



Shadows of the Dead
A Special Tracking Unit Novel
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- €11.99
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- €11.99
Publisher Description
In this gripping thriller, the world's best tracker must hunt down two nearly untraceable killers before time runs out for their victims.
Magnus "Steps" Craig, part of the FBI's elite Special Tracking Unit, is called in on a case that requires his unparalleled skills. A woman, abducted and found in the trunk of a car after a high-speed chase, reveals two crucial pieces of information: the man who kidnapped her is not the same as the man who left her in the woods, and she's not the first victim—she is number eight.
Steps has a secret to his talent. He possesses a kind of synesthesia that allows him to see the 'essence' of a person—what he calls 'shine'—on everything they've touched. Brought in to track the driver through a dense forest after the blood hounds have lost his trail, Steps and his partner Jimmy find the driver laughing maniacally, babbling about souls, and hiding a pristinely maintained box of eight posed rats.
Now, the Special Tracking Unit must chase two villains through both the real world and the dark web, tracking an enemy they can't see, as time runs out for the unknown victims in Spencer Kope's Shadows of the Dead.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Early in Kope's relentless third novel featuring Magnus Craig, the leader of the FBI's Special Tracking Unit (after 2018's Whispers of the Dead), Craig and his partner, Jimmy Donovan, succeed in capturing "mental train wreck" Murphy Cotton at a remote cabin on Washington's Olympic Peninsula. In the trunk of a car Cotton has stolen is a bound woman, Charice Qian. Craig and Donovan learn from Cotton that he kidnapped Charice on behalf of someone he knows only as the Onion King. Cotton refers to Charice as Eight, leading the FBI agents to believe that there are at least seven other victims who might still be alive. Aided by other FBI personnel, Craig and Donovan make a gruesome discovery deep in the woods that helps them identify the other victims. Craig has a secret ability that he calls "shine" that allows him to perceive that surfaces have been touched by specific individuals months or even years afterward. Not a magic bullet, this ability is a useful tool for identifying suspects, victims, and locations, but it can't be used to secure a search warrant, replace a computer search, or make entry into a building. By layering Craig's skill with traditional FBI procedural techniques, Kope has created something truly special.