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Carter Thompson has left the Prosecutors Office, and has been working as a private investigator ever since. After receiving a call from a distraught father to find his missing daughter, Thompson takes the case.
His search for the girl takes him into the world of model agencies, nightclub owners and drug-dealing gangsters, many of whom he has a past with. And if that's not enough, Carter's old boss from the Prosecutors Office also needs him to help out with his son, who's started to mingle with the wrong crowd and dabble in hard drugs.
To solve the case, Cater will need to trust his
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Produktbeschreibung
Carter Thompson has left the Prosecutors Office, and has been working as a private investigator ever since. After receiving a call from a distraught father to find his missing daughter, Thompson takes the case.

His search for the girl takes him into the world of model agencies, nightclub owners and drug-dealing gangsters, many of whom he has a past with. And if that's not enough, Carter's old boss from the Prosecutors Office also needs him to help out with his son, who's started to mingle with the wrong crowd and dabble in hard drugs.

To solve the case, Cater will need to trust his instincts... and defeat some old enemies along the way. But can he find the girl before it's too late?
Autorenporträt
Sean O'Leary has published two short story collections, My Town and Walking. He is a regular contributor of short fiction to Quadrant, FourW and other literary magazines. He has twice been shortlisted for the Booranga Prize for fiction in 2015 and 2016. His short story 'Fremantle' was shortlisted for the Daylesford 'Words in Winter Award' in 2018. His novella Drifting was the winner of the Busybird Publishing 'Great Novella Search 2016' and published in 2017. His article about being a writer with schizophrenia was published on the Writers Victoria website in December 2018. His essay on what it has meant to him to be edited by Les Murray at Quadrant was published in Quadrant online in January 2019. His interviews with crime fiction writers appear in UK magazine Crime Time. He supports Melbourne Football club and believes test cricket is the greatest game of all.