Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Skeleton Sea, The Forensic Geology Series by Toni Dwiggins, Now Available at a Special Price

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy.

Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the author …

Skeleton Sea by Toni Dwiggins

Skeleton Sea by Toni Dwiggins

The Forensic Geology Series (4th in series)

Publisher: Toni Dwiggins

Price: 99¢ (as of 12/30/2015 at 8:00 PM ET).

Skeleton Sea by Toni Dwiggins, Amazon Kindle format

A mystery at sea plunges forensic geologists Cassie Oldfield and Walter Shaws into deadly waters …

When a boat is found deserted off the California coast, it looks to be a simple fishing accident. But there is nothing ordinary going on here. The geologists track the strange incident to an even stranger project. Someone with toxic skills is at work in this sea.

If the lethal project is completed, the outcome will be unstoppable.

Skeleton Sea by Toni Dwiggins

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

American Nightmares, The Stein & Candle Detective Agency by Michael Panush, Now Available at a Special Price

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy.

Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Curiosity Quills Press …

American Nightmares by Michael Panush

American Nightmares by Michael Panush

The Stein & Candle Detective Agency (1st in series)

Publisher: Curiosity Quills Press

Price: 99¢ (as of 12/30/2015 at 7:00 PM ET).

American Nightmares by Michael Panush, Amazon Kindle format

Morton Candle is a tough guy.

He grew up on the streets of Brooklyn, dodging from mobster-ruled neighborhoods to reform school before the army snapped him up and sent him to Europe to fight Hitler. That's where he met Weatherby Stein, the scion to one of the greatest occult families of Europe. Weatherby and his parents were being held prisoner by the Nazis, forced to use their supernatural knowledge to aid the Third Reich's war effort.

Morton Candle got Weatherby to safety, but the kid's parents didn't make it.

Now it's the 1950s.

Weatherby's a teenager, with his father's knowledge and a chip on his shoulder from the indignities of the modern world. Morton bumps into him again and they decide to go into the only business they can — paranormal private detectives.

This time, Weatherby and Mort have cases that will take them from a vampire's decaying mansion to the mob-controlled streets of Havana. They'll take on roadside attractions gone wrong, hordes of the living dead, and ride against the devil in a high speed car race to the death.

Between them, Weatherby and Mort have a small arsenal and a deep knowledge of matters arcane and bizarre. They'll need brains and brawn to survive in a world where horror, action and hardboiled noir come together in a cataclysmic mix.

American Nightmares by Michael Panush

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

New This Week: What the Dead Know, The Mindhunters Series by Kylie Brant

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during December 2015 and priced $4.99 or less …

What the Dead Know by Kylie Brant

What the Dead Know by Kylie Brant

The Mindhunters Series (8th in series)

Publisher: Cedar River Press

Price: $4.99 (as of 12/30/2015 at 6:30 PM ET).

What the Dead Know by Kylie Brant, Amazon Kindle format

When Keira Saxon's father was diagnosed with a life-threatening illness, she quit her job as a Chicago homicide detective to head home. But she hadn't been back on Michigan's Upper Peninsula long before Danny Saxon was dead, killed in a deadly bear attack. Keira bowed to public pressure and agreed to run in the special election to fill the rest of her father's term as sheriff. Although doubts about the circumstances of Danny's death lingered, doubts were all she had. Until she received a grisly delivery and learned that her father's death wasn't an accident at all.

Finn Carstens agrees to partner with Keira's department to solve the murder. When proof of a second victim comes to light, he realizes that the killer is engaging them in the deadliest of contests. Together they must unmask a man who lives — and kills — in the shadows. As they begin to discover his secrets they realize the chilling truth that only the killer's former victims knew: of all the predators lurking in the Michigan forests, man is the most lethal of all.

What the Dead Know by Kylie Brant

See more titles in the Mindhunters Series.

Visit our New Indie MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News for a complete list of titles featured today.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

The Deathsniffer's Assistant, The Faraday Files by Kate McIntyre, Now Available at a Special Price

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy.

Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Curiosity Quills Press …

The Deathsniffer's Assistant by Kate McIntyre

The Deathsniffer's Assistant by Kate McIntyre

The Faraday Files (1st in series)

Publisher: Curiosity Quills Press

Price: 99¢ (as of 12/30/2015 at 6:00 PM ET).

The Deathsniffer's Assistant by Kate McIntyre, Amazon Kindle format

After losing his parents in the Floating Castle Incident, the sensitive and mannered Chris Buckley has spent six years raising his magically talented little sister, Rosemary, on the savings that his once-wealthy family left behind. But that money is drying up, and Chris finds himself with no choice but to seek out work in Darrington City as it spirals into a depression. The only employer willing to consider his empty résumé is Olivia Faraday, the manic Deathsniffer. Olivia's special magical gift gives her a heightened intuition which makes her invaluable in hunting down murderers.

When a Duchess of the mysterious Old Blooded Nobility calls on Olivia to solve the mystery of her dead husband, Chris finds himself tangled in Olivia Faraday's daily life and unable to extract himself from the macabre questions of the investigation. His involvement grows more complicated as political forces in Darrington close around Rosemary, seeing her as a tool that can be used to end the depression at the cost of her freedom — or even her life. Chris must juggle the question of who killed Viktor val Daren with the responsibility of keeping Rosemary and her magic safe from those who would use her up and toss her aside. Worst of all, he begins to learn that the national disaster that took his parents' lives may not have been the accident it seemed.

The Deathsniffer's Assistant by Kate McIntyre

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

New This Week: Absolute Power, A Southern Justice Novel by Cayce Poponea

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during December 2015 and priced $4.99 or less …

Absolute Power by Cayce Poponea

Absolute Power by Cayce Poponea

A Southern Justice Novel (1st in series)

Publisher: Cayce Poponea

Price: $2.99 (as of 12/30/2015 at 5:30 PM ET).

Absolute Power by Cayce Poponea, Amazon Kindle format

Dylan Morgan has it all; a prestigious career as a Detective for the city of Charleston, devilish good looks and a selection of girls whenever he chooses. Southern born and raised, he lives by the pearls his Granddaddy imparted to him. But when he questions his worth to the citizens of Charleston, his fears are realized when someone close to him is in danger. Does he follow the letter of the law as his position dictates, or does he follow his conscience, which will cause him to straddle a fine line? Can Dylan overcome the demons he creates for himself? Or will he toss everything away in a moment of reckoning?

Claire Stuart has fought hard her whole life not to fall into the same trap as her mother. She refuses to allow men to use her and toss her away. Needing to escape the hardship her family creates, she seeks education over acceptance and uproots herself from the backwoods of Kentucky to the charm of Charleston. She knows all about Dylan Morgan and his choice to bed every woman he comes across, yet she finds herself unable to listen to the warnings her mind and friends give her. Can Claire ignore Dylan's past and allow herself to let someone in? Someone who could shatter her very soul.

Absolute Power by Cayce Poponea

Visit our New Indie MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News for a complete list of titles featured today.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Tortured Truths, A Phillip McGuire Mystery by Randy Attwood, Now Available at a Special Price

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy.

Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Curiosity Quills Press …

Tortured Truths by Randy Attwood

Tortured Truths by Randy Attwood

A Phillip McGuire Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Curiosity Quills Press

Price: 99¢ (as of 12/30/2015 at 5:00 PM ET).

Tortured Truths by Randy Attwood, Amazon Kindle format

Once a journalist, always a journalist. Until the Hezbollah get a hold of you and show you just what a coward you are.

Philip McGuire was already a burnt-out foreign correspondent before the Hezbollah kidnapped him in Beirut and, under torture by exposing the nerves of his hand, got him to give the layout of the Marine compound he had visited. They blow it up, killing those 237 soldiers. Then why release Philip, whose psyche is now blown to smithereens with guilt?

The hand gets repaired. Philip quits journalism and returns to his college town to buy and run a bar and try to repair his psyche. A brash Hispanic journalism student teaches him to love again and she starts his healing process. But local drug plots and the young journalist's prying bring him full cycle right back to the hands of the Hezbollah.

But this time he just might be able to sort out all the double-crosses.

Tortured Truths by Randy Attwood

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

New This Week: Daytona '59, A Charlie Flanigan Mystery by Matt Day

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during December 2015 and priced $4.99 or less …

Daytona '59 by Matt Day

Daytona '59 by Matt Day

A Charlie Flanigan Mystery (6th in series)

Publisher: Matt Day

Price: 99¢ (as of 12/30/2015 at 4:30 PM ET).

Daytona '59 by Matt Day, Amazon Kindle format

Daytona Beach, Florida 1958 …

Just when charter pilot and part-time private investigator Charlie Flanigan thinks that his life is finally settling down, along comes a slew of new challenges. First, the upcoming hurricane season looks like it's gonna be a doozy; and on top of that it begins to look like he may have some competition for Carmelita's heart. Oh brother! And that's just for starters …

Daytona Beach in the 1950s was really beginning to come alive. The sport of stock car racing was just getting started, and the U.S. space program was being launched, literally, right down the coast at the Cape. It was truly a fascinating time in the beach town's colorful history. Not to mention it was also the home of Charlie Flanigan.

Daytona '59 by Matt Day

See all six mystery adventures in the Charlie Flanigan Series for $2.99 or less each on Kindle.

Visit our New Indie MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News for a complete list of titles featured today.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

One Ghost Per Serving, A Paranormal Mystery by Nina Post, Now Available at a Special Price

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy.

Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Curiosity Quills Press …

One Ghost Per Serving by Nina Post

One Ghost Per Serving by Nina Post

A Paranormal Mystery

Publisher: Curiosity Quills Press

Price: 99¢ (as of 12/30/2015 at 4:00 PM ET).

One Ghost Per Serving by Nina Post, Amazon Kindle format

Possessed by Rex, a mischievous spirit, Eric Snackerge's life has careened out of control. An unusual contest may be his last chance to make his daughter's dreams come true. But he'll have to overcome his own self-doubt — not to mention spy cameras, attack helicopters, and a supernatural pathogen about to enter the world's food supply.

Do Eric and Rex have what it takes to foil the villains' plan and protect the Snackerge family from becoming the next victims?

One Ghost Per Serving by Nina Post

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Plain Dead by Emma Miller, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during December 2015

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during December 2015 …

Plain Dead by Emma Miller

Plain Dead by Emma Miller, A Rachel Mast Mystery (3rd in series)

Publisher: Kensington

Plain Dead by Emma Miller, Amazon Kindle format

When a newspaperman is murdered in the Amish community of Stone Mill, Pennsylvania, Rachel Mast digs up the dirt to find out who wanted to bury the lead …

Although she left her Old Order Amish ways in her youth, Rachel discovered corporate life in the English world to be complicated and unfulfilling. Having returned to Stone Mill, she's happy to be running her own B&B. But she's also learning — in more ways than one — that the past is not always so easily left behind.

After local newspaperman Bill Billingsly is found gagged and tied to his front porch, left to freeze overnight in a snowstorm, Detective Evan Parks — Rachel's beau — uncovers a file of scandalous information Billingsly intended to publish, including a record of Rachel pleading no contest to charges of corporate misconduct. Though Evan is certain of her innocence, it's up to Rachel to find the real killer. A closer examination of the victim's unpublished report leads Rachel to believe the Amish community is far from sinless. But if she's not careful her obituary might be the next to appear in print …

Plain Dead by Emma Miller

To see more new paperback titles scheduled to be published this month, visit The Mystery Bookshelf for December 2015. For new hardcover mysteries, visit New Mysteries where for a list of December 2015 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers is provided.

Down Solo, A Novel of Suspense by Earl Javorsky, Now Available at a Special Price

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy.

Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Fiction Studio Books …

Down Solo by Earl Javorsky

Down Solo by Earl Javorsky

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Fiction Studio Books

Price: $2.99 (as of 12/30/2015 at 3:00 PM ET).

Down Solo by Earl Javorsky, Amazon Kindle format

Things haven't been going well for Charlie Miner. His work as a private investigator involves him with an endless roster of shady characters. His ex-wife is borderline crazy. And he hasn't been getting to spend anywhere near enough time with his teenage daughter Mindy, the one person in his life who truly matters to him.

When he wakes up on a slab in the morgue with a hole in his head, though, things get even worse.

Just before the shooting, Charlie was investigating a case involving fraud, gold, religious zealots, and a gorgeous woman who seemed to be at the center of everything. Even with a fatal bullet wound, Charlie can connect the dots from the case to his attack. And when his daughter is abducted by someone involved, the stakes get exponentially higher. Charlie needs to find Mindy before the criminals do the same thing to her that they did to him.

After that, maybe he'll try to figure out how he's walking around dead.

Down Solo by Earl Javorsky

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Murder Most Malicious by Alyssa Maxwell, New in Bookstores during December 2015

Today's featured new hardcover mystery, suspense, or thriller title scheduled to be published during December 2015 is …

Murder Most Malicious by Alyssa Maxwell

Murder Most Malicious by Alyssa Maxwell, a Lady Phoebe Renshaw and Eva Huntford Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Kensington

Murder Most Malicious by Alyssa Maxwell, Amazon Kindle format

December 1918: As a difficult year draws to a close, there is much to celebrate for nineteen-year-old Phoebe Renshaw and her three siblings at their beloved family estate of Foxwood Hall. The dreadful war is finally over; eldest daughter Julia's engagement to their houseguest, the Marquis of Allerton, appears imminent; and all have gathered to enjoy peace on earth, good will toward men.

But the peace of Foxwood Hall is shattered on the morning of Boxing Day, when the Marquis goes missing. Not entirely missing, however, as macabre evidence of foul play turns up in gift boxes given to lady's maid Eva Huntford and a handful of others. Having overheard her sister and the Marquis in a heated exchange the night before, Lady Phoebe takes a personal interest in solving the mystery.

As the local constable suspects a footman at Foxwood Hall, Phoebe and Eva follow the clues to a different conclusion. But both young women will need to think outside the box to wrap up this case — before a cornered killer lashes out with ill will toward them …

Murder Most Malicious by Alyssa Maxwell

For a list of more new hardcover titles to be published this month, visit our New Mysteries page for December 2015. For new paperback mysteries, visit The Mystery Bookshelf where a selection of December 2015 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers are shelved.

Choked Up by Janey Mack, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during December 2015

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during December 2015 …

Choked Up by Janey Mack

Choked Up by Janey Mack, A Maisie McGrane Mystery (2nd in series)

Publisher: Kensington

Choked Up by Janey Mack, Amazon Kindle format

She's working undercover — and she's in way over her head …

Scrappy Traffic Enforcement agent Maisie McGrane has finally landed her dream job as a Chicago police officer. There's just one catch. She must remain undercover as a meter maid to gather evidence against Stannislav Renko, a charismatic Serbian mobster running a brutal multi-million dollar mobile chop-shop operation.

When Maisie is targeted by a killer who leaves a body slumped against her car, Renko comes to her rescue and takes her under his wing. From her perch inside the crime boss's inner circle, Maisie sets up a daring sting operation to take down Renko once and for all. But can she pull it off before her family of overprotective Irish cops and her sexy ex-Army Ranger boyfriend blow her cover?

Choked Up by Janey Mack

To see more new paperback titles scheduled to be published this month, visit The Mystery Bookshelf for December 2015. For new hardcover mysteries, visit New Mysteries where for a list of December 2015 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers is provided.

Murder, Madness & Love, A Steven Quaid Mystery by Yolanda Renée, Now Available at a Special Price

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy.

Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Curiosity Quills Press …

Murder, Madness & Love by Yolanda Renée

Murder, Madness & Love by Yolanda Renée

A Steven Quaid Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Curiosity Quills Press

Price: 99¢ (as of 12/30/2015 at 1:00 PM ET).

Murder, Madness & Love by Yolanda Renée, Amazon Kindle format

A killer plays cat and mouse with a young widow against the snowy backdrop of an Alaskan winter.

Branded a black widow after the suspicious death of her millionaire husband, Sarah Palmer flees Seattle for Anchorage.

But the peace and quiet she hoped to enjoy in her hometown is soon shattered: The killer is murdering Sarah look-alikes on the 14th of each month, taunting Sarah with a valentine of evidence.

After her experiences in Seattle, Sarah is slow to go to the police. When she finally does, she finds Detective Steven Quaid, who is called on to protect the beautiful widow from a stalker intent on her destruction.

Steven is not entirely sure she is not behind the scheme herself, and before long Sarah has him wound up tighter than barbed wire. Is Sarah a victim or a very skilled manipulator?

With a killer on the loose and a climbing body count, Steven can't afford to hedge his bets-or his life.

Murder, Madness & Love by Yolanda Renée

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

New This Week: Breakwater, The Tide Series by Anthony J. Melchiorri

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during December 2015 and priced $4.99 or less …

Breakwater by Anthony J. Melchiorri

Breakwater by Anthony J. Melchiorri

The Tide Series (2nd in series)

Publisher: Thunderbird Media

Price: $3.99 (as of 12/30/2015 at 12:30 PM ET).

Breakwater by Anthony J. Melchiorri, Amazon Kindle format

The tide has turned against humanity …

Governments across the globe have failed to stop the spread of the Oni Agent. The biological weapon continues to wreak havoc. Those that are infected become abominations known as Skulls, a fate worse than death.

Captain Dominic Holland and Meredith Webb have made it to Fort Detrick. The Army base was once a bastion for America's biodefense. Now, swarms of hungry Skulls prowl outside the walls. With Fort Detrick's resources, Dom and Meredith think they may finally have a chance to to slow the spread of the Oni Agent.

But with the United States military in disarray, the situation outside Detrick's walls grows bleaker. More and more civilians succumb to the Skulls — or become them. Dom leads a desperate mission to establish a safe zone for civilians fleeing the nightmarish creatures.

Despite this apocalyptic new world, Dom and the Hunters are determined to succeed. New threats and discoveries challenge them every step of the way. But they soon find potential help from an unlikely source … if they can survive long enough to receive it.

Breakwater by Anthony J. Melchiorri

See also the first thriller in this series, The Tide, for 99¢ on Kindle.

Visit our New Indie MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News for a complete list of titles featured today.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

An Excerpt from Seized by Elizabeth Heiter

Omnimystery News: An Excerpt courtesy of Elizabeth Heiter

Earlier today we spoke with Elizabeth Heiter about her Profiler series of thrillers, the third of which, Seized (Harlequin MIRA; December 2015 mass market paperback and ebook formats), is published this week.

To introduce you to the book, Elizabeth has generously agreed to share an excerpt from it with us, the prologue and first chapter.

— ♦ —

THE FREEDOM UPRISING WAS COMING.
  John Peters had waited a long time for this. He could feel the anticipation building inside him, and he wished he could share it with someone other than Bobby Dur¬ham.
  John glanced at his partner, perched silently in the passenger seat of the truck, arms crossed over his chest, supplies packed in at his feet. Bobby was okay, as part¬ners went. Not exactly a strategic thinker, but he was a die-hard believer. He'd do whatever was necessary to complete the mission.
  Still, John wished his half brother was here, the man who'd brought purpose to his life.
  He lowered the window, let the familiar scents of dirt and pine and fresh snow creep into his nostrils as he drove. It was so close now. One more day in this place, and then he could move on, begin the mission.
  If only he could be the one to end it, be there for the final target and see it with his own eyes, instead of just on the news. But he'd be the one to start things off. And they'd start off with a bang.
  He smiled at the thought and felt Bobby's curious gaze.
  "Are you ready for this?" John asked.
  "Damn right I am," Bobby replied, his young voice full of boastful confidence.
  "When we get back you'll need to clear out your bunk. Everything goes."
  "I know. The maps, the guns, the supplies." Bobby repeated John's words from earlier. "I'll get rid of every-thing. We'll be set as soon as we've got the go-ahead."
  "Good." Before they left, John would double-check, of course, and he'd empty his own bunk, too, although he never wrote anything down. He kept it all where it belonged, locked in his mind, where no one could ac¬cidentally discover it.
  Never leave behind anything they can use.
  The reminder ran through his head, but he didn't need reminding. He'd been training for this mission all his life. He just hadn't realized his true purpose until recently.
  And his purpose was great. The lesson he would help teach this country was crucial.
  "No one will suspect a thing till we get back." Bobby's words interrupted his thoughts.
  John grunted noncommittally. Bobby was willing to die for the cause, but John knew the kid imagined him¬self returning a hero.
  John was resigned to the truth. They'd never be com¬ing back here. If they made it through their mission alive, they'd spend the rest of their days in hiding. But it would all be worth the sacrifice.
  He pictured the final target, the one he'd never get to personally see, and he felt his anticipation shift into something hard and powerful and bigger than any one person.
  He'd seen a video of the target once, from a long time ago, taken with a shaky old video camera. An elite group of men, so cocky and righteous. Standing on land that wasn't theirs, using bullets to enforce their pretend authority.
  He could almost see them now, still thinking they were untouchable. Thinking their bloody hands had somehow come clean.
  They were wrong.
  And soon, very soon, the whole world would know it.
  
CHAPTER 1

Lee Cartwright wanted to kill her.
  Evelyn Baine didn't need to be a profiler with the FBI's elite Behavioral Analysis Unit — BAU — to know it. All she needed to do was stare into Cartwright's angry, narrowed eyes and look at the snarl quivering on his lips, the thrust of his jaw as he leaned toward her across the table.
  The bare bulb flickered overhead, deep in the bow¬els of the Montana State Prison. The distant chorus of prisoners' voices reached her ears, but it was just the two of them in the tiny, dingy interview room. Just her and the convicted bomber. They were separated only by a flimsy table and a pair of standard-issue handcuffs. Those were bolted to the table, but looked as if they'd barely closed around Cartwright's meaty wrists.
  His eyes skimmed over her once more and she knew exactly what he saw — a perfect victim.
  She gave him steady eye contact, refusing to react as he flexed his hands. He seemed to be testing the strength of those cuffs. The fact that Cartwright wanted to kill her was one of the reasons she'd been chosen for this interview. Lee Cartwright had been convicted of bombing two black churches and one mosque. Two people had died, and dozens more were injured. It was his way of sow¬ing fear; like a lot of bombers, he wasn't just target¬ing a specific group, but also seeking notoriety. He'd wanted people to fear him, the man who'd been dubbed the "Nail Bomber" because of the materials he used.
  He was antifederalist and anti-anyone-who-wasn't-white. Sending her — a biracial federal agent — was her boss's way of telling Cartwright that he didn't call all the shots. The idea was to piss him off enough to get him to brag. He'd told prison officials that he had a copycat, and the FBI wanted to find out if it was true.
  The other reason the head of BAU, Dan Moore, had sent her was that she was on his shit list.
  Interviewing felons, even felons who claimed a copycat was contacting them, wasn't usually a BAU job. But the file had crossed Dan Moore's desk and apparently it looked like yet another suitable punishment for her refusal to follow orders three months ago.
  She'd never been his favorite person; she was too young, too female and too poor a team player. He'd always treated her like the newbie who needed babysitting, but lately, it had gotten much worse. Lately, she felt as if she wasn't even on the team anymore.
  Worse, she wasn't sure she wanted to be. And that was something she'd never questioned, not since the time she was twelve years old and her best friend, Cassie, had gone missing.
  "I have nothing to say to you," Cartwright muttered for the third time in the half hour they'd been having this little staring contest.
  "You told two guards you had a copycat, Lee. You said you wanted to talk to someone about it. I'm here. Talk to me," Evelyn pressed, trying to sound earnest.
  The truth was, she felt discouraged. She'd already asked the warden about Cartwright's incoming mail and his visitors. Since the only person who visited him was his mom, and his mail had never been flagged as suspicious, she was pretty sure his request was more about attention than a real threat.
  But someone had been setting off explosions in the Montana wilderness about an hour away. There was no indication these had anything to do with Cartwright — he used a distinct method for creating his bombs, as telling as a signature, that local law enforcement hadn't found this time.
  The current explosions were a nuisance, but they'd happened far from anyone. And the reality was, this area had several groups with fringe militia ties, and explosions like the ones in the wilderness had happened before. Cartwright's claim of a copycat was unlikely.
  Still, he'd been convicted of hate crimes and murder. If there was even a tiny chance he was telling the truth, someone had to check it out.
  That someone shouldn't have been her. There was no reason to fly her across the country when there were perfectly capable agents here, and the case didn't need a profiler at all.
  And she was tired of the bullshit assignments when there were plenty of real cases she could be profiling.
  Maybe, if she could ever get back to those legitimate cases, she could figure out whether she still belonged. Maybe it would tell her if, after finally unraveling what had happened to her best friend when she was twelve, she had any drive left for profiling. Cartwright did nothing but snarl back at her, the muscles flexing in his prison-pumped arms.
  Evelyn held in a sigh and leaned forward. "Who's been contacting you, Lee?"
  "I'm not telling you shit."
  Frustration built up. He should've seen her — exactly the kind of person he'd love to target at one of his bomb sites — and wanted to brag about the copycat. They hadn't expected him to hand over a name, but they had expected him to taunt her with whatever he might know. Assuming the threat was real, which seemed more and more unlikely.
  This complete refusal to talk was surprising.
  "What's your copycat planning to target? If he's really copying you, he doesn't seem to be doing a good job." She tried to appeal to his vanity and his need to prove himself at the same time.
  Cartwright scowled at her. "Forget about it."
  "Did you teach someone how to make a bomb?" she asked, leaning back in her chair. She tried another route. "It's not like you used the most sophisticated method we've ever seen."
  "Yeah?" he barked. "Have you tried it? Packed in all those nails … ?" He cut himself off and smirked at her. "My method was just fine."
  "But not so complicated that you'd need to teach someone else to do it, right? I mean, they could just figure it out on their own?" It probably wasn't true. Cartwright had used easily accessible materials to create his bombs, but they'd been sophisticated in the detonation. The FBI hadn't seen anything quite like them before — or since.
   "Whatever," he said. "I didn't ask for you. I got nothing to tell you."
  "Why? Because there is no copycat?"
  "Believe what you want."
  "I believe you're wasting my time," she snapped, bracing her hands on the table and leaning forward again so she could glare at him.
  In that instant, he lunged toward her, shooting out of his chair and driving his elbow at her face.
  She leaped back, cursing herself for not properly gauging the distance he could move while tethered to the table. But she wasn't fast enough and his elbow clipped her cheek. It sent her flying backward.
  She slammed against her chair, then tripped over it, falling onto the ground, her head slamming the concrete floor.
  Behind her, she heard the guard wrestling with the locked door. Cartwright's grating laugh sent fury racing through her veins.
  She should've expected it. Cartwright had nothing left to lose. Thanks to a lenient judge, he'd avoided the death penalty, but he was never leaving this place.
  She got to her feet before the guard had the door open, and resisted the urge to react. Instead, she righted her chair and sat back down as though everything was fine, waving the guard off. "Does it bother you that this is the worst you can do? Is that why you're making up claims of a copycat?"
  His face flushed an angry red and a vein in the center of his forehead popped up. "Get out."
  "If you're not making it up," she challenged, ignoring the way her cheek throbbed, "then prove it."
  "I didn't make any damn claim to the Zionist … " He cut himself off again, blew out a noisy breath.
  But she knew what he was going to say. Zionist Occupational Government. It was what a lot of fervent antigovernment groups called the federal government. She tried not to roll her eyes.
  "I have nothing to say to you," Cartwright finally finished.
  She stared at him a minute longer, but a year and a half as a profiler — or behavioral analyst as they were officially called — told her she didn't have anything to gain here. Her six years before that as a regular special agent told her she needed to find a real case.
  "Nice talking to you, Cartwright," she said, the sarcastic response so different from the way she would've handled an interview like that three months ago.
  Cartwright just sat there, jaw and arm muscles flexing in unison, and Evelyn stood and motioned for the guard.
  The keys jangled in the lock again for so long Evelyn was glad Cartwright had only winged her with his elbow. Eventually the door opened and the guard beckoned her forward.
  She moved to his far side, practically sliding along the wall as he led her down the hallway, past a row of cells. They were in the supermax portion of the prison, filled with lifers, which made them especially dangerous. But the inmates were a lot less likely to lodge spit — or other bodily fluids — at a guard they had to deal with every day than a visiting federal agent.
  Luckily for her, the guard was six feet tall and as broad as a small car, making her five-foot-two, one-hundred-and-ten-pound frame virtually invisible. Still, the catcalls and obscene comments trailed behind her, leaving an imaginary layer of filth under her loosely tailored suit.
  "You get anything good from Cartwright?" the guard asked, sounding completely uninterested in the answer as they reached the front of the prison.
  He was slow getting her weapon out of the locked box where she'd had to leave it when she entered, and Evelyn shifted her weight impatiently. Less than two hours in this building and already she felt desperate to breathe fresh air.
  How must Cartwright, who'd been locked up for three years of a life sentence, feel? Was that why he'd claimed he had a copycat? To waste the government's time and amuse himself? With someone like him, it was entirely possible.
  Evelyn hooked her holster back onto her belt and tugged her jacket down over it. "Thanks. Nothing useful from Cartwright."
  She checked her watch. A few hours to grab a late dinner, pack up and catch her flight. She'd follow up with the warden when she was back in Virginia.
  As soon as she stepped outside, Evelyn drew in a lungful of fresh, clean air, shivering in her wool suit. It was twenty degrees colder in Montana than in Virginia, and a light dusting of snow covered her rental car. The sun had begun to sink while she was inside, and the parking lot looked eerie in the semidarkness.
  As she hurried toward her car, her fingers seemed to drain of warmth as fast as her breath puffed clouds of white into the November air. She strode away from the fenced area around the prison, anxious for the heater in her rental — and saw someone standing beside her car.
  She could tell from twenty feet away that person was in law enforcement, probably FBI. It was the way she stood, angled to see any approaching threat, the way she held her hand near her hip, where her weapon would be holstered.
  Evelyn glanced down at her watch again as she reached her car. The Montana State Prison wasn't exactly a short jaunt from the closest FBI office. Which meant this agent wanted something. Evelyn's stomach grumbled as she sensed her chance for dinner slipping away.
  "Evelyn Baine?" the woman asked. She stuck out a hand and shook with the precision of a military offi-cer and the force of someone used to working in a predominantly male profession. "I'm Jen Martinez. Salt Lake City office."
  She flashed a set of FBI credentials and Evelyn squinted at them. "Good to meet you."
  Jen frowned as she dropped Evelyn's hand. "What happened to your eye?"
  Evelyn gingerly touched the tender spot high on her cheek where Cartwright had winged her. It was swelling underneath her eye. "An accident. What can I do for you?" She tried not to shiver outwardly as she crossed her arms over her chest to preserve whatever warmth she could.
  Jen must have lived in the area long enough to be used to the cold, because she looked comfortable, even with her blazer unbuttoned. She was a few inches taller than Evelyn, with white-streaked blond hair pulled into a bun nearly as severe as the way Evelyn wore her own dark hair. She probably had fifteen years on Evelyn, and everything about her, from the laser-sharp gaze to the polyester-blend suit, screamed longtime law enforcement.
  "When I heard BAU was sending a profiler to talk to Lee Cartwright, I had to come and get your input."
  "You have some insight into Cartwright's copycat?"
  Jen waved her hand dismissively. "No. But I do have another situation where I'd like a profiler's take."
  Evelyn looked pointedly at her watch. "My flight takes off in a few hours." Actually, it was four, but that wasn't a lot of time to fully review a case and give case agents a profile of their perpetrator.
  Not to mention the fact that she wasn't supposed to review a case at all until it was vetted at the BAU office and brought to her officially. Then again, maybe Jen had a case that would allow Evelyn to use her profiling abilities for a change. "Did you bring the file with you?"
  "Not exactly," Jen hedged. "I was hoping we could take a ride."
  Evelyn moved from one foot to the other, trying to generate more warmth. "Where?"
  "Ever heard of the Butler Compound?"
  "No."
  Jen's lips tightened. "Figures. I've tried to get BAU to look more closely at it a couple of times, but I keep getting denied."
  Probably for good reason — but Evelyn didn't say that. The BAU office received hundreds of requests every single week, from federal, state and local law enforcement offices all over the country, plus the occasional international request. There was simply no way to take them all on. And many of them genuinely didn't require a profiler.
  "If … " Evelyn started.
  "You're here." Jen cut her off, hands on her hips. "Just take a look, would you? There's something there. I know it, and I need help."
  The desire to follow procedure, to do things by the book, rose up hard. Once upon a time, she'd been a stringent rule-follower. But the desire to contribute again as a real profiler — to get out of limbo — was stronger.
  "Tell me what you want," Evelyn said. "And where's your partner?" As a profiler, Evelyn didn't have one, but that was rare. Like most law enforcement, the FBI liked to pair up their agents.
  Relief rushed over Jen's face. "I'm between partners. Mine just transferred to another office. But I heard you were here, and I couldn't miss this chance." She suddenly seemed to notice Evelyn shivering. "Want to get out of the cold?"
  "Yes."
  Jen laughed and nodded at the battered SUV next to Evelyn's rental. She beeped open the doors and climbed inside, turning on the engine. "Hop in."
  As Evelyn got into the passenger seat of what was obviously Jen's Bureau-issued vehicle, she flipped the heat up to high, then said, "Give me the basics."
  "I can do better than that." Jen buckled up, gunning it out of the parking lot.
  A bad feeling came over Evelyn — the strong, sud-den certainty that she was heading into something she shouldn't. It mingled with annoyance that Jen had tried to trick her, instead of just asking Evelyn to go somewhere.
  "Where precisely are we going?" she demanded, buckling up even as she debated asking Jen to turn around.
  "Butler Compound," Jen replied.
  "How far is it?"
  "About an hour," she answered, but from the way she said it, Evelyn could tell it was actually longer. "And then I'll drive you right back."
  Evelyn frowned down at her watch. If she missed her plane, she'd be even higher on Dan's shit list. Which hardly seemed possible.
  And if she was going to leave BAU, she wanted it to be her choice, not because Dan Moore had kicked her out.
  Jen must have seen her annoyance. "I want you to see the place for yourself," she blurted. "Maybe then BAU will finally believe it's not just some harmless cult."
  "What do you think it is?"
  Jen glanced at her, intensity in her eyes, then back at the road. "A threat."
  "This is remote," Evelyn said, staring out her window at the woods. The trees were thinning as they climbed in elevation, but it was still wilderness. The sun had fully set now, so she found it hard to see much beyond the headlights of Jen's SUV.
  They'd been driving just over an hour, and Evelyn had seen nothing more than the occasional lean-to or shack. Snowcapped mountains rose up in the distance. The view was beautiful, but she couldn't imagine anyone living out here.
  "Yeah," Jen agreed. "Very remote. Good place to hide out, away from prying neighbors. Away from law enforcement, too."
  Jen had finally hung up the call she'd taken almost as soon as they'd gotten in the car, which had prevented Evelyn from getting any more information about why they were going to the Butler Compound. But she'd learned plenty about Jen from her half of that conversation.
  "That was your supervisor, huh?"
  "Yes," Jen said. "And before you ask, no, I'm not supposed to be doing this. He thinks I'm running down a lead on another case. Which was probably obvious from that call. He has no idea I tracked you out to the prison."
  Evelyn nodded. "He may not know about me, but he knows what you're doing."
  "What?" Jen whipped her head toward Evelyn, and the SUV jerked. She corrected quickly on the poorly maintained road. "Why do you say that?"
  "I could tell from your call."
  "You could hear him? What do you have, bat ears?" Jen asked. She'd taken the call on her Bluetooth, instead of putting it on speaker.
  "No. But that's what makes me a profiler," Evelyn replied. "Trust me, Martinez. He knows."
  It had been obvious from the way Martinez had kept repeating answers to the same questions about her location. Detailed questions, as though her boss didn't believe a word she was saying.
  "Shit," Jen muttered. "He warned me to stay away from this."
  "Want to tell me what I'm getting into here?"
  "Okay. So, the compound is pretty isolated, as you can tell. This group is cut from the same cloth as Cartwright." She glanced over at Evelyn. "Which reminds me, while we're there, call me Jen. Not Martinez. Just Jen. That's how they know me."
  Evelyn shot her a disbelieving look. "They know you?"
  "Yeah, I've been out there a couple of times. Kind of unofficial, doing the rounds, that sort of thing. They come out and meet me, talk for a while. Usually Butler himself, sometimes with a few of his followers."
  "And they bought your reason for visiting?"
  "Oh, yeah. Salt Lake City is a big field office, but this area is sparsely populated. People around here are used to law enforcement periodically making goodwill calls."
  Evelyn frowned, but didn't argue.
  "You ever work at an RA?" Jen asked.
  Evelyn shook her head. Most agents now started at one of the bigger field offices, but back when Jen had begun her FBI career, they were still sending a lot of newbies to resident agencies, smaller satellite offices.
  "Well, I have. Place quite a bit like this actually, out in Nevada. And it was par for the course, law enforcement checking in on everyone now and then."
  Evelyn nodded, still not sure it was a good idea for Jen to be making these visits. On the other hand, direct contact was the best way to get information on a potential problem group.
  "Anyhow," Jen continued, "my last partner and I introduced ourselves as FBI, but with first names only. No reason to tell a bunch of racists that I'm married to a Hispanic man."
  "They're going to love me," Evelyn muttered. Her mother was of Irish-English descent, but her father had been Zimbabwean. There was no hiding her heritage.
  "Yeah, well, the profiler who showed up being a big, white, Aryan-looking guy was probably too much to hope for. Don't worry. The most they'll do is glare at you."
  "That'll be fun," Evelyn said, already regretting that she'd agreed to this as she glanced at the dashboard clock. She didn't really mind the animosity of suspects — that was pretty common — but this visit was sounding more and more like a bad idea.
  And if the most she had to fear from them was the evil eye, what kind of threat were they?
  "The leader, Ward Butler, was friends with Lee Cartwright when they were kids," Jen explained as she sped along the barely paved roads.
  Evelyn stared at her. "You know Cartwright's claiming he's got a copycat, right?"
  "Yeah, I heard. I wouldn't take anything that guy says at face value, though. He's not exactly the type who'd warn the government. He's more likely to watch the news from prison and cheer when it happens. Or taunt law enforcement, acting like he knows who's copying him, just to get a rise out of us."
  "Okay," Evelyn said. "I can see that. But if Butler and Cartwright are friends … "
  "Were friends," Jen corrected her. "Like twenty years ago. They grew up together, but there's no indication they've been in contact in a long time. Then they had a complete falling-out when Cartwright went violent, and Butler started his compound."
  "So you're saying Butler's group isn't violent," Evelyn said, getting frustrated. "Why are they a threat?"
  "They haven't been violent yet," Jen replied. "But I think they're going to be."
  "Why? And how long have they been nonviolent?"
  Jen slowed the SUV and turned off onto a dirt path. "Just because they've been quiet for a few years doesn't mean they plan to stay that way. Butler refers to the place as a 'refuge' for other survivalists. And we have a lot of those — people who want to live off the land, with no interference from anyone. Most of them wish they'd been born a couple of centuries ago, with no law except maybe a local sheriff, and the chance to be as isolated as they want."
  "I know about survivalists," Evelyn said. "And sure, some of them are a problem, but plenty of them just want to be off the grid. Leave them alone and they leave everyone else alone."
  The SUV bounced along the potholed trail, and Jen's silence dragged on until she said, "You know the Unabomber's cabin was only about twenty miles from here? His neighbors probably thought he was harmless and just wanted to be left alone."
  Evelyn held in a sigh. "You still haven't told me why you think this particular group is more dangerous than any of the dozens of other cults we've got."
  Jen's knuckles whitened on the steering wheel. "You're too young to remember some of the crap from the nineties, but … "
  "I know enough." Evelyn could see where this was going. "And yes, there's been an uptick in homegrown terrorism chatter over the past few years, but … "
  "Officially, the Butler Compound is a low threat," Jen broke in. "The FBI thinks Butler is more likely to feed his followers Kool-Aid than plan an attack against anyone. But I've been around cults. One of my very first assignments was in Waco, Texas." She gave Evelyn a meaningful look.
  "The Koresh disaster? You were there?" David Koresh and his followers had been in a fifty-one-day siege after Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agents tried and failed to deliver a warrant. Koresh and his followers had fired on the ATF agents and barricaded themselves in the Apocalypse Ranch — a name that should've set off warning bells from the start. The FBI's Hostage Rescue Team had eventually surrounded the place. In the end, Koresh and the cultists had set their own compound on fire, and most of them died.
  "Yeah, I was there. Mostly getting senior agents coffee, but trust me, I have experience with cults. I heard the crazy ranting, I saw the few cultists who came out, I saw the place burn. Hell, I even walked through crowds of protesters and had egg thrown at my face. But this compound is different. It's got some of that same creepy vibe, but I'm telling you, this is more than a simple cult. There's just something off about the place. I know there's more happening. And I'm not going to be the FBI agent who overlooks it."
  No wonder BAU had refused to take on the file. The Butler Compound had already been evaluated and Jen had nothing but her gut to say there was a genuine threat.
  Evelyn was probably going to find a group of survivalists who wanted nothing to do with her or Jen. She'd come home with nothing useful from Cartwright, and an unsanctioned side trip that would make her miss her flight.
  Jen must have sensed her frustration, because she said defensively, "See for yourself."
  The SUV rounded another bend and the compound seemed to appear out of nowhere. It was a larger building than she'd expected in such a remote place, and much more sophisticated, too. Usually survivalists built small, and used the materials they found in their immediate vicinity. Not this group.
  The compound looked more like an aboveground bunker than a house. Windows were barred as if they lived in the city instead of the wilderness, and there was a tower at the center, rising high in the air, that Evelyn hadn't seen until they'd gotten close. But if anyone was up there, they would've seen her and Jen coming for miles — a single set of headlights approaching through the darkness.
  Evelyn peered through the windshield, squinting at the rooftop. "Are those … ?"
  "Solar panels," Jen broke in. "Yeah. Judging from the chimneys, they have a couple of fireplaces. And I know they've got some massive generators, but they're not hooked up to the grid at all. As far as we can tell, they have no electricity and no internet. They've even rigged their own system to bring in water. They're to-tally off grid."
  What a way to live, Evelyn thought but didn't say. Then again, there were plenty of cultists who lived without electricity while their leader had excessive luxuries.
  And this group was supposedly made up of survivalists, so maybe they really didn't need modern comforts.
  The compound was nestled at the base of a steep, curved peak that would prevent anyone from approaching on either side. The rest of it was surrounded by a tall, chain-link fence, topped with barbed wire. But the gate at the entrance hung open.
  "Well, this is kind of weird," Jen said as she drove in.
  "What is?" Evelyn asked, sitting straighter.
  The group had cut down trees to put up the fence and to keep anyone from scaling a tree to hop over it; inside they'd left the environment alone. There wasn't much more than a few scraggly pines, but they were still big enough for someone to hide behind. No one emerged. She didn't see anyone at all. A nervous shiver crept up Evelyn's spine.
  "Usually they meet me at the gate," Jen said, her tone wary.
  "How often have you come here?" And how clearly had she advertised her suspicions?
  "Just three times."
  That would make her interest obvious, Evelyn figured. But where was everyone?
  "Maybe BAU was right about the Kool-Aid," Jen joked. Her voice held no humor.
  She parked close to the compound, took out her cell phone and started to call someone. She had her door open and was hopping out of the vehicle before Evelyn could suggest they wait.
  Swearing, Evelyn followed. Even if Jen had made her suspicions obvious, she knew the people better than Evelyn did. They'd talked peacefully with her in the past, so theoretically they wouldn't overreact to having her return.
  Regardless, Evelyn didn't like it. Not the open gate, not the stillness of the place, not Jen's stubborn insis-tence that there was danger here.
  Cold air stung her throat as soon as she slammed the car door behind her. Either because it was later now, or because of their elevation, it felt another twenty degrees cooler up here. In the Montana wilderness, she needed more than a wool suit and a pair of low heels. She'd taken barely five steps when her fingers started to throb from the cold.
  Still, she unbuttoned her suit coat for quicker access to the SIG Sauer P226 strapped at her hip.
  Jen followed the set of thick tire tracks that ran off the hard-packed trail and into the looser dirt. As she stepped around the corner of the building, she called out, "Hello?"
  Evelyn picked up her pace to follow when she heard Jen exclaim, "Hey, I know you!"
  Then Jen walked around the corner again, this time backward, with her hands up and held out to her sides.
  Evelyn reached for her weapon, but before she could unholster it, a man came into view.
  He was nothing more than a big blur of angry features and camo, because all she could focus on was the modified AK-47 aimed directly at Jen.

— ♦ —

Elizabeth Heiter
Photo provided courtesy of
Elizabeth Heiter

Elizabeth Heiter likes her suspense to feature strong heroines, chilling villains, psychological twists, and a little romance. Her research has taken her into the minds of serial killers, through murder investigations, and onto the FBI Academy's shooting range. Elizabeth graduated from the University of Michigan with a degree in English literature.

For more information about the author, please visit her website at ElizabethHeiter.com and her author page on Goodreads, or find her on Facebook and Twitter.

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Seized by Elizabeth Heiter

Seized by Elizabeth Heiter

The Profiler Series

Publisher: Harlequin MIRA

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Format(s)BN.com Print/Nook Format(s)iTunes iBook FormatKobo eBook Format

Danger is all around her … The next terrorist threat is right beside her …

What should have been a routine investigation for FBI profiler Evelyn Baine turns ominous when she's kidnapped by a dangerous cult of survivalists. As her worst nightmares become a reality, she begins to question what she's seeing. Because the longer she's inside their compound, the more she realizes this group is not what it seems to be.

As the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team closes in, Evelyn suspects she's stumbled onto an emerging terrorist threat — and a cult leader who has a score to settle with the FBI. If Hostage Rescue breaches the compound, Evelyn's dead for sure. If they don't, the cult may unleash a surprise attack that could leave the whole country shattered.

Seized by Elizabeth Heiter

A Conversation with Thriller Writer Elizabeth Heiter

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Elizabeth Heiter

We are delighted to welcome author Elizabeth Heiter to Omnimystery News today.

Elizabeth's third thriller in The Profiler Series, Seized (Harlequin MIRA; December 2015 mass market paperback and ebook formats), is published this week and we had a chance to catch up with her to talk a little more about it.

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Omnimystery News: Tell us a little more about the lead character of The Profiler Series. What is it about her that appeals to you as a writer?

Elizabeth Heiter
Photo provided courtesy of
Elizabeth Heiter

Elizabeth Heiter: The heroine of my Profiler series is Evelyn Baine, a dedicated FBI agent who decided she was going to be a profiler when she was twelve years old and her best friend went missing, a victim of the Nursery Rhyme Killer, and was never found. Seventeen years later, Evelyn learned that her best friend's abductor left a note claiming he took her, too. Early in her career, Evelyn doesn't know why her best friend Cassie was a victim and she was spared. But she's spent most of her life chasing a job that would help her find Cassie — or help find justice for other victims like Cassie.

Evelyn appeals to me as a character because she's got such single-minded focus for her job, and she's a very talented profiler, but in social interactions, she's totally lost. With every case she tackles — a serial killer who buries his victims up to their necks deep in the woods in Hunted and the return of the Nursery Rhyme Killer eighteen years later in Vanished and now a survivalist cult that may actually be a terrorist group in Seized — Evelyn grows and changes, and I love going on that journey with her.

OMN: Seized is the third book in this series. How has Evelyn changed since she was introduced in Hunted?

EH: Like any real person, I want the characters in my series to change over time. At her core, Evelyn is the same person she was in Hunted, but in Seized, she's less isolated, a little less socially awkward, and even in a (secret) relationship with a fellow FBI agent. When I initially developed Evelyn, I purposely created her with room to grow, because I wanted her to change throughout the series, but still retain that talent for profiling that drives the mysteries in each story.

OMN: How would you tweet a summary of Seized?

EH: A routine investigation lands an FBI profiler on the wrong side of a hostage situation, and in the middle of an emerging terrorist threat.

OMN: Describe your writing process for us.

EH: My writing process begins with that spark — that one idea I can't stop thinking about that will become the core of the story. Usually it's something that keeps me up at night, wondering, What if? For the Profiler series, that spark came when I began reading about the process of profiling. I thought, there's a character in this. But the more real-life cases I read, the more gruesome crime scene details I reviewed, the more I realized: my character needed to have a strong motivation to stay in this job. For Evelyn, it was the disappearance of her best friend that started it all.

For each new book, I write a bullet-point outline. It contains the key turning points for the story, as well as the major turning points for the characters. I create biographies for my characters, focusing on their backstory, because it tells me where they came from and helps me develop where they're going. A lot of that never shows up in the story, but it informs the way I create the characters and helps me keep them consistent. Along the way, though, inevitably some of the plot and characters will shift as the writing begins.

Each book is an adventure, and I love a good adventure!

OMN: How do you go about researching the plot points of your stories?

EH: I love to research. Usually, I'm plotting one book, writing another, and researching the next one. For me, research comes in many forms. I read a lot, particularly books from people who have actually done the jobs I'm portraying, and books on the topics I'm covering. Seized required research into cults, survivalists and terrorism, and with every Profiler book I write, I brush up on my core FBI knowledge.

My favorite kind of research, though, is hands-on. In the process of writing this series, I've spoken with current and former FBI agents, cops, and forensics experts. I've visited FBI field offices, forensic laboratories, and the FBI Academy.

I think my most challenging topic to research has been the specifics of profilers — they're actually behavioral analysts and despite popular belief, they work out of an unmarked office building in Aquia, Virginia, and not Quantico. The most exciting? Honestly, I think that was the FBI Academy research — when I visited, they let me shoot every weapon used by federal agents (including the tactical agents!). Talk about some hands-on research!

OMN: Complete this sentence for us: "I am a thriller writer and thus I am also …".

EH: I am a thriller writer and thus I am also a dangerous person to piss off! When I have book signings, inevitably one of the questions I get is: "You look so sweet and normal. What made you write such dark crime stories?" I like to joke that "sweet and normal" is just a façade.

Kidding aside, I have a mug at home that reads "Don't annoy the writer or she may put you in a book and kill you." I haven't ever written in a real person as a victim, but there's always the next book!

OMN: Tell us more about the cover of Seized.

EH: I love the cover for Seized! It's an evolution of the series look, and it's my favorite cover yet. Normally, authors (unless they are self-published, of course) don't have much say in the cover, but I was lucky enough to see a mock-up for Seized early in the process. I had a few suggestions, and my publisher adjusted the final cover. In both Hunted and Vanished, the image was inside the title, and for Seized, the image has moved outside the letters, but it still has the same feel — this one is Evelyn standing in front of a mountainside. In the distance, I like to imagine, is the cult where she'll be taken hostage!

OMN: What's next for you?

EH: I love writing novels, and I'm lucky enough to be writing two series in two different genres (my Profiler series, which are psychological suspense, and my Lawmen series, which are romantic suspense). Next up, I'll be working on revisions to Stalked, my fourth Profiler story, and writing books four through six of my Lawmen stories.

And of course, right now, I'm busy with events for Seized! If you're in Michigan, Illinois, California, or Arizona, please check the News page on my website — I'll be having book signings in those locations. And wherever you are, please check out Avenged. It's a free short story that takes place between Vanished and Seized — you can get all the details on my Books page.

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Elizabeth Heiter likes her suspense to feature strong heroines, chilling villains, psychological twists, and a little romance. Her research has taken her into the minds of serial killers, through murder investigations, and onto the FBI Academy's shooting range. Elizabeth graduated from the University of Michigan with a degree in English literature.

For more information about the author, please visit her website at ElizabethHeiter.com and her author page on Goodreads, or find her on Facebook and Twitter.

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Seized by Elizabeth Heiter

Seized by Elizabeth Heiter

The Profiler Series

Publisher: Harlequin MIRA

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Format(s)BN.com Print/Nook Format(s)iTunes iBook FormatKobo eBook Format

Danger is all around her … The next terrorist threat is right beside her …

What should have been a routine investigation for FBI profiler Evelyn Baine turns ominous when she's kidnapped by a dangerous cult of survivalists. As her worst nightmares become a reality, she begins to question what she's seeing. Because the longer she's inside their compound, the more she realizes this group is not what it seems to be.

As the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team closes in, Evelyn suspects she's stumbled onto an emerging terrorist threat — and a cult leader who has a score to settle with the FBI. If Hostage Rescue breaches the compound, Evelyn's dead for sure. If they don't, the cult may unleash a surprise attack that could leave the whole country shattered.

Seized by Elizabeth Heiter

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