Good girl, bad girl A novel

Michael Robotham, 1960-

Book - 2019

A girl is found hiding in a secret room in a house being renovated after a terrible crime. For weeks she has survived by sneaking out at night, stealing food for herself and two dogs that are kept in the garden. She doesn't appear on any missing person's file, or match the DNA of any murder victim. Six years later, still unidentified, the same girl is living in a secure children's home with a new name, Evie Cormac, when she initiates a court case demanding the right to be released as an adult. Psychologist Cyrus Haven is sent to interview Evie and decide if she's ready to go free, but Evie Cormac is unlike he's anyone he's ever met. She's damaged, destructive, and self-hating, yet possessed of a gift, or a... curse, that makes her both fascinating and dangerous to be with--the ability to tell when someone is lying. Soon he is embroiled in her unique and dangerous world, his life in utmost peril.

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Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Published
New York : Scribner [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Michael Robotham, 1960- (author)
Physical Description
353 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781982103606
9781982103613
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Evie Cormac, in her late teens, has been in a child-care institution for six years after being found hiding in a house with the corpse of a brutally murdered man; she's now considered a danger to herself and others. Jodie Sheehan, 15, a golden girl and a British junior figure-skating champion, is found dead in the Nottingham woods, partially undressed with semen on her leg and in her hair. Psychologist Cyrus Haven is asked by a colleague to look at Evie's case, then called to consult with police on Jodie's murder, as the question of which is the good girl and which the bad starts to shift. Trying to unearth Evie's past, Haven verifies that the girl is a truth wizard, able to tell when someone is lying, a gift that she considers a curse. (Haven has his own tragic past: at the age of 13, he was the sole survivor when his mentally ill older brother killed their parents and two sisters.) Meanwhile, the Sheehan family investigation points the way to deceit and dysfunction, as finally revealed in an explosive conclusion. This sensitive, suspenseful mystery firmly establishes Robotham (The Secrets She Keeps, 2017) in the top ranks of psychological-thriller writers. And it cries out for a sequel.--Michele Leber Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Two major cases preoccupy forensic psychologist Cyrus Haven, the hero of this haunting psychological thriller from Edgar finalist Robotham (The Secrets She Keeps). First, the Nottingham, England, police have enlisted him in their effort to catch the killer of 15-year-old Jodie Sheehan, British junior figure skating champion. Second, Cyrus has to assess the fitness of a troubled but achingly vulnerable teenage girl for release from a high-security children's home. Six years earlier, the media dubbed her Angel Face when she was discovered abused and malnourished hiding inside a north London house, where the body of a murder victim had been found a few weeks before. She now goes by the court-given alias of Evie Cormac, since she has steadfastly refused to reveal her true identity or age. Despite Jodie and Evie's obvious differences, they are sisters under the skin in many respects. Beneath Jodie's sparkly princess persona, Cyrus learns, were a host of very adult problems. To succeed, Cyrus must tease out the secrets Jodie may have died for-as well as some of those that could still get Evie killed. Robotham expertly raises the tension as the action hurtles toward the devastating climax. Readers will hope the complex Cyrus will return for an encore. Agent: Richard Pine, Inkwell Management. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Troubled psychologist Cyrus Haven has to evaluate a girl without a past while finding out who killed a rising young figure skater.Evie Cormac is an enigma. No one knew who she was when she was found in a secret room in a north London home, weighing less than a child half her age, which was determined to be 11 or 12. Only a few feet from her hiding place was the decomposing body of a man who had been tortured to death. Given a new name, she ended up in Nottingham's Langford Hall, a high security children's home, after a series of foster homes. Now, six years later, she's eager to be declared an adult, so Cyrus must evaluate her for possible release. Evie is rude, unruly, self-destructive, prone to occasional violence, heartbreakingly nave, and very, very broken. She also seems to be able to tell, with remarkable consistency, when someone is lying. This intrigues Cyrus, who wrote a thesis on human lie detectors, aka "truth wizards." When Cyrus makes an impulsive choice to temporarily foster Evie, it brings a basket of challenges to his already complicated life. Meanwhile, Cyrus is assisting his mentor, Chief Inspector Lenny Parvel, in the investigation of the suspicious death and possible rape of 15-year-old Jodie Sheehan, who was called the "golden girl of British skating." Some shocking revelations lead Cyrus and the police down a rabbit hole of dark family secrets, and Evie can't help but involve herself in the investigation. It's the careful and often poignant interplay between Cyrus and Evie that elevates this consistently stellar yarn. Cyrus' parents and sisters were murdered when he was just a boy, and by all accounts Evie's childhood was nothing short of a hellscape. Trauma unites them, but Robotham (The Secrets She Keeps, 2017, etc.) seeks to show that together, they might begin to heal. Readers will adore the brilliant hot mess that is Evie, and more than a few moments are breathtakingly sad, such as Evie's confusion about her wrinkly fingers during a long bathbecause she's never in her life had one. Robotham is a master plotter at the top of his form, and readers will surely hope to see more of his complicated new characters. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Good Girl, Bad Girl 1 CYRUS "Which one is she?" I ask, leaning closer to the observation window. "Blonde. Baggy sweater. Sitting on her own." "And you're not going to tell me why I'm here?" "I don't want to influence your decision." "What am I deciding?" "Just watch her." I look again at the group of teenagers, girls and boys. Most are wearing jeans and long tops with the sleeves pulled down to hide whatever self-inflicted damage has been done. Some are cutters, some are burners or scratchers or bulimics or anorexics or obsessive compulsives or pyromaniacs or sociopaths or narcissists or suffering from ADHD. Some abuse food or drugs, others swallow foreign objects or run into walls on purpose or take outrageous risks. Evie Cormac has her knees drawn up, almost as though she doesn't trust the floor. Sullen mouthed and pretty, she could be eighteen or she could be fourteen. Not quite a woman or a girl about to bid good-bye to childhood, yet there is something ageless and changeless about her, as if she has seen the worst and survived it. With brown eyes framed by thickened eyelashes and bleached hair cut in a ragged bob, she's holding the sleeves of her sweater in her bunched fists, stretching the neckline, revealing a pattern of red blotches below her jawline that could be hickeys or finger marks. Adam Guthrie is standing alongside me, regarding Evie like she is the latest arrival at Twycross Zoo. "Why is she here?" I ask. "Currently, her primary offense is for aggravated assault. She broke someone's jaw with a half brick." "Currently?" "She's had a few." "How many?" "Too few to mention." He's attempting to be funny or deliberately obtuse. We're at Langford Hall, a high-security children's home in Nottingham, where Guthrie is a resident social worker. He's dressed in baggy jeans, combat boots, and a rugby sweater, trying too hard to look like "one of them"; someone who can relate to teenage delinquency and strife rather than an underpaid, low-level public servant with a wife, a mortgage, and two kids. He and I were at university together and lived in the same college. I wouldn't say we were friends, more like passing acquaintances, although I went to his wedding a few years ago and slept with one of the bridesmaids. I didn't know she was Guthrie's youngest sister. Would it have made a difference? I'm not sure. He hasn't held it against me. "You ready?" I nod. We enter the room and take two chairs, joining the circle of teenagers, who watch us with a mixture of suspicion and boredom. "We have a visitor today," says Guthrie. "This is Cyrus Haven." "Who is he?" asks one of the girls. "I'm a psychologist," I reply. "Another one!" says the same girl, screwing up her face. "Cyrus is here to observe." "Us or you?" "Both." I look for Evie's reaction. She's watching me blankly. Guthrie crosses his legs, revealing a hairless pale ankle where his trouser cuff has ridden up his shin. He's a jolly, fat sort of bloke who rubs his hands together at the start of something, presupposing the fun that awaits. "Let's begin with some introductions, shall we? I want you to each tell Cyrus your name, where you're from, and why you're here. Who wants to go first?" Nobody answers. "How about you, Alana?" She shakes her head. I'm sitting directly opposite Evie. She knows I'm looking at her. "Holly?" asks Guthrie. "Nah." "Evie?" She doesn't respond. "It's nice to see you're wearing more clothes today," says Guthrie. "You too, Holly." Evie snorts. "That was a legitimate protest," argues Holly, growing more animated. "We were protesting against the outdated assumptions of class and gender inherent in this white-male-dominated gulag." "Thank you, comrade," says Guthrie, sarcastically. "Will you get us started, Nathan?" "Don't call me Nathan," says a beanpole of a boy with pimples on his forehead. "What should I call you?" "Nat." "You mean like a bug?" asks Evie. He spells it out: "N . . . A . . . T." Guthrie takes a small knitted teddy bear from his pocket and tosses it to Nat. "You're up first. Remember, whoever has the bear has the right to speak. Nobody else can interrupt." Nat bounces the teddy bear on his thigh. "I'm from Sheffield and I'm here 'cos I took a dump in my neighbor's VW when he left it unlocked." Titters all round. Evie doesn't join in. "Why did you do that?" asks Guthrie. Nat shrugs nonchalantly. "It were a laugh." "On the driver's seat?" asks Holly. "Yeah. Course. Where else? The dickhead complained to the police, so me and my mates gave him a kicking." "Do you feel bad about that?" asks Guthrie. "Not really." "He had to have metal plates put in his head." "Yeah, but he had insurance and he got compensation. My ma had to pay a fine. Way I see it, the dickhead made money." Guthrie starts to argue but changes his mind, perhaps recognizing the futility. The teddy bear is passed on to Reebah from Nottingham, who is painfully thin and who sewed her lips together because her father tried to make her eat. "What did he make you eat?" asks another of the girls, who is so fat that her thighs are forcing her knees apart. "Food." "What sort of food?" "Birthday cake." "You're an idiot." Guthrie interrupts, "Please don't make critical comments, Cordelia. You can only speak if you have the bear." "Give it to me, then," she says, snatching the bear from Reebah's lap. "Hey! I wasn't finished." The girls wrestle for a moment until Guthrie intervenes, but Reebah has forgotten what she wanted to say. The bear is in a new lap. "My name is Cordelia and I'm from Leeds and when someone pisses me off, I fight them, you know. I make 'em pay." "You get angry?" asks Guthrie. "Yeah." "What sort of things make you angry?" "When people call me fat." "You are fat," says Evie. "Shut the fuck up!" yells Cordelia, jumping to her feet. She's twice Evie's size. "Say that again and I'll fuckin' batter you." Guthrie has put himself between them. "Apologies, Evie." Evie smiles sweetly. "I'm sorry for calling you fat, Cordelia. I think you've lost weight. You look positively svelte." "What's that mean?" she asks. "Skinny." "Fuck off!" "OK, let's all settle down," says Guthrie. "Cordelia, why are you here?" "I grew up too soon," she replies. "I lost my virginity at, like, eleven. I slept with guys and slept with girls and smoked a lot of pot. I tried heroin at twelve and ice when I was thirteen." Evie rolls her eyes. Cordelia glares at her. "My mum called the police on me, so I tried to poison her with floor cleaner." "To punish her?" asks Guthrie. "Maybe," says Cordelia. "It was like an experiment, you know. I wanted to, like, see what would happen." "Did it work?" asks Nat. "Nah," replies Cordelia. "She said the soup tasted funny and didn't finish the bowl. Made her vomit, that's all." "You should have used wolfsbane," says Nat. "What's that?" "It's a plant. I heard about this gardener who died when he touched the leaves." "My mum doesn't like gardening," says Cordelia, missing the point. Guthrie passes the teddy bear to Evie. "Your turn." "Nope." "Why not?" "The details of my life are inconsequential." "That's not true." Evie sighs and leans forward, resting her forearms on her knees, squeezing the bear with both hands. Her accent changes. "My father was a relentlessly self-improving boulangerie owner from Belgium with low-grade narcolepsy and a penchant for buggery. My mother was a fifteen-year-old French prostitute named Chloe with webbed feet . . ." I laugh. Everybody looks at me. "It's from Austin Powers," I explain. More blank stares. "The movie . . . Mike Myers . . . Dr. Evil." Still nothing. Evie puts on a gruff Scottish accent. "First things first. Where's your shitter? I've got a turtle head poking out." "Fat Bastard," I say. Evie smiles. Guthrie is annoyed with me, as though I'm fomenting unrest. He calls on another teenager, who has a blue streak in her hair and piercings in her ears, eyebrows, and nose. "What brings you here, Serena?" "Well, it's a long story." Groans all round. Serena recounts an episode from her life when she went to America as an exchange student at sixteen and lived with a family in Ohio, whose son was in prison for murder. Every fortnight they insisted Serena visit him, making her wear her sexiest clothes. Short dresses. Low-cut tops. "He was on the other side of the glass and his father kept telling me to lean closer and show him my tits." Evie sneezes into the crook of her arm in a short, sharp exhalation that sounds a lot like "Bullshit!" Serena glares at her but goes on with her story. "That night, when I was sleeping, the father came into my room and raped me. I was too frightened to tell my parents or call the police. I was alone in a foreign country, thousands of miles from home." She looks around the group, hoping for sympathy. Evie sneezes again--making the same sound. Serena tries to ignore her. "Back home, I started having problems--drinking and cutting myself. My parents sent me to see a therapist, who seemed really nice at the beginning until he tried to rape me." "For fuck's sake!" says Evie, sighing in disgust. "We're not here to pass judgment," Guthrie warns her. "But she's making shit up. What's the point of sharing if people are gonna tell lies?" "Fuck you!" shouts Serena, flipping Evie the finger. "Bite me," says Evie. Serena leaps to her feet. "You're a freak! Everybody knows it." "Please sit down," says Guthrie, trying to keep the girls apart. "She called me a fucking liar," whines Serena. "No, I didn't," says Evie. "I called you a psycho fucking liar." Serena ducks under Guthrie's arm and launches herself across the space, knocking Evie off her chair. The two of them are wrestling on the floor, but Evie seems to be laughing as she wards off the blows. An alarm has been raised and a security team bursts into the group therapy room, dragging Serena away. The rest of the teenagers are ordered back to their bedrooms, all except for Evie. Dusting herself off, she touches the corner of her lip, then rubs a smudge of blood between her thumb and forefinger. I give her a tissue. "Are you all right?" "I'm fine. She punches like a girl." "What happened to your neck?" "Someone tried to strangle me." "Why?" "I have that sort of face." I pull up a chair and motion for Evie to sit down. She complies, crossing her legs, revealing an electronic tag on her ankle. "Why are you wearing that?" "They think I'm trying to escape." "Are you?" Evie raises her forefinger to her lips and makes a shushing sound. "First chance I get." Excerpted from Good Girl, Bad Girl by Michael Robotham All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.