I wasn't real sure about this one when I first started reading it, but I'm so glad I stuck with it.
Three women work at a high-end property development company in London. Alex is the boss's personal assistant and has been on maternity leave for three months. Jill is one of the founders of the company, now able to devote much less time to the job because of her husband's cancer. Nicole is the star salesperson, a hard-as-nails, take-no-prisoners kind of person.
But then Alex is fired and made the scapegoat for a mistake she didn't commit, Jill is hearing rumblings of her needing to retire, and at a company party, the three of them, never having really talked before, get drunk and air their grievances. Nicole lets slip that the boss, Jamie, has made unwanted advances toward her.
Alex, already furious over her unfair dismissal and the fact that the promised job lead proffered by Jamie doesn't exist, is even angrier when she hears Nicole's story, and she proposes revenge. (Yes, this is probably a scene inspired by the Dolly Parton comedy "9 to 5" but believe me, this stuff ain't funny at all.)
Jill and Nicole sober up the next day and are no longer much interested in vengeance, but Alex, bitter and angry over her predicament and bored and stressed with life as a single mother, still wants her pound of flesh, and she sets about formulating ways to embarrass Jamie and cause him to lose face at work.
And as the humiliations mount, it becomes clear that things are not always what they seem ... people lie; not just by stating untruths, but more insidiously, by stating one tiny kernel of truth and leaving out the rest, and not correcting others when they make the logical assumption.
The lines between hero and villain are first blurred and then nearly erased.
Loyalties are tested, strained and dissolved.
And when Jamie is found fatally injured on one of the historic properties his company was trying to sell, after the accusations became more serious and so did the consequences, after the liars are revealed and the tears are shed, there is one final, horrible and totally unexpected twist on the very last page that I for one did not see coming.
At first glance, this book seemed a Me-Too revenge fantasy, but as the plot thickened and curdled and threatened to explode, it became so much more. This is a story about obsession, about anger, about greed, about monstrous selfishness and self-absorption, and about the limitless ways we humans can think of to destroy one another