Marnie Riches

The Girl Who Broke the Rules


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29 January

      

       CHAPTER 68: South East London, mortuary, later

      

       CHAPTER 69: Amsterdam, later

      

       CHAPTER 70: Amsterdam, Nieuw West area, then, police headquarters, later

      

       CHAPTER 71: Amsterdam, Ad’s apartment, then NOS TV studios, then police headquarters, 30 January

      

       CHAPTER 72: Amsterdam, police headquarters, later

      

       CHAPTER 73: Amsterdam, hospital, 31 January

      

       CHAPTER 74: Amsterdam, police headquarters

      

       CHAPTER 75: South East London, 14 February

      

       CHAPTER 76: Amsterdam, hospital, later

      

       CHAPTER 77: Soho, London, later

      

       CHAPTER 78: Laren, the Netherlands, 15 February

      

       CHAPTER 79: Cambridge, St John’s College, later

      

       CHAPTER 80: Laren, the Netherlands, 16 February

      

       CHAPTER 81: Broadmoor Psychiatric Hospital, later

      

       CHAPTER 82: A secret location near Laren, later

      

       CHAPTER 83: Stansted airport, Essex, later

      

       CHAPTER 84: Amsterdam, then Laren, later

      

       CHAPTER 85: A secret location near Laren, later

      

       CHAPTER 86: A secret location near Laren, moments later, then, the Laren house

      

       CHAPTER 87: A secret location near Laren, later

      

       CHAPTER 88: Amsterdam, hospital, 18 February

      

       CHAPTER 89: Broadmoor Psychiatric Hospital, later

      

       CHAPTER 90: Amsterdam, hospital, later

      

       CHAPTER 91: Soho, London, later

      

       CHAPTER 92: Berlin, Germany, 23 February

      

       CHAPTER 93: Amsterdam, hospital, later

      

       CHAPTER 94: Amsterdam, women’s prison, 28 February

      

       CHAPTER 95: Amsterdam, the Cracked Pot Coffee Shop, then, the hospital, later

       Keep Reading …

       Acknowledgements

       By the Same Author

       About the Publisher

       PROLOGUE

       Amsterdam, red light district, 16–17 January

      The jagged pain between her shoulder blades was fleeting. Magool flinched. Breathed in sharply at the unpleasant sensation. She loosened her seatbelt. Wriggled in the passenger seat to look behind her.

      In the dark, there was nothing to see.

      Then, she tried to reach behind to feel the leather. But her hands would not move. She stared down at them, bemused. They felt neither leaden nor numb. It was simply as if they no longer existed. And yet, there they sat, chapped from the cold, bitten nails, primly folded over her wringing-wet, jeans-clad thighs.

      Frowning, aware of her accelerated heartbeat, she tried to lift her legs, move her feet, wiggle her toes. Nothing. Why was her body not obeying her brain? She looked askance at the driver.

      ‘I can’t move,’ she said in Dutch. ‘What’s going on?’

      The driver stared resolutely ahead. Peering through the windscreen of the car as hail rattled onto the glass, accompanied by fat snowflakes. Swept by the wiper-blades into thin white columns on the windscreen’s periphery that grew thicker and thicker with every second that passed; white screens closing slowly on the real world.

      ‘Hey! Stop the car! Something’s wrong, I’m telling you. I can’t feel a thing.’ With difficulty, Magool could still turn her head – enough to see the side of her driver’s face. ‘Did you hear me?’

      Silence enveloped her, and she realised her words had not sounded at all except inside her head. Through the windscreen, she could just about make out the white-dusted cobbles of the road. The snow, illuminated by the bright, triangular shafts of the streetlights, came down like yellow-gold icing sugar, falling through a sieve. But where the hell were they going on this beautiful, foul night? Not towards her apartment, she was certain. And what was happening to her?

      She started to loll forward, held in her seat only by the belt. The driver reached out and with a large, strong hand,