

Now everyone-including Eden-is a suspect.Įveryone is keeping secrets, but only one is a murderer. But then a scream wakes the house in the middle of the night. Horrified that her get-away has been taken over, Eden decides to head home the next day. She's ready to shed her fear and return to the living, even if it means facing her paralyzing phobia of the dark.īut when she arrives at the park, the guest suite she thought was a private retreat is teeming with a group of twenty-somethings, all stuck in the orbit of their old college friendships. So when she finds paperwork in her husband's effects indicating that he reserved a week at a dark sky park, she goes. Everyone, including her family, has grown weary of her grief. She doesn't work, has given up on her love of photography, and is so plagued by night terrors that she can't sleep without the lights on. Since her husband died, Eden Wallace's life has diminished down to a tiny pinprick, like a far-off star in the night sky. " A brilliant concept, brilliantly told " -Jeffery Deaver, New York Times Bestselling Author "Fans of Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None will be riveted by Rader-Day's latest psychological thriller, which makes you question who you really know and trust and whether you should be afraid of the dark."- Library Journal, Starred Review
