London, 1996. Alexandra Young, seventeen years old, disappears at a busy Tube station. Days later, the Underground becomes a citywide haunting-whispers in tunnels, cold spots on platforms, and a surge of deadly accidents that bring the network to a standstill. Detective Inspector Ian Megevand has seen the unnatural before. When Alexandra's reappears, desperate for justice, he and his partner, Sergeant James Thatcher, are pulled into a case that defies logic-and a manhunt that refuses to stay among the living. As the suspects responsible stay one step ahead, thousands of restless spirits rise through London's arteries. To stop the chaos, Megevand must face his own past and a truth that could cost him his sanity. The Girl on the Tube is a dark, heart-pounding thriller where crime, grief, and the supernatural collide beneath the city-because some secrets refuse to stay buried. More about the story Beneath London's streets lies a world most commuters never see-dark service tunnels, abandoned platforms, sealed stations untouched since the Blitz. It is here the ghosts gather. As Megevand hunts those who think they've escaped justice, the city turns against him: trains stall, shadows move, accidents spike, and the dead begin to whisper across the network. Every hour the haunting grows.Every hour, more victims join the Underground's chorus.And every track leads back to a secret someone would kill to keep buried.Because in London's depths, the past isn't dead-it's waiting. Perfect for readers who love: Supernatural twists woven into gritty police proceduralsClaustrophobic, atmospheric London settingsEmotionally driven crime fiction with a paranormal edgeSeries detectives facing both human monsters and their own ghostsIf you love: slow-building dread that erupts into chaosdetectives battling forces they don't fully understandLondon lore and urban hauntingsthrillers grounded in real police work...this book was written for you. Perfect For Fans OfLJ Ross (DCI Ryan)C.J. TudorStephen King's urban supernaturalTrue-crime-meets-ghost-story narrativesLondon detective fiction