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Over
three decades ago in Alaska, wealthy Victoria Pilz Bannister
Muravieff was convicted of murdering her oldest son William by
setting a fire to their home; her other son Oliver escaped by
jumping out a window. At the time of her conviction Victoria
insisted she was innocent, but once in jail accepted her lot
stoically.
Now Victoria is dying from uterine cancer and her
daughter Charlotte, who believes her mom is innocent, wants her to
come home. Her only hope is to learn what happened on that fatal
day. No Anchorage based sleuth will touch the case so she travels to
the wilderness to persuade Kate Shugak to find out who set the fire.
Kate accepts the job because the fee is too great to refuse. Talking
about refusal, Victoria wants no part of the investigation refusing
to assist Kate. As the sleuth continues to dig up information,
someone else wants Victoria left behind bars until she dies and that
person will kill to keep what happened secret thirty-one years
ago.
Shugak's fourteenth Alaska mystery is an enjoyable tale
as every new piece of evidence that Kate finds confirms the
conviction and the key "witness" will not help her own cause. The
story line also contains a romantic subplot, but that detours the
reader away from the prime did she really do it. When Kate stays
within the course of her investigation, the audience receives a
powerful tale of family secrets to include murder and blackmail and
a look back at Anchorage that makes the love subplot pale. Fans of
the series will appreciate this solid sleuthing
tale.
REVIEWED BY HARRIET KLAUSNER
DO
NOT REPRINT WITHOUT PERMISSION OF THE REVIEWER, HARRIET
KLAUSNER
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