In a major departure from her lighthearted Key West mysteries, Burdette invites readers into the world of a chilling thriller.
New York City medical student Elizabeth Brown was jilted by her fiance a few days before their wedding, and she's taking the subway to visit a friend who'll commiserate when a frantic-looking girl hands her a bundle that turns out to be a newborn baby. After phoning the police, she makes the mistake of calling a number she finds in the coat wrapping the baby. This call immerses her in a dangerous cat-and-mouse game with people she naïvely believes want to help. The baby’s mother, 16-year-old Addison, is running for her life from a woman who took her in as a young runaway and turned her into a prostitute. Addy had been going to meet Rafe, a man she thinks loves her, when she went into labor, giving birth by herself in a bathroom at the Delancey Street station, thus ruining Rafe's plan of blackmailing the father. Unable to forget the baby after turning her over to the police, Elizabeth, herself adopted, gives an interview to a reporter that only exposes her to more danger. A murder sends her running back to her upscale hometown in Connecticut. Although Addy can’t get in touch with Rafe, she’s street-wise enough to survive, and a chance sighting allows her to follow Elizabeth home, where Rafe finds them both. Only quick thinking and grit will save their lives.
A page-turner highlighting the problem of exploited runaways.