Frozen Death
G. L. Didaleusky
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BLURB:
Something is causing people to freeze to death in
Florida during ninety-degree weather. Ancient Indian lore holds the answer to
these mysterious medical aberrations. A newly constructed Florida male prison
sits on ancient hallowed grounds called Forbidden Hill. Soon after the prison
opens, two male inmates freeze to death without exposure to frigid
temperatures. John Randall, a widowed prison doctor, meets Lena Windmaker, a
single, off-duty sheriff detective at a local library. Their initial plutonic
relationship soon kindles into a more amorous one. They hide a personal secret
that could bring them together or destroy them. They uncover articles in local,
post-Civil war newspapers describing residence succumbing to Frozen Death. John
and Lena race to discover a cause before it chooses other victims.
EXCERPT:
At 3:30 A.M., the telephone rang. On the fourth ring,
John picked up the receiver, his mind still foggy from sleep. "This better
be an emergency."
"Is this…Dr. Randall?"
John realized the caller had a male voice, not the
feminine voice of Nurse Simpson. “Yes, I'm Dr. Randall. I'm sorry for being so
abrupt when I first answered the phone. I thought it was the infirmary nurse
calling again."
"I've answered the phone the same way on several
occasions at this time of the morning," said the male caller. "My
name is Steve Patterson. I'm the ER physician at Ocala General Hospital."
"Is it about the inmate I sent to you a few
hours ago? Was it a drug overdose?"
"No."
"A brain tumor?"
"No. His CT brain scan was normal, along with a
normal drug screen," said Patterson. "I'm sorry to tell you but the
inmate died."
John nearly dropped the phone. "What did he die
from?"
"He froze to death. I've never seen anything
like this in my thirty years as an ER doctor. After running all the tests on
him, he started to shake. His temperature rapidly dropped followed by cardiac
arrest. I tried everything to save his life, but nothing worked."
"I’m sure you did everything you could.
Hopefully an autopsy will give us an answer to his death." John decided
not to tell him about Inmate Armstrong’s similar death yesterday morning.
"Thanks for calling me, Dr. Patterson."
"I'm just sorry I didn't have good news to tell
you." He hung up the phone.
John couldn't go back to sleep. He got up and put on
a pot of coffee. After he had showered, shaved, and dressed, he went back to
the kitchen and poured himself a cup of coffee.
As he sat at the kitchen table, sipping his coffee,
the telephone rang. The ominous ring almost caused him to lose his grip on the
coffee cup. He glanced up at the wall clock: 5:15 A.M. John sprang from his
chair and rushed toward the ringing phone on the wall.
He picked up the phone. "Dr. Randall."
"It's Nurse Simpson from the infirmary."
She took a deep breath. "I have an inmate…"
Stevi B. for Manic
Readers says:
"Frozen Death is a very intriguing mystery and
it gets even more interesting as the answer appears to be found in Ancient
Indian lore. If you love Indian lore, medically impossible puzzles, and
mysteries that look impossible, you will like Frozen Death."
Buy
at: http://www.roguephoenixpress.com/
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