The Missing Hours

The Missing Hours

by Emma Kavanagh
The Missing Hours

The Missing Hours

by Emma Kavanagh

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Overview

A woman’s disappearance in western England draw a pair of sibling detectives into a baffling murder case in “this intricately plotted crime novel” (Publishers Weekly).
 
In the sleepy borderland between England and Wales, serious crimes are rare. But now Det. Constable Leah Mackay and her brother, Det. Sergeant Finn Hale, are fielding two disturbing calls on the same day. Psychologist Selena Cole had been at a playground with her children when she disappeared. Then the body of attorney Dominic Newell was found on a remote mountain road. Soon enough, the sibling detectives find their respective investigations inextricably linked. Then the mystery deepens when Selena reappears alive and unhurt twenty hours later.
 
Selena’s work consulting on kidnap and ransom cases has brought her into close contact with ruthless criminals and international drug lords. But now, as she walks back into her life, blood-spattered, claiming no memory of the preceding hours, Leah can’t be sure if she is a victim, a liar, or a suspect. As Leah and Finn delve into each case, untangling a web of secrets and betrayals, they are entirely unprepared for the dangers they are about to uncover.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781496713735
Publisher: Kensington
Publication date: 02/27/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
Sales rank: 1,049,390
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Emma Kavanagh is the acclaimed UK bestselling author of The Missing Hours. Born and raised in South Wales, she is a former police and military psychologist. After completing her PhD, Emma began her own consultancy business, providing training to police and military across the UK and Europe. She taught police officers and NATO personnel about the psychology of critical incidents, terrorism, body recovery and hostage negotiation. She has run around muddy fields taking part in tactical exercises, has designed live fire training events, has been a VIP under bodyguard protection and has fired more than her fair share of weapons. She is married with two small sons and considers herself incredibly privileged to get to make up stories for a living.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

The Disappearance of Selena Cole

Heather Cole — Tuesday, 7:45 AM

It was the silence that frightened Heather. It seemed to come from nowhere, a creeping, drowning vacuum racing across the playground, down the muddy bank toward where she sat, both feet planted firmly in the rocky brook. One moment the air had sparkled with her younger sister's laughter, the aching creak of the swing, then nothing.

There was a thrumming in Heather's chest, like a small bird had flown in there and was trapped, its wings beating against her rib cage, only Heather couldn't tell if it was the anger that bubbled up inside her seemingly all the time now, or if she was afraid.

It was anger. She screwed her face up, scowled at the water's surface. Thought for a moment that the water reared back in terror.

Anger was easier, she had learned.

She looked down at her feet, where her red patent shoes shimmered beneath the bubbling water. Mummy would be so cross with her. She had told her not to wear the shoes, that they were for school, that they weren't to play in. But Heather had screwed up her face, made her eyes all small and stern, had said she was going to wear them anyway. Had waited for the thunder, her mother's face sliding into that flat expression, the one that said she was up for the fight, waited for her arms to cross across her narrow waist, the look that said, "Fine, I can stand here all day." Heather would have given in then. Honest she would. She would have puffed and rolled her eyes until they ached, but she'd have pulled the red patent shoes off, slipping her feet instead into the warm embrace of her wellie boots.

But that hadn't happened.

Instead, Mummy's eyes had got full, the way they did when she was thinking about Daddy, and she had turned away, shrugging her shoulders. And Heather had stood in the hallway, staring at the red shoes, thinking how pretty they looked against the twisty tiles, and wishing she had just put her wellies on anyway.

Heather Cole sat on the bank, the tree stump hard against the small of her back, and listened, as hard as she possibly could. She cocked her head to one side, as if that way she could make the laughter come back. She glanced behind her, up toward the top of the embankment. Maybe Mummy was coming to find her. Maybe she'd taken Tara out of the swing and they were on their way to get her, only she couldn't hear their steps because of the water.

That could be it.

"I don't know, Orl. Heather is just so angry. All the time. It's like ... ever since we lost Ed ... she ... it's like she hates me."

Heather had stood in the silent hallway, hadn't moved or breathed, just pushed her ear against the living room door. Could hear the tears in her mother's voice. Heard Auntie Orla sigh.

"She doesn't hate you, Selena. Really she doesn't. She's just ... she's seven. She's grieving and she doesn't know how to handle it. Of course, she's taking it out on you. You're all she has left."

"I know. But she was such a daddy's girl. Sometimes I wish ..."

"What?"

Then her mother had sighed like a giant gust of wind. "Nothing. It doesn't matter."

Maybe they had left her. Had Mummy taken Tara and simply gone home? She had said that Heather was angry all the time. Heather knew what that meant. She was naughty. Daddy used to call her his little spitfire. Heather preferred that word. It sounded better. Maybe Mummy had left because she just couldn't deal with Heather anymore.

Heather scratched at the dirt beside her, watching her white nail turn slowly black. No. Mummy wouldn't do that. Would she? But then nothing in Heather's world worked the way it used to work, and so now she simply didn't know.

The bird's wings beat faster now.

Heather pulled her feet free from the water, the rushing cold making her shiver. She began to clamber up the bank, steeper than it had been when she climbed down it, arching hand over hand. It will happen now. Now. Now. She strained. Was that it? Was that Mummy's voice? Wasn't it? No. It was just the wind. As the ground flattened out beneath her fingers, she raised her head to see the cloud-soaked sky, the dew-slicked slide, the swing hanging slack.

She stood looking around the empty playground. She wondered if she was dead. It seemed that her breath had stopped. Was this how it had been for her father? That he had simply ... stopped? That everything had fallen silent and then he was just gone? But no. She had heard the whispers, the word that Mummy and Auntie Orla were so careful never to say when they thought she was listening. Bomb. She was seven, only seven. But she knew what a bomb was. In her mind there was noise, more noise than seemed possible. Heat. Fire. And then nothing. So perhaps it did all come back to silence in the end.

Heather Cole pulled herself up, stood on the crest of the bank. She tried to breathe, the way she had seen her mother do when she was trying to stay calm, when fear was only inches away. She sucked in a breath through her nose, held it, then exhaled, the sound whistling into the silence.

They were gone — Tara, Mummy. She was alone.

She felt tears prick at her. Felt her lip shake.

It was the shoes. It was the stupid red shoes. If she had just put the wellies on like she'd wanted to really, they would still be here. Heather looked down at her sopping wet feet, hating them now.

Then there was a sound, a wail that punctured the silence.

Heather swiveled her head, left to right, trying to locate the source of the sound. Then she saw it. Tara sitting in the slack swing. She was still there. Tara was still there. Heather pushed the awful shoes into the long grass, took off at a run across the playground, ran like her life depended on it, past the slide, the empty roundabout, to the limp-hanging swing and her three-year-old sister.

"Tara! Tara! It's okay! I'm coming!" She slip-slid on the gravel, her voice coming out small, and even to her own ears she sounded younger than her seven years.

Tara's head snapped toward her, and she stared at Heather with those huge blue eyes, their mother's eyes, so everyone said. Her face had pinked up, the way it always did when she cried, her lower lip jutting forward, shuddering.

"Mama, Heafer. Mama's gone."

CHAPTER 2

Investigating a Vanishing

DC Leah Mackay — Tuesday, 9:46 AM

"She was here? When the girls saw her last?"

I sense rather than see the PC nod, because I'm not looking at her. My gaze has been trapped, caught on the empty swing. It has begun to rain, soft drops, more like a mist than anything with any guts to it, and the water is pooling on the red plastic of the seat, transforming the rusting chain into a Christmas garland. Dr. Selena Cole would have stood here, just where I am standing. Would have reached out her hands, wrapping them tightly around the metal chains, her three- year-old daughter sitting beneath them. Maybe they were laughing, the little one thrilled and a little scared as her mother pushed her, backward, forward.

I take a breath, feel the emptiness chase me, diving in, down my throat, nestling in my lungs. The vacuum where Selena Cole once stood. I look at the mountains that tower around us, dwarfing the tiny hamlet of Endleby. Hereford feels so far away from here, and yet it must be, what, five miles at most?

"The little one, Tara, was on the swing." The PC, Sophie I think her name is, tucks her chin inside her jacket, voice disappearing into the fabric. "Mother was pushing her. Heather, the seven-year-old, had gone down to the stream." She indicates a shallow rise, an infant summit climbing to an oak tree, then dropping away out of sight. "There's a little brook there, over that hill. When the girl came back, her mother was gone, sister was alone."

"Heather didn't hear anything?" I look down toward the road, my eye following its gentle curve. Twenty meters, thirty maybe, and then the house, stone-built, double-fronted, screaming of age and money, immediately abutting the playground. Selena Cole has vanished so close to her home.

"Nothing. The neighbor — Vida Charles — found the girls, must have only been a short time later, sobbing their hearts out."

I nod, and as I nod, I try to find the line, the one that delineates my life, separating the mother from the detective. Her girls, Selena Cole's. Not my girls. Mine are fine. Mine are safe. I shake myself, pull myself up taller, like the extra inch will make a difference. It's baby brain. I'll blame baby brain. Can you do that when your babies are nearly two years old? I guess if it's twins, then you get an extension.

"The girls okay?" I ask.

Her girls, Selena Cole's girls, aged three and seven.

Sophie shrugs. "As okay as they can be, I guess." She sighs, nods toward the house. "The neighbor is in there with them. I've got a call in to their aunt, and she's on her way."

"The father?" I ask. My gaze moves from the swings across the gravel, the grass, down toward the road. Where did Selena Cole go? What happened? Did something just snap in her? The demands of parenthood or marriage or just life suddenly overloading her, so that in the end she couldn't remember exactly who she was, couldn't push through the noise and the responsibilities and the chaos. Did she stand here, one daughter on the swing, the other playing, and then just turn, walk away? The road is right there. Did she get into a car, drive off, leaving her children behind?

"The father is dead."

I look at Sophie. "He's dead?"

"Do you remember that terrorist attack in Brazil last year? He was there — Ed Cole. Apparently, they ran some kind of consultancy business together, he and Selena. Pretty successful by all accounts. They were at a conference when it was hit. She survived. He didn't."

"God!"

"I know. Those poor kids." Sophie says it abstractly, as if it is a story she has read.

I study her for a second. Decide that she doesn't have kids.

I look back at the house. Think of the weight resting on Selena, the grief. Was that it? She was her girls' world, their security, their sanctuary. But a support beam can only hold so much weight. Did Selena collapse in on herself, her knees buckling from the pressure of it all?

I glance at Sophie. "We need to get the word out. We may be looking for a body."

She nods slowly. "Suicide?"

I stand where Selena stood, reach out my fingers, touch the chain of the swing that she touched, imagine that I can hear the belly laugh of a little girl, the flip- flopping footsteps of another.

Selena. What have you done?

I pull my coat tighter around me. The rain has finally decided to put some effort in, large drops softly plunking against the swing in an easy rhythm. Even though it is early in the day, the sky is the color of battleships. "I need to speak to Heather and Tara."

The lights are on in the house. All of them, it seems. The wide-eyed bay windows gaze outward, spilling an orange glow into the small walled garden. I can see the children inside, bundled together, still wearing their coats and buried so deep in the cushions on the sofa that it is hard to distinguish them from it. The elder holds the younger within her arms, her long, biscuit-blond hair spilling over her like a shawl. Her lips are moving, and I study her, trying to make out what it is she says. Then her face is transposed with that of my Georgia and suddenly I realize that she is singing, her mouth shaping the words to "Let It Go." Tears prick at my eyes. I think of Georgia, spinning around the kitchen, a clumsy pirouette, singing the Frozen song loudly and keylessly. But it's not Georgia. I shake my head, a sharp, hard movement that makes Sophie look at me, curious. It is not Georgia, but Heather Cole, seven years old, cradling her sister, Tara Cole, three years old. And their mother has vanished.

"Shall we?" Sophie gestures to the door.

I nod.

The house is warm, uncomfortably so after the chill of the outside. The hallway is wide, autumnal Victorian floor tiles giving way to hard wood trim, the walls a deep luscious red. I cannot help but feel that this is what it must be like to stand inside the ventricle of a heart. There is a strip of pictures in heavy iron frames. Heather and Tara, two slender blond girls, their heads together, smiles all but identical. Heather and Tara again, but this time they hang off a woman — late thirties, her hair dark, cut into a chin-length bob so that it swings, trailing across her lips. I stand, transfixed by the image of Selena Cole. I wouldn't call her beautiful, rather striking, with her large eyes, her full lips, her slightly uneven features. I stare at her, wondering where it is that she has gone.

There is another picture, a third to complete the triptych. Heather and Tara and Selena with a man. Ed Cole, I presume. I breathe in, inhaling the loss this family has had to bear. He is handsome in an offhand kind of way, broad and rugged, a nose that looks like it has been broken once, or even twice, his head shaved, lower face swathed in a beard, light veering to red. There is a sparkle to him, so much life that it seems impossible he could be dead.

I find myself thinking of Alex. We have a photo on our mantelpiece, the four of us knotted together, Georgia on my lap, Tess on Alex's, taken when the girls were eighteen months old, everyone laughing even as Tess tries to squirm away, her eye caught by a nearby cat. It was a good day. A bright day. Before I came back to work, when I could still legitimately claim to be a mother, a detective. After all, it was a career break. A break. That means you are returning, that you will come back exactly as you left, not as some impoverished facsimile, there in body but not in spirit.

I hear Sophie enter the living room ahead of me, realize that I have taken too long.

The girls are still huddled together on the sofa, an elderly woman perched beside them, her back straight, fingers plucking at her thick wool trousers. She looks up as I enter, expression serious. The neighbor, I guess. The one who found the children.

"Mrs. Charles? I'm Detective Constable Leah Mackay."

She nods her head once, firmly. "Vida Charles. I live a couple of doors down. Their neighbor," she adds, redundantly. "Mind, my house isn't like this. Only a little one, mine. My husband was a postman. Retired now, of course. So, you know, we couldn't afford a big house. Not like this one ..." She trails off as if she has forgotten how the thought ends.

I nod, smile. But I'm not thinking about her. I'm thinking about the children. The little one, Tara, isn't looking at me. She is holding her sister's hand, her gaze far off, as if the enormity of what has happened is simply too much for her little mind to process. But Heather is looking at me; her gaze has not left my face.

I sink down, sitting on the sofa beside her.

"Heather? I'm Leah."

She studies me appraisingly. "Are you a policeman ..." — she catches herself — "lady?"

I nod. I keep the smile, as if it will somehow ease her pain.

"You're going to find my mum." It isn't a question. It is a statement. She says it as a mantra, one hand stroking her little sister's hair. "She'll come back then."

She is Tess, asking another police officer where I have gone. She is Georgia, instructing another police officer to find me, to return me to her.

I nod again. Try to forget that I want to cry.

A Start in Kidnap and Ransom

Dr. Selena Cole

(Originally published in London Us magazine)

It began with a kidnapping. A woman, thirty-five-year-old Astrid, readies herself for work one fine London day. She kisses her husband, Jan, and her four-year-old son, Gabriel, good-bye, and then hurries to catch her train. By the time she returns, a little over eight hours later, both her husband and her son are gone. Vanished into thin air.

Astrid is my sister.

You do not go looking for kidnap and ransom. It comes looking for you.

I was on the train when she called me, watching the sun sink on a satisfying spring day. It had been a day like any other, my world replete with the walking wounded, returning servicemen fresh from war, trying to make sense of the world they had returned to, how much of themselves they had left behind. It is about finding a new normal, I would tell them. Learning to live in the world as it is now, in the body you have now.

The words are easy. Empty. You do not understand the weight of them until your normal also disappears.

"Selena ... my baby. He's gone."

The police tracked them as far as Poland. Have there been any problems? they asked my sister. In your marriage? Your lives together?

(Continues…)



Excerpted from "The Missing Hours"
by .
Copyright © 2018 Emma Kavanagh.
Excerpted by permission of KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Title Page,
Copyright Page,
Dedication,
The Disappearance of Selena Cole,
Investigating a Vanishing,
The Body,
Auntie Orla,
Those Left Behind,
What the Darkness Takes,
Eighty-two Days,
Coming Home,
The Reappearance of Selena Cole,
A Good Man,
An Impression of a Victim,
Going Rogue,
A Fight to the Death?,
Survivors,
Finding Beck,
Tumbling Back,
The Breath of the Devil,
The Trouble with a Closed Case,
A Question of What Is Important,
The Cost of Infidelity,
Life Beyond,
Held Hostage,
An Unrequited Love,
On the Banks of the River,
A Victim or a Liar?,
The Compromise of Marriage,
Blood,
The Suspect,
The Watcher,
Chasing the Money,
A Deal with the Devil,
Lies,
The Car,
Becoming Unstuck,
Square One,
What Comes Next,
Full Circle,
Everything Changes,
Into the Mountains,
The Disappearance of Selena Cole,
A Placing of Pieces,
6:02 PM,
A Primer in K&R,
The Value of Money,
The Only Way,
Hurrying to Wait,
None So Blind,
A Good Man,
The Arrest,
Homecoming,
Acknowledgments,
Author's Note,

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