Call me Evie

J. P. Pomare

Book - 2019

For the past two weeks, seventeen-year-old Kate Bennet has lived against her will in an isolated cabin in a remote beach town--brought there by a mysterious man named Bill. Part captor, part benefactor, Bill calls her Evie and tells her he's hiding her to protect her. That she did something terrible one night back home in Melbourne--something so unspeakable that he had no choice but to take her away. The trouble is, Kate can't remember the night in question. The fragments of Kate's shattered memories of her old life seem happy: good friends, a big house in the suburbs, a devoted boyfriend. Bill says he'll help her fill in the blanks--but his story isn't adding up. And as she tries to reconcile the girl she thought s...he'd been with the devastating consequences Bill claims she's responsible for, Kate will unearth secrets about herself and those closest to her that could change everything. A riveting debut novel that fearlessly plumbs the darkest recesses of the mind, Call Me Evie explores the fragility of memory and the potential in all of us to hide the truth, even from ourselves.

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Subjects
Genres
Suspense fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Published
New York : G.P. Putnam's Sons [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
J. P. Pomare (author)
Physical Description
357 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780525538141
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Seventeen-year-old Evie and a man who instructs her to call him Uncle have fled Australia to a remote village in New Zealand to avoid capture. Something terrible has happened that a disturbed Evie can't remember. The man claims to be trying to help her reclaim her memory, but why does he routinely feed her pills, lock her in her room, and spend so much time in a shed on the property of the dilapidated house where they seek shelter? Such unanswered questions drive the narrative of this very dark novel of psychological suspense, which moves backward and forward in time between the past, which provides clues as to what has happened, and a sinister present that raises more questions than it answers. Why are the villagers so universally antagonistic, for one example? The mood tends to be one note unrelievedly ominous and the action is fairly predictable, aside from one big surprise. Nevertheless, suspense fans will find this first novel a satisfying if occasionally frustrating read.--Michael Cart Copyright 2019 Booklist

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

A bad, bad thing has happened to 17-year-old Kate Bennet, the narrator of Australian author Pomare's outstanding debut, with even worse looming. Feisty Kate, who's from Melbourne, is trying to flee from a controlling older man she calls Jim, who is keeping her a virtual prisoner in a rural New Zealand hideout, ostensibly for her own good-which is also why he claims he's shaving her head as a disguise and insisting she go by the new name of Evie. It's clear the pair's on the run, but from whom? And why? As Kate starts to spin her story, shifting between before she fell into Jim's clutches and afterward, she tries to piece together what happened that traumatic night and figure out the true nature of Jim's game-and how she can finally escape. Although Pomare cheats a little toward the end, introducing two new voices to reveal what Kate can't or won't, the final pages stun with their gallows-drop plot surprises. Almost nothing will turn out as it initially appears in this devastating novel of psychological suspense. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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

A 17-year-old girl struggles to piece together the truth about a violent incident she can barely recall.When Kate shows up in rural New Zealand with a man who tells people he's her uncle Jim, she has only the vaguest notion of the danger she's in. Jim has brought her from Melbourne to a seaside town to avoid the police and the social uproar from something she's supposedly done. With a new look and a new nameJim calls her EvieKate tries to recall the evening that changed her life. Jim asks her questions about what she can remember, but he won't allow her to go online, he locks her in her room at night, and he seems to have alerted all the locals that she's mentally unbalanced and not to be trusted. But as Jim grows more paranoid, and Kate more desperate to get back home to Melbourne and face the truth, she must decide whether or not Jim is trying to protect her or drive her to the brink. This debut novel by Pomare sets him up as a writer to watch. There are the kind of plot wobbles that often attend first novelsit may especially frustrate some readers that Pomare uses the cover of Kate's trauma-induced amnesia to withhold vital information that has nothing to do with Kate's memory and everything to do with the author wanting to force a twist. But Pomare's writing is so crisp and his characterizations so spot-on that these tricks are easy to forgive. Readers looking for a page-turner will be happy, but so, too, will those looking for a work with deeper resonances, in this case about gaslighting and the ruthless world of teenagers.Read this one with the lights on, and keep Pomare on your radar. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

After   One   The green first-aid kit is open, with rolls of bandages, eye drops, butterfly stitches spilling out over the vanity like entrails. In my hand are the tiny pointed scissors. Before my eyes, they open and close and open and close. I can hear him coming up the hall. The door creaks.   "Jesus," he says. He palms his forehead.   I stop breathing.   "Put those down, Kate."   I toss them beside the sink and sit back on the stool with my arms folded.   His eyes roam over the floor tiles, the clumps of dark hair. "It's a real mess." He stands for a moment, before reaching in under the sink and pulling out the hair clippers. He plugs them in at the wall, and they purr to life in his hand. "Be still."   Blood throbs in my chest. The clippers sing closer. When the steel thrums against my forehead, I scramble up from the stool. My feet slip on the hair, and I steady myself against the door.   "Kate," he says. The clippers die in his hand.   I turn and run. The bathroom door whips closed behind me. I sprint up the hall and through the kitchen, sidestepping the island. It's only when he shouts that I realize how close he is. "Stop right now!" Never run, but it's too late.   I lunge for the front door, opening it inward. I twist through the gap and try to pull it closed but his fingers grip the edge, whitening.   I haven't thought this through. I haven't thought at all. Goose bumps rise all over my body. The towel slips from around my torso and pools on the concrete. Pulling with all my strength, I turn my head back and look about me. I could scream. Would anyone hear? The door is opening. If I ran would I make the road? What then?   "Let go of this door," he says, a sort of stillness on the surface of his voice. "You are only making it worse."   Squeezing every cell in my body, I wrench, imagining his fingers crushed against the frame, clipping off at the tips.   "Please," I say. My voice sounds so pathetic and high, I hardly recognize it. "Just let me go."   The handle slips from between my fingers. My body thumps against the concrete.   "Shit, watch your head," he says, rushing forward, cradling my skull in his hands. "What the fuck were you thinking? Look at you." His face hovers over mine. The concrete saps the heat from my skin. "Come on. Inside now."   "No," I say. "I want to go home."   He looks up toward the road, then back at me. The big wire-framed glasses have slipped down his nose and his cheeks glow red. His teeth are yellow; his voice is low and mean. "If you want to act like a child, I'll treat you like one." He snatches my head back by the remaining hair. The sound is cotton ripping in my skull. An electric shock shoots down my spine, poking between every vertebra to my hips and down the bones of each leg. I scrabble for purchase as he drags me with one hand knotted in my hair, the other under my shoulder. The concrete turns the skin over on one knee. Even though I know I shouldn't, I let out a scream.   I hear the sound first. A gunshot suddenness and my cheek is hot and numb. I look up and he's staring at his hand.   "I . . . ," he begins. His face is still red but the anger is draining. He exhales. "Just stop."   Size is important; the smaller I become, the less he can hurt me. "I'm sorry." My voice is a wind chime. "I was scared."   A tear of blood rolls down my shin, carving a path among the goose bumps. He crouches. Hauling me up, he folds me over his shoulder. Like that he carries my weak and trembling body back inside to the bathroom.   "That was a stupid thing to do, all right? Where were you planning on running off to like that in the middle of the day? They could be anywhere. They could be watching us right now."   I'm back on the stool and now when the clippers start, he positions his lean, muscled body between the door and me. I can feel the naked patch in my hair like a burn. The clippers are whirring again; he brings them up my neck. Vrrthonk. The steel teeth gnaw, catching a thatch of hair and jerking my head. Hair brushes my neck. It falls over my scarred thighs to the floor. He thumps the clippers against his palm, blows on them.   "It's too thick," he says.   I stare at the towel veiling the mirror. If I could reach it, pull it away, I would see that it's not real. I would know it's not happening. He runs the clippers through again, this time peeling the hair away from my scalp. A ribbon of it falls apart and strands stick to the dampness of my cheek. He flicks his wrist to whip the cord away. The molars at the back of my mouth are numb. I try to relax my jaw but I can't.   "Be still."   Arms first, then legs, then stomach, but my chest will not become still. It rattles, and within it my heart is the flickering pulse of a bird held in the hand. Can a heart give up? Slow down, seize its valves, and close like a fist?   "It's almost finished, darling. Please."   Vrrrthonk. The clippers tangle, clutch my hair like a fist, and pull. The skin of my thighs goes white beneath the grip of my fingers. This bathroom is smaller than the one at home. It's tacky and dated. This entire house is claustrophobic. Where the fuck are we? I could scream it and yet the headache looms, sharpening its teeth. And one thought rises through it all: He hit me.   Stepping back with one hand on his hip, he examines me.   "It will be fine." My voice is desperate.   "No, it's patchy, it's a mess. You look like a starved dog."   I squeeze my eyes closed and see a teenage girl. She's sitting on the edge of a bed. Then she slips to the floor, where she comes to rest. Her legs are tucked beneath her. Over her nose is a saddle of freckles. She rises with the boneless grace of a dandelion, tilts her head, smiles. It's the video of me. I'm reminded of why I ended up here.   I try to stand but his hand is heavy on my shoulder. It squeezes. I sit back down, tip my head forward, and close my eyes.   He takes most of what's left of my hair in his fist and picks up the scissors. "Almost finished. Just don't move for one more minute." As my hair falls around me, I imagine the scissors puncturing his trachea, lodging between a pair of vertebrae in his neck. These thoughts come and go as quickly as a sneeze. I remind myself of a time when I loved this man and feel sick with it.   "Oh," he says, letting the word uncoil like smoke from his mouth. "What have we done?"   In the shower, I'm still trembling with adrenaline as I watch the water chase the blood and nicks of hair down the drain. Up in the corners long-legged spiders dance webs on the avocado-green panels. The water pressure is weak and sprays with a panicked hum. Soon the water is cool, and when I shut it off I can hear the pipes shudder in the walls. I dry myself and pull the towel away from the mirror, standing before it. An invisible fist thumps my chest as, for the first time, I see myself.   You can never know the shape of your skull, not until you have peeled the hair away. Even then the skin, the shadows and light, marks and spots, can obscure the bone that lies beneath. Seeing it isn't enough because as with anything, what you see is not necessarily all there is. I almost don't trust my eyes. It's possible the cord stretching to my brain is knotted, or my brain may have a short-circuited connection or snapped synapse. I see only my skull. Closing my eyes, I squeeze a single tear out. I try to forget but the skin remembers, the fingertips remember. When I touch my shorn head I gasp. The thin layer of skin wrapping the bone cage of my brain is so soft and smooth, like the pink foot of a newborn. I can feel the shape, the planes and the curvature. But of course it's what lies within that is most important of all.   I think: What I know about the human skull, I learned because of him.   Before   Two   This is my first memory. I am in the bath at the old house, the house down in Portsea. Mum was sick and we had a nanny who would drift about the house, laying out my clothes for the day, ferrying me to childcare, spreading raspberry jam over my toast and deftly cutting away the crusts. Her name was Eloise. She was the first woman I wanted to be like.   I recall snippets of her time in the house and her abrupt dismissal. I recall Dad passing her in the kitchen, his hand grazing her spine. I remember all the time I spent nestled against her chest as she read to me on the couch while Mum was sick. And, of course, I remember that bath.   Dad would eventually organize to have the hot-water cylinder replaced, but back then the bath would only reach ankle-depth before the hot water ran out. Extreme emotions-rage, bliss, grief, ecstasy, agony-are amber; they preserve memories whole. I remember every detail of that time. I remember the gold locket that dangled from Eloise's neck as she bent to shut off the tap. I remember the cloying scent of the lemon bubbles.   "In you get," Eloise said, her voice sweet and light.   "It's still cold and empty."   She frowned and flattened the front of her blouse. "You don't need to stay in for long, Kate."   "I don't want to get in. It's too cold."   "Come on," she said. "Arms up." She pulled off my top, but when she went to pull off my shorts I held on to them and dropped to my knees.   "No."   "Kate, please. It'll only be for five minutes."   I let her undress me. She picked me up, deposited me in the water, then I screamed.   "Kate," she said with an owlish lean of the head. "That's enough."   I splashed water over the edge of the bath onto the floor as she left the room, then to stop my shivering I wrapped my arms around myself. When she returned, Eloise slipped and had to grab at the sink to keep from falling. She clicked her tongue. "You've got water everywhere."   "It's cold."   "Do you want to get out?"   "No," I said. "Just make it warmer."   "There's no more hot water, Kate. We can't make it warmer."   "Dad makes it warmer."   "Well, I don't see how," she said. She was on her knees now, dragging a towel over the floor tiles.   "Dad heats the water up in a pot."   From her position on the floor she looked up at me. I splashed water at her. "Make it warmer!" I said. "Make it warmer!" My voice had become a shrieking demand.   She winced. "Okay, okay," she said.   She left the room again.   It seemed a very long time before Eloise returned, carrying a large steel pot. Steam drifted in her wake as she strode across the room and set it down on the wooden seat beside the bath.   "Okay, Kate, move your legs away so I can pour a little in." I drew my legs up to my chest and Eloise poured. A gust of steam rose as the hot water rushed beneath me. It was too hot but it quickly cooled. Eloise set the pot back on the seat. "Better now?"   "I'm still cold."   She tested the water with her hand. "You'll be fine. That's warm enough." She tucked a loose strand of hair behind my ear. "Can you just sit for a few minutes? I have to get your dinner on."   Leaving the door open, she walked away up the hall.   The water was still too cold.   "Eloise!" I called.   No response.   "Eloise!"   Still nothing.   Gripping the edge of the bath, I stood and reached for the handles of the pot. It was heavy, almost too heavy for me to lift. Stepping backward, I dragged it over the lip of the bath. The water rocked within. The edge came to rest against my stomach. It seared. I fell back and a scream ripped from my throat as the pot tipped over my legs. I screamed and screamed as, beneath the surface of the water, blisters bubbled on my thighs.   Then Eloise was there, her hand covering her mouth, her eyes wide. She pulled me from the bath but the pain didn't stop. The screaming didn't stop. I thought it never would. A howl escaped that may have lasted seconds or minutes or hours. Hands holding me under flowing water. I couldn't distinguish hot from cold. A long throat-scorching vowel of pain. This is my first memory.   Part Two   Out of Its Misery   In the past month, how often have you been upset or scared by something that happened unexpectedly?   0. never;  1. rarely;  2. sometimes;  3. often;  4. all the time   After   Three   He is in the kitchen, thumping about. I've decided to call him Jim. The grinding of the juicer fills the house as the first piece of beetroot churns through. The carrots go in next, then small stringy mushrooms, a pair of Brazil nuts. The spout coughs out a foaming blood-rich concoction. When the juicer thunks to a stop, the classical music coming from the small stereo in the lounge can be heard again. He has made toasted sandwiches, crusts removed and cut into triangles. His glasses are on the island. I try them on but the world through them doesn't change. The lenses are just glass.   "Go on, darling," he says. "Eat."   I'm surprised by how my body responds, how quickly I wolf down the sandwiches. It's as though I haven't eaten in weeks.   "How do you feel?" he asks.   "I'm okay."   "You're doing really well."   "My hair," I say, looking up at him.   He sucks his lips, standing so close that I can see the tiny constellations of blood vessels in his cheeks, the pores of his nose.   "It'll grow."   He stirs a scoop of white powder through the juice and brings it over to me. I block my nose and take a long sip. The taste is earthy and bitter. I cough. Excerpted from Call Me Evie by J. P. Pomare 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.