The Sudden Departure of the Frasers

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Authors: Louise Candlish

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BOOK: The Sudden Departure of the Frasers
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Louise Candlish
THE SUDDEN DEPARTURE OF THE FRASERS
Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Acknowledgements

Follow Penguin

PENGUIN BOOKS

THE SUDDEN DEPARTURE OF THE FRASERS

Louise Candlish studied English at University College London and worked as an editor in art publishing and as a copywriter before writing fiction. Though her stories are about people facing dramatic dilemmas, she tries to live an uncomplicated life in London with her husband and daughter.

For Sheila Crowley, saviour of this story

‘There was no trap involved, no trick: he was a wolf in wolf’s clothing. And I went right up to his door and asked him his name.’

Amber Fraser

Prologue
15 January 2013

‘I hate you,’ I said, trembling.

I love you, a voice replied, but it was not the one I wanted to hear; only my own, inside my head, the words incarcerated there forever.

He said nothing. His mouth made vile movements, a bully’s gathering saliva to spit at an object of repugnance, a victim. In his eyes there pooled pure savagery.

And then he sprang.

Chapter 1
Christy, April 2013

Right from the moment she first held the keys in her hand, something felt wrong.

Later, she would regret ignoring that instinct, but at the time she put it down to the simple fact of Joe not being there with her. It couldn’t be helped, of course, it was just one of those things – or several of them. A rescheduled client meeting that could under no circumstances be missed; the estate agent’s half-day closure for staff training (or, as Joe suspected, plans for a long lunch courtesy of the commission earned on
their
house); her own eagerness to get into the property and start their new life: all conspired to bring her there that morning to pick up the keys alone.

‘Well, congratulations, Mrs Davenport,’ said the agent, and he placed the keys with a ceremonial flourish on the release document for her to sign. There were two sets, one attached to a costly-looking silver key ring with a pretty dragonfly charm – the previous owners’, presumably.

‘Thank you.’ Hand shaking, Christy scrawled her name before snatching up the keys and defending them in a clenched fist – as if someone might step forward and battle her for them! For these were the keys to a house on
Lime Park Road, and never in her wildest dreams had she thought she would come to own a property on that street. Yes, she and Joe had always aimed high, but this, this was rags-to-riches stuff, the fairy-tale ending you wouldn’t normally trust.

‘I hope you and your husband have many happy years in your new home,’ the agent said. He was different from the one who’d handled the sale, younger and less sincere: could that be why the encounter felt, somehow, illicit? He could be a con artist, she and Joe the innocent victims of some elaborate sting. Or maybe it was the previous agent who’d been the fraudster?

Illicit? Con artist? Fraudster
? What had got into her? She could tell by the way the man was frowning that her smile looked as problematic as it felt; it was causing disquiet, the way it might if a clown put his face too close. Managing a last choked thank you, she made her exit to the street. It’s just nerves, she told herself; or excitement, the pure, debilitating kind that was hard to distinguish from terror.

Either way, she could have walked the route in her sleep, for she knew Lime Park as well as any postman from the countless occasions she and Joe had roamed it together since first viewing the house. She knew the short parade that masqueraded as a high street, with its mix of cafés, boutiques and estate agents, and the florist’s on the corner that spilled its colours far across the pavement, as if cans of paint had been flung from the windows above. She knew the famous old art school that had stood empty for years before being redeveloped into the complex of
luxury flats it was today. She knew the little park, the main gates of which she passed through now, walking in the shade of the old limes that lent the area its name, catching the scent of cut grass on the breeze. And she knew the web of streets beyond, including the one that curved around the park’s southern edge, the one that contained the house to which she held the keys (she was gripping them in her hand still, as if to relax a single finger would be to render the whole business null and void; the fine edge of a dragonfly wing cut painfully into her palm).

And here it was: Lime Park Road, lined as far as the eye could see with cherry trees in full bloom, like giant sticks of candyfloss, casting dancing black patterns on the sun-bleached car lanes. It was a festive sight, could almost be the gateway to a carnival – until you noticed there wasn’t a soul to be seen. No one was parking a car or closing a gate; no one was pushing a baby or walking a dog; no one was arriving or departing.

There was only her.

As the road swept eastward, the façade of their new home came into view. The houses on Lime Park Road were brick villas built in pairs in the late nineteenth century, their matching chimney stacks positioned at the outer edges of the roofs like cocked dog ears, and number 40 was the right hand of its twosome. Hers now, hers and Joe’s, and yet it was with the furtive air of a trespasser that she pushed open the gate and teetered towards the glossy Oxford-blue door. She lifted the key to the lock, her breath held. How unfamiliar each element of entry was: that brief resistance followed by a sudden sweet give, the
weight of good timber against her palm, the cool hardness of tile underfoot, and the smell in the broad hallway of … not so much temporary disuse as reckless abandonment.

But maybe that was because she knew the previous owners had left in a hurry. Virtually overnight, in fact. Lord Lucan’s got nothing on this pair, the agent had joked.

She wished she hadn’t remembered that detail, for the sight of the bare hall walls and closed internal doors caused wild thoughts to surface: what might she find behind these doors? Bloodstains on the floor? A decomposing body? Some sort of weapon that linked the murder to Joe and her?

Ashamed, she turned brisk, throwing open the first door she came to, the one to the large square sitting room at the front. Everything was perfectly in order, of course, and quite devoid of signs of crime. There was the grand and glamorous marble fireplace they had so admired; and the pair of thickset ribbed radiators, the type torn from Victorian schoolhouses and reconditioned for the nostalgic wealthy; and the deep bay with its shining triptych of panes. She’d forgotten its original oak seat, newly upholstered in a textured linen print that looked far too expensive to actually sit on.

Christy marched across the room and hurled herself onto it, if only to prove that she was not the kind of person you could intimidate with
fabric
. The view onto the street was glorious, a collage of green leaf and golden brick unfettered by the low-level planting in the front
garden; it was like looking through a giant camera lens at a scene lit to perfection by a master cinematographer. This was where she would come to watch the seasons change, she thought, during those many happy years the agent had wished her.

On her feet once more, she moved to the rear of the ground floor, actually gasping at the sight of the vast kitchen, just as she had when she’d first seen it. The fittings were high-end and handmade (the agent had mentioned a designer neither she nor Joe had heard of but whose name, when invoked in earshot of her boss, Laurie, had caused swooning), the cabinet doors made of opaque glass with brass fittings, the worktop a glittering slice of quartz. Family and friends were going to be not so much impressed as astonished, she thought, and to picture them assembled amid the hard, gleaming angles was like imagining villagers circling a spaceship that had just landed in their field, lights flashing in colours never before seen on earth. With the image came a fresh swell of unease, a recognition of its true source. Who are we fooling? she thought: this house is worth far more than we paid for it. There
must
be a catch.

She remembered with perfect clarity the day the agent had rung with news of an unusually well-priced house in Lime Park, a once-in-a-lifetime deal for a buyer who could act fast – so fast that only the chain-free were invited to bid. How she and Joe had patted themselves on the back for having already sold their two-bed in New Cross and rented just before the market had suffered a fortuitous
downturn. But even so, this house was beyond ‘well-priced’, it was a gift, and in the whirlwind of the transaction they had perhaps not been diligent enough in asking the crucial, central question:

Why?

‘They’re leaving for personal reasons,’ was all the agent had been able to tell them of the sellers, which made Joe suspect financial ruin.

‘No,’ Christy said. ‘Why would they sell at such a good price if they need the money? They’d hold out for top whack.’

‘Not if they need the cash quickly,’ Joe said. ‘Maybe a debt’s been called in and they have to cut their losses. It must happen all the time in a recession.’

The agent agreed that times were harder in the outer suburbs. It wasn’t Chelsea, after all.

But Christy’s instinct pulled in a different direction. ‘No. This is something emotional. It must be divorce or illness. They need to pay for treatment, perhaps.’ Whatever it was it had to be something catastrophic for a couple to give up a home they’d plainly only just finished renovating, for the place was box-fresh throughout; you could smell the newness of it, hear it squeaking. ‘Are they leaving London?’

But the agent didn’t know, had no forwarding address on file, the sale being conducted by the couple’s solicitor. He admitted he’d not met the couple – Jeremy and Amber Fraser, they were called – face to face.

A sharp rap at the front door startled her and, laughing at herself, she opened up to the postman. He had an item
too big to fit through the letter box, an oversized brochure of some sort for Mrs A. Fraser. There was other post, too, all of it for the outgoing couple.

‘Didn’t the Frasers redirect their mail?’ she asked.

‘There’s sometimes a bit of an overlap,’ the postman said, ‘but it’ll kick in in a few days, don’t worry.’

‘I’ll collect it all up and send it on to them in one batch,’ she promised.

Alone again, she inspected the items. Only two were not junk or publicity mail-outs and both were addressed to Amber Fraser: one was a postcard with a picture of an old
Vogue
cover, the model an alluring redhead with a plum-coloured pout; the other a white envelope with ‘Private & Confidential’ stamped on it. Christy experienced a sudden desire to tear the letter open – an extension of that peculiar sensation of being in the house unlawfully – but resisted the urge and satisfied herself by reading the postcard:

Hi Amber,

How are you? Hope you’re still loving your forever home! Have tried emailing and phoning you, but no luck. Couple of loose ends to tie up – call me when you have a spare moment?

Love, Hetty xxx

Below the name a mobile phone number had been scribbled, ‘just in case’.

On cue, Christy’s phone began ringing: Joe.

‘Your meeting’s finished?’

‘Just this second. How’s the house?’

She was honestly not sure how to answer this. ‘It feels a bit strange, like I’m going to be arrested for breaking and entering. Does that sound crazy?’

Joe chuckled. ‘That’s just Imposter Syndrome. Happens to everyone.’

Well, not
everyone
, she thought, not the entitled Oxbridge types with whom he worked and routinely lost out to in promotions, but she knew what he meant: everyone ordinary, like them.

‘But don’t worry, the solicitor sent the confirmation email, we’ve definitely completed, otherwise they wouldn’t have released the keys. We’re the owners now.’

Christy felt her heart contract, and with its unclenching came the first flood of joy. ‘It just seems too good to be true, Joe.’

‘I know.’ But his tone was unambiguously triumphant because as far as he was concerned all good things came true if you worked hard enough to get them. In the seventeen years that had passed since they’d met at university, he had never stopped remembering that he had something to prove.

‘Are you on your way?’

‘Leaving right this minute, just setting my stopwatch to time the commute. One minute longer than an hour and we’re giving the house back.’

Laughing, Christy hung up and looked once more at the handful of post for the Frasers. Then she slotted the postcard and the ‘Private & Confidential’ letter between
two larger envelopes, out of sight. Joe’s right, she thought, you’re not an imposter.

You’re just lucky.

‘And look what else I’ve got!’ Along with a chilled bottle of Veuve Clicquot, a gift from Marcus, the partner at Jermyn Richards who was his boss and long-time mentor, Joe waved a copy of
Metro
under her nose. It was open at an article titled ‘Top Ten London Streets for Families’:

6. LIME PARK ROAD (NEW ENTRY)

It’s a miracle that this Victorian beauty has kept itself below the radar for as long as it has – blame the Lottery-funded revamp of the park last year and the newly opened Canvas restaurant for its breakout moment. This is the most sought-after street in the neighbourhood thanks to its handsome brick villas, once chaotic shares for the students of the Lime Park Art School. While there’s still a smattering of the old boho crowd amid the incoming well-heeled families, don’t let that deceive you: the days of snapping up a property for the price of a couple of watercolours are long gone.

‘Talk about being in the right place at the right time,’ Joe crowed. ‘We’ve probably made a ten per cent capital gain on the house since this morning! Shame we’ve hardly got anything to put in it, mind you.’

‘I know. It’s a bit embarrassing.’ Christy’s glance swept the spacious zone between kitchen units and garden doors that had been furnished by the Frasers with such memorable
elan. There’d been a vintage dresser stacked with coloured glassware and a leaf-green velvet sofa with wittily mismatched cushions. The dining table and chairs had been of the same bold contemporary style she’d seen through the window of Canvas, all curved lines and vibrant hues.

Wherever they’d gone, the Frasers would not have arrived, as she and Joe had, with nothing but sleeping bags and a change of clothes. The cut-price van-hire company the Davenports were using to transport their possessions from the storage facility did not have the smaller van size available till the next day. Perched now on bar stools to eat the cheese-and-tomato sandwiches Christy had made that morning – it seemed too prosaic a snack for so glossy a setting – they were grateful to their predecessors for having left them and saved them from sitting cross-legged on the floor. (Another reason to discount the theory that the Frasers had fallen on hard times: the stools looked like design classics; you could probably get hundreds of pounds for them on eBay.)

But none of that worried Joe as he poured the champagne into plastic beakers. Smart in his office suit and only a few days into a new haircut, he looked like a man who’d earned his spot on that designer stool; a man entering his prime. His eyes, the colour of cognac and the only exotic touch in a solidly Anglo-Saxon face, glowed warm with glee as he touched his cup to hers and popped the discarded ends of her sandwich into his mouth. ‘Here’s to a new life of bread crusts and eye-watering debt!’

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