Wednesday’s Mystery eBooks

A Game of Fear
by Charles Todd
Rating: 4.6 #ad

KINDLEAUDIBLENOOKKOBO APPLE

In this newest installment of the acclaimed New York Times bestselling series, Scotland Yard’s Ian Rutledge is faced with his most perplexing case yet: a murder with no body, and a killer who can only be a ghost.

Spring, 1921. Scotland Yard sends Inspector Ian Rutledge to the sea-battered village of Walmer on the coast of Essex, where amongst the salt flats and a military airfield lies Benton Abbey, a grand manor with a storied past. The lady of the house may prove his most bewildering witness yet. She claims she saw a violent murder—but there is no body, no blood. She also insists she recognized the killer: Captain Nelson. Only it could not have been Nelson because he died during the war.


Special Agent Storm
by Mimi Barbour
Rating: 4.5 #ad

KINDLE

Agent Storm is way too gorgeous for a mere mortal. Considering his looks mean nothing to him, that detail has hindered him all his life. For Kurt, it’s all about his ability to be a good Navy Seal and eventually the FBI agent that works undercover and gets the bad guys.

Therefore, when a stranger gives him a hard time in a bar, and then kisses him crazy before she’s done, the aftereffects of that meeting change his whole life. From then on, her problems become his focus, and she leads him on a merry chase… especially when she informs him in no uncertain terms to back off because she’s married.

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(Undercover FBI Mysteries)


Bleeding Heart Yard
by Elly Griffiths
Rating: 4.4 #ad

KINDLEAUDIBLENOOKKOBO APPLE

Is it possible to forget that you’ve committed a murder?

When Cassie Fitzgerald was at school in the late 90s, she and her friends killed a fellow student. Almost twenty years later, Cassie is a happily married mother who loves her job—as a police officer. She closely guards the secret she has all but erased from her memory.

One day her husband finally persuades her to go to a school reunion. Cassie catches up with her high-achieving old friends from the Manor Park School—among them two politicians, a rock star, and a famous actress. But then, shockingly, one of them, Garfield Rice, is found dead in the school bathroom, supposedly from a drug overdose.


Chaos
by Patricia Cornwell
Rating: 4.2 #ad

KINDLEAUDIBLENOOKKOBO APPLE

A vast chasm or void. Anarchy. The science of unpredictability.

On a late summer evening in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Dr. Kay Scarpetta and her investigative partner, Pete Marino, respond to a call about a dead bicyclist near the Kennedy School of Government. It appears that a young woman has been attacked with almost superhuman force.

Even before Scarpetta’s headquarters has been officially notified about the case, Marino and Scarpetta’s FBI agent husband, Benton Wesley, receive suspicious calls, allegedly from someone at Interpol. But it makes no sense.


What Awakens Within
by Jewel Gray, Aaren Light
Rating: 4.8 #ad

KINDLE

A bloodthirsty Dangere killed Wintry’s loved one. She wished all the beasts were dead, wiped off the earth. Too bad she discovered she’s one of them.

Blaize vowed never to take a mate. Wintry loathes all Dangere. Yet, neither can break the bond of being intended mates that fate has woven for them. With humans and Dangere being mortal enemies, can love flourish between a girl and Dangere?

Wintry Oryx, a seventeen-year-old with albinism is relegated to a life as a Recessive within the dome. As a nurse, she’s dedicated her life to saving those who have fallen prey to the Dangere wolves. Living in the dome has spared Wintry from ever encountering them. That is until an Alpha, in human form, arrives for her.


Second Lives
by P.D. Cacek
Rating: 4.8 #ad

KINDLEAUDIBLENOOKKOBO APPLE

When four patients unexpectedly wake after being declared dead, their families are ecstatic and the word “miracle” begins to be whispered throughout the hospital. But the jubilation is short lived when the patients don’t respond to their names and insist they are different people. It is suggested all four are suffering from fugue states until one of the doctors recognizes a name and verifies that he not only knew the girl but was there when she died in 1992. It soon becomes obvious that the bodies of the four patients are now inhabited by the souls of people long dead.


Notes on an Execution
by Danya Kukafka
Rating: 4.4 #ad

KINDLEAUDIBLENOOKKOBO APPLE

Ansel Packer is scheduled to die in twelve hours. He knows what he’s done, and now awaits execution, the same chilling fate he forced on those girls, years ago. But Ansel doesn’t want to die; he wants to be celebrated, understood.

Through a kaleidoscope of women—a mother, a sister, a homicide detective—we learn the story of Ansel’s life. We meet his mother, Lavender, a seventeen-year-old girl pushed to desperation; Hazel, twin sister to Ansel’s wife, inseparable since birth, forced to watch helplessly as her sister’s relationship threatens to devour them all; and finally, Saffy, the detective hot on his trail, who has devoted herself to bringing bad men to justice but struggles to see her own life clearly. As the clock ticks down, these three women sift through the choices that culminate in tragedy, exploring the rippling fissures that such destruction inevitably leaves in its wake.


Why is Nothing Ever Simple?
by Jodi Taylor
Rating: 4.8 #ad

KINDLEAUDIBLENOOKKOBO APPLE

It’s Christmas at St Mary’s and time for the traditional illicit jump. Except this one is perfectly legal. It’s Major Guthrie’s last jump. To the Battle of Bannockburn, no less. An important moment in History for two nations – one that warrants everyone’s full attention.

But Max soon finds herself grappling with a near-lethal game of pooh sticks, another avian incursion and two turbulent teenagers intent on piloting their own illegal jump. And that’s all before they even get near fourteenth-century Scotland.

For this is St Mary’s and nothing is ever simple . . .


Used: Not a Memoir
by Sloane Ellis
Rating: 5.0 #ad

KINDLE

When you always live an authentic life, you never have to keep your story straight.

When Sloane woke up with searing pain and half the skin on his left foot shorn off, he could not remember why. As a pathological liar with a short memory inflicted by drug and alcohol abuse, keeping his story straight was like navigating the terror and thrills of the roller coaster he had been on most of his life.

This is not a memoir about the disease of addiction and its fallout. This is not an autobiography of a man who gave up everything for just one thing nor is it an account of love and loss and the refusal to see what is right in front of you until it is too late.