The Resentment
โ Scribed by T. O. Paine
- Publisher
- Dark Swallow Books
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
They killed her husband. Now, they're coming for her son.
Lauren Kaine has everything she ever wanted โ a fabulous home, a shiny Lexus, a bright sixteen-year-old son, and a loving husband with a lucrative internet career. Tonight, she walks hand-in-hand with William beneath the lustrous Seattle sky, celebrating twenty-two years of marriage.
But theyโre not alone.
A mysterious black Audi comes out of nowhere and chases William onto a bridge. He shouts, โTheyโre here for the card,โ and falls to his death. Enraged, Lauren attacks the car, but the tinted windows hide the driverโs face, and it speeds away.
Still mourning, she sets out to find her husbandโs killer when a stranger calls and demands the card. William never mentioned a card, and she doesnโt know where it is. The stranger follows her. He torments her. He threatens to kidnap her son and throw him into the same river that killed William.
And itโs not just the stranger.
Black cars lurk around every corner. Williamโs co-workers refuse to talk to her. Her brother-in-law resurfaces after years of silence, and he knows something, but sheโs running out of time. She searches for the card, and the past pulls her back to the first time someone kidnapped her son. Back to her resentment. Back to the truth.
Youโre only as sick as your secrets . . .
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>Reโขsentโขment<br /><br />The act of hating โ no, fucking loathing Dean Collins. (Yes, Iโm well aware thatโs not the actual definition, but it might as well be . . .)<br /><br />Itโs been ten years since we've seen each other and the feelings are still as strong.<br /><br />Iโm not going to bore yo
Resentment has a history. Paintings such as Gericault's Le Radeau de La Meduse, nineteenth-century women's manifestos and WWI war photographs provide but a few examples to retrace the changing physiognomy of this emotion from the second half of the eighteenth century up to our contemporary society.