Before I Say Good-Bye by Mary Higgins Clark
Reviewed by Gerti
Mary
Higgins Clark’s novel “Before I Say Good-Bye” is about a woman
with more psychic powers than sense. Protagonist Cornelia (Nell)
MacDermott has spent her life hearing from the dead. Her parents came
to visit her after they had died in a tragic place crash. Also during
her childhood, she sensed that her grandmother came to see her after
she passed. But her grandfather, who raised her after those deaths,
is skeptical about this whole psychic thing, and since Mac is a
blustery but powerful New York politician, Nell generally plays along
with him. That is, until her husband is killed in a boating tragedy,
and she is left wondering why she can’t “sense” his presence.
Mac wants her to leave it alone since he hopes Nell will run for his
congressional seat. But Nell is wracked with guilt because of a fight
she had with her husband before he left on that boat trip.
Fortunately
for Nell, she has a great aunt named Gert who not only believes in
psychics, she consorts with people with extra-sensory perception. She
convinces her niece to see a medium who says she’s received a
message from Adam Cauliff, Nell’s husband. He was an architect and,
using money he borrowed from Nell’s trust fund, he had purchased a
NYC property that is just about to pay big dividends. Adam was going
to design the new building for that spot, and build it along with
primo Manhattan real-estate developer Peter Lang.
But
Bonnie the medium tells Nell that she sees Peter Lang dripping with
blood, and Nell wonders if he wasn’t the man behind her husband’s
boat accident. Lang was supposed to be on board the vessel that day,
meeting with a number of other developers, but Lang got into an
accident on the way there, and never made the meeting. Clark wants us
to believe this is highly suspicious.
She
also throws a number of other suspects our way – the son of the
woman who sold the property, who not only has a long criminal
history, but thinks Adam paid his mom less than she deserved for the
piece of land. Then of course there’s the firm where Adam used to
work, which is being investigated for bid rigging. Did Adam know more
than they wanted revealed about their dirty dealings? And then
there’s Adam’s secretary, whom he took with him when he left the
previous architectural firm. She knew all about their business, too.
She was also on the boat, so maybe she was the intended target of the
explosion? There are other people on the suspect list, too, and Clark
even goes into the lives of the cops who are investigating the
explosion. And then there’s the kid who saw the boat blow up from a
tourist craft nearby.
In
the end, we find that the psychic was in co-hoots with the husband,
who isn’t dead at all, but who was also stringing along his mousey
secretary, who was in love with him, in order to make a mint of
money. My critique - sometimes Clark loves writing so much that she
writes too much. For me, “Before I Say Good-Bye” is one story
where fewer characters might have made it more suspenseful.
