''Tense. Moving. Morally complex. Zina Pavlou is wholly unforgettable.'' Rachel RhysThey say she''s a murderer. She says nothing.London, 1954. Eva Georgiou has just returned from her shift at the glamorous Caf-e Paris, when she-s summoned to her second job: Greek interpreter for the Metropolitan Police. There, she is tasked with representing Zina Pavlou, a Cypriot woman who has been accused of the brutal murder of her daughter-in-law who has been bludgeoned, strangled and then set alight.Eva gets to work as Zina-s translator, but her concern grows that the case may be more complicated than it seems. Then Zina changes everything when she reveals she-s been accused of murder once before, years ago in Cyprus.While Eva-s obsession with the case deepens, so does her bond with Zina. And soon she will discover that when you lend your voice to an accused murderer, it comes at a devastating cost.A compelling historical crime novel set in the Greek diaspora