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2000s: Is there a serial killer out on the streets of San Francisco? The most rare of killers? A female?
2000s: Is there a serial killer out on the streets of San Francisco? The most rare of killers? A female?
FBI Special Agent Matthew Roarke is working on busting open a major criminal organization in San Francisco. He’s getting close too, but then one day an undercover member of his team is killed right in front of him making him think that this is no accident or coincidence.
His investigations find that there is one woman always seemingly present at the city’s accidents or murders and she could be the missing link between many of them.
The hunt is on – across three states to find this woman before she strikes again.
Meanwhile, a young, single father meets a nice young woman on the beach and wonders if this might be the start of something new..
San Francisco is the hunting ground of the Huntress Moon and the streets are paved with potential as well as danger and darkness.
The novel opens in the rather grimly named Tenderloin area with the stench of urine and vomit in your nose. Welcome to the dark side of addition at the heart of the city. A lone woman, not the kind usually found here is seen on the streets. She has a mission, she is searching for something and darkness cloaks her every move.
From the other side of the San Francisco divide, stands FBI Special Agent Matthew Roarke . Two trails going on at the same time towards their ultimate goals. Why these two missions are both as deadly as each other, and why one woman would be so involved in San Francisco’s underbelly.
The rise and fall of the city’s streets mirrors the efforts of both ‘hunters’ as they search for their end goal. Contrast this with the nice seaside town of Pismo Beach where the single father finds renewed hope in the guise of a lovely young woman.
However the overall trail widens and soon –
Each city Roarke visits gives the trail and the woman he’s chasing a new insight into the world of this serial killer. The deadliest trail of any kind we’ve ever read.
Twitter: @AlexSokoloff
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