Kendall, a pretty woman, is a young lawyer at Sheridan, a little town of Tennessee, which left her firm to take a job of public defender at Prosper, South Carolina. During her first months there in Prosper, she falls in love with Matt Burnwood, young journalist and the son of a respectable patriarch of the locality.
Kendall and Matt get married and have a fairly-tale wedding, with dozens of guests and gifts, waltz, big wedding cake, a beautiful newlyweds’ chalet (a gift from her father in law), etc. The future of the jurist seems promising on her triple conquest: a good professional future, a gallant husband whom she loves and the beautiful baby that they eventually got. But the illusions start to fall through, like dominoes, after she discovers the ins and outs of this all American Dream: the existence of a powerful secret organization, headed by her kind father in law and backed by her husband (obedient daddy’s kid), which involves the most prominent of public powers of the town. Kendall get involved too in it, since she becomes an eyewitness of an awful racial murder. Then she decides to run away, taking with her the little baby of them.
FBI intervenes in the matter and decides to act against the organization, but it needs her as a witness for the prosecution, the only one key to take the lid off the Pandora’s box’s outrages of the cunning sociopaths. Kendall, being also distrustful of the federal police, is afraid for her life and her son’s, and opts to keep running away.
And then starts that weird adventure that, as a gruesome Road Movie, puts the chased lawyer in an automobile crash wherein either she and her baby come out intact, but leaving battered and amnesiac her companion, a man which identity she hides from the authorities all the long their route, in which uncertainty prevails: whether she is able to flee indefinitely, or she takes the risk of being taken back in Prosper, to give her testimony.
A novel conceived by its author after Oklahoma’s events, in April 1995, when right-wings extremists carried out the terrorist bombing against a government building, killing 168 people (children between them) and injuring over 500 people.
A thriller at full tilt, with a suitable deal of suspense and faithful to genre rules, well written and set in the racist American Deep South, where dangerous white supremacists seek to prevail over the law and at no matter what price, even that of innocent people’s life.