The chateau A novel

Jaclyn Goldis

Book - 2023

"A girls trip to a luxurious French chateau turns from dream vacation to nightmare"--

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FICTION/Goldis Jaclyn
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Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Goldis Jaclyn Due Jan 26, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Novels
Published
New York : Emily Bestler Books/Atria 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Jaclyn Goldis (author)
Edition
First Emily Bestler Books/Atria Books hardcover edition
Physical Description
325 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781668013014
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

Four best friends, all with secrets to hide, embark on a vacation to remember at a beautiful old château in the scenic countryside of Provence. It's been 20 years since Darcy and her friends have stayed with Darcy's grandmother Séraphine at her château. One day, Darcy, Arabelle, Jade, and Vix all unexpectedly receive invitations from Séraphine, and they each have a personal reason to accept the invitation. The vacation seems perfect with all the wineries, lavender fields, markets, and dinners--until Séraphine is found viciously murdered. While the friends try to figure out who murdered Séraphine, a mysterious Instagram account surfaces, exposing private moments from the vacation and threatening to reveal more. The old château holds many secrets, including the murderer and stalker. Can Darcy and her friends find out who the murderer is before someone else winds up dead? VERDICT While the plot in this novel from Goldis (When We Were Young) is unique, it is slow-paced and filled with clichés and unlikable characters. Avid mystery and suspense readers will be able to predict the ending, but some readers will enjoy the twists and turns.--Anna Kallemeyn

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Provence is the stunning backdrop for this murder mystery, in which a much-anticipated vacation turns deadly and friends struggle to discover the killer in their midst. Visiting the lush lavender fields and olive groves of the French countryside is a dream come true for Darcy, Jade, Vix, and Arabelle when Darcy's Grand-mère Séraphine invites them to stay at her chateau. The women have known each other for decades and are looking forward to their reunion. But not long after their arrival Séraphine is stabbed to death. Reeling from the horrific attack, the four friends are even more unsettled when they receive a follow request from an anonymous Instagram account entitled @imwatchingyou88. The feed contains photos of the women at the chateau and includes menacing messages: "You can't hide," and "I know what you did. You won't get away with it." In the tradition of a classic Agatha Christie locked-room mystery, everyone in the chateau is a suspect, and each of the women may have a motive unknown to the other three. At least three of them have serious financial issues and could benefit if they are included in Séraphine's will. Goldis is in firm control of her plotting and stealthily employs the unreliable narrator trope with alternating first-person chapters told by Darcy, Jade, Vix, and Arabelle as well as Séraphine; the groundskeeper, Raph; and Séraphine's housekeeper, Sylvie. They all have reasons for hiding their truths, but past traumas and secrets slowly come to light. A messy extramarital affair, a missing Van Gogh painting, and a Holocaust-era betrayal spin the plot toward shocking revelations that do not stop until the very last page. Sex, lies, and secrets turn deadly in this modern-day tale built on classic plot devices. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One: Jade CHAPTER ONE Jade In the prelude to sunrise, just after I've returned to my room and drifted back off to sleep, I awaken to a scream. I bolt up in bed, shove my sleep mask off my face. I reach out to toggle the lamp, but where is the switch? Disorientation in the dead of night is doubled when you're across the world, in someone else's home. Finally, I grasp the switch and wince as light illuminates the cavernous room, the herringbone marble fireplace and towering windows framed in gauzy cream drapes, the leafy branches of an oak tree swishing against the exterior of the panes. In the thick silence that has ensued, I analyze the sound I thought I heard--its scratchy, desperate contours. Did I dream it? I sag back into my nest of pillows. I suppose I did. I grab my phone to see if one of the girls has texted. No text, and mercifully no Instagram notification from @imwatchingyou88. Only the time blinks back at me. 6:05. So I stole not even ten minutes of sleep after returning from my little errand. My heart slaps my chest--did someone see me? Does someone know? No. Impossible. I force my mind to turn over other affairs--the fact that my birthday is officially over. Forty. Thank the Lord. Thirty-nine felt like a forced march, but now that I'm here, in this new decade, I remind myself, again, that I have everything I've ever wanted. A kind, gorgeous husband; two amazing kids; a career that has steadily skyrocketed. And I'm hotter than ever, hotter even than most of the twenty-four-year-olds who clamor to take my spin classes. Forty isn't our grandmothers' forty, right? My unconvincing pep talk is interrupted by another scream. My breath stalls, hovers, until I gulp for it. The sound rollercoasters my eardrums. I've never heard anything so primal. And its origin is clear. Darcy. I hear footsteps outside my door. Arabelle? "Belle?" When there is no answer, I shout, "I'm coming!" The few words I manage sandpaper my throat. Darcy needs me. Us. Someone. But still I am fixed in place to this linen duvet. In the twenty years Darcy Demargelasse Bell has been my best friend, I've hardly ever heard her scream. Darcy is exceedingly patient and compassionate, not the type to overreact. Recently, though, I've witnessed her in a couple of disproportionate blowups--an unusually short fuse with her kids, with Oliver. It's not nice of me to say, and I wouldn't aloud. These are the kindnesses best friends pay each other, to trip over each other's failings and then straighten out the rug. Silence has once again descended like a tarp on the chateau. I pad down from the bed and reach for my tee draped on the olive velvet chaise, then tug it back on. My feet shiver against the terra-cotta tiles. For a moment the view from my window transfixes me: the manicured grounds, the still swimming pool, the shimmering moon. It is a Starry Night , like the one conceived by Vincent van Gogh, who painted his most acclaimed works at a sanitorium nearby. His muse was this very horizon that has shaped me in indelible ways. I think about what I vowed before coming here. What I still must do. Then my eyes catch on a shadowy figure on the outskirts of the pool, wandering past the hedges. Raph? The groundskeeper. But why would he be walking about before morning? I step closer to the window, but then he's gone, disappeared around the corner, back to his little cabin on the outskirts of the property, I presume. It is the lovely part of summer in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence. June. I've never been here in summertime, but this isn't my first time at Séraphine's grand chateau. Darcy used to bring all of us to visit her grandmother during the semester we met, when we studied abroad in Avignon, fifteen miles away. This time of year, lavender fields swathe the countryside, providing endless backdrop fodder for all the tourists who flock. But summer aside, my teeth are now chattering like someone banging on a door knocker. My nerves are the obvious puppeteers. Darcy is staying upstairs, down the hall from her grandmother's suite. Across from Vix's room, too. Arabelle and I are on the main floor in the hall by the stairs, across from each other. For me to hear Darcy scream from upstairs in this massive place, she had to scream really loudly, right? I bite down on my lip, then set out the door. Shuffles of feet echo ahead of me. "Arabelle?" I call out. No answer. Anyway, didn't she pass by before? My head is fuzzy from the previous evening's revelries, and buzzing from what I just did, only a little time ago. God, how much did I drink last night? I'm usually a strictly kombucha girl. Why did I let Darcy insist on that last shot of pastis ? Voices above, but I can't yet make out their edges. Shadows ping off the walls like intruders. Suddenly I hear weeping and then a different cry overlaid, more strangled. It is clear now that life will divide into a before and after this morning. This pronouncement may sound dramatic, but I have a compass for trauma. Not mine, necessarily, but that of those who came before me. And is there really a difference, when it all converges in your bones? The cold stone floor absorbs my tentative footsteps. Somehow, I can't coax myself up the last step. My icicle feet make me think of Darcy. When for years she struggled to get pregnant, one doctor asked if she wore slippers. When she said no, that she liked the feel of wood floor on her soles, he shrugged. Cold feet, cold uterus . When I heard this, I felt like punching the guy. Instead I brought her UGG slippers. I remember how we hugged, and I said, fiercely, Warm fucking uterus. Okay? When I finally dart past the landing, I see the door flung open to Séraphine's suite. Inside the opulent room, Arabelle hovers at the mouth of the door, her face sucked of color--the same gray as her silk pajamas. Then Vix is standing and Darcy kneeling, both beside the imposing poster bed made of mahogany wood and rich-people carvings. I walk slowly over. My eyes rove to the crimson stains on the sheets. The unmoving shape. The knife plunged in her chest. Yes, the old bitch is dead. I close my eyes, and my hand goes to the necklace at my throat. One diamond. The only one that remains. When I open my eyes, I'm going to have to rearrange my face into something that resembles upset. Excerpted from The Chateau: A Novel by Jaclyn Goldis 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.