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2000s: Buried in the past is a terrible injustice
2000s: Buried in the past is a terrible injustice
The boy studied the bruise turning yellow at the base of his neck. With quick fingers his mother tightened his tie, and pulled his collar high above it. Her eyes alone said, We will not speak of this…
Years later, a man is found shot dead in a local park. On his phone is a draft text: I can’t keep this secret any longer. The recipient is unnamed.
Detective Robyn Carter knows this secret is the key to the case, but his friends and family don’t offer any clues, and all her team have to go on is a size-ten footprint.
Then a woman is found in a pool of blood at the bottom of her staircase, and a seemingly insignificant detail in her stepdaughter’s statement makes Robyn wonder: are the two bodies are connected, and has the killer only just begun?
When another body confirms Robyn’s worst fears, she realises she’s in a race against time to stop the killer before they strike again. But just as she thinks she’s closing in, one of her own team goes missing.
The area is also officially known as Cannock Chase Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and was designated as such in 1958. It’s a former Royal forest and is also a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI). since it has a remarkable range of landscape and wildlife, including a herd of around 800 fallow deer . The flora and fauna of the landscape is also of note.
There are a number of visitor centres, museums and waymarked paths, including the Heart of England Way and the Staffordshire Way. There are also accessible trails to enable people to explore and experience the park for themselves. Maybe a gruffalo really does live here?
To the North is Shugborough Hall, ancestral home of the Earls of Lichfield. At to the south – Castle Ring, an Iron Age hill fort, which is the highest point on the Chase.
Destination: Staffordshire, Stafford Author/Guide: Carol Wyer Departure Time: 2000s
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