Format: Hardcover, 352 pages
Release Date: December 3, 2019
Publisher: Berkley
Source: Publisher
Genre: Thrillers / Suspense
New York Times bestselling author Nalini Singh pivots in a new direction with her first mainstream thriller that will be sure to keep readers on their toes.
Nalini Singh's A Madness of Sunshine is the authors first attempt at fictional suspense/mystery. The story takes place in her own country of New Zealand where 29-year old Anahera Rawiri is returning home 217 days since burying her husband, and 8 years since leaving Golden Cove for a hopeful future in London. But, soon after her arrival, there is a shocking disappearance of a young woman who had everything to live for. Everyone in this town has secrets, including the new comer Detective Will Gallagher who Ana finds herself entangled with.
Ana is a world renowned Classical pianist who is still grieving and upset at the discovery that her husband cheated on her with another woman. She wants to hole up in her dead mother's old
cabin and hide from the world awhile while putting her career on hold. But, when 19 year old Miriama Tutaia disappears without a trace after going for a run, Ana can't sit still. Ana learns that there have been (3) other disappearances of hikers going back 15 years. Could a serial killer be living in Golden Cove?
Will is a decorated police officer who was exiled to Golden Cove after an incident tarnished his reputation. Will has to deal with his own ghosts while searching for Miri and uncovering a slew of people who could be responsible for what happened to Miri. Will has some hurdles to jump over as well. How can an outsider possibly know the secrets that tied the residents of this town together. How can Will understand the deep wounds of hurt that have never gone away? Will gets some much needed help from Ana who knows these people a whole lot better than Will ever will.
I can tell you that I had a long list of those who could have been responsible for what happened to Miri the bright light that was suddenly and inexplicably taken away. The most shocking part is that Ana has known all of them since she was a child, including one who just happens to be the father she refuses to have anything to do with after Ana found her mother dead. This book is filled with the Polynesian language of the Maori. It would have been nice to have some sort of dictionary in the back of the book to look up what the characters were saying.
The book alternates between Ana and Will which gives the story a bit more depth had the story only been told from Ana's perspective. The romance itself was a secondary element to the story not irrelevant, but also not the main focus. The focus is on the characters complicated pasts. There is a clear divide in the story between those who are well off and those who are barely scraping
by. As someone who has never been to New Zealand, but wanted to visit when I was younger, I can honestly say I loved the setting. I am glad that this story didn't end up like the authors paranormal romance series where sex is on the table 24/7 while the action takes a step back.
1
She
returned home two hundred and seventeen days after burying her husband
while his pregnant mistress sobbed so hard that she made herself sick.
Anahera had stood stone-faced, staring down at the gleaming mahogany
coffin she’d chosen because that was what Edward would’ve wanted. Quiet
elegance and money that didn’t make itself obvious, that had been
Edward’s way. Appearances above everything.
His friends had looked at her with sympathetic eyes, believing her grief so great that she couldn’t cry.
And all the while, Edward’s mistress sobbed.
No one knew her.
Anahera hadn’t explained who the woman was.
And she hadn’t cried. Not then. Not since.
Now,
she drove the dark green Jeep she’d bought sight unseen over the
internet and arranged to have delivered to the airport that had been the
last stop in her long plane trek from London.
Christchurch, New Zealand.
A
land at the bottom of the world. So far south that she’d felt no
surprise when their pilot pointed out a cargo plane being loaded with
freight bound for an Antarctic research station.
How many hours had it been since she walked through the departure gate at Heathrow?
Thirty-six? Thirty-eight?
She’d
lost count somewhere between yesterday and tomorrow. Between the gray
drizzle of a city full of theaters and museums and the cold sunlight of a
barely civilized land adrift in the ocean.
Edward had liked cities.
He
and Anahera had never driven through such a primal and untamed
landscape together, the trees born of ancient seeds, and the ferns huge
and green and singing a song of homecoming.
Tauti mai, hoki mai.
And
this moment a whisper from the end of her journey, she stood on a
jagged cliff looking out over the crashing sea below as fog wove through
the treetops, a light misty rain falling and dissipating before it ever
got to her.
Dark
gray water smashed against unforgiving black rock, sending up a frothy
white spray that disappeared under the violence of the next crashing
wave. The water went on endlessly, a tumultuous vastness that was
nothing like the European beaches she’d visited with Edward. You
couldn’t swim in the water below, not unless you wanted to be swept out
into the cold arms of the ocean, but its beauty spoke to Anahera’s
heart, made it ache.
She
could watch it forever, might just do that once she reached the cabin.
Josie told her it was still standing-and that no one had smashed in the
windows.
Maybe it had been out of respect. Perhaps out of fear.
To some, the cabin was a place of ghosts.
To
Josie, it was where she and Anahera had once sat on the porch and
laughed, two nineteen-year-olds with their whole lives ahead of them.
Her best friend from high school was the only person with whom Anahera
had kept in touch after she left Golden Cove, and she’d told Josie not
to bother worrying about keeping an eye on the place.
After all, Anahera was never going to come back.
Turning away from the cliff, she got into the Jeep and started it up.
Driving
inland and away from the crashing sea-it was an illusion, the sea still
there, just hidden by the trees-she drove the last ten minutes to the
edge of forever. The sign startled her. Golden Cove hadn’t had a sign
when she’d left. Only an old gumboot on a fencepost that Nikau Martin
had put there when they were eleven.
For some reason, the adults had never taken it off.
But
it was gone now, and in its place stood a gleaming sign that said:
Haere Mai, with Golden Cove lettered in swirling font below, and Welcome
below that. She went past, then stopped and looked back to see that,
from this side, it said, Haere R, with Golden Cove below, and under
that, Farewell.
Shrugging off the disquiet of the unfamiliar after a long moment, she continued on down the otherwise empty road.
Her car hiccuped, then jerked.
“Don’t
you crap out on me now,” she said, hitting the dashboard. But the Jeep
was in no mood to listen to her. It spluttered and hiccuped again before
going dead.
Managing
to guide it to the side of the road, Anahera put it in park, then
turned off the engine. Well, at least it wasn’t a total disaster. From
here, it would only take her about twenty minutes to walk into Golden
Cove. She’d have to leave her two suitcases in the back or maybe not.
They had wheels, didn’t they? It just seemed appropriate that the angry
girl who’d left this town in her dust would return dusty and travel
worn.
Fate sure had a sense of humor.
A
car engine sounded in the distance, growing increasingly louder. Before
she’d left the stark emptiness of New Zealand’s West Coast all those
years ago, Anahera would’ve thought nothing of jumping out and flagging
down that truck or car or whatever it was.
Despite
her childhood and the chill darkness of her fourteenth summer, she’d
grown up thinking of this entire wild landscape as safe, those who lived
within it all people she knew. But the wider world had hammered it home
that no one could be trusted. So she stayed inside her locked vehicle
and watched a large SUV approach in her rearview mirror.
It
was white, with a bull bar in the front. That wasn’t unusual-what was
unusual was the distinctive blue-and-yellow-check pattern along its
sides, a pattern she could see because the SUV had come to a stop right
alongside her, though it stayed far enough away that she could easily
open her door should she need to.
The
word Police was written in solid white letters against a large blue
piece of the pattern. Since when, she wondered, did Golden Cove deserve
any kind of a police presence? It was too small, the residents relying
on the police station in the closest big town, Greymouth, to supply
their needs, though “big” was a relative term on the West Coast. Last
she’d heard, the population of the entire coast had been hovering around
thirty-one thousand.
She
cautiously lowered her window as the other driver lowered their
passenger-side window so that the two of them could talk. A man.
Thirty-something, with a hardness to his jaw and grooves carved into his
face, as if he’d seen things he couldn’t forget-and they hadn’t been
good things.
His
hair was dark, his skin that light-brownish tone that made it difficult
to tell if he was just tanned, or if he had ancestors on her side of
the genetic tree. She couldn’t see his eyes behind the opaque darkness
of his sunglasses, but she imagined they’d be as hard as his jaw.
“Everything all right?” he asked.
She
noticed that he wasn’t in uniform, but then, if he really was stationed
in Golden Cove, it wasn’t as if any of the locals would report him for
breaching protocol. “Car trouble,” she answered. “I can walk the rest of
the way into town.” She had no intention of getting into a vehicle with
an unknown man on a deserted road surrounded by dark green native
forest and not much else.
“Let
me have a look at it.” Pulling ahead of her car before she could
answer, he got out and she saw immediately that he was a big man: wide
shoulders; strong, long legs; equally strong arms. But everything about
him was hard, as if he’d been smelted down until all softness was lost.
Gut
tight, she raised her window a little farther, but he didn’t come
around to the door. Instead, he indicated that she should pop open her
hood. Figuring she had nothing to lose, Anahera went ahead and did so.
As
he disappeared behind it, she tried to imagine what it would be like to
walk into the cabin after all this time. She couldn’t. All she could
see was her last glimpse of it, the floor scrubbed of blood and the
ladder taken away to be crushed in a compactor.
The cop looked around the side of the hood. “Try it now.”
She
did so without hope and the engine caught. Not smiling at her shouted
thanks, he unhooked and closed the hood before finally coming around to
her window. “It doesn’t look like anything major,” he said, “but if you
intend to drive through more of the West Coast, you should have a
mechanic check it out.”
It
was good advice; these roads were exacting. It wasn’t that they were in
bad condition-for being in the middle of nowhere, the roads were just
fine. But they were empty. Long stretches of nothing but wilderness and
water; break down in one of those areas and there was no guarantee
anyone would come along for hours. As for cell signals, the mountains
played havoc with them.
“I’m
going to the Cove,” she told him. “Does Peter still work in the
garage?” Maybe her old schoolmate had gone on to bigger and better
things by now.
Raising an eyebrow, the cop nodded. “It’s not tourist season. You here to do a retreat with Shane Hennessey?”
Josie
had told Anahera about the famed Irish writer who’d relocated to Golden
Cove. “No,” Anahera said. “I’m coming home. Thank you again.” She
rolled up the window before he could ask any more questions.
But
this man, he wasn’t someone she could simply ignore. He knocked on the
glass politely after taking off his sunglasses to reveal slate gray eyes
as dark as the clouds gathering on the horizon.
When she lowered her window a fraction, he said, “I’ll follow behind you, make sure you get in okay.”
“Knock yourself out,” she said, not certain
Maybe it was knowing she was driving back into the past.
She pulled out.
In
the rearview mirror, she saw the cop take his time getting into his
vehicle. Then she turned the corner and he was gone. But his SUV
reappeared behind her soon enough, and then their party of two made its
way into a town founded on a golden illusion.
The
miners had thought they’d find gold here, find riches, find a future.
Instead, they’d found nothing but a harsh and unforgiving landscape with
water as treacherous as the rocks that crushed so many of them one
after the other.
2
Will
followed the unfamiliar vehicle through the heavily tree-shadowed road
that led into Golden Cove. There was nowhere else to go from this point.
The
town’s self-appointed business council might have managed to get up a
few signs, but come winter and even those signs wouldn’t help those new
to the area find the place Will had called home for the past three
months. It wasn’t surprising that he didn’t recognize the dark-eyed
woman with wavy black hair and striking cheekbones that pushed against
skin of midbrown.
The skin was smooth but the eyes old.
Late
twenties or very early thirties, he guessed, likely a child of Golden
Cove who’d lit out of here the instant she was legal and who was
returning to pay a visit to a parent or grandparent. You’d think with
the town’s younger residents almost universally restless, just itching
to leave, the place would be a retirement village-but that was the
strange thing with Golden Cove. It seemed to draw back its prodigals.
Peter
Jacobs, the garage owner she’d mentioned, had spent six years working
for a Formula One team and traveling the world before he landed back in
the Cove. When asked why he’d given up his glamorous life in favor of
running the family garage with his aging father and resentful younger
brother, he just shrugged and said that a man got tired of Ferraris and
wanted to return to the ocean.
Peter,
however, had only been back for less than a year, and yet the woman
with the car trouble had asked if Peter was “still” working in the
garage, which meant she’d last been in Golden Cove at least seven years
earlier.
Will’s
eyes narrowed: the woman and Peter might even be the same age or close
to it. Could be they’d been schoolmates. And what, he asked himself, did
it all matter? It wasn’t as if he’d been dumped in Golden Cove to be a
detective. He might hold the rank, but he’d been placed here as the
community’s sole policeman because he’d become a problem for the
force-but was too decorated and senior an officer to simply fire. So
instead, they’d put him out to pasture in Golden Cove and forgotten
about him.
That
was fine with Will. Prior to being offered this job, he’d been planning
to quit. Since his plan after quitting had involved any remote job he
could get his hands on, he’d thought why the hell not just bury himself
in a sole-charge station that covered a sprawling geographic area but
involved only a very small number of people?
There were far more trees in his patrol area than human residents.
Most
of the folk in Golden Cove let him be, and the odd time that he did
have to step in, it was usually to break up a bar fight or calm down a
neighborhood dispute. Yesterday, he’d had to handcuff a drunk to a chair
until the other man was sober enough to be dropped home.
Will didn’t have a jail.
And
so far, no Golden Cove problems had justified formal charges. Come
summer, with tourists pouring in for various adventure activities thanks
to the region’s advertising campaign over the past couple of years, and
he’d probably have more trouble. Which was also why the town now had a
police officer. The regional tourism bodies had apparently gone
apoplectic about a couple of tourists who’d gotten beaten up in Golden
Cove after dark.
Bad
for business to have visitors posting photos of black eyes and broken
ribs instead of the bleak scenery, dangerous cliff climbs, or local
cuisine.
So now Golden Cove had Will.
The
first small home appeared on the right, complete with a white picket
fence and hardy wildflowers in a neatly tended garden. Mrs. Keith sat on
her rocker out front, her girth overflowing the white wood of it and
her face a pale moon surrounded by a halo of teased black. Pink lipstick
slashed across her mouth, her plump fingers bejeweled when she raised
her hand in a wave.
Will didn’t know if the curt woman in the Jeep waved back, but he raised his hand.
The
next house was on the left, this one as ramshackle as Mrs. Keith’s was
immaculate. Peeling blue paint, a wheelless car rusting in the front
yard, grass as high as his calves. On the front stoop sat a good-looking
man with nut-brown skin, a cigarette in hand and his face tattooed with
a full t moko that might’ve been traditional, but that tended to make
strangers wary. It didn’t help that Nikau Martin consistently wore
ripped black jeans, shitkickers, and T-shirts imprinted with the Hells
Angels logo.
great cover. i have been seeing this around and it seems most are enjoying it
ReplyDeletesherry @ fundinmental