It’s summer in Paris, and two tourists have been murdered in Père Lachaise cemetery in front of Jim Morrison’s grave. The cemetery is locked down and put under surveillance, but the killer returns, flitting in and out like a ghost, and breaks into the crypt of a long-dead Moulin Rouge dancer. In a bizarre twist, he disappears under the cover of night with part of her skeleton. One of the dead tourists is an American and the other is a woman linked to a suspected terrorist; so the U.S. ambassador sends his best man and the embassy’s head of security—Hugo Marston—to help the French police with their investigation. When the thief breaks into another crypt at a different cemetery, stealing bones from a second famed dancer, Hugo is stumped. How does this killer operate unseen? And why is he stealing the bones of once-famous can-can girls? Hugo cracks the secrets of the graveyards but soon realizes that old bones aren’t all this killer wants . . .
Download and start listening now!
"The clever antagonist leads [Marston] on a merry chase that will keep the reader entertained throughout."
— RT Book Reviews
Be the first to write a review about this audiobook!
Mark Pryor, a former newspaper reporter from England, is now an assistant district attorney with the Travis County District Attorney’s Office in Austin, Texas. The creator of the nationally recognized true-crime blog D.A. Confidential, he has appeared on CBS News’s 48 Hours and the Discovery Channel’s Discovery ID: Cold Blood. In addition to the Hugo Marston series, Mark is the author of As She Lay Sleeping and Hollow Man.
Todd McLaren, an Earphones Award–winning narrator, was involved in radio for more than twenty years in cities on both coasts, including Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. He left broadcasting for a full-time career in voice acting, where he has been heard on more than five thousand television and radio commercials, as well as television promos; narrations for documentaries on such networks as A&E, Discovery, and the History Channel; and films, including Who Framed Roger Rabbit?