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href="#ua4277d9b-a41b-550f-8f79-0c17d570401a">Chapter 9

       Chapter 10

       Chapter 11

       Chapter 12

       Chapter 13

       Chapter 14

       PART TWO

       Chapter 1

       Chapter 2

       Chapter 3

       Chapter 4

       PART THREE

       The Remand

       The Murder Charge

       The Committal

       The Trial 1

       The Trial 2

       The Trial 3

       The Trial 4

       The Trial 5

       The Trial 6

       The Trial 7

       The Verdict

       A Place of Execution

       BOOK 2

       PART ONE

       PART TWO

       1 February 1998

       2 October 1997 – February 1998

       3 February 1998

       4 February/March 1998

       5 April 1998

       6 May 1998

       7 May 1998

       8 May/June/July 1998

       9 August 1998

       PART THREE

       1 August 1998

       2 August 1998

       3 August 1998

       4 August 1998

       5 August 1998

       6 August 1998

       7 August 1998

       8 August 1998

       9 August 1998

       10 October 1998

       Acknowledgements

       Keep Reading …

       About the Author

       Also by Val McDermid

       About the Publisher

BOOK 1

       Introduction

      Like Alison Carter, I was born in Derbyshire in 1950. Like her, I grew up familiar with the limestone dales of the White Peak, no stranger to the winter blizzards that regularly cut us off from the rest of the country. It was in Buxton, after all, that snow once stopped play in a county cricket match in June.

      So when Alison Carter went missing in December 1963, it meant more to me and my classmates than it can have done to most other people. We knew villages like the one she’d grown up in. We knew the sort of things she’d have done every day. We suffered through similar classes and cloakroom arguments about which of the Fab Four was our favourite Beatle. We imagined we shared the same hopes, dreams and fears. Because of that, right from the word go, we all knew something terrible had happened to Alison Carter, because something we also knew was that girls like her – like us – didn’t run away. Not in Derbyshire in the middle of December, anyway.

      It wasn’t just the thirteen-year-old girls who understood that. My father was one of the hundreds of volunteer searchers who combed the high moorland and the wooded valleys around Scardale, and his grim face when he returned home after a fruitless day scouring

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