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Necromancer's Lament by David F. Balog
Necromancer's Lament by David F. Balog












Necromancer Necromancer

As they’re talking, Hunter gets a text: “We have your son.” He’s instructed to admit to rules violations at the hearing or he won’t see the boy again. He explains the source of their wealth - she’s a policy adviser to a Senate committee he’s a lobbyist with a client who’s about to make him a billionaire, pending a Senate hearing. At the same time, Becca’s husband approaches Rachael Davies, an assistant director at the Locard Institute, to ask them to consult privately. She is astonished to learn that the mansion belongs to her cousin Becca, whom she has not seen in more than five years, and the baby is Becca’s son Mason.īook Talk: Life was a circus for Barnum & Bailey partnerīook Talk: ‘Akron Family Recipes’ offers a taste of tradition, a taste of homeĪlthough her presence would ordinarily be a conflict of interest, her unit is stretched thin and she’s told to stay. The main character, Ellie Carr, works for the FBI and is called to a mansion overlooking the Potomac in response to the disappearance of a 4-month-old baby. It’s named for the real-life French criminologist Edmond Locard, who developed the contact tracing theory of forensic science, which states that every contact between two items leaves evidence such as fibers or oils. Having just wrapped up two Cleveland-set series, she’s launching a new one with “Red Flags,” based out of the fictional Locard Institute in Washington, D.C. Lisa Black writes what she knows: The former forensic scientist at the Cuyahoga County Coroner’s Office writes novels about forensic scientists.














Necromancer's Lament by David F. Balog