There is complete chaos and madness in this thirteenth part of the series. A young girl named Autumn needed support because she was being followed by a madman who had already killed many who were close to the little girl. When she saw Agent Dillon on the television screen she thought that he was the one who could help her with the problem.
So the little girl made a call for help, and although she wasn’t able to tell everything clearly her call got a reply. The sheriff reached the little girl and he apparently saved her life but the trouble was not over at all. Someone was after the girl and her mother and she called it Uncle Blessed. Somehow the man was impossible to tack and the sheriff could feel that he was quite near the girl all the time.
Savich and Sherlock come to the rescue and they too feel that the killer is too clever for them so they have to get rid of him in order to save the girl as there is no option. As long as the killer is out there, saving the girl seems to be an impossible thing. In the stories of Catherine Coulter, the innocent is always trying to run and the only hope for him or her is the detective trying to solve the case.
In Reckoning and The Cove there came a time when the killer or the criminal was nowhere to be found and the detectives thought that they were going after the wrong man. Then they were able to save the life of the innocent right in time. Renee Raudman is the narrator who has an impact on the speed of narration in this novel while the other narrator, Paul Costanzo keeps their foot on the brake to some extent.