Engrossing Suspense Drama: Read an Extract from Remember Me by Charity Norman

Engrossing Suspense Drama: Read an Extract from Remember Me by Charity Norman

17 June 1994

‘I envy you,’ she says. She doesn’t.

Why would she envy me? She’s Dr Leah Parata,five years older and infinitely, effortlessly superior. Everything about the woman screams energy and competence, even the way she’s twirling that turquoise beanie around her index finger. She’stall, light on her feet, all geared up for back-country hiking in a black jacket—or maybe navy blue, as I’ll later tell the police.

Waterproof trousers, walking boots with red laces. Hair in a heavy plait, though a few dark tendrils have escaped.

‘I really do,’ she insists.

‘You’ve bought your ticket to Ecuador. What an adventure.’

‘Hope so.’

‘I know so.’ She grabs a bar of Cadbury’s from the display and holds it up to show me. ‘Got a craving.’‘I didn’t know you were a chocoholic.’

‘Just when it’s cold. This should keep me going all the way toBiddulph’s.’ I’ve only once managed to haul myself up to Biddulph’s bivvy,
a ramshackle hut on the bush line, built about a hundred years ago for professional rabbiters.

They must have been hardy people. As I count her change, I peer out at the weather: standing water on the petrol station forecourt, raindrops bouncing high off the mustard-coloured paintwork of her car.

The ranges are smothered in charcoal cloud, as though some monstrous creature is breathing out giant plumes of smoke.

‘Seriously?’ I ask. ‘You’re heading up there? Today?’She takes a casual glance at the cloud cover. It seems to delight her.

‘Lucky me, eh? Perfect weather for finding Marchant’s snails. The first wet days after a dry spell bring ’em out. I’ve got a happy weekend ahead of me, crawling around in the leaf litter.’

I can’t imagine why anyone would choose to tramp through those rain-soaked forests and uplands, but then I’ve never been a mountain woman. Leah is, of course. She took her very firststeps in the Ruahine Range. To her, that wilderness is home. She’sgoing on and on about her snails while I smile and nod.

‘They’re this  big!’—holding up her fingers to demonstrate.

‘Carnivorous.’ She catches me blanching at the image of a giant,flesh-eating snail. ‘Okay, maybe not the sexiest of our native creatures. But their shells are works of art, they’ve been around for millions of years, and now they’re in trouble because everything preys on them. Possums, rats, pigs.’

Blah blah blah, I think, because I’m twenty-one, and empty-headed, and I’ve been jealous of Leah for as long as I can remember. Her teeth are a bit crooked. She has a high forehead, a small mole on her left cheekbone and a permanent concentration crease, a vertical line between her eyebrows. Yet somehow, these imperfections add to the hypnotic effect. I can see why my brother Eddie’s had a crush since he first clapped eyes on her, swimming her horse in the Arapito stream. They were both eleven then, and he was a scrawny kid from Leeds, but he still hasn’t given up hope…

Continue reading the extract here…

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16 March 2022

Heartfelt Page Turner: Read Our Review of Remember Me by Charity Norman

    Publisher details

    Remember Me
    Author
    Charity Norman
    Publisher
    Allen & Unwin
    Genre
    Fiction
    Released
    01 March, 2022
    ISBN
    9781761065170

    Synopsis

    They never found Leah Parata. Not a boot, not a backpack, not a turquoise beanie. After she left me that day, she vanished off the face of the earth.

    A close-knit community is ripped apart by disturbing revelations that cast new light on a young woman's disappearance twenty-five years ago.

    After years of living overseas, Emily Kirkland returns to New Zealand to care for her father, Felix, who suffers from dementia. As his memory fades and his guard slips, she begins to understand him for the first time - and to glimpse shattering truths about his past. Truths she'd rather were kept buried.

    A heartfelt, page-turning suspense novel from the bestselling author of The Secrets of Strangers - ideal reading-group fiction, perfect for fans of Jodi Picoult and Liane Moriarty.

    Charity Norman
    About the author

    Charity Norman

    Charity Norman was born in Uganda and brought up in successive draughty vicarages in Yorkshire and Birmingham. After several years' travel she became a barrister, specialising in crime and family law in the northeast of England. Also a mediator, she is passionate about the power of communication to slice through the knots. In 2002, realising that her three children had barely met her, she took a break from the law and moved with her family to New Zealand. Her first novel, Freeing Grace, was published in 2010 and her second, Second Chances, in 2012 (published in the UK as After the Fall) was a Richard and Judy pick. The Son-in-Law, her third novel, was published in 2013.

    Books by Charity Norman

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