Working on both cases, she soon begins to realize that nothing is as she believes – not the present… and definitely not the past. But when a body turns up indicating a ritualistic killing, Pine is pulled into the investigation. But when an incident at work makes her realize that she’s letting her demons take control, she does the only thing she can to set things right – returns to the town where she lost her sister with the goal of finding answers. Now an FBI agent, Pine has put a lot of bad people away. Pine suspects Daniel James Tor, a serial killer who fits the bill and is now locked away in a maximum security prison in Colorado. Their parents were passed out downstairs after a night of partying. When she was six years old, someone snuck into her bedroom, kidnapped her twin sister, and left her for dead. Read on to know more about how and why this was so much better than its prequel, and where its shortcomings were.Ītlee Pine’s past is catching up. And so, I picked up the second book in the series – A Minute to Midnight. The characterization of Atlee Pine was the best part of the book, which made me want to read more about her. It was good, but not great, and set the stage for Baldacci’s (sort-of) first female lead protagonist. I’d read the first book of the Atlee Pine series, Long Road to Mercy, a while ago.
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