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The first #MeToo thriller by Amazon bestselling author* Claude Brickell.A penetrating expos into one girl's horrendous sexual abuse and the young men who will suffer her wrath. Amazon reviewers have written: "This is not a cozy mystery, there is non-stop action, it is extremely well done. I recommend the book. Brickell hits the nail on the head with his story of today's sexual scene." If you liked Paula Hawkins' "The Girl on the Train" or Leslie Wolfe's "Dawn Girl" then "Train Games, the Girl in the Red Vinyl Coat" is sure to satisfy your thriller desires. It is chock-full of mystery, suspense and riveting action that will keep you reading page after page until the shockingly unexpected ending.
Recent New York arrival, 27-yr-old Rhona Boroff, too sexy for her own good, has a peculiar fetish. She delights in exciting young men on the city's subway then slipping notes to them where to meet up with her at a bar later on. When she and the young men rendezvous, she pulls them into the darkest corner of the place and makes out with them bringing them to erotic highs. At that, she passes them packets of lubricant laced with thallium poison to use on themselves while masturbating. And when the young men reach orgasm, she bolts blurting out, "Gotta go " leaving them embarrassingly exposed and dumbfounded. Days later, the young men end up in hospital ERs writhing in convulsions and desperately fighting for their lives. The only thing saving them at that point is a rare antidote called Prussian Blue.
New York detective, 26-yr-old rookie Dave Stepino, is called in to investigate after the first poisoning, not only to determine the toxic source but also to track down this elusive and mysterious Mata Hari perpetrating it. After Rhona has struck twice more, frustrating the detective to no end, his only hope in tracking her down then is posing as a potential victim on the subway, himself. But when he succeeds in that and sets up his own bar encounter with her, things take an unexpected turn. And what we have learned about Rhona from her ongoing sessions with her therapist forces us to weigh whether she is blatantly guilty of the crimes or completely justified in her actions.
*The Napoleon Connection
This is going to be a literary bombshell In two-month's time, everyone will be talking about it. Be the first to have read it GET IT NOW