
A classic psychological thriller from author of Waterstones Thriller of the Month, Uncle Paul: 'Britain's Patricia Highsmith' and the 'grandmother of psycho-domestic noir' (Sunday Times)'Brilliant ...So witty and clever.' Elly Griffiths'Fremlin packs a punch.' Ian Rankin'Irresistible.' Val McDermid'Splendid ...Got me hooked.' Ruth Rendell'A master of suspense.' Janice HallettLindy had a lovely voice.It rose into the summer darkness clear and true as a nightingale; or was it, rather, like a bird of prey?Rosamund wakes up from her mid-morning nap to find, to her delight, that she is running a temperature.Surely that explains her blinding headache, and the weird, delirious dream in which she had murdered her overly seductive neighbour - the Other Woman - in a vengeful act of jealousy?A great relief, then, to find this was merely the nightmarish work of a fevered imagination.Until her husband exclaims, 'Rosamund! Have you any idea what's happened to Lindy? She's disappeared!.'