

I won’t bite you.” His smile widened, revealing a bottom row of spectacularly stained and crooked teeth. “That’s it, darlin’,” he cajoled in his exaggerated Irish lilt, the emerald-green scarf in his hand waving impatient circles around his portly frame.

Okay, if you’ll all just gather around me for a few seconds, I’ll give you a wee bit of information about this glorious building in front of you.” The guide smiled encouragingly at the group of tired and somewhat bedraggled-looking tourists milling around the front of St. "synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

Riveting from start to finish, it’s one fans won’t want to miss. Now You See Her vividly displays Fielding’s rare talent for creating the kind of tension, suspense, and compelling heroines readers crave. So begins Marcy’s desperate search to find Devon, to find herself, and to find the disturbing truth that might, in the end, be her only salvation. Now in Ireland, on what was originally intended to be a celebration of her twenty-fifth wedding anniversary - if, that is, her husband had not left her for another woman - Marcy yet again thinks she sees her daughter, casually strolling past her on the sidewalk. She continues to see the young woman’s face in crowds and has even stopped strangers on the street, certain she has finally discovered her long lost daughter. Her body was never found in the icy waters of Georgian Bay, and as a result Marcy has never fully accepted her death. Two years ago, her twenty-one-year-old daughter, Devon, perished in a canoeing accident. Fifty-year-old Marcy Taggart’s life is in shambles.
