Praise for the novels of
MAGGIE SHAYNE
âA tasty, tension-packed read.â
âPublishers Weekly on Thicker Than Water
âTenseâ¦frighteningâ¦a page-turner in the best sense.â
âRT Book Reviews on Colder Than Ice
âMystery and danger abound in Darker Than Midnight, a fast-paced, chilling thrill read that will keep readers turning the pages long after bedtimeâ¦. Suspense, mystery, danger and passionâno one does them better than Maggie Shayne.â
âRomance Reviews Today on Darker Than Midnight
[winner of a Perfect 10 award]
âMaggie Shayne is better than chocolate. She satisfies every wicked craving.â
âNew York Times bestselling author Suzanne Forster
âShayneâs haunting tale is intricately wovenâ¦. A moving mix of high suspense and romance, this haunting Halloween thriller will propel readers to bolt their doors at night.â
âPublishers Weekly on The Gingerbread Man
âA gripping story of small-town secrets. The suspense will keep you guessing. The characters will steal your heart.â
âNew York Times bestselling author Lisa Gardner on The Gingerbread Man
Kiss of the Shadow Man is a âcrackerjack novel of romantic suspense.â
âRT Book Reviews
Sixteen Years Ago
Carrie Overton had known her life was about to change forever. She just hadnât known how drastically. But when her headlights picked out the shape of a lone woman standing beside her car on the roadside, she knew something was wrong. It was the dead of night in the middle of nowhere. The woman was leaning on her rusty, lopsided car, one arm braced on the hood, the other, cradling her swollen belly. Her face bore a grimace of pain and no small amount of fear. And, in fact, when Carrie flipped on her signal lightâthough there was no one other than an army of raccoons to see it, she thoughtâsome of that fear changed to visible, almost palpable, relief. The womanâno, she was really little more than a girl, Carrie saw as she drove closerâheld up a hand, as if to signal her to stop, though Carrie had already decided there was little else she could do.
She pulled over behind the girlâs car, a primer-colored breakdown-waiting-to-happen, shut her own engine off and got out. The silence of the night struck her as she walked quickly over to the girl. Her shoes crunched on gravel, crickets chirped as if nothing was wrong, and night birds called out noisily every fourth step or so.
âCar broken down?â she asked, almost hoping it was as simple as that, even though every instinct in her body was telling her otherwise. And her instincts were probably better than most, seeing as how she was a doctor. A new one, yes, but a doctor all the same.
The girl met her eyes, and Carrie saw that they were wet. âNo. I think I might be in labor.â
Carrie felt her own quick gasp, but just as quickly she grabbed hold of her nerves and replaced them with the quiet calm she had learned patients needed from their MDs. âLucky for you I came along, then. Iâm a doctor.â
âAre you kidding me?â
âNope. Iâm on my way to start a new job at Shadow Falls General Hospital.â
âThatâs where Iâm going, too!â the girl said, but then she whimpered, and closed her eyes and hugged her middle. âGod, that hurts.â
âOkay, breathe through it,â Carrie told her. âLike this.â And then she demonstrated, puffing short bursts of air from pursed lips.
The girl obeyed, and in a moment, as the pain eased, Carrie opened the rear door of the girlâs car and helped her in. âCome on, lie down on the backseat, where you can be more comfortable until I get us some help.â
âI think comfortable is impossible at this point.â But the girl moved anyway. Not far, though. She took two steps, then bent double once more, almost falling to her knees this time. She began puffing those short breaths again, and for the first time Carrie felt a real sense of alarm.
Hunkering down to be at eye level with the now-crouching mother-to-be, Carrie asked, âHow far apart are the pains?â
âAlmost constant,â the girl whispered between puffs.
âOkay. Okay,â Carrie said soothingly. She waited for the pain to pass, and then quickly moved the girl into the backseat. Clearly she was about to deliver a baby. Another birth pang came and went before she got the girl even half-undressed. Then Carrie had to leave just long enough to race to her own car and grab her bag. In seconds she was back, kneeling on the pavement beside the open car door.