This gripping historical novel dramatizes one of America's most notorious crimes: the 1932 kidnapping of famous aviator Charles Lindbergh's son from his New Jersey home. Betty Gow, the twenty-six-year-old Scottish nanny for Charles Jr., was the last to see the child before he was taken, and she quickly became a person of interest. Mariah Fredericks brings Betty's perspective of the affair to vivid life: the heartache of losing her beloved charge, the desperation to exonerate herself, the anxiety of not knowing whom to trust among her friends and coworkers. Even those familiar with the case will be captivated by this poignant and suspenseful historical fiction—after all, it's highly likely the real-life culprit had an accomplice on the inside… (AG)