Still the story pulls you in and keeps engaged till the very end. You know from the very beginning who kills whom and also, roughly, why. We get three different POV’s: that of Priya, and of the two murderers. It is not as much a whodunit as ‘how-will-they-catch-him/them–if-they–catch-him/them-at-all’. What will take to catch them all? Will it influence real romance between Priya and one of the cops? After a while she discovers something even more disturbing: it seems one of the perpetrators is falling in love with her, using her Indian/Hindu heritage to scene his murders. Are they cooperating? Is it a case of copycat murders? Is there no link at all between them? One thing is sure: their victims, young and not so young women, are so numerous that it is obvious Priya deals with two cunning and very successful serial killers. Soon enough she finds out there are two perpetrators. When Priya Conlin-Kumar, an FBI agent also known as ‘the Destroyer’, is sent to a small town to help investigate a number of murders she hardly knows it will be one of the most challenging cases in her career. I received a complimentary copy of this novel from the publisher in return for an honest review– thank you! That fact didn’t influence me in any way.
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