By Daily Mail Reporter

Last updated at 6:30 PM on 8th May 2011

  • She reveals how she slept in a separate room after she felt hurt and upset by what husband Gerry said
  • The hours leading up to moment Madeleine was discovered missing are revealed
  • Why the McCanns left their three children alone in the holiday apartment
Determined: Kate McCann with her daughter Amelie at the Church of the Sacred Heart

Determined: Kate McCann with her daughter Amelie at the Church of the Sacred Heart

Angry Kate McCann slept alone the night before Madeleine disappeared after Gerry offended her at dinner, she revealed today.

Upset by his 'abrupt' behaviour, she took a spare bed in the children's room at  the family's holiday apartment in Portugal.

In another extract of her upcoming book, Mrs McCann reveals she is haunted by  an awful missed chance when she believes Madeleine tried to alert her that  somebody had attempted to break into the bedroom where she slept with her  siblings Sean and Amelie.

With hindsight, it could have been her 'one chance to prevent what was about to  happen', said Mrs McCann, adding: 'And I blew it.'

Madeleine disappeared aged three from her bed in the family's apartment in  Praia da Luz, the Algarve, on the evening of May 3, 2007, while her parents  were eating at a nearby Tapas restaurant - as they did every night of the  holiday.

The possible missed chance came at breakfast on the day Madeleine vanished, when the little girl disconcerted her mother by asking: 'Why didn't you come  when Sean and I cried last night?' Mrs McCann, 43, says: 'Not for a moment did we think there might be some  sinister explanation. But it is [now] my belief there was somebody either in or  trying to get into the children's bedroom that night, and that is what  disturbed them.

'So haunted have I been ever since by Madeleine's words that I've continued to  blame myself for not sitting down and making completely certain there was no  more information I could draw out of her.' Her heart-wrenching book, called Madeleine, is being published this Thursday -  the day of Madeleine's eighth birthday.


Mrs McCann's book will be on sale on May 12 - her missing daughter Madeleine's eighth birthday. She is pictured here with her youngest daughter Amelie going to the Church of the Sacred Heart in their hometown

In one extract, Mrs McCann describes her horror at discovering a predatory  paedophile could easily have been tipped off that Madeleine was vulnerable, by  a staff note on display at reception which revealed the McCanns 'were leaving  our young children alone...and checking on them intermittently'. The note was  written by a receptionist to staff explaining why they wanted to reserve tables  every night close to their apartment.

Missing: Madeleine has still not been found four years after she disappeared in the Algarve

Missing: Madeleine has still not been found four years after she disappeared in the Algarve

Although she is 'loath' to make it public by writing it in the book, Mrs McCann  describes how she and Gerry had a row on the final night before their daughter  was lost.

As the couple and their holiday friends were enjoying a drink at the bar, at  11.50pm, Mr McCann 'abruptly announced' that he was tired and off to bed.

His wife was 'slightly hurt' he had gone without her, and writes: 'He's not a  touchy-feely guy. Like many men, he assumes I take his feelings as read and  doesn't see any need to express them with soft-soaping, flowers or cards.

'I am not sure why I was miffed by his lack of social graces that particular  evening. Perhaps because the other guys in the group were all attentive "new  men", compared with Gerry at least, and I was a bit embarrassed.' When she followed him a few minutes later, she found him already asleep and  snoring and so, 'still feeling a bit offended', she chose a bed in the  children's room because 'my peaceful slumbering babies were more attractive  room-mates'.

Former GP Mrs McCann, whose 384-page book is being serialised in The Sunday  Times and The Sun newspapers, says she still feels sad at the memory - though  stresses the 'isolated' incident was not reflective of their relationship as a  couple.

In an interview with The Sunday Times, Mrs McCann says her hospital consultant  husband had an ability to 'switch off' from the grief, and was 'functioning'  again much sooner than she was. She admitted: 'Sometimes I found it almost  offensive, as if somehow he wasn't grieving enough.'

Recalling a television appeal to the abductor they recorded together, Mr McCann  added: 'That day I remember we were concerned we weren't crying. The thing is,  we're not actors. We were trying to focus on getting our message out.' The McCanns, of Rothley, Leicestershire, are hoping the sale of the book will  raise 1million to fund the continued search for their missing daughter.


Unity: The couple have remained together and are hoping the sales from the book will raise money so they can continue searching for Madeleine

Unity: The couple have remained together and are hoping the sales from the book will raise money so they can continue searching for Madeleine

Yesterday Mrs McCann and her youngest daughter Amelie attended church in the  village, where prayers were said for Madeleine.

Mrs McCann dispels suggestions she and Gerry were drunk on the fateful night,  saying their alcohol consumption was 'hardly excessive', and that although  their group of nine friends was nosier than other tables, they were not  'partying wildly'.

In fact, she said they were so tired they nearly had dinner inside their own  apartment on the night Madeleine vanished - but then decided that would be anti-social.


MASS PRAYER

With the bumbling Portuguese police getting nowhere, terror-struck Kate McCann  turned to all she had left: divine intervention.

Five hours after Madeleine went missing, she tried to mobilise a mass prayer at  3am.

First she telephoned her friend Father Paul Seddon, the priest who had married  her and Gerry in 1998, and then her best friend Michelle back in the UK.

'I needed her to get her large Catholic family praying too,' said Mrs McCann,  who had already been on her knees in her bedroom, 'begging God and Our Lady to  protect Madeleine and help us find her'.

Unsurprisingly, her friend Michelle was asleep and her partner Jon, who  answered the phone, was at first reluctant to wake her.

Mrs McCann said: 'Poor Jon - I don't think he could quite get his brain in gear  for a moment or two. "No one's listening" I wept. "Nothing's happening".' After arranging the mass prayer, Mrs McCann could not sleep, but her husband  told her: 'Kate, we need to rest.'

WHY THEY HAD NO BABYSITTER

Leaving Madeleine with a babysitter who none of them knew would have been  'unwise', Kate McCann declares in her book.

Explaining why they did not make use of the babysitting service offered by the Ocean Club, she said the couple never even thought about it.

She said: 'I could argue that leaving my children alone with someone neither we nor they knew would have been unwise, and it's certainly not something we'd do  at home, but we didn't even consider it.

'We felt so secure we simply didn't think it was necessary.' With the infamous tapas restaurant 'so near', the McCanns and their friends  decided to do their own child-checking service, said Mrs McCann, adding: 'It goes without saying that we now bitterly regret it.'

However British police later told the couple their holiday apartment, being a corner flat on the ground floor, next to two roads and with secluded entrances, made it a perfect target for criminals.

Childless Kate and Gerry McCann endured two traumatic bouts of IVF treatment before conceiving Madeleine.

As a young doctor, Mrs McCann had seen countless desperate women put themselves through the procedure - and had declared then she would never put herself through the pain if she ever found she could not have children naturally.

But after two years of failing to get pregnant, she said she 'didn't think twice' about going down the IVF route, and her first attempt seemed to go well. She felt so confident and excited, going to the hospital two weeks after the embryos were implanted, that when the pregnancy test was negative,

'I simply couldn't believe it,' she recalls. Two months later, the couple had a further setback, when the hospital informed them two more healthy embryos they had had frozen during the first IVF attempt had not survived being defrosted. 'Another pallet of bricks dropped on my chest,' said Mrs McCann of the news.

The couple were keen to start trying again immediately, but a practical problem stood in their way: at the point Gerry would need to provide his sperm, he was due to give a presentation at a cardiac conference in Berlin, an important stepping stone in his career.

Mrs McCann recalled: 'My heart sank. It would mean many more months of waiting, but how could he miss this conference? That evening, as I was cooking dinner, Gerry gave me a hug and told me he'd decided not to go to Berlin. The IVF was more important.'

This time, the procedure was successful, and at six weeks' pregnant, Mrs McCann had a scan and saw a beating heart.

'And that was the first time we saw our little Madeleine,' she says. 'Even then she was beautiful.'

Here's what readers have had to say so far. Why not add your thoughts below, or debate this issue live on our message boards.

The comments below have been moderated in advance.

I can't help but think, that for every second that the media has given to following the spectacle, it could have been used to help others. What about all the other 'Maddies' who, because their parents weren't rich enough couldn't get air time to ask for help? How many other lives could have been saved instead of covering this one? What about the Other parents who have lost children, had them kidnapped, and can't get anyone to help them, because everyone is focussing on poor little Maddie. Are other children not as special as this one? No, I believe the McCanns should end this.

The Portuguese plod were simply not up to the job and were too arrogant to admit it. The Schengen Accord means that criminals can roam continental Europe without being checked at borders. The EU needs to get its act together and sort out an effective response to serious issues like child abduction.

Well said Annon beds, Which one of us can say we haven't made a serious error of judgement whilst caring for children? I did. I hired a holiday house and on the fist night I let a child sleep in 'the garden room' The next day a local told me not to let anyone sleep in this room because 'a weirdo' was known to have broken into this room, on several occasions. I could easily have been in the same situation as Kate and Gerry. I hope that Maddy is found safe and well and my heart goes out to her, her parents and her family.

"The next day she recalled how Madeleine asked her why she didn't come into the bedroom when she and her little brother Sean cried. Puzzled by the statement, but not aware of its significance, the family continued as normal." I am not sure I understand this. Why would Kate McCann be puzzled that Madeleine asked her why she didn't come into the bedroom when she and her brother were crying? And what's the significance now? I hope Madeleine is found, the more details that emerge, the stranger and more mysterious things seem.

Kate and her husband made a serious error of judgement in leaving their daughter alone, but as parents haven't we all made serious judgement calls at some point or another in our parenting (or many times in our parenting). Annon, Beds, 08/5/2011 15:31 It is horible and I cannot understand their loss, BUT I do not even leave my 10 year old in the car alone, let alone leave her in a room alone with 2 other children in a strange country. Haven't we all made serious judgement call's? NO, never in my life would I leave a child in a hotel room while I went out for dinner. I feel sorry for Maddy, not her mother/father!

How does publishing in the paper that Kate had a row with her husband and slept in separate beds help Madeleine? It doesnt, and it smacks of attention seeking behaviour. There are currently two articles running on the McCanns in this paper at the moment, do they really need so much publicity? I applaud them in their attempts to find Madeleine and I hope they succeed, but most of the items of news now are around Kate and Gerry, and not related to Madeleine. I wish them well, but I certainly wont be buying the book.

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