda twists around to face us over the back of the seats, and mouths, He’s hot, no? Samira and Emma nod their agreement. Then, aloud, she says, Don’t you think so, Katie?
She leans over and pokes me in the shoulder, a tiny bit too hard.
I don’t know,
I say. I look at the gamekeeper’s impassive expression in the rearview mirror. Has he guessed we’re talking about him? If so, he gives no indication that he’s listening, but all the same, it’s embarrassing.
Oh, but you’ve always had strange taste in men, Katie,
Miranda says, laughing.
Miranda has never really liked my boyfriends. The feeling has, funnily enough, generally been mutual—I’ve often had to defend her to them. I think you pick them,
she said once, so that they’ll be like the angel on your shoulder, telling you: ‘She’s not a good’un, that one. Steer clear.’
But Miranda is my oldest friend. And our friendship has always outlasted any romantic relationship—on my side, that is. Miranda and Julien have been together since Oxford.
I wasn’t sure what to make of Julien when he came on the scene, at the end of our first year. Neither was Miranda. He was a bit of an anomaly, compared to the boyfriends she’d had before. Admittedly, there were only a couple for comparison, both of them projects like me, not nearly as good-looking or as sociable as her, guys who seemed to exist in a permanent state of disbelief that they had been chosen. But then, Miranda has always liked a project.
So Julien seemed too obvious for her, with her love of waifs and strays. He was too brashly good-looking, too self-confident. And those were her words, not mine. He’s so arrogant,
she’d say. I can’t wait to hand him his balls next time he tries it on.
I wondered if she really couldn’t see how closely he mirrored her own arrogance, her own self-confidence.
Julien kept trying. And each time, she rebuffed him. He’d come over to chat to us—her—in a pub. Or he’d just happen to bump into
her after a lecture. Or he’d casually be dropping into the bar of our college’s Junior Common Room, ostensibly to see some friends, but would spend most of the night sitting at our table, wooing Miranda with an embarrassing frankness.
Later I came to understand that when Julien wants something badly enough he won’t let anything stand in the way of his getting it. And he wanted Miranda. Badly.
Eventually, she gave in to the reality of the situation: she wanted him back. Who wouldn’t? He was beautiful then, still is, perhaps even more so now that life has roughed a little of the perfection off him, the glibness. I wonder if it would be biologically impossible not to want a man like Julien, at least in the physical sense.
I remember Miranda introducing us, at the Summer Ball—when they finally got together. I knew exactly who he was, of course. I had borne witness to the whole saga: his pursuit of Miranda, her throwing him off, him trying and trying—her, finally, giving in to the inevitable. I knew so much about him. Which college he was at, what subject he was studying, the fact that he was a rugby Blue. I knew so much that I had almost forgotten he wouldn’t have a clue who I was. So when he kissed me on the cheek and said, solemnly, Nice to meet you, Katie
—quite politely, despite being drunk—it felt like a big joke.
The first time he stayed at Our House—Miranda, Samira, and I all lived together in the second year—I bumped into him coming out of the bathroom, a towel wrapped around his waist. I was so conscious of trying to be normal, not to look at the bare expanse of his chest, at his broad, well-muscled shoulders gleaming wet from the shower, that I said, Hi, Julien.
He seemed to clutch the towel a little tighter around his waist. Hello.
He frowned. Ah—this is a bit embarrassing. I’m afraid I don’t know your name.
I saw my mistake. He had completely forgotten who I was, had probably forgotten ever having met me. Oh,
I said, putting out my hand, I’m Katie.
He didn’t take my hand, and I realized that this was another mistake—too formal, too weird. Then it occurred to me it might also have been that he was keeping the towel up with that hand, clutching a toothbrush with the other.
Sorry.
He smiled then, his charming smile, and took pity on me. So. What did you do, Katie?
I stared at him. What do you mean?
He laughed. Like the novel,
he said. "What Katie Did. I always liked that book. Though I’m not sure boys are supposed to." For the second time he smiled that smile of his, and I suddenly thought I could see something of what Miranda saw in him.
This is the thing about people like Julien. In an American romcom someone as good-looking as him might be cast as a bastard, perhaps to be reformed, to repent of his sins later on. Miranda would be a bitchy Prom Queen, with a dark secret. The mousy nobody—me—would be the kind, clever, pitifully misunderstood character who would ultimately save the day. But real life isn’t like that. People like them don’t need to be unpleasant. Why would they make their lives difficult? They can afford to be their own spectacularly charming selves. And the ones like me, the mousy nobodies, we don’t always turn out to be the heroes of the tale. Sometimes we have our own dark secrets.
What little light there was has left the day now. You can hardly make out anything other than the black mass of trees on either side. The dark has the effect of making them look thicker, closer: almost as though they’re pressing in toward us. Other than the thrum of the Land Rover’s engine there is no noise at all; perhaps the trees muffle sound, too.
Up front, Miranda is asking the gamekeeper about access. This place is truly remote. It’s an hour’s drive to the road,
the gamekeeper tells us. In good weather.
"An hour?" Samira asks. She casts a nervous glance at Priya, who is staring out at the twilit landscape, the flicker of moonlight between the trees reflected in her big dark eyes.
I glance out through the back window. All I can see is a tunnel of trees, diminishing in the distance to a black point.
More than an hour,
the gamekeeper says, if the visibility is poor or the conditions are bad.
Is he enjoying this?
It takes me an hour to get down to my mum’s in Surrey. That’s some sixty miles from London. It seems incredible that this place is even in the United Kingdom. I have always thought of this small island we call home as somewhat overcrowded. The way my stepdad likes to talk about immigrants, you’d think it was in very real danger of sinking beneath the weight of all the bodies squeezed onto it.
Sometimes,
the gamekeeper says, at this time of year, you can’t use the road at all. If there’s a dump of snow, say—it would have been in the email you got from Heather.
Emma nods. It was.
What do you mean?
Samira’s voice has an unmistakable shrillness now. We won’t be able to leave?
It’s possible,
he says. If we get enough snow the track becomes impassable—it’s too dangerous, even for snow tires. We get at least a couple of weeks a year, in total, when Corrin is cut off from the rest of the world.
That could be quite cozy,
Emma says quickly, perhaps to fend off any more worried interjections from Samira. Exciting. And I’ve ordered enough groceries in—
And wine,
Miranda supplies.
—and wine,
Emma agrees, to last us for a couple of weeks if we need it to. I probably went a bit overboard. I’ve planned a bit of a feast for New Year’s Eve.
No one’s really listening to her. I think we’re all preoccupied by this new understanding of the place in which we’re going to spend the next few days. Because there is something unnerving about the isolation, knowing how far we are from everything.
What about the station?
Miranda asks, with a sort of gotcha!
triumph. Surely you could just get a train?
The gamekeeper gives her a look. He is quite attractive, I realize. Or at least he would be, only there’s something haunted about his eyes. Trains don’t run so well on a meter of snow, either,
he says. So they wouldn’t be stopping here.
And, just like that, the landscape, for all its space, seems to shrink around us.
4
Doug
If it weren’t for the guests, this place would be perfect. But he supposes he wouldn’t have a job without them.
It had been everything he could do, when he picked them up, not to sneer. They reek of money, this lot—like all those who come here. As they approached the Lodge, the shorter, dark-haired man—Jethro? Joshua?—had turned to him in a man-to-man way, holding up a shiny silver phone. I’m searching for the Wi-Fi,
he said, but nothing is coming up. Obviously there’s no 3G: I get that. You can’t have 3G without a signal … Ha! But I would have thought I’d start picking up on the Wi-Fi. Or do you have to be closer to the Lodge?
He told the man that they didn’t turn the Wi-Fi on unless someone asked for it specifically. And you can sometimes catch a signal, but you have to climb up there
—he pointed to the slope of the Munro—in order to get it.
The man’s face had fallen. He had looked for a moment almost frightened. His wife had said, swiftly, I’m sure you can survive without Wi-Fi for a few days, darling.
And she smothered any further protest with a kiss, her tongue darting out. Doug had looked away.
The same woman, miranda—the beautiful one—had sat up in front with him in the Land Rover, her knee angled close to his own. She had laid an unnecessary hand on his arm as she climbed into the car. He caught a gust of her perfume every time she turned to speak to him, rich and smoky. He had almost forgotten that there are women like this in the world: complex, flirtatious, the sort who have to seduce everyone they meet. Dangerous, in a very particular way. Heather is so different. Does she even wear perfume? He can’t remember noticing it. Certainly not makeup. She has the sort of looks that work better without any adornment from cosmetics. He likes her face, heart-shaped, dark-eyed, the elegant parentheses of her eyebrows. Someone who hadn’t spent time with Heather might think that there was a simplicity to her, but he suspects otherwise, that with her it is very much a case of still waters running deep. He has a vague idea that she lived in Edinburgh before, that she had a proper career there. He has not tried to find out what her story is, though. It might mean revealing too much of his own.
Heather is a good person. He is not. Before he came here, he did a terrible thing. More than one thing, actually. A person like her should be protected from someone like him.
The guests are now in heather’s charge, for the moment—and that’s a relief. It took no small effort to conceal his dislike of them. The dark-haired man—Julien, that was the name—is typical of the people that stay here. Moneyed, spoiled, wanting wilderness, but secretly expecting the luxury of the hotels they’re used to staying in. It always takes them a while to process what they have actually signed up for, the remoteness, the simplicity, the priceless beauty of the surroundings. Often they undergo a kind of conversion, they are seduced by this place—who wouldn’t be? But he knows they don’t understand it, not properly. They think that they’re roughing it, in their beautiful cabins with their four-poster beds and fireplaces and underfloor heating and the fucking sauna they can trot over to if they really want to exert themselves. And the ones he takes deer-stalking act as if they’ve suddenly become DiCaprio in The Revenant, battling with nature red in tooth and claw. They don’t realize how easy he has made it for them, doing all the difficult work himself: the observation of the herd’s activities, the careful tracking and plotting … so that all they have to do is squeeze the bloody trigger.
Even the shooting itself they rarely get right. If they shoot badly they could cause a wound that, if left, might cause the animal to suffer for days in unimaginable pain. A misfired head shot, for example (they often aim for the head even though he tells them: never go for it, too easy to miss), could cleave away the animal’s jaw and leave it alive in deepest agony, unable to eat, slowly bleeding to death. So he is there to finish it off with an expert shot, clean through the sternum, allowing them to go home boasting of themselves as hunters, as heroes. The taking of a life. The baptism in blood. Something