Breaker's Reef (e-bog) af Blackstock, Terri
Blackstock, Terri (forfatter)

Breaker's Reef e-bog

57,30 DKK (inkl. moms 71,62 DKK)
Murder and mystery continue in Book Four of the Cape Refuge series A famous mystery writer has just moved to Cape Refuge when a teenage girl is found murdered. Sheila Carusoex-con, mother to Sadie and Caleb, and resident of Hanover Houseis working for the writer when she discovers that a scene in one of his novels matches the crime scene. When Police Chief Cade and Blair Owens discover a second...
E-bog 57,30 DKK
Forfattere Blackstock, Terri (forfatter)
Forlag Zondervan
Udgivet 26 maj 2009
Længde 336 sider
Genrer Religious and spiritual fiction
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9780310570844
Murder and mystery continue in Book Four of the Cape Refuge series A famous mystery writer has just moved to Cape Refuge when a teenage girl is found murdered. Sheila Carusoex-con, mother to Sadie and Caleb, and resident of Hanover Houseis working for the writer when she discovers that a scene in one of his novels matches the crime scene. When Police Chief Cade and Blair Owens discover a second dead teenagermirroring a murder in another of the eccentric writer's booksCade is drawn into a web of trickery and deceit. Evidence turns up in Cade's own truck, and suddenly he becomes the number-one suspect. Cade tries to clear his name, but when eighteen-year-old Sadie Caruso disappears, tensions mount to a fever pitch. Can Cade find the real killer before Sadie winds up dead? Is the novelist a demented killer, or a hapless victim? And what does Sadie's own mother have to do with the crimes? Secrets are uncovered, while lessons are learned about the sins of the father being visited upon his children. Will the consequences of Sheila's life be fatal, or is there redemption and mercy for her and her children? ';Chief Matthew Cade rarely considered another line of work, but news of the dead teenage girl made him long for a job as an accountant or electriciansome benign vocation that didn't require him to look into the eyes of grieving parents.'