Itâs a crime scene worthy of Hieronymus Bosch, so shocking and so senseless that it challenges the local law and intrigues veteran reporter Geneva Chase, whose career may be dying alongside that of her small-town newspaper.
The Sheffield Post headline shouts, âCops Call Murder Scene âSlaughterhouse.ââ On the scene, Genie spurs the deputy police chief to tell her quietly, âSix bodies ... all nude ... hacked to pieces.â Even tough Geneva shivers. How could such a slaughter happen on Connecticutâs moneyed Gold Coast, to privileged couples inside a historic 1898 Queen Anne mansion on the shoreline of Long Island Sound? Where is the protection afforded by the gated community and the security technology in place?
For Geneva, battling alcoholism and bad choices, writing this story is the last chance to redeem herself. Sheâs lost every other major news job sheâs had. Working at her hometown newspaper is the end of the lineâthere will be nowhere else to go.
But ink still flows thick in her veins. Her story on Sheffieldâs unlikely killing field is the Postâs lead, soon picked up by metro papers, and she keeps it, exposing the turbulence beneath the secrets of the rich and entitled and their ability to buy off embarrassments. She is also tracking community connections, watching a hit-and-run case disappear through a large donation, interviewing dangerous suspects, visiting a swingers club, joining cops for a burglary bust, and taking a guided tour to spot historyâs underwater ghost.
All this is despite the distractions of the married man she canât quite ditch and the sweet, shaky love affair she starts with an old high-school sweetheart. Can she keep her drinking under control and do her job well enough to keep from getting fired, finish the story, not further screw up her lifeâand not get killed?
Thomas Kiesâ gripping first novel with its corkscrew of a plot asks, âDo things happen for a reason, or is everything random?â
Thomas Kies has had a long career working for newspapers and magazines, primarily in New England and New York. When he is not writing mysteries, he serves as president of the Carteret County Chamber of Commerce.
Rebecca Gibel is an award-winning stage, television, and voice actress, who has narrated over fifty audiobooks in a wide variety of genres. She has worked across the country at theaters such as Trinity Rep, Cleveland Play House, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Intiman Theatre, and the Arden Theatre Company. She holds a BA from the College of William & Mary and an MFA in Acting from Brown University/Trinity Rep.