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On a cool December afternoon, a jetliner inexplicably explodes over the Florida Everglades, killing all 150 onboard. Before it barrels in, however, the plane takes one more victim, the mayor of Broward County, an avid outdoorsman who was on his airboat, in the wrong place at the wrong time. That's according to the sole witness, a dominatrix of all things. She claims she was providing her professional services to the mayor in that remote location. At least, that's what she tells George Leon. A young, successful magazine publisher, George is a former investigative reporter, who used to work for…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
On a cool December afternoon, a jetliner inexplicably explodes over the Florida Everglades, killing all 150 onboard. Before it barrels in, however, the plane takes one more victim, the mayor of Broward County, an avid outdoorsman who was on his airboat, in the wrong place at the wrong time. That's according to the sole witness, a dominatrix of all things. She claims she was providing her professional services to the mayor in that remote location. At least, that's what she tells George Leon. A young, successful magazine publisher, George is a former investigative reporter, who used to work for the Universal Planet, a real out-there supermarket tabloid. Now the editor of the Planet is offering him a cool fifty grand to see if the woman's story is on the level. George digs in, only to gravitate closer to the deceptively dangerous dominatrix and find she has a dark past. Ultimately, he'll discover the shocking story behind the jetliner's downfall and that the woman has a dark past she just can't overcome.
Autorenporträt
Ken Kaye has authored seven novels, including The East Side of Lauderdale, Final Revenge, Stuck on 75, Gash in the Glades, The Wrong Hangar, The Kiss and Kill Girl and The Monroe Massacre. Born and raised in Cleveland, Ohio, Ken graduated from the University of Denver, where he had been aiming toward a career as an airline pilot. He was a flight instructor during his last two years of college. Yet, always a writer at heart, he ended up working as a reporter for the Sun Newspapers in Northeast Ohio for four years. He then migrated to South Florida, where he worked for the Sun Sentinel for more than three decades as a reporter, editor and columnist. As a reporter, Ken specialized in weather and aviation. He led the coverage of the tumultuous 2004 and 2005 hurricane seasons, helping the Sun Sentinel to be nominated as a Pulitzer finalist both years. He also led coverage of the ValuJet crash in the Everglades in 1996. Ken lives in Weston, Florida, with his wife, Maria.