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What Lies Between Us

What Lies Between Us

by John Marrs 2020 363 pages
4.02
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Plot Summary

The Crow's Nest Prisoner

A mother watches from above

Maggie, an aging woman, spends her days locked in the attic of her own home, observing the world through shuttered windows. She is a ghost in her own life, isolated from the outside, her only company the books her daughter Nina brings her and the memories of a life that has gone terribly wrong. Maggie's existence is strictly controlled by Nina, who keeps her mother chained and locked away, feeding her, bathing her, and dictating every aspect of her life. The relationship between mother and daughter is fraught with unspoken resentments, old wounds, and a suffocating codependency. Maggie's internal monologue reveals a woman who has been both victim and perpetrator, haunted by regret and the knowledge that everything wrong in her life is mirrored in her daughter.

Dinner with Chains

Mother and daughter's toxic routine

Nina and Maggie's daily life is a ritual of control and passive aggression. Dinner is a battleground, with Maggie forced to eat what Nina cooks, often foods she dislikes, and always under the watchful eye of her captor-daughter. The house is a maze of locked doors, chains, and routines designed to keep Maggie compliant and contained. Their conversations are laced with barbs and reminders of past hurts, especially around the subject of children and lost opportunities. The power dynamic is constantly shifting, with Maggie occasionally testing boundaries, hiding objects, or attempting small acts of rebellion, only to be met with swift and sometimes violent retribution from Nina.

Fractured Reflections

Isolation breeds obsession and regret

Maggie's isolation leads her to obsess over the lives of her neighbors, the passage of time, and the many regrets that haunt her. She reflects on her lost friendships, her failed marriage, and the choices that led to her current imprisonment. The house itself becomes a character—claustrophobic, silent, and filled with the ghosts of the past. Maggie's only solace is in the books she reads, often thrillers and stories of captivity, which serve as both escape and cruel reminder of her own predicament. The psychological toll of her confinement is evident in her shifting moods, her longing for connection, and her growing sense of futility.

The Unraveling Past

Secrets surface through memory and confrontation

The narrative shifts between present and past, revealing the events that led to Maggie's captivity. Through flashbacks, we see a family unraveling: a husband who leaves, a daughter who spirals into rebellion, and a mother who makes desperate choices to protect her child. The past is a minefield of trauma—abandonment, abuse, and betrayal. Maggie's attempts to shield Nina from harm only serve to deepen the wounds between them. The house, once a home, becomes a prison for both women, each trapped by the other's needs and failures.

Teenage Ruptures

Nina's adolescence spirals out of control

As a teenager, Nina is wild, angry, and self-destructive. Her father's abandonment leaves her emotionally adrift, and she seeks solace in risky behavior—drinking, sex, and defiance. Maggie, overwhelmed and desperate, tries to maintain control but is increasingly powerless. The mother-daughter bond is tested to its limits as Nina's actions become more dangerous, culminating in a pregnancy that Maggie feels compelled to "solve" for her daughter, setting in motion a chain of secrets and lies that will haunt them both.

The First Betrayal

A mother's intervention with lasting consequences

When Nina becomes pregnant as a young teen, Maggie intervenes without her daughter's knowledge, secretly inducing a miscarriage with stolen medication. She justifies her actions as necessary to protect Nina from a life she is unprepared for, but the betrayal is profound. Nina's trust is shattered, and Maggie's guilt festers. This act of "protection" becomes the template for their relationship—love expressed through control, care through coercion, and safety through secrecy.

A Daughter's Descent

Nina's search for love and identity

Nina's teenage years are marked by a desperate search for love and belonging. She becomes involved with Jon Hunter, a charismatic but troubled local musician, and is drawn into his world of music, drugs, and adult relationships. The affair is both intoxicating and dangerous, as Jon is much older and the relationship is kept secret. Nina's sense of self is fragile, shaped by her need for validation and her mother's suffocating influence. The relationship with Jon becomes a defining trauma, leading to another pregnancy and a series of events that will have devastating consequences.

The Secret in the Basement

A hidden birth and a stolen child

Nina's second pregnancy is hidden from Maggie until it is too late. When she goes into labor, Maggie delivers the baby herself, a girl Nina names Dylan. But the child is born with complications, and Maggie, convinced she is protecting her daughter, tells Nina the baby died. In reality, Maggie arranges for the child to be adopted by another family, erasing all traces of the birth and leaving Nina to grieve a loss she does not fully understand. This secret becomes the central lie that binds and destroys both women.

The Lost Child

A son's return and the unraveling of lies

Years later, the child—Dylan, now a young man named Bobby—reaches out to Nina, believing her to be his sister. Through a series of revelations, Nina discovers the truth: Dylan is her son, not her brother, and Maggie orchestrated his disappearance. The reunion is fraught with confusion, anger, and longing. Nina is forced to confront the reality of her mother's actions and the depth of her own loss. The fragile hope of reconciliation is quickly overshadowed by the weight of the past and the impossibility of undoing what has been done.

The Hunter's Shadow

Violence, murder, and the cycle of trauma

The legacy of Jon Hunter looms large. He is eventually convicted of murder, a crime that may or may not be his, and dies in prison. The narrative reveals that Maggie, in her quest to protect Nina, may have played a role in framing Jon for a crime he did not commit. The cycle of violence and retribution continues, with Nina herself becoming both victim and perpetrator. The lines between love and hate, protection and punishment, blur until they are indistinguishable.

The Memory Box

Objects and memories as weapons and wounds

A memory box, filled with relics of the past, becomes a symbol of the unresolved pain between Maggie and Nina. Each item—a photograph, a letter, a toy—carries the weight of what was lost and what was stolen. The box is both a comfort and a curse, a reminder of innocence and a record of betrayal. As the women sift through its contents, they are forced to confront the truth of their relationship and the impossibility of forgiveness.

The Second Child

Motherhood, infertility, and the hunger for connection

Nina's inability to have more children, a result of the drugs Maggie gave her, becomes another source of grief and resentment. She attempts to adopt, seeking to fill the void left by Dylan, but is thwarted by Maggie's interference. The hunger for connection, for a family, drives Nina to increasingly desperate acts. The house becomes a mausoleum of lost possibilities, each room echoing with the ghosts of children who never were.

The Chain of Guilt

Captivity, violence, and the collapse of hope

The relationship between Maggie and Nina deteriorates into open hostility and violence. Escape attempts, physical altercations, and psychological warfare become the norm. Both women are prisoners—Maggie literally, Nina emotionally. The arrival of Dylan, now an adult, offers a brief hope of redemption, but the cycle of trauma proves too strong. In a final confrontation, violence erupts, and Dylan is killed, the ultimate casualty of generational pain.

The Son Returns

A family reunion turned tragedy

Dylan's return to the house is a catalyst for the final unraveling. He discovers the truth of his origins, the depth of his mother's suffering, and the extent of Maggie's manipulations. The attempt to rescue Maggie from her captivity ends in disaster, as Nina, in a psychotic break, kills her own son. The tragedy is complete—three generations destroyed by secrets, lies, and the inability to break free from the past.

The Final Escape

Desperation, fire, and the end of the line

With Dylan dead and her own health failing, Maggie sees only one way out. She sets fire to the house, determined to end the cycle of suffering once and for all. The fire consumes the home, the prison, and the evidence of all that has transpired. Nina survives, but is left alone, broken, and haunted by the ghosts of her family. The authorities arrive too late, finding only ruins and the bodies of Maggie and Dylan, chained and lost.

The Fire and the End

Ashes, aftermath, and the meaning of freedom

In the aftermath, Nina is left to face the consequences of her actions and the legacy of her family's pain. The fire is both literal and symbolic—a purging of the past, but also a final act of destruction. Maggie's last act is one of agency, choosing death over continued captivity, and in doing so, she frees herself and, in a twisted way, her daughter. The story ends with the recognition that true freedom can only come from confronting the truth, no matter how unbearable, and that the chains we forge for ourselves and others are the hardest to break.

Characters

Maggie Simmonds

A mother imprisoned by guilt

Maggie is both victim and architect of her own suffering. Once a devoted mother and wife, her life is shattered by her husband's abandonment and her daughter's rebellion. Her attempts to protect Nina from harm lead her to commit acts of profound betrayal—inducing a miscarriage, giving away her grandchild, and ultimately imprisoning her daughter in a cycle of control and punishment. Maggie's psychological complexity is rooted in her inability to let go, her need to be needed, and her terror of abandonment. Over time, her love curdles into obsession, and her efforts to save Nina become the very thing that destroys them both. Her final act—setting fire to the house—is both a desperate bid for freedom and an acknowledgment of her own culpability.

Nina Simmonds

A daughter shaped by trauma

Nina is a woman defined by loss, longing, and rage. Abandoned by her father and betrayed by her mother, she seeks love and validation in all the wrong places. Her relationship with Jon Hunter is both a rebellion and a cry for help, leading to pregnancies, heartbreak, and the loss of her child. As an adult, Nina becomes her mother's jailer, repeating the cycle of control and punishment that defined her own upbringing. Her psychological unraveling is marked by dissociation, violence, and an inability to distinguish love from possession. The return of her son, Dylan, offers a fleeting hope of redemption, but her unresolved trauma leads to tragedy. Nina is both a victim and a perpetrator, her life a testament to the destructive power of secrets and unhealed wounds.

Jon Hunter

Charismatic predator and tragic scapegoat

Jon is the enigmatic singer who becomes the object of Nina's obsession and the catalyst for much of the family's suffering. Charismatic, talented, and deeply flawed, he is both a victim of circumstance and a perpetrator of harm. His relationship with Nina is exploitative, yet he is also a casualty of Maggie's need to protect her daughter at any cost. Jon's eventual conviction for murder—possibly orchestrated by Maggie—serves as a grim reminder of the collateral damage wrought by generational trauma.

Dylan/Bobby

The lost child, hope and casualty

Dylan, stolen from his mother and raised by another family, is the embodiment of lost potential and the possibility of healing. His return to Nina and Maggie's lives is both a miracle and a curse, forcing all involved to confront the truth of their actions. Dylan's search for identity and belonging is met with love, confusion, and ultimately violence. His death at the hands of his mother is the story's most devastating moment, the final proof that some wounds cannot be healed.

Alistair Simmonds

Absent father, hidden abuser

Alistair's abandonment is the inciting trauma for both Maggie and Nina, but his true legacy is far darker. Hints and revelations suggest he may have abused Nina, a secret that Maggie suspects but cannot face. His murder—at Nina's hands, covered up by Maggie—sets the stage for the family's descent into madness and retribution.

Elsie

Neighbor, confidante, and silent witness

Elsie is Maggie's neighbor and occasional friend, a figure of stability and normalcy in a world gone mad. She assists Maggie in giving away Dylan, acting out of compassion but also a desire to help her friend escape an impossible situation. Elsie's presence is a reminder of the world outside, the life that might have been, and the cost of silence.

Jane

Adoptive mother, rival, and mirror

Jane, who raises Dylan as her own, is both a savior and a source of resentment for Nina. Her love for Dylan is genuine, but her presence is a constant reminder of what Nina has lost. The rivalry between the two women is rooted in their shared love for the same child and their inability to reconcile their roles in his life.

Sally Ann Mitchell

Collateral victim of generational pain

Sally Ann is Jon Hunter's pregnant girlfriend, a young woman caught in the crossfire of Maggie and Nina's war. Her brutal murder—possibly at Nina's hands, certainly covered up by Maggie—serves as a grim echo of the violence and secrecy that define the Simmonds family.

Dylan's Adoptive Family

Symbols of normalcy and loss

Dylan's adoptive family represents the life he might have had—a life of stability, love, and opportunity. Their grief at his disappearance is genuine, and their inability to save him is a final, bitter irony.

Supporting Neighbors and Friends

Background chorus of normal life

The various neighbors, colleagues, and friends who populate the story serve as a backdrop to the central drama, their ordinary lives a stark contrast to the chaos within the Simmonds house. They are witnesses, sometimes complicit, sometimes oblivious, always powerless to intervene.

Plot Devices

Dual Narrative and Shifting Perspectives

Alternating voices reveal unreliable truths

The story is told through alternating chapters from Maggie and Nina's perspectives, with occasional interludes from the past and other characters. This structure allows the reader to see the same events through different, often contradictory, lenses. The use of unreliable narrators heightens the sense of uncertainty and dread, as each woman's version of the truth is shaped by trauma, denial, and self-justification.

Nonlinear Timeline and Flashbacks

Past and present collide to reveal secrets

The narrative moves fluidly between present-day captivity and key moments in the past—childhood, adolescence, pivotal traumas. This nonlinear approach mirrors the characters' fractured psyches and allows the gradual revelation of secrets, lies, and motivations. The past is never truly past; it is always intruding on the present, shaping actions and justifying sins.

Symbolism of the House and Chains

Physical and psychological imprisonment

The house is both setting and symbol—a place of safety turned prison, filled with locked doors, hidden rooms, and secret compartments. Chains, padlocks, and physical restraints are literal manifestations of the psychological bonds that tie Maggie and Nina together. The memory box, the attic, the basement, and the garden grave all serve as metaphors for buried secrets and unresolved pain.

Foreshadowing and Repetition

Hints of doom and cycles of trauma

The story is laced with foreshadowing—references to fire, escape, and death recur throughout, building a sense of inevitability. The repetition of routines, arguments, and failed escape attempts underscores the cyclical nature of trauma and the difficulty of breaking free from destructive patterns.

Psychological Realism and Dissociation

Mental illness as both cause and effect

The narrative delves deeply into the psychological states of its characters, exploring dissociation, psychosis, and the ways in which trauma distorts memory and perception. The use of unreliable narration, hallucinations, and memory gaps reflects the characters' fractured realities and the impossibility of objective truth.

The Final Conflagration

Fire as both destruction and liberation

The story culminates in a literal and symbolic fire, set by Maggie as an act of agency and escape. The fire consumes the house, the evidence, and the last vestiges of hope, leaving only ashes and the possibility of a new beginning. It is both an act of revenge and a final, desperate bid for freedom.

Analysis

A generational tragedy of love, control, and the impossibility of escape

What Lies Between Us is a harrowing exploration of the ways in which love, when twisted by fear, guilt, and trauma, can become indistinguishable from cruelty. The novel interrogates the boundaries between protection and possession, care and control, victim and perpetrator. Through its dual narrative and nonlinear structure, the story reveals how secrets, lies, and unhealed wounds are passed from one generation to the next, each act of "protection" sowing the seeds of future destruction. The house, with its locked doors and hidden graves, is a powerful metaphor for the psychological prisons we build for ourselves and those we love. The final act of fire is both a cleansing and a destruction, a recognition that some chains can only be broken by burning everything to the ground. Marrs's novel is a cautionary tale about the dangers of unresolved trauma, the limits of forgiveness, and the tragic consequences of love that cannot let go.

Last updated:

Review Summary

4.02 out of 5
Average of 100k+ ratings from Goodreads and Amazon.

What Lies Between Us is a dark psychological thriller about a mother and daughter with a twisted relationship. Many readers found it gripping and shocking, praising the complex characters and unexpected twists. The story alternates between perspectives, slowly revealing secrets and motivations. While some predicted certain plot points, most were captivated by the disturbing tale. A few felt it was too unbelievable or lacked closure, but overall, it was well-received as an addictive, mind-bending read that showcases Marrs' storytelling skills.

Your rating:
4.36
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About the Author

John Marrs is a bestselling author known for psychological thrillers and science fiction novels. His book "The One" became a Netflix series and has sold over a million copies. Marrs has written several popular titles, including "The Good Samaritan" and "The Passengers." Before becoming a full-time writer, he worked as a journalist for 25 years, interviewing celebrities for national newspapers and magazines. His novel "What Lies Between Us" won the International Thriller Writers' Best Paperback award in 2021. Marrs is active on social media and continues to release new books, with his next title, "You Killed Me First," set for publication in March 2025.

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