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Cold Truth [Truth Series Book 1] [Secure eReader (recommended)/Mobipocket/Microsoft Reader]
eBook by Mariah Stewart
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eBook Category: Suspense/Thriller
eBook Description: Truth Has Deadly Consequences! Twenty-six years ago, even before a series of brutal murders rocked the idyllic town of Bowers Inlet, Cassie Burke lost her parents, her sister, and nearly her own life to a transient befriended by her father. Back then, Cassie was a scared kid--now she�s a homicide cop. Back then, the suspect was caught and convicted--he died in prison. But now the killing has started again. And all signs indicate that the Bayside Strangler has come back for more. With too many victims and too few suspects, Cassie has her hands full investigating the case, while working through the old trauma it has brought to the surface. Luckily, FBI agent Rick Cisco is dispatched to lend support. Together, Cassie and Rick must uncover the link between the dark past and the dangerous present to bring this small town�s long nightmare to an end. If they fail, an elusive fiend will slip back into the shadows ... to watch and wait--and kill another day. In matters of crime, there are many versions of the truth.
eBook Publisher: Random House, Inc./Random House Publishing Group
Fictionwise Release Date: September 2005
This eBook is part of the following series:
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Available eBook Formats [Secure eReader (recommended)/Mobipocket/Microsoft Reader - What's this?]: SECURE MOBIPOCKET FORMAT (363 KB], SECURE MICROSOFT READER FORMAT (544 KB] - Requires Microsoft Reader 2.1.1 for PCs, or Microsoft Reader 2.2.2 on Pocket PC 2002 handheld devices. Some older Pocket PCs can be upgraded. Learn More., SECURE EREADER (RECOMMENDED) FORMAT (265 KB], OEBFF Format (IMP) [618 KB]
All formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED
Microsoft Reader ISBN, Adobe Acrobat Reader ISBN, eReader (recommended) ISBN: 0345484797 MobiPocket Reader ISBN: 9780345484796

One The early-morning fog had yet to be burned off by a sun still snoozing behind low-lying clouds, but the gulls were already circling over the bay and the shorebirds had begun to forage along the waterline. Although almost summer, the air still bore a bit of a chill, and the remnants of a cool spring night hung in the damp air. Waves rolled gently onto the beach, tiny swells outlined with white foam that left damp impressions on the pale yellow sand. Overhead, a gull screamed at the intruder who crested the top of the dune. "Oh, shut up." The woman barely glanced at the ornery bird that swooped over her head and continued to rain gull curses down upon her. Detective Cassandra Burke stood with her hands on her hips, and through the fog sought the outline of the Barnegat Lighthouse across the bay. She'd just ended her fourth night of surveillance of a motel where suspected drug sales were being conducted, and she was both exhausted from lack of sleep and stiff from inactivity. She toed off her shoes and left them in the sand, then set off for the marina a mile down the beach. She'd walk the kinks out, then run back. Two miles wasn't really long enough, but it was the best she could do this morning. Maybe she'd feel better. Maybe not. But she had a meeting at eight, and needed to sandwich in a little exercise, then a little breakfast, before she headed to the police station. The sand on the bay beach was coarser than that on the ocean side, and allowed a more solid footing. She walked briskly, sidestepping the spiny helmets of the dead and dying horseshoe crabs that had washed up onshore overnight and had been unable to crawl back before the tide went out. When she reached the inlet, she paused long enough to watch a few large power boats—charters, mostly—as they set out to sea with their passengers, sport fishermen who had paid for the privilege of casting their lines into the Atlantic with hopes of snagging a few feisty blues before the sun set later that day. She waved to the captain of the Normandy Maid as it passed, a half-dozen or so eager fishermen on deck, their baseball caps shielding their faces from the sun that would soon enough grace them with its presence, their arms and noses slick with SPF 35. It wasn't much of a living, running a charter, but for those who'd never done much else, it was a way of life, a life she knew well. Her father had captained his own boat, the Jenny B, named after her mother. He'd never made much money, but he loved to go to work every day. In the off-season, he ran the only boat storage facility in Bowers Inlet, but his life was out on the water. Few days passed that didn't find Cass here, at the point where the bay eased into the ocean, watching the boats head out, and remembering. As a very little child, she'd watched from her mother's arms as her father's boat chugged by. "Wave to Daddy, Cassie," her mother would say. "See him there, on the deck? Wave to Daddy, honey . . ." And Cass would wave wildly. Most days, her father would salute as he passed, touching just his right index finger to the brim of his hat. A few years later, Cass stood on the rocks nearest the water, holding tightly to her little sister's hand. "Wave to Daddy, Trish," she'd say. "Wave to Daddy . . ." The alarm on her watch buzzed, bringing her back to the present. She turned away from the inlet and started back down the beach, running so fast her muscles barely had time to burn before she reached the spot where she'd left her shoes. If she was going to grab something to eat before her meeting, she'd have to leave now. She wanted real food. Through the wee hours of the night, she'd had enough coffee to keep her wired for several days, while Jeff Spencer, the only other detective on the town's small police force, had packed away enough cream donuts to make her sick just to watch. Eggs and sausage and toast should do it, she was thinking as she slipped into her shoes. And orange juice. Her stomach rumbling, she headed back to her car. If she drove fast enough, she might even have time for a short stack of pancakes. * * * "Detective Burke?" "Yes?" Cassie paused midway across the lobby of the new police station. "The lady at the desk there . . ." "Sergeant Carter." Emphasis on sergeant. "Right. Sergeant Carter. She said you were working on my son's case . . ." "Your son is . . . ?" "Derrick Mills." He spoke the name softly. "Yes. Derrick. Yes, I'm working on that case." Cassie swallowed back a sigh. Derrick Mills was one of five kids arrested for selling drugs at the regional high school three weeks ago. She wasn't blind to the father's pain and embarrassment and wished she could ease it somehow, even as she knew she could not. Copyright © 2005 by Marti Robb
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