A Wrongful Death, by Kate Wilhelm. A. Produced by Blackstone Audio and downloaded from audible.com.
Another fine visit with Barbara Holloway. At the beginning of this book we found her wandering and trying to figure out what she should do. Should she continue to practice law? Should she give in to her feelings and marry Daron, or would she make his life, and his son’s life, a living hell because of her work? She sought counsel from a therapist in San Francisco, and then drove to an isolated part of Oregon to continue thinking. But she found she didn’t have the isolation to herself. She saw a young woman with a small boy. The two women waved to each other but it was clear neither wanted contact. Then one day she saw the little boy rushing toward the lake. His mother wasn’t with him. He was crying. He came up to her and said his mama was hurt. Barbara followed him to a cabin where she found the woman in the doorway with cuts and bruises around her head. She got the woman into the cabin and told her she would return with help. When she came back with the cabins caretaker, the woman and boy were gone. Then people started coming to her asking where Elizabeth Curtz and her son were and threatening all manner of things if Barbara didn’t tell them. She kept insisting, for once truthfully, that she didn’t know anything about them. Then she got a call from Elizabeth Curtz who asked Barbara to come to her apartment to meet her. When she got there, one woman, apparently Elizabeth, was shot dead, and another woman, her adopted sister, was crying hysterically. People really suspected Barbara now since she was again on the scene of the murder. She began to realize that until she sorted it all out, she would be the main state witness against the remaining young woman, whom she did not believe had shot Elizabeth. As usual, a very compelling and complex plot. This time Barbara seemed to be pushed toward a peaceful family, Daron, and continued practice of law. Even with all the mayhem, this was more than a usually peaceful Barbara Holloway book. It could be an ending book. I hope not.