STRANGERS AT THE GATE by Catriona McPherson: Book Review
Newlyweds Finnie Doyle and Paddy Lamb consider themselves very fortunate. Paddy has been offered a partnership in a small country law firm, and he was still “under forty” as he excitedly told his wife. And Finnie, who had been a bit more reluctant to move and begin searching for a job as a member of the Church of Scotland clergy, is pleased to discover that the church in the town next to their new home is looking for a deacon. It seems a perfect match for both of them.
To add to what seems incredible good luck, Paddy has found someone who wants to sublet their flat for a year at a rate enough to cover the mortgage, and the senior partner in his new firm is allowing them to live in a small cottage on the grounds of his home. What could be more perfect?
There is a downside, however, at least for Finnie. She dislikes the gatehouse/cottage at first sight; it’s small, dark, and surrounded by hills and forest, not at all the charming home with latticed windows and crooked chimneys that Paddy has described. But she’s here and will make the best of it, she tells herself.
A day after their arrival, they’re invited (Paddy’s word) or summoned (Finnie’s) to dinner at the lodge, home of Tuft and Lovatt Dudgeon. Prepared to dislike both of them, Finnie finds herself admiring Tuft, a woman with a sly sense of humor. Tuft sits on the fund-raising committee and board of St. Angela’s, the church where Finnie will have her first full-time job as a deacon. So with that connection and the fact of Lovatt being the senior partner in Paddy’s law firm, it all could be seen as either fortuitous or incestuous, depending on one’s point of view.
However, the dinner goes well and Finnie is more relaxed on the way back to their gatehouse until, halfway there, she realizes that she left her handbag at the Dudeons’. They have to go back and get it, she tells Paddy, because the key to their house is in it. When they return to the lodge the front door is open and the lights are on, but no one answers the bell. Finnie’s handbag is on the stand where she had left it, as they can see from a window, so they enter and call out for their hosts. There’s no answer, so they venture into the kitchen, still calling for Tuft and Lovatt, and see the couples’ bloody bodies on the kitchen floor.
Finnie’s immediate reaction is to call the police, but Paddy is vehement. “No police….I can explain everything….But we need to get out of here now.” And with each explanation/secret, the fissures between them widen. Their marriage isn’t quite the perfect one the reader had been led to expect from the beginning of the novel. The story is so skillfully told that you will be drawn in, step by step, until the very end.
You can read more about Catriona McPherson at this website.
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