SOMETIMES THE TRUTH IS NOT ALL IT SEEMS...
SOMETIMES A CONFESSION IS JUST THE BEGINNING...
NOW A NUMBER ONE BESTSELLER
'Brilliant' - BA Paris, author of Behind Closed Doors and The Breakdown
'Chilling' - Sunday Times
'Enthralling' - JP Delaney, author of The Girl Before
'Compulsive' - Sunday Mirror
'Addictive' - Michelle Frances, author of The Girlfriend **********Late one night a man walks into the luxurious home of disgraced banker Harry McNamara and his wife Julie. The man launches an unspeakably brutal attack on Harry as a horror-struck Julie watches, frozen by fear. It looks like Harry's many sins - corruption, greed, betrayal - have finally caught up with him.
An hour later the intruder, JP Carney, hands himself in, confessing to the assault. The police have a victim, a suspect in custody and an eye-witness account, but Julie remains troubled.
Has Carney's surrender really been driven by a guilty conscience or is this confession the first calculated move in a deadly game?
THE MOST GRIPPING PSYCHOLOGICAL THRILLER OF 2018: PERFECT FOR FANS OF THEN SHE WAS GONE AND THE GOOD DAUGHTER.
**********'Brutal' - Fiona Cummins, author of Rattle
'Gripping' - Best
'Jaw-dropping' - Chris Whitaker, author of Tall Oaks
'Vivid' - Irish Times
'Fabulous' - Amanda Jennings, author of In Her Wake
'A contender for the most arresting opening paragraph of the year' - Sunday Express
Read MoreFabulous . . . Clever, pacey, compulsive - Sunday MirrorRefreshing and... full of twists - The ExpressSpain's blackly comic touch pulls us through a brilliantly dark tale - Daily MailA brilliantly dark tale - Mail on SundayA clever and unusual premise . . . punchy and energetic . . . a brilliant hook and rapid-fire ride - Irish IndependentFresh, witty writing style . . . an eye for details make the characters instantly believable - Daily MailBrilliantly crafted . . . each piece of the puzzle is gradually put together and keeps you gripped until the end - PrimaA scathing overview of the Celtic Tiger years . . . [a] vivid portrait of a fascinating monster - Irish Times