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Synopsis:

Henry North is a down-on-his-luck cybersecurity expert from New Orleans. Adam Zhang is the cofounder of one of Austin’s most successful venture capitalist firms. The two men didn’t know each other. They never met. Yet they died together, violently, in a place neither had any business being.

When Henry doesn’t return from a business trip, his wife, Kirsten, panics — and then gets an anonymous telephone call: “Your husband is dead in Austin.”

Flora Zhang knew her husband was keeping secrets. She suspected he was having an affair, but had decided she could forgive him for his weakness . . . until he ended up dead. With no explanation for her husband’s murder, the police begin to suspect her.

An uneasy alliance forms as the two widows delve into their husbands’ deadly and dangerous secrets . . . and try to protect their own. Together, the two widows will face a powerful foe determined to write a false narrative about the murders. Neither of them will remain the woman the world thought she was.

Review:

Author Jeff Abbott

Readers are always curious about where novelists find inspiration for their books. Bestselling author Jeff Abbott says coming up with story ideas is “not the hard part of writing. I have ideas all the time. I have far more ideas than I could ever write books about. Ideas tend to be related to something you see or hear or read about and it sticks in your mind, dormant but present, a seedling, maybe waiting for the fertilizer of another idea or stimulus to take the appropriate shape. It’s not that you go somewhere to get ideas; it’s that you make your mind receptive to all the ideas that are confronting you each day.” However, “an idea is meaningless until the book is written around it.” The challenge lies in sifting through them to discern which “are the most interesting and powerful and dramatic,” and can be melded into a cohesive tale. “It’s all in the execution,” he notes, “because the idea is where the work begins, not where it ends.”

In the case of An Ambush of Widows, Abbott says he imagined a young woman at home who receives an anonymous telephone call informing her that her husband, who is out of town on a business trip, has been shot and killed. When the idea first came to him, he had “no idea” who she was, who her husband was, or what their relationship was like. But he knew he had the genesis of a new thriller when he imagined her rushing to the scene of the murder and discovering that a second man, also married, was also murdered at the same time and location. But the two victims had no connection to each other. “So there’s the mystery. What will their two widows do to solve their husbands’ murders and protect their own secrets?”

With An Ambush of Widows, Abbott deftly demonstrates that the execution is what really matters, delivering another compelling thriller. In fact, he ups the ante on his original idea. The book opens with Kirsten North, a freelance information researcher, alone at home while her husband is on a business trip. She is eating Chinese takeout food and watching a baking show while working on her laptop when she receives the anonymous call from her husband’s cell phone. Henry North is a software consultant who specializes in computer security, operating his own company, North Star Consulting. Kirsten believed Henry was in New York on business, but the caller tells her he died in Austin, Texas. She soon learns Henry is not registered at the hotel in New York where he usually stays. Could he really have been shot and killed, as the caller claimed? What was he doing in Austin?

Of course, Google provides the answer. The search results lead Kirsten to a news report about a double homicide in an Austin warehouse. The second victim is Adam Zhang, an entrepreneur. He operates Zhang Townsend with his partner, Shawn Townsend. The company, known for funding start-up tech companies and nurturing them through the rough early days in business, has a track record of success. But Zhang Townsend is not listed among Henry’s clients.

It’s an ambush of widows. That’s the collective noun for a group of widows. An ambush. You know, like a parliament of owls or a troupe of acrobats. Do you think it’s because we feel ambushed by what’s happened to us?

Kirsten immediately books a late-night flight to Austin by way of Houston. She has no idea that Henry’s murderer sees her board the plane as he is exiting it. He has just flown in from Austin and is en route to her home to murder her and make it appear that she committed suicide. The hit man, Mender, makes up a story about an emergency that requires him to immediately return to Austin, which the ticket agent believes. He re-boards the plane and sits right next to Kirsten. Mender is puzzled because Kirsten was not supposed to learn of her husband’s murder so quickly and frustrated by the change of plan. He promised his fiance he would complete the job and be home in plenty of time for the birth of their child.

Meanwhile, Flora Zhang, Adam’s wife, has also been notified of her husband’s murder. A former journalist, she now serves as the chief mission officer of Zhang Global Rare Diseases Foundation and, with her husband, supports numerous local charities. The mother of a young daughter, she is as bewildered as Kirsten. And worse, the police are of course curious about the state of their marriage. Meeting Kirsten neither quells her anxiety nor provides answers about why or how their husbands’ deaths are related.

Abbott elevates the story by relating the perspectives not only of Kirsten and Flora, but also Mender, the hit man who “tries not to think about the targets too much.” Having to sit next to Kirsten on the flight is disconcerting — it’s “the most time he’d ever spent with a a target alive.” His handlers provide the requisite information and he carries out his assignments before resuming an otherwise unremarkable life. But he never sleeps well for a week or so after a kill, and was hoping to catch up on his sleep before the baby arrives. With Kirsten’s arrival in Austin, his job has gotten more complicated and he is not happy about that because the client still wants her dead, too. But pulling off the hit is suddenly problematic. “It was like he thought he was playing one chess game and then suddenly everything on the board changed. He ought to raise the price.”

In alternating chapters, Abbott reveals his character’s histories and emotional states. Outward appearances are deceiving and Flora plans to wear earrings and other things Adam gave her, rather the items she selected herself. “A brief way to honor what had once been between them. Before he started to change.” Flora finds she misses Adam but feels “like a weight slipped from her.” “I’m free. The ugly thought crowded into her head again and she pushed it away. I can be who I want. I don’t have to think about what he thinks.” Her confusing feelings trouble her, and Abbott gradually unveils the referenced changes in her husband that have brought Flora to her current state. Abbott also details the past that Kirsten, Henry, and Henry’s brother, Zach, share. The three of them met as minors living in the same foster home, and Kirsten was drawn to Henry’s calm demeanor and sense of security he gave her. The three of them have long shared an explosive secret, while Adam was keeping secrets from Flora, who becomes a subject in the investigation of both murders. After all, women with motives often kill their husbands. And the more they learn about their late husbands’ activities, the more both widows find their trust in them was misplaced. Now that they are both dead, the women don’t know who they can trust, including each other.

“Ambush” is the term used to describe a group of widows, as well as how Kirsten and Flora are feeling when they eventually agree to embrace the concept. The decide it is in their best interests to team up to solve the mystery, putting aside their initial misgivings. After all, sisterhood in any configuration is a powerful force and the two clever women with vastly different backgrounds and social standing have to work quickly in order to not only find out how their husbands’ deaths are connected . . . but stay alive.

Abbott again displays his storytelling prowess. An Ambush of widows boasts an intricately-constructed plot, the details of which he reveals at expertly-timed junctures. The story explores the complex and sometimes darkly cutthroat world of cybersecurity, as well as the risks and stressors associated with entrepreneurship, including the complications involved in securing financing for start-up businesses. For good measure and to make the story even more interesting, Abbott also injects ties to organized crime, intertwining it with the personal lives of his characters. The key players are as complex and richly layered as the storyline he propels forward at a steady pace.

Luckily for readers, Abbott provides an ending that suggests he has an idea for a sequel to this absorbing thriller. Undoubtedly, Abbott will execute the drafting of any follow-up as adeptly as he crafted An Ambush of Widows.

Excerpt from An Ambush of Widows

1

Thursday Evening

Kirsten North was doing what she normally did when Henry was gone on a business trip: finishing her own work on her laptop on the couch, ordering in Chinese food from that place Henry didn’t much like, and watching a British baking show that was like a televised tranquilizer.

She was on the second episode in her mini-binge when the phone rang. She glanced at the screen; it was Henry’s number.

“Finally, sweetie,” she said. “How’s New York?”

There was a silence for five seconds.

“Henry?” she said.

“Kirsten North?” The voice was muffled, indistinct, a whisper.

“Yes?”

“You’re Henry’s wife?”

A coldness fell on her skin like sudden rain. “Yes. Who is this?”

“Your husband has been killed. In Austin. Texas.” She couldn’t tell if the voice was male or female, and it didn’t matter, because it spoke madness.

“This isn’t funny, Henry,” she said, at the same time she thought that this wasn’t the kind of joke he would ever make. Henry’s phone must have been stolen and this was the sick thief’s idea of a prank.

“He was shot.” And then the caller hung up.

Kirsten North stared at the phone. Cruel and sick, that’s what it was. Her husband was in New York, not Austin. She texted Henry: did u lose yr phone? Some sicko just called me from yr number. And then she realized the sicko was reading the text now because they’d called from Henry’s cell.

There was no replying text.

Think, she told herself. She pushed down the anger and the rising fear. What hotel had he told her he was staying at? She tried to remember while in the background one of the baking show judges gently chided a contestant for an undercooked crust, and the woman’s lip trembled like her whole world was falling in on her.

The Van Vleck, a small, quirky hotel not far from Times Square. Yes. He’d stayed there before on business.

She googled the hotel, called its main number.

The polite young man who answered checked and told her there was no Henry North registered there. She thanked him automatically and ended the call. But he arrived in New York Sunday night, and he’s due home tomorrow, she thought. He must have stayed at another hotel. She hurried through her emails and texts, in case she’d missed a message from him, telling herself when Henry called and explained he’d lost his phone she’d laugh at her silly worry.

He was shot.

Something in the voice . . . that awful voice. Like it was glad.

There was no mention of the New York hotel in his emails from last week.

Who was the client? What was the company name?

Henry had been trying hard to land clients beyond his few in New Orleans. Had he told her the name of his hotel and she hadn’t been listening? Sometimes she wasn’t a good listener.

She searched her emails and the texts from him once more. Nothing mentioning this New York client’s name.

Austin. She and Henry didn’t know anyone in Austin. They’d talked about moving there once, because it was growing so fast and there were lots of tech jobs, but Henry said there were so many freelancers it would be more competitive than New Orleans, which was just sort of emerging as a tech area and there were more chances here to make an impact. . . .

In Austin. He was shot.

Instead of looking for hotels in New York that sounded familiar, she entered in the search engine an awful phrase: “austin shooting.”

The results popped up, the most recent at the top. POLICE INVESTIGATE DOUBLE HOMICIDE. The related headlines: TWO MEN FOUND SHOT TO DEATH AT WAREHOUSE. LEADING BUSINESSMAN KILLED. The stories were tied to local news stations. The victims had been found two days ago, in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

He’d left early Sunday afternoon. “Got an early Monday morning meeting. I’ll text you,” he’d said. And he had, that all was fine, the meetings were going well. But if these headlines were about him, he was dead, and someone else had texted her from Henry’s phone. Nausea churned her gut; her chest felt tight. This couldn’t be.

She clicked on the first result and watched the news video. The reporter was young and eager and said two bodies had been discovered in the warehouse by a homeless person who had found an unlocked door and entered.

More details had emerged since Tuesday.

One of the men was named Adam Zhang. An entrepreneur of some note who had launched multiple start-up tech companies in the crowded Austin landscape. The other man had not been identified. Those active in the tech scene were expressing shock and dismay. “More to come,” the reporter said. The police were asking anyone who might have seen anything or knew anything to come forward.

If Henry was the other victim . . . why would an anonymous person call her? Why tell her this?

Had the call come from the murderer? Did the killer have Henry’s phone?

She started to shiver, her mind reeling in shock. She forced herself to take several deep breaths. No. Don’t just sit here. Do something. Be like Henry. Act when it seems impossible to act.

A back corner of her mind took over. She logged on to an airline website and found a late-night flight to Houston, connecting onward to Austin.

She could just make it if she hurried.

2

Nothing on this job had gone quite right; none of the normal protocols were followed, and now having his next target walking directly toward him in the airport was a sure sign to call off the hit.

Mender caught his breath. Here she was, hurrying toward a gate in the New Orleans airport, just as he’d come off his flight from Austin.

He stopped and looked at his phone and she rushed past him, her carry-on bag nearly hitting his hip.

Kirsten North was leaving town, just as he was arriving to take care of her.

His mind literally went blank; he nearly laughed. He normally felt emotionless about his work, but this job was testing his nerves. He followed her to the gate where she waited. The flight that he’d taken from Austin would soon be reboarding, getting ready to head back via Houston. He’d just come off the plane; if he tried to buy a ticket to get back on, wouldn’t that flag the system? Be suspicious? He could not be noticed.

Why was she flying to Austin?

Because she knew. How could she know?

He watched her, but he was careful to flicker his gaze because a woman could sense a stare. She was shivering. Anxious. Like she’d gotten bad news. But that wasn’t possible. Not yet.

He saw there wasn’t a change of crew. So if he got back on the plane, the flight attendants might notice him, might even jokingly comment.

He had no idea how to trace her once she made it to Austin. But this was a bonus-driven job and he had to risk it. He went back to the gate counter. Waited behind people trying to buy a lower boarding pass number. He put a beaten, sad look on his face.

“I just flew in on this arriving flight, but there’s a text. . . . ” Mender held up his phone like it had all the answers. “My dad’s had a heart attack in Austin; I need to fly back. . . . Can I get a ticket back on this flight?” His voice quavered.

The gate agent said, “I’m so sorry, let me check,” and Mender put on an expression of muted grief, one that wouldn’t draw attention. He glanced over toward the target. She was sitting, staring at her lap, not looking at anyone. Lost in real grief, where his was pretend.

“Yes, there’s a seat,” the agent said. Mender wordlessly shoved a credit card toward her. It didn’t have his real name on it.

“Thank you so much.”

“I hope your dad’s okay. You’ll be in the final boarding group, though. Sorry.”

“It’s fine.”

He didn’t have a checked bag—he was to get a weapon, courtesy of his handler, here in New Orleans. He dumped the weapon he’d used in Austin, per standard protocol. He got his boarding pass—a number so high it guaranteed a middle seat—and sat down, where he could see the target but she wouldn’t notice him.

It suddenly occurred to him that she would be in his boarding group; she must have been late in booking her flight as well. He hoped not. He did not want her to notice him. He had on a baseball cap and sunglasses; it was the best he could do to minimize being noticed or recognized.

The plane was readied; the groups lined up per the airline’s policy, with boarding group A first, numbers one through thirty.

The target and the killer both kept their seats.

“Group B,” the agent brightly announced, and more people rose. The plane, he guessed, might be full. It would be close. He should try to sit so he could deplane before her, so he could follow her when she left.

Then group C. The stragglers got up, worrying about whether there would be any remaining overhead storage; couples resigning themselves to not sitting together. The rest bracing themselves for the little hell of the middle seat.

They ordered themselves by number. The target was immediately ahead of him. Of course. She didn’t look back at him. They were the last two in line. He hoped she wouldn’t look at him.

They boarded the plane. The flight attendant gave them each a bright hello and neither the target nor he responded. The flight was nearly full. He scanned the seats, hoping she would pass up a middle seat toward the front of the plane and leave it for him so he could exit in Austin ahead of her and more easily follow her. But all the seats were taken.

He could see the last two seats, in the back row. Next to each other. A middle and an aisle, an older man already in the window seat with his neck pillow, reading a book.

The target glanced back at him and he froze. “You’re tall,” she said. “You can have the aisle.”

He found his voice and said, “You sure?”

She nodded. “It’s a short flight.”

“Thanks.” He glanced away as if embarrassed, but he didn’t want her looking at his face. Something had gone so bent on this job and he’d have to turn this to his advantage.

She had already turned away, shoving her carry-on into the overhead bin. He put his bag next to hers. She settled into the middle seat and he sat down in the aisle seat.

He had to decide how to do this. He could try to engage her in conversation, maybe in the Houston airport—they would have to change planes for Austin—then draw her somehow away from people and end her.

But if she was heading to Austin on a last-minute flight, she knew about her husband, and she wouldn’t be in any mood for some guy chatting her up, not with all the terrible thoughts that must be swirling in her head. He sat very still, looking ahead, sunglasses in place. She did the same.

He wondered: What is she thinking? He needed to just be the guy sitting next to her on the flight, faceless, voiceless. Unremarkable. He would not interact with her again; he would not give her reason to remember him.

The plan had been to make her look like a suicide. He couldn’t do that in an airport. Far too dangerous. Best to not be noticeable, to not engage.

How did she know?

He kept his gaze straight ahead. He heard the man in the window seat offer her a drink coupon when the flight attendant came around to take orders. She accepted.

The profile said she used to drink a lot but had stopped two years ago. She must be in shock right now. If she got drunk, maybe the hit would be easier when she got to Austin. Follow her to wherever she was going, pour more alcohol down the grieving widow, and then end her.

He smiled at the flight attendant and ordered a ginger ale.

3

Morgan cried and howled, as though he could feel Flora’s pain. She walked and patted the child, murmuring to him, wondering: Can a one-year-old know that his father is dead? Does he feel the shift in the world?

Flora Zhang had hardly slept since Adam and the unknown man were found shot to death. She had given Morgan an early dinner and then lay down on her and Adam’s bed with their son. She’d just drifted off, exhaustion taking its toll, when Morgan suddenly awoke, squalling, restless, and she stumbled to her feet, scooped him up, made her checks. Diaper dry, nose clear. She began her weary procession of walking back and forth.

The door to the nursery cracked open. Her next-door neighbor, Jeanne, stood in the doorway. “Flora? I can take him. . . . ”

“Thank you, Jeanne, I have him.”

“Are you sure?” Jeanne was in her sixties, silver hair fashionably cut short, bright blue eyes behind stylish red eyeglasses, always calm in a crisis. She had been a steadfast friend since Adam’s body had been found and Flora’s world unraveled. Jeanne had brought over the first meal in the initial shock, held Flora’s hand while she tried to process the impossible, been a constant, reassuring presence for Morgan.

“I have him,” Flora said and Jeanne nodded and shut the door. Jeanne meant well. But Flora couldn’t hand over her child right now. Adam was dead and Morgan was all she had left. She needed to hold her baby.

But Morgan wouldn’t stop crying. Flora shuffled back and forth, trying every song he loved, the old lullabies, the ones Flora had heard Jeanne sing for him, fumbling over the lyrics because she wasn’t sure of them, and while his crying would subside it would not cease.

Adam. Sometimes he would stand in the doorway, watching her walk Morgan when he was fussy, as though the crying were an inconvenience and he was judging her job performance. Once when Morgan was asleep on her shoulder but she hadn’t wanted to set him down yet, Adam had said, “I know I’m not good at this dad stuff. I wish I could be.”

He had said that as though he’d forgotten himself, almost shyly, and then he’d taken Morgan from her and set him down in the crib and taken her back to bed. He had wanted a wife and a child and then once he had them, she sensed a growing indifference. As though he’d realized: Is this all there is to it? And she was in love with him, and she found herself wondering if he still loved her. She should have talked to him. Asked him.

And now the doorway was empty. It would always be empty.

Morgan kept crying, wriggling in her arms.

The door opened and for one moment she expected it was Adam, and the past two days had been an unmanageable dream. But it was Jeanne, again.

“Please, let me help you. I know you’re exhausted. . . .”

“I need Morgan to want me right now. To not cry . . . ” She managed to keep her voice under control. “Why doesn’t he want me? Is he sensing how I feel?”

“Oh, Flora. He’s just a bit fussy and out of sorts. Sweetie, you can’t help him if you’re exhausted. I’m here, let me help.”

And exhaustion won so she gave Morgan over to Jeanne. Who cooed and rubbed his back in a way different than Flora had, and his cries started to soften.

He responds to her more than me, Flora thought, and it was just another way for her to feel crushed. He can feel all my fear and my grief. It would be so much easier not to feel.

She eased the door shut and walked down the stairs to the kitchen. She looked at the counter. More food. The neighbors, including Jeanne and her husband, Milo, just kept bringing food. Teddy Chao was on his laptop at the table, but as she came into the room, he put it aside and stood. That was one way you knew your life had forever changed; now people didn’t look at their phones or their tablets or their laptops if you were around. They looked at you.

“Morgan all right?” Teddy asked. He was young, early twenties, a little too handsome for his own good. Adam’s assistant strategist, protégé, and distant cousin. He had been living with them since he graduated from college two years ago.

“Yes. Jeanne seems to be able to calm him.” She tried to keep the bitterness out of her voice.

“Can I get you anything? Tea?”

She thought she had been offered more tea in the past two days than in her whole life. “No. What are you doing?”

“Dozens of people who work for the companies Adam helped launch have been emailing me about Adam. Offering condolences, support. I’ve been responding to them. I’ll keep all the emails for you to read if you like, when you feel up to it.”

“Thanks.” Maybe it would be comforting to read words of sympathy from people who knew him, who actually got to spend time with him. More time than they’d had together lately. She pushed that thought away. His business. She had hardly thought about it. “His company . . . I haven’t asked what everyone is doing.” Adam was gone, but the things he’d built, the lives he’d touched, remained.

“You don’t need to worry about it. Shawn and I have everything under control.” Shawn was Adam’s business partner in their venture capital firm, Zhang Townsend.

“All right. At some point, we have to talk about what happens next.”

“I think Shawn will want to buy out Adam’s partnership. He hasn’t said so, but . . . ”

Flora sat down and she realized that Morgan’s crying had stopped. He’d fallen asleep. For Jeanne, not for her.

“I’d like to stay on and work with Shawn,” Teddy said.

There was plenty of money, and she didn’t have to worry about that, but she had worked when Adam was in grad school, and she had worked as he built up Zhang Townsend from two guys with their desks pulled together to one of the largest venture funds in the South. She wasn’t so sure she wanted to sell her ownership shares. “We’ll see,” she said. Teddy nodded.

“The funeral . . . ,” Teddy began, as if hating the word. “We don’t know when the police will release the body. . . . Do you want to have a memorial service first?”

Flora rubbed at her temples. “I can’t decide right now.”

“All right,” Teddy said, in a tone that made it sound like it wasn’t all right. She didn’t care. Teddy was a lot like Adam, in that things needed to be done a certain way. Precise and proper and businesslike. But until she knew why he died, what had happened, it seemed bizarre to think about gathering with people and talking about him. It felt like rushing him into his grave.

Teddy said, “I didn’t mean to pressure you. I’m sorry.”

And of course he was just trying to help. Everyone was. But there was no help. Literally none. There were times in the marriage when she’d felt so alone, but this was a new kind of alone. She didn’t know what to do. The first two days had been numbness, her on autopilot, but now the reality was setting in that Adam was gone. And the rest of her life stretched out like a long, fogged road that she couldn’t see.

She glanced at the stairs as Jeanne came down them. “Morgan’s fine. . . . He cried it out.”

Flora started to say I’m glad he would sleep for you, but the words didn’t come.

“We were talking about the memorial service, Jeanne,” Teddy said. “That we’re going to wait.”

“Flora, can Milo and I do anything to help you with that?” Jeanne asked.

“No. I’m not ready to have an actual memorial like a church service yet. Maybe the fund-raiser on Saturday . . . maybe it could be like a way to honor him. A lot of people he knew will be there.”

“Yes, of course,” Jeanne said noncommittally. She glanced at Teddy. “I can stay over if you need me, Flora.”

“No, we’ll be fine,” she said. “Give my best to Milo and thank you again for everything.” She gave Jeanne a quick, grateful hug and Jeanne left, telling them she’d be glad to come over in the morning if they needed her and wishing them a good night.

“Do you still want to go to the fund-raiser? I know it mattered a lot to Adam, but . . . ” Teddy’s voice trailed off.

“All I want to know is why this happened.” Now she looked up at him. “Why . . . did this happen? Why is Adam gone; why does Morgan not have a dad? Why?” she repeated, and then she felt like a child for asking the question.

“I don’t know.”

“You knew . . . you knew the people he dealt with. Was there someone who could have wanted to hurt him?”

“No. Of course not. Everyone loved Adam.”

“Someone didn’t, Teddy. He was killed in an empty building he owned. He went there. To meet someone . . . a deal that went bad, someone resenting him . . .”

“No, I think this had to be some random . . . act, Flora. I know you want it to make some kind of sense, but it’s not going to. Someone might have spotted him near the warehouse, guy in a nice Mercedes, decided to rob him.” Teddy opened one of the casseroles and started to put food on plates.

Flora got up and went to the window. From their hilltop Lakehaven mansion that overlooked Lady Bird Lake, the lights of downtown Austin gleamed on the other side of the water, to the east.

She picked out the tower where he’d surprised her with the keys to a penthouse he’d bought three weeks ago. They had planned to move in two months. Or rather he had. She loved their Lakehaven home, having thoughtful neighbors like Jeanne and Milo, and the quiet. Lots of people lived downtown now, but there was traffic and honking horns and she had wondered how a baby would do, even in a penthouse. They wouldn’t have a yard. Adam thought she’d be delighted and she remembered her automatic smile feeling a bit frozen on her face. He couldn’t have even talked about it with her? What had he really thought of her, to assume she’d just accept a new home, sight unseen? Had he thought he knew her so well, when he didn’t at all?

The penthouse purchase meant that maybe she didn’t know him so well either. She didn’t like to ponder that thought.

“It won’t ever make sense to me,” she said.

“I’m not saying that. . . . I know the police will catch whoever did it. We have to have hope,” Teddy said.

Hope is a cruel thing, she thought.

Teddy brought her a plate with some chicken casserole on it, as well as salad and broccoli. “People have brought so much food, Flora, and you’ve got to eat.”

“I’m not hungry.”

“You didn’t eat lunch.”

“I’m not . . .”

“For Morgan. Do it for him. Please.”

Teddy was right. Flora sat down and ate dutifully. She barely tasted the food. She drank a glass of water Teddy brought her. Through the huge window she looked at the tower, where they were supposed to live. . . .

The penthouse light was on.

She was sure of it. Why . . . why would it be on?

No one was supposed to be there.

But someone was.

Why did this happen? Why? Maybe the answer was there, in the lit-up place he’d bought for her without even telling her.

She grabbed her purse off the table.

“Where are you going?” Teddy asked.

“I have to get out of here,” she said. “Just for a bit. Keep an eye on Morgan for me.” She decided not to tell Teddy she’d seen the light. He would call the condo management, ask questions. She wanted out of this house.

“Okay, I’ll drive you.” He stood. “I’ll get Jeanne to come back.”

“No. I want to be alone.” She’d felt stuck and mired for the past two days. She needed to do something. To not feel numb. To be in fresh air.

“Flora . . . ”

She shut the door on his words.

Excerpted from An Ambush of Widows by Jeff Abbott. Copyright © 2021 by Jeff Abbott. Excerpted by permission of Grand Central Publishing. All rights reserved.

Also by Jeff Abbott:

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received one hardcover copy of An Ambush of Widows free of charge from Grand Central Publishing. I was not required to write a positive review in exchange for receipt of the book; rather, the opinions expressed in this review are my own. This disclosure complies with 16 Code of Federal Regulations, Part 255, Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.

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