4.2
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134,791 ratings
A twisting, pulse-pounding thriller from Freida McFadden, the New York Times bestselling author of The Housemaid and The Coworker
"You must be our new neighbors!" Mrs. Lowell gushes and waves across the picket fence. I clutch my daughter's hand and smile back: but the second Mrs. Lowell sees my husband a strange expression crosses her face. In that moment I make a promise. We finally have a family home. My past is far, far behind us. And I'll do anything to keep it that way…
I used to clean other people's houses―now, I can't believe this home is actually mine. The charming kitchen, the quiet cul-de-sac, the huge yard where my kids can play. My husband and I saved for years to give our children the life they deserve.
Even though I'm wary of our new neighbor Mrs. Lowell, when she invites us over for dinner it's our chance to make friends. Her maid opens the door wearing a white apron, her hair in a tight bun. I know exactly what it's like to be in her shoes. But her cold stare gives me chills…
The Lowells' maid isn't the only strange thing on our street. I'm sure I see a shadowy figure watching us. My husband leaves the house late at night. And when I meet a woman who lives across the way, her words chill me to the bone: Be careful of your neighbors.
Did I make a terrible mistake moving my family here?
I thought I'd left my darkest secrets behind. But could this quiet suburban street be the most dangerous place of all?
**From New York Times, USA Today and Wall Street Journal bestselling author Freida McFadden comes the next installment of the unbelievably twisty, tension-packed and globally bestselling Housemaid series. This book can be enjoyed as a standalone read: and once you start, it will have you up all night racing through the pages until the final explosive twist. **
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ISBN-10
1464221138
ISBN-13
978-1464221132
Print length
400 pages
Language
English
Publisher
Poisoned Pen Press
Publication date
June 10, 2024
Dimensions
5 x 1 x 8 inches
Item weight
11.2 ounces
The third in a series usually isn’t that great, so it’s not his fault.
Highlighted by 2,698 Kindle readers
Except the person at the window doesn’t wave back. Instead, the shutters suddenly snap closed and the silhouette disappears.
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If she’s a real estate agent, how come her neighbors didn’t want her to sell their house?
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But now, for the first time, I wonder if I have made a terrible mistake moving here.
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ASIN :
B0CK4YL5FM
File size :
2307 KB
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Enabled
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Supported
Enhanced typesetting :
Enabled
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Enabled
About the Author
#1 New York Times, USA Today, Publishers Weekly, and Sunday Times internationally bestselling author Freida McFadden is a practicing physician specializing in brain injury. Freida is the winner of both the International Thriller Writer Award for Best Paperback Original and the Goodreads Choice Award for Best Thriller. Her novels have been translated into more than forty languages. Freida lives with her family and black cat in a centuries-old three-story home overlooking the ocean.
PART I
ONE
MILLIE
Three Months Earlier
I love this house.
I love everything about this house. I love the giant front lawn and the even more giant back lawn (even though both are edging toward brown). I love the fact that the living room is so big that multiple pieces of furniture fit inside rather than just one small sofa and a television set. I love the picture windows overlooking the neighborhood, which I recently read in a magazine is one of the best towns to raise a child.
And most of all, I love that it’s mine. Number 14 Locust Street is all mine. Well, okay, thirty years of mortgage payments and it will be all mine. I can’t stop thinking about how lucky I am as I run my fingers along the wall of our new living room, bringing my face closer to admire the brand-new floral wallpaper.
“Mom is kissing the house again!” a voice squeals from behind me.
I quickly back away from the wall, although it’s not like my nine-year-old son caught me with a secret lover. I have no shame about my love for this house. I want to shout about it from the rooftop. (We have an amazing rooftop. I love this house.) “Shouldn’t you be unpacking?” I say.
Nico’s boxes and furniture have all been deposited in his bedroom, so he should be unpacking, but instead he is repeatedly throwing a baseball against the wall—my beautiful, floral wallpapered wall—and then catching it. We have lived in this house for less than five minutes, and he is already determined to destroy it. I can see it in his dark brown eyes.
It’s not that I don’t love my son more than the world. If it was one of those hypothetical situations where I had to choose between Nico’s life and this house, of course I would choose Nico. No question.
But I’m just saying, if he does anything to harm this house, he is going to be grounded until he’s old enough to shave.
“I’ll unpack tomorrow,” Nico says. His general life philosophy seems to be that everything will be done tomorrow.
“Or now?” I suggest.
Nico throws the ball in the air, and it just barely grazes the ceiling. If we had absolutely anything valuable in this house, I would be having a heart attack right now. “Later,” he insists.
Meaning never.
I peer up the stairwell of the house. Yes, we have stairs! Honest-to-goodness stairs. Yes, they creak with every single step, and there’s a chance if you hold on to the banister too tightly, it might fall off. But we have stairs, and they lead to an entirely different floor of the house.
You can tell I have lived in New York City far too long. I was hesitant to come back to Long Island after what happened last time I lived here, but that was nearly two decades ago—the distant past.
“Ada?” I call up the stairs. “Ada, can you come out here?”
A few moments later, my eleven-year-old daughter pops her head into the stairwell so that I can see her thick, wavy black hair and dark, dark eyes peeking out at me. Her eyes are the same color as Nico’s, inherited from their father. Unlike her brother, Ada has undoubtedly been unpacking her belongings since we arrived. She’s a straight-A student—the kind who does her homework without having to be told, a week before it’s due.
“Ada,” I say. “Are you almost done unpacking?”
“Just about.” No surprise there.
“Do you think you could help Nico unpack his boxes?”
Ada nods without hesitation. “Sure. Come on, Nico.”
Nico immediately recognizes this as an opportunity for his sister to do most of the work. “Okay!” he agrees happily.
Nico finally stops terrorizing me with the baseball and sprints up the steps two at a time to join Ada in his room. I start to tell her not to do all the work for him, but that’s a lost cause. At this point, I’ve got about sixty boxes of my own to unpack. As long as it gets done, I’ll be happy.
We were extremely lucky to get this house. We lost half a dozen bidding wars in neighborhoods that weren’t even as nice as this one. I didn’t think we had a snowball’s chance in hell of landing this quaint former farmhouse in a town with such highly rated public schools. I almost cried with joy when our real estate agent called me to let me know that the house was ours. At ten percent less than asking!
The universe must have decided we deserved some good luck.
I peek out through the front window at the moving truck parked on the street outside the house. We live in a little cul-de-sac with two other houses, and across the way, I can see the silhouette of a person at the window. My new neighbor, I suppose. I hope they’re friendly.
A banging sound comes from within the truck, and I wrench open the front door to see what’s going on. I jog outside just in time to see my husband emerging from the truck with one of his friends who has agreed to help with the move. I wanted to hire a moving company, but he insisted he could do it himself with his friends helping. And I have to admit, we need to save every penny if we want to make our mortgage payments. Even at ten percent below asking, our dream house wasn’t cheap. My husband is holding up one half of our living room sofa, his T-shirt plastered to his torso with sweat. I cringe because he’s in his forties and the last thing he needs is to throw out his back. I expressed this concern to him when we were planning the move, and he acted like it was the silliest thing he’s ever heard, even though I throw out my back every other week. And it’s not from lifting a sofa. It’s from, like, sneezing.
“Will you please be careful, Enzo?” I say.
He looks up at me, and when he grins, I melt. Is that normal? Do other women who are married to somebody for over eleven years still get wobbly in the knees over them sometimes?
No? Just me?
I mean, it’s not like it’s every minute. But boy, he still gets me. It doesn’t hurt that he seems to get inexplicably sexier every year. (And I just get a year older.)
“I am careful,” he insists. “Besides, this couch? Is light! Weighs almost nothing.”
That warrants an eye roll from the guy holding the other end of the couch. But admittedly, it’s not exactly a heavy-duty couch. We got it from IKEA, which is a step up from the last couch, which we grabbed from the curb. Enzo used to have this theory that all the best furniture came from the curb outside our apartment.
We’ve grown up a little since then. I hope.
As Enzo and his friend bring the sofa into our beautiful new house, I raise my eyes again to look at the house across the way. Number 13 Locust Street. There’s still someone staring at me from the window. The house is dark inside, so I can’t see much, but that silhouette is still at the window.
Somebody is watching us.
But there’s nothing ominous about that. The people in that house are our new neighbors, and I’m sure they are curious about who we are. Whenever I used to see a moving truck outside our building, I always watched through the window to see who was moving in, and Enzo would laugh and tell me to stop watching and go introduce myself.
That’s the difference between him and me.
Well, it’s not the only difference.
In an effort to change my ways and be more friendly like my husband, I lift a hand to wave at the silhouette. May as well meet my new neighbor at 13 Locust.
Except the person at the window doesn’t wave back. Instead, the shutters suddenly snap closed and the silhouette disappears.
Welcome to the neighborhood.
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Freida McFadden
#1 New York Times, Amazon Charts, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Sunday Times, and Publisher's Weekly bestselling author Freida McFadden is a practicing physician specializing in brain injury who has penned multiple bestselling psychological thrillers and medical humor novels. Freida’s work has been selected as one of Amazon Editors’ best books of the year, she is the winner of the International Thriller Writers Award for best paperback, and she is a Goodreads Choice Award winner. Her novels have been translated into 40 languages. Freida lives with her family and black cat in a centuries-old three-story home overlooking the ocean, with staircases that creak and moan with each step, and nobody could hear you if you scream. Unless you scream really loudly, maybe.To hear Freida talk about herself more in the third person, check out her website freidamcfadden.
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Customer reviews
4.2 out of 5
134,791 global ratings
Angela Wiseman
5
such a great ending to a 3 book series
Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2024
Verified Purchase
Wow…. Just wow what a complete ending to an amazing 3 book series. I never saw the ending coming I was on the edge of my seat the entire time I was sad to see the series come to an end but all good things end eventually. I can’t wait for Freida McFadden next book I am positive it will be just as good and mysterious as this one was.
Brandy
5
I don’t know what I know! 😂
Reviewed in the United States on June 13, 2024
Verified Purchase
I have read every book by Freida. I can honestly say that I always think I’ve got everything figured out.
She always proves me wrong.
It brings me enjoyment when I try and I fail. I hate knowing how a book will end or the twists.
If I ever figure the ending/plot twists of any of her books, I’ll be sad!
This book was so good! I loved getting more of Millie and Enzo and being introduced/reintroduced to other characters.
I loved the flow and pace of the book. I read this in less than two days which is impressive for my chaotic life. When I wasn’t reading it, I was listening to it. I couldn’t wait to find out who did what!
I will totally continue to read and recommend books by the author!
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12 people found this helpful
louloumac05
5
♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
Reviewed in the United States on June 22, 2024
Verified Purchase
Ms. Freida, Ms. Freida, Ms. Freida………you can do no wrong. I have come to expect nothing but the best from this author and this book did not disappoint! Every page will hold your interest and don’t forget the twists and turns! Even though it seems everything was tied up neatly, I’m seeing a dozen ways to get another installment in this series. Ms. McFadden if you read this review, another Housemaid book, please! Highly recommended!
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