Plot Summary
Domestic Bliss Unravelled
Corinne's outwardly perfect life with her loving husband Seth and energetic son Freddie is suddenly thrown into disarray by the ordinary chaos of family life—a missed shoe, the struggle to get out the door. Routine is upended not by domestic tasks but by the ominous to-do list in Corinne's mind: protect her loved ones at any cost. She's filled with anxiety, haunted by the fear that something is about to rip away the security and joy she treasures. As family prepares to meet Georgia's new boyfriend, there's an unspoken sense that change is not only coming—it's already begun, creeping into the corners of her meticulously managed world.
The Return of Mateo
At the pivotal family lunch, Georgia's new boyfriend Mateo is introduced, sending Corinne into a spiral of panic as she recognizes him immediately. He's the man from her past—the one mistake she's buried for years. The world tilts as polite introductions are exchanged, and Corinne is trapped at the table, watching the man who could end her marriage and happiness charm her loved ones. Her desperation to leave and her inability to do so signals the start of a psychological game with her family as unwitting pawns, raising the tension to nearly unbearable levels.
Secrets Resurface
Corinne barely holds herself together, excusing herself from lunch for a panic-stricken escape to the bathroom. Within this private cage she relives her mistake: a single reckless night with Mateo, years ago, while "on a break" from Seth. As she steels herself to return, the past is now alive at the table with her family, and she knows—should the truth get out—her son's life, her marriage, and her sister's heart will be destroyed. Returning, she learns Georgia and Mateo are advancing quickly; the past is no longer buried but moved into the guest room.
Panic and Paranoia
The lunch devolves into a crisis as Corinne feigns illness to escape, dragging Seth and Freddie home in a state of confused urgency. At home, the web of deceit grows, with Corinne fielding questions from Seth and Georgia about her strange reaction to Mateo. She is battered by guilt and foreboding as messages from Mateo begin to appear on her phone. The threat isn't an explosive confrontation but a slow, torturous manipulation, as Mateo quietly asserts his power: he is now unavoidable, and he's enjoying every moment of her suffering.
Mistake of the Past
Flashbacks reveal Corinne and Mateo meeting at a fitness class while she's dissatisfied in her relationship with Seth. Tempted by the attention and excitement Mateo offers, Corinne slides toward infidelity during a low point, mistakenly believing Seth has grown distant. Their affair is brief but shattering—a one-night stand that undermines everything she values. The next day, Seth throws her a surprise party and proposes, leaving Corinne tormented by guilt and unable to confess, setting the stage for years of secrets, self-recrimination, and fear.
Mateo's Threat
In the present, Mateo crosses boundaries, texting and then appearing at places Corinne goes, always with the same undertone: he knows everything and could end her life as she knows it. He moves in with Georgia, embedding himself into Corinne's daily reality, and makes it clear that his silence about their past comes at a price. He hints at telling Seth, using every interaction to remind Corinne of his power. The stakes rise from personal discomfort to existential threat—her secret is now a weapon pointed at everyone she loves.
Double Lives
Corinne tries in vain to manage the situation and keep Seth and Georgia in blissful ignorance, increasingly forced into awkward evasions and emotional distancing. While publicly supporting her sister's happiness, she privately grapples with the knowledge that Georgia's relationship is a fraud and that any wrong move will shatter the family. The attempt to maintain two parallel realities—devoted wife, supportive sister—pushes Corinne to the brink. Seth's confusion about Corinne's odd behavior grows, deepening the tension and potential for disastrous revelation.
The Paternity Crisis
Fear spikes as the timeline of Corinne's affair overlaps with Freddie's conception. Questions about paternity emerge: Is Seth truly Freddie's father? Secretly, Corinne takes a paternity test, praying for relief. Waiting for results, she's caught between the ruin of her marriage and the possibility of an even more devastating secret. Each interaction with Mateo feels more threatening as he drops veiled hints—did she tell her husband everything? Is her child really Seth's? The paternity result, when it arrives, is a lifeline, but the overall knot tightens further.
Spiraling Lies
Mateo's threats escalate—he gives Corinne an ultimatum: tell Seth the truth by Saturday night, or Mateo will do it at a party planned for the whole family. Corinne is trapped, desperate for a way out. She contemplates everything from confession to violence, realizing that neither confession nor running away seems feasible without catastrophic fallout. Meanwhile, Mateo basks in his control, playing the charming boyfriend, taunting her in ways subtle and overt. The net closes, and time runs dangerously short.
Blackmail at Home
Corinne enlists Mateo's presence for a confrontation, hoping to negotiate or intimidate him into silence. Instead, he proves immune to reason or guilt—he only wants her back, or else he'll destroy her world. Determined to protect her son and husband, Corinne prepares for extreme action, even buying a kitchen knife with intent. But an attempted attack is foiled by Georgia's surprise arrival, and Corinne is forced to hide, despairing at her inability to act.
Sinister Ultimatum
The party arrives—Mateo's chosen moment for maximum pain. As friends and family gather, Mateo prepares to expose Corinne's secret to all, basking in the prospect of her humiliation and ruin. In a desperate move, Corinne creates a chaotic distraction, temporarily buying time. Alone, she learns the depths of Mateo's manipulations: not only is he blackmailing her for personal revenge, but he's also exploiting her financially—he tricks her into giving him an exorbitant sum, claiming it's for debt. But he has no intention of going away.
Knife's Edge Decision
In the shadowy aftermath of the failed party revelation, Corinne lures Mateo to a lonely bridge on the hotel grounds, intending to kill him and end the cycle of torture. Knife in hand, she freezes at the final moment, unable to do the unthinkable even for her family. But then, to her shock and horror, Seth appears and, seeing Corinne endangered, kills Mateo himself, saving her yet irrevocably changing both of their lives. Their shared secret is now one of murder.
A Sister's Heartache
Mateo's disappearance sends Georgia into emotional collapse. The family scrambles to find him, never suspecting the truth. The police are called, intensifying the pressure on Seth and Corinne to appear innocent and supportive. As detectives investigate, clues begin to point away from Georgia and toward the possibility of crime. Corinne's anxiety mounts as she faces questions—not just about where Mateo went, but about her own financial transactions with him, now discovered by the authorities.
Attempted Murder
Flashbacks and current events entwine, showing Corinne's near-murder of Mateo foiled by Georgia's arrival at his apartment. Forced to hide in a wardrobe, she is later nearly discovered, the knife unused but ever-present, the threat tangible. This moment of overlapping horror and relief underlines how deeply Corinne's family is now unwittingly enmeshed in the web of lies, violence, and betrayal—each moment bringing them all closer to tragic exposure.
The Final Party
At the hotel party, Mateo prepares to destroy Corinne publicly. A last-moment distraction stops him, but the threats continue. He moves from blackmailing for silence to outright extortion, manipulating Corinne into transferring him a fortune to disappear—money she'd saved for family dreams. He promises to leave but instead uses the cash to lavishly spoil Georgia and ingratiate himself further. The betrayal cuts deeper, and Corinne realizes she's helpless against his escalating cruelty.
Money for Silence
The truth of Mateo's game is revealed—love was never his motive. Corinne isn't the only one he's conned; he's played the entire family for cash and revenge, sowing discord for pleasure and profit. With mounting desperation and fury, Corinne tries again to act, but her every effort is outmaneuvered. Mateo's control is absolute—until his final meeting on the bridge, where murder irrevocably ends his campaign of torment.
Mateo's True Game
Mateo's plan is exposed: he never wanted reconciliation, just money and the sick delight of revenge. Georgia's unwitting confession about Corinne's private savings years ago gave him the leverage he needed. Every gesture—the relationship with Georgia, public humiliation, the spa weekend, even the proposal—was designed to maximize Corinne's pain while extracting as much value as possible. Now, with Mateo dead, these schemes unravel, but the emotional destruction remains.
Betrayal, Blood, and Water
After Seth kills Mateo, husband and wife work together—hiding the knife, disposing of the body in a river, deleting incriminating messages. The cover-up is desperate, coordinated, and thorough. The police, family, and guests are left bewildered by Mateo's disappearance, suspicions swirling but proof maddeningly absent. Corinne and Seth, bound by their shared crime, struggle to maintain normality for Freddie, even as the specter of discovery looms constantly.
Silent Justice
Authorities dig deeper, questioning Corinne about the transferred money. She crafts a half-true story about helping a desperate friend. Georgia's grief and confusion intensify, but Corinne and Seth maintain their composure under scrutiny, protecting their son and each other through a careful web of lies. Tension remains high as police uncover Mateo's phone, the murder weapon lost, and evidence cleared just enough to maintain plausible deniability.
Aftermath of the Past
In the quiet aftermath, Corinne and Seth are superficially cleared, their alibis and explanations holding for now. Georgia mourns, the family is scarred but not destroyed, and Freddie is safe and innocent. The couple, forever changed, realize the limits of heroism and of calculated sin: they have what they wanted most—their marriage, family, freedom—but at the price of innocence, peace, and lifelong vigilance. The cycle of deceit is only ended through violence, leaving a legacy not of happiness but survival.
Analysis
Daniel Hurst's The Ex Who Came Back is a psychological thriller that ruthlessly uncovers the fatally thin veil separating an ordinary, loving family from disaster. Through Corinne's eyes, it explores how a single mistake—compounded by secrecy and fear—can spiral into blackmail, violence, and self-destruction. While initially posed as a tale of infidelity and its fallout, the narrative morphs into something much broader: a meditation on guilt, the costs of concealment, and the limits of self-preservation within a family system. The shifting timelines and relentless psychological pressure expose the vulnerabilities of modern domestic life—how quickly trust can be weaponized, how family roles can invert, and how easily the appearance of happiness can mask private terror. The novel warns against both the repression of truth and the dangers of obsessively defending one's world at any cost. Ultimately, the story refuses easy catharsis: although the immediate threat is eliminated, the survivors are forever altered, living with the knowledge of what they have done in the name of love and protection. The enduring lesson is chilling: some secrets, once created, are inescapable—and every act to cover them exacts a toll that cannot be undone.
Review Summary
Reviews for The Ex Who Came Back are mixed, averaging 3.61 out of 5. Many readers praise its fast pace, gripping tension, and unpredictable twists, calling it an addictive page-turner. Critics, however, cite repetitive inner monologues, an unbelievable plot, flat character motivations, and predictable twists as significant weaknesses. Some loyal fans found it below the author's usual standard, while newcomers generally enjoyed it more. The novel is scheduled for release on September 24, 2025.
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Characters
Corinne
Corinne, the protagonist, is a woman whose maternal devotion and enduring guilt form the psychological center of the story. She is outwardly a caring wife and mother but inwardly wracked by self-loathing over a single night's compromise with Mateo. Her inability to confess her mistake to Seth breeds neurosis, paranoia, and panic as the past invades her present. Corinne's psychological arc is that of a person pushed beyond herself, crossing moral lines she never imagined for the sake of her family. Her love is both redemptive and destructive—she'll do anything, even contemplate murder, to protect her son and her marriage. Corinne's relationships with Seth and Georgia—the two people hurt most by her secret—are fraught with love, guilt, and a desperate hope for forgiveness that may never come.
Seth
Seth is Corinne's devoted husband, characterized by stable affection, patience, and a desire for domestic harmony. He endures Corinne's emotional distance, confusion, and unpredictable behavior as the drama unfolds. Unbeknownst to Corinne, Seth is far more perceptive than he appears, having discovered her letter years earlier. His capacity for forgiveness frames much of the story's moral undertone; he stays loyal and compassionate, ultimately rescuing Corinne when Mateo threatens her physically. In killing Mateo, Seth unleashes a protective darkness, shared only with his wife, and becomes her indispensable co-conspirator in the aftermath—an act that both binds and burdens him forever.
Mateo
Mateo is the former lover and the protagonist's living nightmare. He enters the family under the guise of romance with Georgia, soon revealing himself as a manipulative blackmailer and sociopathic opportunist. Mateo delights in psychological torture: embedding himself in the family, dropping hints, and leveraging secrets for power and money. Beyond personal revenge, Mateo's motives are revealed as sexual, financial, and psychological—he thrives on control and humiliation. His show of affection for Georgia and even Corinne is hollow, a mask concealing deep narcissism and vindictiveness. His ultimate fate is deservedly violent, fulfilling the cycle of psychological horror he began.
Georgia
Corinne's younger sister is lively, independent, and slow to settle down until she falls for Mateo. Trusting and open, she welcomes Corinne's advice but is ultimately devastated as her happiness is built on deceit. Georgia's relationship with Corinne is loving but strained as secrets poison their bond. Her emotional vulnerability and desire for connection render her susceptible to Mateo's manipulation, while her resilience is tested by betrayal and heartbreak. Georgia serves as both a source of guilt for Corinne and as a representation of collateral damage in a family structured by secrets.
Freddie
The four-year-old son of Corinne and Seth represents all that Corinne wishes to preserve. He is blissfully unaware of adult machinations, but his existence heightens the stakes of every parental choice. His well-being is both a leverage point for Mateo and a foundation for Corinne's darkest decisions. Freddie's innocence punctuates the contrast between a stable, loving home and the malevolence lurking on its edges, underscoring the ultimate cost of adult betrayal.
Janet
Janet offers comic relief and a confidante role in the workplace, but she is also a device—her growing suspicion amplifies Corinne's paranoia and the impossibility of keeping lies contained in all spheres of life.
Corinne's Parents
Warm, well-meaning, and eager for family unity, Corinne's parents embody the idealized family that fuels Corinne's terror of losing everything. Their presence at key meals and as Freddie's grandparents make them both supporters and unknowing threats, increasing the burden of secrecy.
Detective Aspinall & Detective Burns
To the family's drama, they bring external pressure, their investigation raising the threat of exposure. Their pointed questioning draws out the truth but ultimately remains thwarted—emblematic of the difference between public justice and private survival.
The Babysitter, Lucy
Lucy allows the plot to proceed—especially the adults' deadly business—while ensuring Freddie remains insulated from the family's darkest night.
The Hotel and Restaurant Staff
Their presence highlights the contrast between appearances and reality—a staff member carries Corinne's suitcase with a hidden knife; waiters serve as a backdrop to climactic events, their normalcy sharpening the family's dysfunction.
Plot Devices
Interwoven Timelines & Flashbacks
The story alternates between present-day tension and flashbacks to the affair, allowing readers to both relive Corinne's anxiety and gradually learn flashpoint details. This dual timeline provides psychological depth—Corinne's guilt, the slow decline into panic, and the full circle of betrayal and cover-up—while doling out crucial information at moments designed for maximum tension and irony.
Ultimatum and Deadline
Mateo's threat of revelation by a particular deadline (the party) injects a thriller's momentum. The countdown sharpens every decision—each failed attempt to solve the problem increases the pressure, driving Corinne closer to breaking.
Blackmail and Gaslighting
Mateo leverages his knowledge and charm not only to torment Corinne, but to use her fear, guilt, and paranoia to destabilize the family. His methods highlight themes of power, vulnerability, and the disastrous cost of yielding to manipulation.
Maternal Sacrifice and Knife Symbolism
Corinne's purchase and near-use of a knife literalizes the metaphorical "cut" of family betrayal and the extremity of her desperation. The knife also foreshadows the ultimate act of violence (but at Seth's hand)—a dark symmetry of intent, execution, and complicity.
Paternity Uncertainty
The question of Freddie's paternity tightens the sense of catastrophic risk while symbolizing the consequences of even a moment's error. The secret test, the dread while waiting, and its result inject existential stakes into personal betrayal.
Hidden Evidence and Disappearance
The couple's efforts to delete messages, hide the murder weapon, and dispose of the body drive home how truth is constructed and concealed. The search for Mateo, the recovered phone, and the family's plausible deniability build tension until the end.
Moral Ambiguity
Throughout, the story employs dramatic irony—Corinne and Seth are both relatable and deeply flawed, forced to choose between honesty and survival, between justice and family. Their choices, while understandable, challenge the reader's instincts toward empathy or condemnation.