Twenty years ago, on a hot August evening, twelve-year-old Junie Calder walked down to the water to watch the boats and never came home. There was no body. There was no proof. There was only a town that decided what it wanted to believe, and a sixteen-year-old sister who never could.
Now the drought has come to Dell's Reach, and the reservoir is giving back what it swallowed. As the water falls, the drowned town of Old Lowater rises into the light: rooftops, a church steeple, the streets where a family once lived. And Frances Calder has come home.
Frances reconstructs crimes for a living. Give her the ground and she will tell you where a person stood, where they fell, how far they were carried and by how many hands. She has spent her whole career insisting the ground does not lie. Now she has turned that gift on the one case she could never close, and on the dying old man she has always believed knows the truth.
She tells herself she is only reconstructing what happened. She would have parked here. She would have waited there. But there is a thin line between explaining a thing and intending it, and with every quiet hour Frances spends at the water's edge, that line grows harder to see.
The lake is almost empty now. Soon there will be nothing left to hide what lies on the bottom. And not everyone who goes looking for the truth is hoping to find it.
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