Ein Flugzeugabsturz - nur ein namenloses Baby überlebt. 1980. In der Vorweihnachtsnacht kommt es im verschneiten Jura zu einem tragischen Unfall: Ein Flugzeugabsturz, den allein ein kleines Baby überlebt. Doch auf der Passagierliste sind zwei Säuglinge vermerkt, beide Mädchen, beide drei Monate alt. Welches der Babys wurde gerettet? In einer Zeit, in der es noch keine DNA-Tests gibt, ist dies kaum mit Sicherheit nachzuweisen. In einem aufwühlenden Sorgerechtsprozess, den die Großeltern beider Familien führen, fällt trotz letzter Zweifel schließlich ein Urteil: Emilie Vitral hat überlebt, nicht Lyse-Rose de Carville. Achtzehn Jahre später entdeckt ein Privatdetektiv den Schlüssel zur Wahrheit, kurz darauf wird er tot aufgefunden. Zuvor aber hat er Emilie seine Aufzeichnungen zukommen lassen, die das Leben der jungen Frau von Grund auf verändern. Ausgezeichnet mit dem Prix Maison de la Presse. 'Originelles Thema und emotionale Spannung bis zur letzten Seite.' Eliane Girard, Prima. 'Exzellenter Spannungsroman made in France. Durchwachte Nächte garantiert.' Isabelle Bourgeois, Avantages.
From the author of the "wonderfully ingenious" (Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review) novel After the Crash, a thrilling tale of a murder that takes place in Claude Monet's garden and the mystery that surrounds it.
Giverny, France. During the day, the town is the home of the famous artist Claude Monet and the gardens where he painted his Water Lilies. But once the tourists have gone, there is a darker side to the peaceful French village.
This is the story of thirteen days that begin with one murder and end with another. Jérôme Morval, a man whose passion for art was matched only by his passion for women, has been found dead in the stream that runs through the gardens. In his pocket is a postcard of Monet's Water Lilies with the words: Eleven years old. Happy Birthday.
Entangled in the mystery are three women: a young painting prodigy, the seductive village schoolteacher, and an old widow who watches over the village from a mill by the stream. All three of them share a secret. But what do they know about the discovery of Jérôme Morval's corpse? And what is the connection to the mysterious, rumored painting of Black Water Lilies?
"Wonderfully ingenious and altogether satisfying."---Marilyn Stasio, New York Times Book Review
Just after midnight on December 23, 1980, a night flight bound for Paris plummets toward the Swiss Alps, crashing into a snowy mountainside. Within seconds flames engulf the plane, which is filled with holiday travelers. Of the 169 passengers, all but one perish.
The sole survivor is a three-month-old girl--thrown from the airliner before fire consumes the cabin. But two infants were on board. Is "the Miracle Child of Mont Terri" Lyse-Rose or Emilie? The families of both girls step forward to claim the child. Dogged by bad luck, the Vitrals live a simple life, selling snacks from a van on the beaches of northern France. In contrast, the de Carvilles, who amassed a fortune in the oil business, are powerful-and dangerous.
Eighteen years later, a private detective tasked with solving the mystery of the girl known as "Lylie" is on the verge of giving up. As he contemplates taking his own life, Crédule Grand-Duc suddenly discovers a secret hidden in plain view. Will he live to tell it?
Meanwhile, Lylie, now a beautiful university student, entrusts a secret notebook into the hands of Marc, the brooding young man who loves her, and then vanishes. After Marc reads the notebook's contents, he embarks on a frantic search for Lylie.
But he is not the only one looking for her.