Lost in the Wind
Publisher Description
ONE NIGHT CHANGES EVERYTHING.
—But will it change enough?
She had survived. She could survive. She would survive again.
After a brutal assault as a teenager, Dr. Nikkie Jean Netorre has found her way out of the darkness. She does good for the world now—pediatric trauma surgeon by day, counselor at a women's trauma center by night. She's moved on, has a purpose for her life, and everything is in her control now.
BUT...
—SHE CAN'T CONTROL EVERYTHING.
When a young patient dies, a grief-stricken Nikkie Jean runs straight into the arms of neighbor Dr. Caine Alvaro, just needing to forget for a little while. One small step forward at a time—that is Caine's plan for helping Nikkie Jean feel safe with him.
But as they struggle to deal with their sudden, life-altering change in their relationship, another surgeon has Nikkie Jean in his sights.
A surgeon who has killed before. A man who will stop at nothing to protect his sinister secrets.
Now Caine has to keep Nikkie Jean safe once again—before someone else she loves pays the ultimate price.
And before the killer destroys them all…
LOST IN THE WIND is the first book in the FINLEY CREEK: DISASTER trilogy and is a full-length romantic suspense novel. The Finley Creek series contains a large cast of characters, multiple scenes of violence, adventure, dark criminal behavior, cursing by heroes, heroines and villains, a few mild-to-moderate love scenes, and references to subject matter that may distress some readers, including assaults, abductions, mass shootings, child abuse and other dark themes.
Customer Reviews
Lost in the wind
A very good read. Good author. TKS .. dc
Fantastic read
I couldn’t put it down. The characters were fantastic and the story was interesting and action packed.
Lost in the Wind
Good book with a compelling story line. Could use more proof reading but it want enough to take much away from the story. The biggest con was the number of characters. It took over half way through the book before I could keep track of who half the characters were. Several points felt unfinished…nicki Jean’s eyes were bad due to something that happened when she was younger but then never out right said exactly what caused it. Was it the trauma or the cancer? There was no closure regarding her dad. It was barely even addressed. The epilogue wasn’t really an epilogue and I get so tired of authors doing this. An epilogue should be months or years in the future, a conclusion to the story, not a handful of hours later and used primarily as a way to roll into the next book. Huge pet peeve of mine.