A governess becomes entangled with a dysfunctional and dangerous
family in this novel by a New York Times-bestselling "master of
suspense" (Mary Higgins Clark).
Finally liberated from her cruel and domineering mother,
twenty-eight-year-old schoolteacher Jessica Abbott has accepted a
position as governess in Hampden House, a crumbling plantation on the
cliffs of St. Croix. Her charge is Leila Drew, the oppressed teenage
daughter of a pathologically punishing mother. But the vulnerable girl
is not Catherine Drew's only victim.
For years, Catherine's desperate husband, King, a man to whom Jessica is
irresistibly drawn, has been searching for the means to a safe
escape--for himself and Leila--from this ruin of a family. As Jessica
becomes further entwined in the violent dynamics of the Drew family, she
realizes Catherine's wretched power may be grounded in a secret that has
trapped not only King and Leila, but herself as well.
A recipient of the Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Award,
Phyllis A. Whitney was hailed by Mary Higgins Clark as "a superb and
gifted story teller, and a master of suspense."