After the body of her missing twin sister is found, a young woman investigates new questions about her initial disappearance in Manterfield’s mystery.
Abby Kirkpatrick’s fraternal twin sibling, Cassie, mysteriously vanished when they were both 6 years old, placing the family under the white-hot lights of public scrutiny. With an aim to start afresh, the English family moved to a town in Great Britain in the middle of nowhere—a “place people drove by on the way to somewhere else.” Now 22, homeschooled Abby wants to break free from her sheltered life and study child psychology at a university. Then police suddenly show up at the family’s door with shocking news: Cassie’s body has been found in a nearby lake bed, and the physical evidence unambiguously points to murder. Once again, the Kirkpatricks bear the weight of public suspicion, and Manterfield powerfully captures their ordeal in these pages: “It was starting again. The life we had rebuilt, the quiet, secluded life we’d hidden behind, was about to be shaken upside down. We’d be The Killer Kirkpatricks again.” Abby’s father, Robert, is quickly singled out as the prime suspect, and Abby begins to have her own suspicions that he might be responsible in some way—and even that her mother, Theresa, is covering for him; throughout, these nagging worries are rendered artfully, and with a great deal of suspense. Indeed, Manterfield exercises an impressive display of authorial restraint, disclosing just enough information to keep the reader riveted, and never so much that the reins are loosened. Overall, this novel shows itself to be more ambitious than many other crime dramas, raising philosophically searching questions about the nature of trauma and memory, as well as the moral dimensions of familial loyalty. It’s a compelling tale, as thoughtful as it is haunting.
A harrowing and unpredictable yet psychologically subtle story.