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Forge January eBook Deals!

New Year, new e-Book deals! Gear up for next month’s release of The House Guest by Hank Phillippi Ryan with one (or both) of these searing thrillers—now on sale for $1.99, all month long!


The Murder ListThe Murder List by Hank Phillippi Ryan

Law student Rachel North will tell you, without hesitation, what she knows to be true. She’s smart, she’s a hard worker, she does the right thing, she’s successfully married to a faithful and devoted husband, a lion of Boston’s defense bar, and her internship with the Boston DA’s office is her ticket to a successful future.

Problem is–she’s wrong.

And in this cat and mouse game–the battle for justice becomes a battle for survival.

Trust MeTrust Me by Hank Phillippi Ryan

There are three sides to every story. Yours. Mine. And the truth.

An accused killer insists she’s innocent of a heinous murder.
A grieving journalist surfaces from the wreckage of her shattered life.
Their unlikely alliance leads to a dangerous cat and mouse game that will leave you breathless.
Who can you trust when you can’t trust yourself?

 

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8 Books to Read for Galentine’s Day

By Alison Bunis

Happy Galentine’s Day! What’s Galentine’s Day, you ask? Essentially, for those of you not in the know, what started as a made-up holiday on the tv-show Parks and Recreation has become a real holiday. The day before Valentine’s Day, the most couple-y of holidays, gal pals everywhere put aside their partners and say to each other, “I appreciate your friendship and I love you.” How you celebrate is up to you, of course. Leslie Knope of Parks and Rec obviously goes for breakfast food, because that’s her love language. But for us here at Forge, our love language is obviously books. So to celebrate Galentine’s Day this year, we’ve put together a list of books celebrating women!

These books are by women or about women. Some of these women kick ass. Some of these women bake magic pies. Some of them tell you about their parents’ divorce and how not to join a cult, and some of them write about ISIS occupations. It’s a wide range, because there’s no predetermined way to be a woman, or to be a gal-pal. So grab your BFF, grab a couple of books, and get reading. Ladies celebrating ladies by reading about awesome ladies. What could be more Galentine’s Day than that??


For the Non-fiction Gal

Image Place holder  of - 84Stay Sexy & Don’t Get Murdered by Karen Kilgariff & Georgia Hardstark
Pick up this book if you’re into Karen & Georgia’s podcast, My Favorite Murder! But even if you’re not a podcast person, don’t worry, this book is an excellent read for anyone looking for an honest, open, hilarious memoir about the struggles of dealing with mental health issues, addiction, and being a True Crime fan.

Image Placeholder of - 63Father of Lions by Louise Callaghan
This one is a touching story of humanity in the midst of war, told by award-winning journalist Louise Callaghan. Callaghan is one of the youngest Middle East Correspondents ever hired by the Sunday Times (UK), and she has had pieces published in The Sunday Times Magazine, Vogue, and the Times Literary Supplement. Talk about an impressive lady. Father of Lions is a must-read if you’re interested in a story that will make you view war and conflict in a new light, or if you want a good book about brave animals.

To Get Your Pulse Racing

Placeholder of  -55The Retreat by Sherri Smith
We’ve all got that one friend who’s way too into the latest wellness craze. Maybe we are that friend, and no one’s told us yet. Doesn’t matter, this is just the book to break the spell: four friends go for a weekend getaway at a wellness retreat. By the end, only one of them is left standing…

Place holder  of - 79Trust Me by Hank Phillippi Ryan
Hank Phillippi Ryan is an award-winning investigative journalist, so when she sits down to write a book about a journalist looking for the truth in an unbearably brutal story, you can bet she delivers. Trust Me is full of all the psychological suspense and manipulation that any thriller reader could ever desire.

A Hint of Magic

Poster Placeholder of - 87Midnight at the Blackbird Cafe by Heather Webber
For your friend who believes in magic, for your friend who believes in love, for your friend who loves to bake, for your friend from a small town, for your friend with a close family, for your friend with serious family issues: Midnight at the Blackbird Cafe checks all the boxes. But have baked goods on hand: you’ll definitely want a snack while reading.

Remembrance by Rita Woods
Do you want to spark a discussion with your friends? Want to dive into the deeper issues surrounding the Haitian Revolution and the Underground Railroad? Or do you just want to sink into an enthralling read about four women, connected across different times and places, struggling to make their way in a world that doesn’t have a place for them? (Hint: If you liked The Underground Railroad or The Orphan Train, this is definitely the book for you.)

Historically Accurate Friendships

Ask Me No Questions by Shelley Noble
 Okay, this one’s for the gal pal groups who watched Downton Abbey together. The movie helped, sure, but it was just one movie. So if you’re suffering from Downton Abbey withdrawal, Shelley Noble is here to help you out with her delightful mystery set in Gilded Age Manhattan, where horse racing, romance, murder, and scandals abound. Someone simply must do something. And our plucky heroine Lady Dunbridge is happy to oblige.

Of Irish Blood by Mary Pat KellyOf Irish Blood by Mary Pat Kelly
This vivid, compelling epic is a great read for anyone interested in Irish heritage or family history, because author Mary Pat Kelly based the story on her own great-aunt’s life. Following heroine Nora Kelly as she travels through Europe in 1903, readers will meet all kinds of exciting real-life characters such as Gertrude Stein, William Butler Yeats, and James Joyce!

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Four Books That’ll Convince You to Keep Your Lights on at Night

Four Books That’ll Convince You to Keep Your Lights on at Night

By Mary Halabani 

Spooky season is finally here! What better way to celebrate than with a stack of extra thrilling and oh-so chilling reads? Get comfortable in your coziest jammies and be sure to sleep with one eye open: it’s going to be a long night of suspicious noises from potential murder suspects.

Trust Me by Hank Phillippi Ryan 

Image Placeholder of - 82Ashlyn Bryant is on trial for the heinous murder of her daughter, and it’s all anyone in Boston can talk about. Mercer Hennessy is assigned to cover the trial and spin it into a best-selling true crime book, but the subject is hitting too close to home. In award-winning author Hank Phillippi Ryan’s Trust Me, the unlikely alliance between grieving journalist and accused killer leads to a dangerous cat and mouse game that is sure to leave you breathless.

When Old Midnight Comes Along by Loren D. Estleman

Placeholder of  -44Award-winning author Loren D. Estleman is back with a new Amos Walker mystery to satisfy longtime fans and new readers alike. This time, Amos Walker is hired by one Francis X. Lawes, a private-sector mover and shaker in Detroit politics, to prove that his wife, Paula, who disappeared under sinister circumstances six years ago, is dead, so he can remarry without having to wait for the seven-year-declaration-of-death rule to kick in. But Lawes is still the police’s prime suspect, and Walker has to wonder: if Lawes is really guilty, why would he put himself in jeopardy by hiring Walker to find the body and give the forensics team something to work on? 

Redemption Point by Candice Fox

Place holder  of - 60The follow-up to Candice Fox’s Crimson Lake is just as compulsively readable and thrilling. Ted Conkaffey is the most infamous man in Australia, accused but never convicted of abducting a young girl named Claire Bingley. He attempts to disappear to Crimson Lake, but nowhere is safe from Claire’s grieving father. Dale Bingley wants revenge on the real abductor, and if that fails, Ted will be his first casualty. Meanwhile, Amanda Pharrell–a convicted killer, and Ted’s partner in the PI business–takes on the homicide case of two young bartenders. Ted and Amanda must hunt for the truth to redeem themselves, but it could cost them their lives.

They All Fall Down by Rachel Howzell Hall

Image Place holder  of - 52A surprise invitation lands Miriam Macy and six other strangers on a luxurious private island off the coast of Mexico. But they’ve been invited there under false pretenses, and nothing is what it seems. When secrets begin to divide the strangers and strange accidents start to occur the guests are left wondering who to trust, and more importantly…who will be next?

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New Releases: 12/31

Happy New Release Day! Here’s what went on sale today.

Siege of Stone by Terry Goodkind

Place holder  of - 62The Sorceress Nicci, the Wizard Nathan Rahl, and the young swordsman Bannon remain in the legendary city of Ildakar after a great internal revolt has freed the slaves and brought down the powerful wizards council. But as he fled the city, capricious Wizard Commander Maxim dissolved the petrification spell that had turned to stone the invading army of General Utros fifteen centuries earlier. Now, hundreds of thousands of half-stone soldiers from the ancient past have awakened, led by one of the greatest enemy commanders in history.

Nicci, Nathan, and Bannon have to help Ildakar survive this unbreakable siege, using all the magical defenses of the legendary city. Even as General Utros holds Ildakar hostage and also unleashes his incredible army on the unsuspecting Old World, an equally powerful threat arises out in the sea.

Nicci knows the battle won’t remain in the city; if she can’t stop this threat, two invincible armies can sweep across the Old World and destroy D’Hara itself.

NEW IN PAPERBACK

The Search for Maggie Ward by Andrew M. Greeley

Image Placeholder of - 47Young Navy flier Jerry Keenan is supposed to be on his way home to Chicago, law school, and a postwar life that is socially acceptable to a well-off Irish Catholic family. Instead he is in Arizona delaying that homecoming while he wrestles with his memories of combat and the men he saw die.

That may be one reason an encounter with a girl at a Tucson lunch counter seems so appealing. Another reason is that she is mysterious, hauntingly beautiful, and very sexy—the perfect antidote for a troubled heart.

But just when Jerry realizes how much he needs Maggie Ward, she dramatically vanishes, or is taken, from him. And Jerry Keenan, in search of his destiny and his soul, must be willing to move heaven and earth to find the woman he loves.

Trust Me by Hank Phillippi Ryan

Poster Placeholder of - 27There are three sides to every story. Yours. Mine. And the truth.

An accused killer insists she’s innocent of a heinous murder.
A grieving journalist surfaces from the wreckage of her shattered life.
Their unlikely alliance leads to a dangerous cat and mouse game that will leave you breathless.
Who can you trust when you can’t trust yourself?

 

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On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events in September

Your favorite Tor/Forge authors are hitting the road in September! See who’s coming to a city near you this month.

Brendan Deneen, The Chrysalis

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Wednesday, September 5
Housing Works Bookstore Café
New York, NY
7:00 PM

Friday, September 7
Barnes & Noble
West Hartford, CT
7:00 PM

Saturday, September 15
Words Bookstore
Maplewood, NJ
4:00 PM

Parker Peevyhouse, The Echo Room

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Saturday, September 15
Hicklebee’s
San Jose, CA
7:00 PM

P. Djèlí Clark, The Black God’s Drums

Drums

Sunday, September 16
Brooklyn Book Festival
Brooklyn, NY
3:00 PM

Brandon Sanderson, Legion

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Wednesday, September 19
BYU Store, Wilkinson Student Center
Provo, Utah
7:00 PM

Hank Phillippi Ryan, Trust Me

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Sunday, September 2
The Arizona Biltmore
Phoenix, AZ
4:30 PM

Wednesday, September 12
Rockport Public Library
Rockport, MA
7:00 PM

Sunday, September 16
Provincetown Public Library
Provincetown, MA
4:00 PM

Saturday, September 22
Bookfest St. Louis
St. Louis, MO
6:00 PM

Tuesday, September 25
Belmont Books
Belmont, MA
7:00 PM

Drew Williams, The Stars Now Unclaimed

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Monday, September 10
Lemuria Books
Jackson, MS
5:00 PM

Saturday, September 29
Page & Palette
Fairhope, AL
2:00 PM

Mary Robinette Kowal, The Fated Sky

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Tuesday, September 4
American Writers Museum
Chicago, IL
6:30 PM

V. E Schwab, Vengeful

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Tuesday, September 25
Barnes & Noble
Los Angeles, CA
7:00 PM

Wednesday, September 26
Books Inc
Berkeley, CA
7:00 PM

Thursday, September 27
Powell’s Books
Beaverton, OR
7:00 PM

Friday, September 28
Third Place Books
Lake Forest Park, WA
6:00 PM

Saturday, September 29
The King’s English Bookshop
Salt Lake City, UT
7:00 PM

Sunday, September 30
Tattered Cover
Denver, CO
2:00 PM

Malka Older, State Tectonics

state-tectonics

Tuesday, September 4
Flyleaf Books
Chapel Hill, NC
7:00 PM

Saturday, September 15
Politics and Prose
Washington, DC
6:00 PM

Tuesday, September 25
Housing Works Bookstore Café
New York, NY
7:00 PM

Matt Goldman, Broken Ice

brokenicetour

Thursday, September 27
Le Sueur Public Library
Le Sueur, MN
7:00 PM

Paddy Hirsch, The Devil’s Half Mile

devilshalfmiletour

Monday, September 10
Huntington Beach Library
Huntington Beach, CA
6:00 PM

Saturday, September 22
Santa Clarita Public Library
Santa Clarita, CA
6:00 PM

William Martin, Bound for Gold

boundforgoldtour

Thursday, September 13
Falmouth Historical Society
Falmouth, MA
7:00 PM

Thursday, September 20
Concord Bookshop
Concord, MA
7:00 PM

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New Releases: 8/28/18

Happy New Release Day! Here’s what went on sale today.

Stygian by Sherrilyn Kenyon

Image Placeholder of - 43 Bestselling author Sherrilyn Kenyon brings us back to the astonishing world of the Dark-Hunters in Stygian, with a hero misunderstood by many…but most of all by himself.

Born before man recorded time, I lived for thousands of years believing myself to be something I’m not.

Someone I’m not.

Trust Me by Hank Phillippi Ryan

Place holder  of - 15 An accused killer insists she’s innocent of a heinous murder. A grieving journalist surfaces from the wreckage of her shattered life.

Their unlikely alliance leads to a dangerous cat and mouse game that will leave you breathless.

Who can you trust when you can’t trust yourself?

NEW FROM TOR.COM

War Cry by Brian McClellan

Placeholder of  -92 Teado is a Changer, a shape-shifting military asset trained to win wars. His platoon has been stationed in the Bavares high plains for years, stranded. As they ration supplies and scan the airwaves for news, any news, their numbers dwindle. He’s not sure how much time they have left.

Desperate and starving, armed with aging, faulting equipment, the team jumps at the chance for a risky resupply mission, even if it means not all of them might come. What they discover could change the course of the war.

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Blade of Empire by Mercedes Lackey & James Mallory

The Dog Master by W. Bruce Cameron

Eve of Destruction by Sylvia Day

Hawk by Steven Brust

Stand Proud and Eyes of the Hawk by Elmer Kelton

Strong to the Bone by Jon Land

NEW IN MANGA

12 Beast Vol. 6 Story and Art by OKAYADO

Alice & Zoroku Vol. 4 Story and art by Tetsuya Imai

Captain Harlock: Dimensional Voyage Vol. 5 Story by Leiji Matsumoto; Art by Kouichi Shimahoshi

D-Frag! Vol. 12 Story and Art by Tomoya Haruno

Hour of the Zombie Vol. 7 Story and art by Tsukasa Saimura

How to Build a Dungeon: Book of the Demon King Vol. 4 Story by Yakan Warau; Art by Toshimasa Komiya

Magical Girl Apocalypse Vol. 15 Story and art by Kentaro Sato

Monster Girl Doctor Vol. 3 Story by Yoshino Origuchi; Art by z-ton

My Monster Secret Vol. 12 Story and Art by Eiji Masuda

Ultra Kaiju Anthropomorphic Project Vol. 2 Character designs by POP; story and art by Shun Kazakami

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Three Sides to Every Story

Image Place holder  of - 49 By Hank Phillippi Ryan

An intensely gruesome murder. An unimaginably creepy defendant and her weird boyfriend. Drugs and money and a lost little girl. And it wasn’t fiction. (Not yet, at least, but more on that in a minute.) Here in Boston, they called it the Baby Doe case.

It’s Sunday evening, and I’m sitting at the kitchen table listening to my lawyer husband. He’s practicing the closing argument he’s about to give to the jury in Baby Doe. He’s an experienced successful defense attorney. A good guy. Who, truly, believes his client did not commit this murder.

I listen, fascinated. And more importantly, completely convinced that the story my husband is telling is true. He’s used only the evidence presented at the trial, as he legally is required to, and what he is saying is so persuasive, I cannot believe a jury would not instantly return a verdict of not guilty.

And then, I imagine another spouse, sitting at another kitchen table across town in Boston somewhere. She is listening to her husband present his closing arguments. Those of the prosecution.

Is she as mesmerized as I am? As convinced, as certain? The prosecutor, of course, is arguing that my husband’s client is guilty! Using exactly the same evidence, as he is required to do, he has created a completely different version of what happened.

Which version is true?

Trust me, each of those lawyers would be telling the jury. Trust me. I am telling you the truth of what happened.

As a result of this, of this impossible choice, I became more and more obsessed with the central question of truth. There was the prosecution side and the defense side—and then there was the truth. There were actually three sides to every story, I realized. It all depends what you mean by “the truth.”

In that moment, Trust Me was born.

Here is what— for me at least – makes this book even more breathtakingly personal. Something that happened six years earlier.

Remember the Casey Anthony trial? They called it the trial of the century. Television viewers across the country were riveted, every day, to the wall-to-wall coverage of the case of the Florida party girl who was accused of killing her toddler, hiding her body, and then lying about the girl’s whereabouts for a month. Everyone was talking about it. The intensity of the animosity toward Casey Anthony actually brought people together! Strangers on subways and in elevators discussed the characters, and dissected the evidence, and exchanged gossip and the speculation. It was a tragedy, a terrible story, and it was everywhere.

Back then, I was hired to collaborate with the on-scene trial reporter to write the true crime account of the Casey Anthony story — an “instant book,” my editor called it. I was under a crushing deadline for it, too: I had to watch the trial on TV, research Anthony’s background and past and all of the evidence and documentation, and use it to write a true crime account of what happened. And on the day she was sentenced to prison for life, as everyone assumed she would be, the book would be published.

I worked nonstop for two months. I dropped everything. I had three computers–one for research, one for watching the trial, and one for writing the book. I wrote from dawn till midnight, and even later.

It was a revelation. I realized I was the perfect person to write the story. I’d been a television reporter for 30 years at that time, and understood evidence, and trials, and storytelling, and suspense.  I’d covered the Civil Action trial and the Claus Von Bulow retrial, among many others. I knew how to write for television, I knew how to write about trial coverage, and I knew this was a hell of a story. I will admit I thought I’d found my calling as a true crime narrative nonfiction author.

I finished. I even wrote the outline of the verdict day scene before it happened. Of course she’d be found guilty, I’d decided. She was guilty, I’d decided. No other result was possible.

Then. Casey Anthony was found not guilty. The book was killed. All my work was for nothing.

But what affected me even more profoundly: I had, apparently, gotten everything completely wrong. I had written the whole book, I realized, as if she were going to be found guilty. Because, again I admit, that’s what I thought was true. But the jury disagreed with me. How could the jury believe one thing, and I so deeply believe another?

I thought about that dilemma, again, during my husband’s trial. And those puzzle pieces— The Baby Doe trial, the Casey Anthony trial, my book that never was and my experience writing it, as well as the “three sides to every story” realization–all came together to create Trust Me.

In this psychological standalone, a magazine reporter faces off with an accused murderer in a life-and-death battle for the truth. The journalist uses all of her reporter tricks to get the defendant to confess for the true-crime book she’s writing. The defendant uses all of her manipulative skills to convince the journalist she’s innocent.

Using only the evidence presented, one character puts the pieces together a certain way. Using that same evidence, the other character puts the story together a completely different way. But might there be—using exactly the same evidence—another version?

It’s a high-stakes psychological cat and mouse game: but who is the cat and who is the mouse?

Each player has risked it all. Staked her life on winning. But only one can win.

And in Trust Me–I dare you to find the liar.

What do we mean by the “truth”? Trust me, we don’t always know.

Order Your Copy

Image Place holder  of amazon- 64 Placeholder of bn -14 Image Place holder  of booksamillion- 54 ibooks2 71 indiebound

 Follow Hank Phillippi Ryan online on Twitter, Facebook, and her website.

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Start a Discussion With the Trust Me Reading Group Guide

Place holder  of - 70 Can you spot the liar?

An accused killer insists she’s innocent of a heinous murder.

A grieving journalist surfaces from the wreckage of her shattered life.

Their unlikely alliance leads to a dangerous cat and mouse game that will leave you breathless.

Who can you trust when you can’t trust yourself?

Want to talk about Trust Me‘s thrilling twists and turns with your book club? Start the conversation with some discussion questions about Hank Phillippi Ryan’s standalone novel of psychological suspense and manipulation.

Trust Me RGG

Order Your Copy

Placeholder of amazon -74 Image Placeholder of bn- 47 Poster Placeholder of booksamillion- 98 ibooks2 14 indiebound

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On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events in August

Tor/Forge authors are on the road in August! See who is coming to a city near you this month.

Lara Elena Donnelly, Armistice

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Sunday, August 12
Brookline Booksmith
Brookline, MA
2:00 PM

Mary Robinette Kowal, The Calculating Stars & The Fated Sky

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Wednesday, August 1
Firefly Fibers Art Studio
Chicago, IL
4:00 PM
Yarn Crawl Meet and Greet

Tuesday, August 21
Poisoned Pen
Scottsdale, AZ
7:00 PM
Discussion and Signing with John Scalzi

Monday, August 27
Left Bank Books
St. Louis, MO
7:00 PM

David D. Levine, Arabella the Traitor of Mars

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Wednesday, August 1st
Powell’s Books
Beaverton, OR
7:00 PM

Friday, August 3rd
University Bookstore
Seattle, WA
6:00 PM

William Martin, Bound for Gold

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Thursday, August 16th
An Unlikely Story
Plainville, MA
7:00 PM

Sunday, August 19th
Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library
Kennebunkport, ME
2:00 PM

Thursday, August 23rd
Wilmington Memorial Library
Wilmington, MA
7:00 PM

Hank Phillippi Ryan, Trust Me

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Tuesday, August 28th
Brookline Booksmith
Brookline, MA
7:00 PM

Wednesday, August 29th
Poisoned Pen
Scottsdale, AZ
7:00 PM
In conversation with Steve Hamilton.

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Excerpt: Trust Me by Hank Phillippi Ryan

amazons bns booksamillions ibooks2 14 indiebounds

Placeholder of  -23 An accused killer insists she’s innocent of a heinous murder.

A grieving journalist surfaces from the wreckage of her shattered life.

Their unlikely alliance leads to a dangerous cat and mouse game that will leave you breathless.

Who can you trust when you can’t trust yourself?

Trust Me will be available August 28th. Please enjoy this excerpt, and keep reading with the free digital preview

Chapter 1

DO YOU KNOW ME? Of course I’d seen those billboards, the posters, the full-color composite drawing plastered on every TV screen and newspaper—so has everyone else in Boston, if not everyone on the planet. “The poor little girl,” everyone said. “Who is she?Someone must miss her.” And those who still had daughters of their own drew them closer, or whispered warnings, or kept one protective hand on the cart as they shopped for groceries.

“Mercer? Can you handle it?” Katherine’s voice on the phone softens with concern. “You need to get back to work.”

I guess I’ve been silent, thinking about “Baby Boston” longer than I realized.

“You okay?” she persists.

“Yeah. I’m fine.” Kath wants me to write the inside true story of this gruesome crime. I sink into my chair in the study. Can I handle it? To be honest, I’m not sure.

“The book will be an instant bestseller, kiddo. It’ll put you back on the map.” Katherine charges ahead, persuading me. “Toddler killed and dumped in Boston harbor? And now the mother’s on trial for the murder? Sorry, I’m horrible. And I know it’s short notice. But you’re the only writer who can do this justice. Can I tell them yes?”

Good thing she can’t see the look on my face. Having the sensationally tragic murder of a child be the best thing that’s happened to me in a while is probably not socially acceptable. Since people finally left me alone, I’ve gotten out of practice being socially anything. I hadn’t heard from my former editor for months. Not since I stopped returning calls. And now this. A job offer.

All I’d have to do, Katherine Craft explains is—starting tomorrow—watch the courtroom testimony through the same video feed the TV stations use, then write an “instant book” about the Baby Boston murder trial. “Of course you could watch it on regular TV,” she says. “But what if some moron producer decides it’s boring? Or they cut away for the dog in the well or some phony news? Can’t rely on them deciding what to broadcast. So getting you the full feed is perfect. I tried to get you a seat in court, sweetheart, but it was too late.”

Just as well, I don’t say. Face all those people? Kath then offers me fifteen thousand dollars up front, with another fifteen thousand after the verdict when the book hits the market. Hefty royalties after that. I do need the money.

“Unless she’s not guilty.” Katherine’s voice is infinitely dismissive. “Like that’s gonna happen. But when Ashlyn Bryant is convicted? You’ll be Mercer Hennessey, bestselling author. I promise.”

That’d be good. More important, though I’ll never admit it to Kath, the book might give me a reason to get up in the morning.

“It’s never the mother, right?” She keeps up the pressure, and assumes she knows best. “The boyfriend, maybe. Or the father. But the mother? This is pure crazy.”

Right. It’s never the mother. Except when it is.

In this case, it is. And yes, pure crazy. Kath’s in her Back Bay office; I’m in my little suburban study. But I can picture my former editor’s expression. It’s the same baffled one I see on the TV talk shows and when I fidget in line at the coffee shop. People asking each other: what kind of monster mother could kill her own two-year-old?

“She’s . . .” I search for a gruesome enough word. The mother is definitely guilty this time. I’d already devoured every newspaper and magazine article and watched every newscast and feature story revealing every heartbreakingly disgusting detail about the missing-then-found little girl, even the online TV stories from the Ohio stations. At first I couldn’t stop weeping for that poor dead child. Then more tears as I shared her mother’s certain anguish. Easier to fill my brain with someone else’s grief, hoping to replace my own. Not completely successful, but better than emptiness.

When Tasha Nicole was finally identified, I actually considered calling Ashlyn, thinking (ridiculously) I could comfort her by sharing some maternal bond, each of us lost in grief and mourning our treasured baby daughters. Now it turns my stomach to think of it. How she duped me. Duped everyone. After the breaking news of her arrest? I could have murdered Ashlyn myself.

And no jury would have convicted me.

“Merce? You there?” She’s in full pitch mode, as if we still work together, still talk every day. “Go for it, honey. Say yes. It’s been long enough. You have to get back to work. You have to do something.”

Do something? Do? I almost yell at her. But she means well, and she’d stuck by me through the days the sun went out and the shadows closed in. Kath understands, as much as anyone can. It’s unfair for me to take my grief out on her. Is she right? Is there something I can do?

Maybe—for Sophie? And for Dex. Maybe to make up for what happened to them. To accept that I’m the one who’s left alive. I’m not fooling myself; I can never actually accomplish that. But at this moment, I feel Dex. Urging me to do it. To use my words to right a wrong. To strive for justice, like he always did. What’s more, he whispers, you could at least honor Sophie’s memory.

Yes. Dex is right. Yes. I’ll do it. To avenge Baby Boston. And I’ll secretly dedicate this book to Sophie. To every little girl unfairly wrenched away from the world. The more I think about it, the more I know I can do it. I yearn to do it. Physically, mentally, emotionally do it.

Plus, writing a book beat the options I’d already contemplated.

Maybe I’ll burn down the house. I’d actually said that out loud only a few days before Katherine called. Though there was no one to hear me.

I’d visualized the flames, too. Visualized the nursery furniture, its pink rosebuds and indulgent ruffles, blackened by flames. The sleek suits Dex wore to court, and Sophie’s daisy jammies and her plushy animals, the wedding photos and the toothbrushes and the . . . there’s so much of our stuff. What would I feel as the Linsdale firefighters battled hellish flames and choking smoke, attempting—yet ultimately failing—to save any evidence the Hennessey family existed? I wouldn’t live to find out.

That was the point.

“Merce?” Katherine prompts.

Putting Kath on speaker, I get up from my desk chair and retie the strings of my sweatpants, yanking them tighter. The sweats, black and soft and now grotesquely too big for me, are XL. Not mine. His. Dex won’t be needing them. No matter how many days go by, I’ll never get used to that.

“Yeah, well, maybe.” I pace to the bookshelves and back to the desk. Trying to gauge whether I’m the crazy one.

“Come on, Merce. The jury’s chosen, all the boring motions out of the way. It’s all on camera now. You just dig up the deets on the nutcase mother.” Katherine’s voice follows me, reprising the fast-talking cajoling-editor tone she’d used on me and her other underlings, when we were all at City magazine. This year she began acquiring for Arbor Inc., the mega-co that owns City and a bunch of other publications, including Arbor’s true-crime imprint.

“I know, you’re like, another body in Boston Harbor?” She goes on. “But you gotta see this one’s different. It’s not a Mob hit on a snitch, not some heroin addict’s poor abused child, not a gang turf war. The killer is the gorgeous young mother next door. Ashlyn,I mean, even her name is perfect. You can’t turn on the TV without seeing that clip of her, all petulant and pouting off to jail. So we’ll need you to convey, you know, the secret torment of the seemingly typical suburban family. Give it the feel of real.”

The feel of real. Got it. I’m a writer. I’m a storyteller. I take the facts and make them fascinating. This story doesn’t need much help in that department.

“Like In Cold Blood,” Katherine continues, as if I’ve said yes. “Narrative nonfiction. Reportage. Truman Capote simply imagined half that stuff. Made up dialogue. How else could he write it? But you can do it, Merce, I know you can.”

“Well . . . okay,” I say. “Deal.” She thinks she’s convinced me. I’ll let her believe that.

“Terrific. I’ll email the paperwork. There’s no one better for this job. You’ll kill it.” Katherine says. “Oh. Sorry, honey. But you know what I mean. You okay?”

“Sure.” She doesn’t know the half of it. “Talk soon.”

I hang up the phone, looking out my study window, down our—my—flagstone front walk and our—my—quiet neighborhood, still serenely green on a September morning, as if nothing has changed. As if my Sophie were still alive, and Dex, too. Funny what strength there is in purpose.

“Rot in hell, Ashlyn Bryant,” I say. And then, “This is for you, darling ones.”

But of course they’re not here to thank me.

 

Copyright © 2018 by Hank Phillippi Ryan

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