
The Rigger
Detective Constable David Parker is plunged into the world of BDSM and his own murky past when he and his partner, Megan Hendriks, investigate the murder of Erika Pilkin. The victim is suspended from an old oak tree in historic Stanley Park using Japanese bondage techniques, and a stunning angel wing is woven into the suspension using rope. The ties are all too familiar to Parker, and he decides to consult with Shiro Nakamura, a famous Japanese bondage artist and his former mentor. The two men share a tangled history haunted by the memory of Shiro’s favorite rope model—Yumi Nawashi—and Parker’s actions make Hendriks question his judgement.
The detectives focus on two men with questionable reputations in the BDSM community. Another possible suspect is Shiro, but Parker refuses to consider his former mentor which forces Hendriks to doubt her partner’s judgement. It leads her to start digging into Parker’s past, and she is shaken to learn about his possible involvement with the murders of five women in China.
The murder investigation seems to get some breaks, but each new revelation is undermined by another. As the suspect pool shrinks, questions about Parker’s involvement with Shiro mire the investigation in uncertainty, deception and betrayal. Eventually, questions are raised about Parker’s history as well as Shiro’s innocence. Time becomes the enemy as the killer repeats his pattern and bodies pile up. Hendriks must understand what connects a dead rope model in Japan to the murder victims, and the past and present collide hurtling everyone towards a devastating confrontation and heart-wrenching conclusion.
Completed
Angels of Punishment
What do you do when greed and the will to power has corrupted society to the point of collapse?
For Fallyn Suzuki, there is only one solution.
Retribution.
Set in a society where the rich and powerful serve themselves to the detriment of everyone else, the novel follows a sophisticated group of vigilantes seeking justice. Seeing how the justice system has failed ordinary people struggling to make ends meet, there is no punishment too harsh for the entitled elites who are in the crosshairs.
In progress
