A three-year-old girl is snatched from a beach in Spain. Nobody heard a sound. Nobody saw a thing.
Rosie Gilmour’s much-needed holiday is cut short when the abduction story breaks and she’s sent to cover it. Her instincts tell her something’s wrong: such a crime must surely have its witnesses, and the girl’s mother’s story doesn’t add up.
With a child’s life at stake, Rosie must dig deeper into the seedy depths of the area, making dangerous enemies. As she closes in on the truth, she realises the penalty for missing this particular deadline could be her own death.
‘Perfectly paced and neatly plotted’ Daily Mail
Rosie Gilmour’s much-needed holiday is cut short when the abduction story breaks and she’s sent to cover it. Her instincts tell her something’s wrong: such a crime must surely have its witnesses, and the girl’s mother’s story doesn’t add up.
With a child’s life at stake, Rosie must dig deeper into the seedy depths of the area, making dangerous enemies. As she closes in on the truth, she realises the penalty for missing this particular deadline could be her own death.
‘Perfectly paced and neatly plotted’ Daily Mail
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Reviews
Gripping
Having been glued to the opening chapters of To Tell The Truth, I applaud her ... this is a social issue that's worth discussing
Gritty, suspenseful and real ... the story is a complete page turner that grips you as the seedy depths of human trafficking and networks unravel
Shocking and compelling, it's impossible to look away until the last headline has been written
The book is as perfectly paced and neatly plotted as any Ian Rankin novel, with a wide appeal for both male and female readers