If you ask veteran Everly sheriff Samantha Mason, there’s never been any doubt who killed Timothy and Rebecca Parker, a pair of brilliant mathematicians who taught at the local college, and plunged their three young daughters into foster care....
If you ask veteran Everly sheriff Samantha Mason, there’s never been any doubt who killed Timothy and Rebecca Parker, a pair of brilliant mathematicians who taught at the local college, and plunged their three young daughters into foster care. It was their teenage son, Alex, who’d already displayed troubling enough behavior to put his school counselor on alert even before he wrote a story about a cannibal serial killer a few days before his parents’ deaths. But Alex died, too, obligingly leaving behind a confessional suicide note to head off any doubts about his guilt. Now Delaney Moore, a content moderator for a social media site, has pulled a video showing the corpses of Bob and Gina Balducci, one of whom had an uncomfortable relationship with the Parkers, staged in a remarkably similar scene. The discovery brings FBI agent Callum Kilkenny to Everly, along with FBI forensic linguist Raisa Susanto, who’s trying to live down a fatal mistake she made in identifying the author of an anonymous missive from the idiolectic patterns in which she specializes. As Raisa beats the bushes for evidence she can use to redeem herself, she (naturally) doesn’t realize that Labuskes is alternating the chapters that track the stages of her investigation with chapters from the viewpoint of Delaney, whose consistent determination to take violent revenge on anyone who’s ever wronged her leaves Raisa’s own troubled childhood in the dust. So Raisa never has a chance to read that “Delaney wasn’t made for love. She was made for death.”