Gwen Moffat lives in Cumbria. Her novels are set in remote communities ranging from the Hebrides to the American West. The crimes fit their environment, swelling that dreadful record of sin in the smiling countryside cited by Sherlock Holmes.
After harrowing
experiences in modern Africa Kay Ward, a war correspondent, retires to find
solace in family life, renting a farmhouse in Vermont with her children, Freya,
aged eight, and five-year-old Tom. Husband Michael is called away on business— although
there is little doubt in Kay’s mind that he’s accompanied by his mistress.
However the marriage is rocky so mistresses are of little account; apart from
the exigencies of coping with two small children, Kay is now free to write a
book.
As
might be expected in a crime novel, the idyll of rural New England, with its
quaint steepled churches, enchanting woods, friendly neighbours, bake-offs, all
this is quickly revealed as a sham. If Kay is haunted by atrocities on another
continent she finds that conditions in Vermont are different only in degree,
that exploitation and corruption have not been left behind. To start with, here
there is a crime wave involving heroin, then her landlord has disappeared and
neighbours are taciturn when not overtly hostile concerning his whereabouts and
that of his wife and children. There is shocking abuse: of women and children,
of animals, of the environment.
Kay
sees it all through the eyes of an investigative journalist and, determined to
find what has happened to her landlord and his family, in exploring the house, she
discovers a secret crawl space in her bathroom with the latch on the inside
and childish threats scratched on the wall in black marker ink, suggesting that
someone with a distorted mind had shut him or herself within.
Some
alleviation of impending disaster is signalled by the arrival of a logger, Ben
Comeau, although himself beset by problems past and present. He has burdened
himself with the charge of a doomed junkie only in order to save her mute and
traumatized son, whom he dreams of detaching from his appalling mother and flying with him to a new life in Australia. Ben is the strong
man: a blundering mammoth who makes all the wrong moves which providentially
achieve some kind of resolution even if the reader’s jaw must drop in appalled astonishment
at the climax.
This is
a graphic story to be read at one sitting, skimming the nasty bits. The fact
that it’s well-written makes it too credible.
The dialogue appears correct to the last syllable of rural colloquialism (American
and African) and the characters fit it like a glove. There are shades of
morality but only one person is all bad and even there one can follow if not
condone the twisted logic of the terrible General Christmas under whose rule
there was every kind of atrocity from the torture and gang rape of women and children to
the murder of children by children.
But it is the latter that is almost balanced by Kay’s Freya and Tom: a couple
of articulate and highly intelligent young animals that, with their formidable
mother, try so hard to make us forget the real horrors of modern war that haunt
Melanie Finn’s timely fiction.