For Nathan McLain, finding Emily Henderson has been the most difficult case. While he exposed his fiancé’s murderer, he knows the blood is really on Emily’s hands. So he devotes his keen investigative skills to finding her. If only he could. Her knack for disappearing without a trace leaves him kicking up dirt and chasing a shadow. Her victims never leave him so much as a flake of dried skin. So now, he’s on the hunt. She might be elusive, but she is still human. One day he’ll find her. He hopes. In the midst of his search, Nathan receives a call from a friend at the Tenaple Police Department and goes to investigate the absurd reports coming from Comfort Lane. There, he meets Lydia Epson, a healthy, shy young girl who was bit by a mouse while playing in the yard. The bite is deep, but it doesn’t seem to bother her much. Through his investigation, Nathan comes across the first clue that might explain the reports and sends it off for identification. Everything seems normal enough. Until the next day Lydia is found dead - decomposed beyond recognition. The evidence Nathan sent to Forensics has disappeared, and the town seems to be in the wake of a new epidemic. Determined to find the source for the chaos, Nathan dives deeper into the case. But the fight against time becomes a fight for his life as his prodding gets him captured. His time clock runs out when he comes face to face with the deadly killer. I first realized my calling at ten years old; I received my first journal and realized the relief I experienced when I wrote my bottled up emotions on paper. Soon after, as I grew into my teenage years, I began creating characters and putting my friends into scenes with favorable (and unfavorable depending on how mad I was at them) outcomes. I wrote and finished my first book at age thirteen - and it was horrible! I've found that the most encouraging thing about writing is finishing. When you get a character through a certain scene, whether it be love, a battle, or a travel scene, completing the parts of the story is so inspiring. The network of authors I know have done everything to keep my spirits up and keep me trudging forward in my writing. My readers have further advanced that with their wonderful reviews, feedback, and encouragement (some of it angry) to get the next book done. My goal is to become a good enough author that they make movies and video games from my works. With enough hard work, I will see my dreams come to full life. "You can either enjoy the story, or write the story everyone enjoys." - J. K. Miller II