The Trouble with Believing

Mystery & Suspense, Women Sleuths
Cover of the book The Trouble with Believing by Mary Base, Mary Base
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Mary Base ISBN: 9780463349113
Publisher: Mary Base Publication: May 18, 2018
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Mary Base
ISBN: 9780463349113
Publisher: Mary Base
Publication: May 18, 2018
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

“The crime scene photos are logged into evidence. All I have with me is a picture of a picture,” he said. “So it’s not a great shot.”
The girl had dark, shoulder-length hair. Both eyes had been blackened, one swollen shut, the other a narrow slit into dead vacancy. An uncomfortable prickling began at the back of my neck. I felt flushed. Could it be?...
Gingerly, I picked up Braddick’s cell phone and brought it closer to my eyes. I’d only met her once. And I didn’t want it to be her.
“You know her?” he asked.
“I…I think it might be Aysu,” I said, weakly.
Detective Sergeant Margaret (Magnum) Schultz looked away from the strangled girl in the picture and wondered what sort of a religion gave a stamp of approval to murder.
After nearly 16 years in law enforcement, Magnum had thought she’d seen it all: deranged serial killers, rapists, perverted child molesters, even a foray or two into the woo-woo side of the supernatural. But this had to be the most disturbing. A religion so committed to their own tribal convictions about what God expected of them that common sense morality was shoved aside, making way for a heartless cruelty beyond her understanding. How else to explain an otherwise loving father willing to murder his own daughter; a culture that controlled women not only through how they were allowed to dress, but through female genital mutilations? And it wasn’t just foreign religions who were so self-righteous these days. At what point had it become a Christian ideal to treat anyone with the disrespect she’d seen recently from so-called religious people in the good ol’ USA? She was beginning to feel that with the amount of hate in the world being expressed in the name of religions, atheism might be the sole remaining keeper of love for humanity.
Magnum stood up, shook her head, and slid on the sunglasses. Time to get to work.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

“The crime scene photos are logged into evidence. All I have with me is a picture of a picture,” he said. “So it’s not a great shot.”
The girl had dark, shoulder-length hair. Both eyes had been blackened, one swollen shut, the other a narrow slit into dead vacancy. An uncomfortable prickling began at the back of my neck. I felt flushed. Could it be?...
Gingerly, I picked up Braddick’s cell phone and brought it closer to my eyes. I’d only met her once. And I didn’t want it to be her.
“You know her?” he asked.
“I…I think it might be Aysu,” I said, weakly.
Detective Sergeant Margaret (Magnum) Schultz looked away from the strangled girl in the picture and wondered what sort of a religion gave a stamp of approval to murder.
After nearly 16 years in law enforcement, Magnum had thought she’d seen it all: deranged serial killers, rapists, perverted child molesters, even a foray or two into the woo-woo side of the supernatural. But this had to be the most disturbing. A religion so committed to their own tribal convictions about what God expected of them that common sense morality was shoved aside, making way for a heartless cruelty beyond her understanding. How else to explain an otherwise loving father willing to murder his own daughter; a culture that controlled women not only through how they were allowed to dress, but through female genital mutilations? And it wasn’t just foreign religions who were so self-righteous these days. At what point had it become a Christian ideal to treat anyone with the disrespect she’d seen recently from so-called religious people in the good ol’ USA? She was beginning to feel that with the amount of hate in the world being expressed in the name of religions, atheism might be the sole remaining keeper of love for humanity.
Magnum stood up, shook her head, and slid on the sunglasses. Time to get to work.

More books from Women Sleuths

Cover of the book Cooking the Books by Mary Base
Cover of the book Tropical Vice by Mary Base
Cover of the book My Wicked Half-Sister by Mary Base
Cover of the book The Turtle Mound Murder (A DAFFODILS Mystery) by Mary Base
Cover of the book BAD PICK by Mary Base
Cover of the book Scones and Scoundrels: The Highland Bookshop Mystery Series: Book 2 by Mary Base
Cover of the book Smoke and Whispers by Mary Base
Cover of the book Hotspur by Mary Base
Cover of the book The Graveside Detective by Mary Base
Cover of the book The Bodies in the Library by Mary Base
Cover of the book Tracy Hayes, from P.I. with Love (P.I. Tracy Hayes 5) by Mary Base
Cover of the book Sounds Like Obsession by Mary Base
Cover of the book The Leigh Koslow Mystery Series: Books Four and Five by Mary Base
Cover of the book "A" is for Alibi by Mary Base
Cover of the book Death by Water by Mary Base
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy