It is early 2061 as Echoes in
Death begins and Eve Dallas just wants to go home. She did her duty
under, as she refers to it, “the marriage rules,” and had gussied up for Roarke
and gone to the charity ball. She got through the event safely despite a couple
of absolute fools that also attended. She did her job of as wife to quite
possibly the richest man in the world. Now it is time to get home, ditch the
dress and heels, and get back to normal.
At least that was the plan.
Would have happened to if a naked woman
had not stepped out into the roadway right in front of them as they headed
home. Naked, bloody, and very disoriented, she was very lucky that Roarke was
able to stop in time. They bundle her into the car and head for the nearest
hospital.
As Eve calls it in to the hospital, she
sees the woman has got cuts, abrasions, as well as ligature marks around the
neck. She has other injuries as well and appears to have blood on her that is
not her own.
They get her to the hospital and Dr. Del
Nobel begins to asses and treat her. Thanks to Dallas’ scan of her
fingerprints, they soon learn that the woman is 24-year-old Daphne Strazza. She
is married to the more than two decades older Anthony Strazza. The same Dr.
Anthony Strazza, who is a big shot at this same hospital, and is not very well
thought of or liked.
Soon, Roarke, and Dallas, discover the
former big shot doctor went through considerable hell before he died. Daphne’s story regarding what she went through
and saw is convoluted and does not make sense. But it is clear, she went
through hell. She is lucky to be alive. Her far older husband is very dead.
Is she involved in some way? Was she
part of a plan to kill her husband and she went through far more than
originally intended? Or, is she totally innocent, and is only a brutally traumatized
victim?
Time will tell as this first married
couple are just the top of a brutally violent pyramid of rape, murder, and more
in Echoes in Death.
As always, the head hopping POV is
initially disruptive. At least, it is for this reader. However, as it often
happens, the case evolves and the storyline progresses, that all falls away,
and the reader is left with a complicated read that pulls one into an
intriguing mess. Mostly police procedural, part romance, Echoes in Death is another
good one in a long line of good reads. It maybe nearly 20 years in the future,
and the weapons are different, but the themes are universal.
So too is my need for Roark’s library
and a working Auto Chef.
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3x2C6gq
My reading copy came by way of the Libby/OverDrive
App and the Dallas Public Library System.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2024
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