Lauren Child

Blink and You Die


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       Chapter 30. A stroke of luck

       Chapter 31. Place of death

       Chapter 32. Hit and run

       Chapter 33. One and the same

       Chapter 34. I remember nothing

       Chapter 35. Who to tell?

       Chapter 36. Loveday

       Chapter 37. A safe house

       Chapter 38. Lost and found

       Chapter 39. Cousin Mo

       Chapter 40. On the cards

       Chapter 41. What we know

       Chapter 42. Chasing a shadow

       Chapter 43. What to do if You are Caught in an Avalanche

       Chapter 44. Buried alive

       Chapter 45. Cold comfort

       Chapter 46. Run

       Chapter 47. On thin ice

       Chapter 48. Sorrow

       Chapter 49. We wish you a merry Christmas

       Chapter 50. Even the mundane can tell a story

       Chapter 51. The fly barrette

       Chapter 52. Instinct

       Chapter 53. Nothing is completely safe

       Chapter 54. All systems are down

       Chapter 55. Make like bananas

       Chapter 56. The Eye Ball

       Chapter 57. A man about a dog

       Chapter 58. No Rule 81

       Chapter 59. Follow me

       Chapter 60. Hanging on by an eyelash

       Chapter 61. Blink and you die

       Chapter 62. 1974

       Two lucky escapes

       Heroics

       The oak on Amster Green

       A badge of approval

       Team players

       Crime pays

       A note on the Prism Vault codes

       Picture this

       Footnotes

       Acknowledgments

       Special thanks

       About the Publisher

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      IT HAPPENED ONE BRIGHT APRIL DAY when the child, then barely five weeks old, was sleeping. The world crashed down and the baby opened its eyes, but there was only darkness to see. The walls were packed around it, almost touching, and the doors and the windows all gone. The baby cried out, but no one came. It screamed and clenched its furious fists, trying in vain to push at the tomb of rubble, but nothing happened. Its little mind began to panic, its eyes closed shut and its heart began to hurt.

      She was alone and no one would ever find her.

      The baby had been left in the care of the housekeeper, who had just put some cookies to cool on the porch when, without warning, the ground began to shift and the buildings began to shake, trees creaked and then cracked. Some of them – the big oak on Amster Green – stood firm, others – the giant cedar of west Twinford – fell.

      Sidewalks buckled and streetlights toppled. The earth tremor lasted just a few seconds and Twinford City escaped by-and-large unscathed – a few buildings needed repair, but remarkably no one, not a soul, lost their life. The townsfolk mourned their fallen trees, but counted their blessings: no one had died. There was only one real casualty; the Fairbank house on Cedarwood was completely destroyed. After 200 years of standing just exactly where it was, looking out across the ever-changing townscape of west Twinford, this historic house was gone.

      It was the housekeeper who dug the child out with nothing but ‘the hands God gave her’. This woman had endured more than earthquakes in her time and no mere earth tremor was going to have her standing by while an infant lay buried, perhaps dead, perhaps alive. By the time the baby’s