Jumat, 24 Juli 2020

[PDF] Download The Empty Bed: A Novel (The Burial Society Series) by Nina Sadowsky | Free EBOOK PDF English

Book Details

Title: The Empty Bed: A Novel (The Burial Society Series)
Author: Nina Sadowsky
Number of pages:
Publisher: Ballantine Books (January 28, 2020)
Language: English
ISBN: 0525619879
Rating: 4     35 reviews

Book Description

Review “There’s a definite cinematic vibe to [Nina] Sadowsky’s novel, especially as the characters rush around Hong Kong in Jason Bourne–type chase scenes. Catherine and her mysterious network are impressively connected and intriguingly motivated, and the woman herself is a fascinating study of power, empathy, and efficiency. . . . Surrender to the action and intrigue . . . and enjoy this whirlwind adventure in Hong Kong.”Kirkus Reviews   “Entertaining.”Publishers Weekly   “A sly, wry look at privilege and the price it can exact . . . a globe-trotting, jet-setting quest to avenge some of society’s most pressing ills . . . Nina Sadowsky thrills again with her filmic vision of a troupe of unlikely superheroes.”—Jenny Milchman, USA Today bestselling author of Cover of Snow and Wicked River   “Who better to find a missing woman than an expert in making people disappear? This unputdownable novel has flawless prose, a compelling premise, and textured settings that become characters in their own right. There is no more sleep once you crawl into The Empty Bed.”—K. J. Howe, internationally bestselling author of Skyjack   “Nina Sadowsky weaves another thrilling chapter of the Burial Society series, mixing classic Hitchcock conspiracy with the sexual tension of a modern noir. Sadowsky’s characters exude a razor-sharp wit that yanks you along on an adventure that keeps you guessing until the glorious conclusion.”—Ted Sullivan, producer and writer of Riverdale Read more About the Author Nina Sadowsky has written numerous original screenplays and adaptations for such companies as The Walt Disney Company, Working Title Films, and Lifetime Television. She was the executive producer of The Wedding Planner, has produced many other films, and was president of Meg Ryan’s Prufrock Pictures. Sadowsky is the program director for NYU Los Angeles, a Global Programs initiative that provides an experiential learning environment for students preparing for careers in the entertainment and media industries. This is her third novel, following Just Fall and The Burial Society. She is at work on her next novel. Read more Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. How things begin . . .I could tell the story differently; of course I could. Every storyteller twists his or her lens to suit an agenda. Or protect the heart.This impulse to shape the truth is universal, one of the many traits that serve to remind us that we are more alike than we are different.I find it useful to focus on where we align even as our differences threaten to tear us apart. After all, in order to do what I do, you have to not just learn to see the world through others’ eyes, but to live, to breathe, to act, to be another.Welcome to the Burial Society. Peer into the lens and see what I see.RISINGCatherine, Phoenix, ArizonaI shut the door of my rental van but don’t lock it. It’s not only that I don’t fear it will be stolen in this exclusive neighborhood; it’s that we will need to make a fast exit. The computer geeque decals I’ve slapped on its side panels are eye-­catching and distinctive (what any witness will remember)—­and easily disposable.The sunbaked asphalt is spongy under the hard soles of my boots. The air is dry as bleached bones, hot and still. The sun, relentless and blinding, hangs directly overhead in a serene blue sky free of any clouds.I open the passenger door to let Stephanie out and make a mental note to talk to her later about some refinements in her appearance. In her usual uniform of skintight shredded black jeans, rock ’n’ roll T-­shirt, and leather jacket, bright blue eyes rimmed with kohl, she stands out here in the Arizona suburbs. You can take the girl out of Jersey, but still, she needs to learn to blend in.I’m also worried she might pass out from the heat in that leather jacket and, purely selfishly, that’s the last thing I need right now.Holding up one hand to signal she should stay put, I pull out a pale pink polo shirt that matches my own and toss it to her.“Lose the jacket. Put this over your T-­shirt.”She complies. It’s time to move.The villa we are targeting sits in a cul-­de-­sac in a pricey community anchored around a golf course and also featuring a clubhouse, tennis courts, and swimming pools. The monochromatic soft beiges and muted greens of true sunbaked desert should color the landscape here, so the deceptive emerald of the man-­made lawns and rolling hills of the golf course give this development a disingenuous feel, temporary, like it could be just a stage set, struck at any moment.Despite this, the harsh sun reminds us where we really are.It’s why we came at noon; everyone is inside, shades drawn against the blazing sun, air conditioners pumping.We have a cover story ready if we’re stopped, of course, but I’d prefer it if we just slid in and out without anyone noticing. My plan is to get inside her house and then get Leslie Virgenes out of there as quickly and cleanly as possible. If she’s there. If not, I’ll have to improvise.We steal across the lawn and past a silver Audi TTS Coupe parked in the driveway of the “Spanish­inspired” villa, a good first sign. We turn the corner and edge along the house to the back door. We did a trial run last night at a sister complex across the road built by the same developer. Under Stephanie’s expert tutelage, I picked three kitchen-­door locks to get my rhythm down, each one taking progressively less time. Stephanie may need refinements in certain areas, but she has skills and is willing to teach them.Stephanie joined the Burial Society seventeen months ago. Like most of my recruits, she was a rescue in whom I saw potential. (Her stories, along with those of my other recruits, are tales for another time.)We snap on latex gloves. I conquer Leslie’s lock in less than twenty seconds. As the tumbler clicks over, Stephanie gives me a pleased grin, a teacher proud of her pupil.We’re in. Steph closes the door softly behind us and lifts her shaggy mane of black hair away from her damp neck. The sweat on my skin prickles with chill in a matter of seconds. The powerful hum of the central air system swallows up most sound.A cup of cold coffee with a congealed ring of cream sits on the gray granite countertop, next to a half-­finished piece of toast smeared with peanut butter. A fat fly buzzes lazily over a bowl filled with overripe bananas and a net bag of tangerines. A smaller bowl next to it holds a set of keys. A fob for an Audi is a probable match for the car parked in the driveway.I extract two loaded syringes of fentanyl from their pouch in the leather satchel strung across my body and hand one to Stephanie. I head through the kitchen into the dining room. Stephanie follows, but then we split paths, she heading toward the front office, den, and main living area, me toward the bedrooms. We’ve studied the floor plans together, role-­played every possible scenario: finding Leslie alone, with her son. Possibly armed. Almost certainly irrational from fear. If Leslie’s even still here. My current guess is yes, given the evidence of the car in the driveway and the keys and food in the kitchen.There will be three bedrooms along this corridor. The first door hangs ajar. The room is tidy and a bit sterile: a guest bedroom. The second door is closed and I push it open. Leslie’s son’s room, cluttered with sports trophies and posters; the faint aroma of teenage hormones and perspiration discernible even in the chilly air. The room looks like it hasn’t been used in a while. A lone striped tube sock sits on the end of the neatly made bed, but otherwise it’s tidy, a bit dusty. I’m relieved; the kid is supposed to be away at college (a sophomore playing for the Arizona Wildcats) and it makes my job simpler if he’s where he ought to be, someone else dispatched there to ensure he’s safe.The door to the master bedroom is half open, a spill of golden light playing across the russet tile floor of the hallway. I walk ­toward and then into the light, pushing the door fully open. I enter Leslie Virgenes’s private domain, a tastefully and luxuriously appointed master bedroom and bath, the showpiece of the trophy second home she purchased at the pinnacle of her successful career in the pharmaceutical business.A California king-­sized bed with an expensive-­looking cream-­colored headboard of tufted raw silk dominates the space. The sheets, comforter, and mounds of pillows on the bed coordinate in feminine waves of flowers, all rosy pinks and soft golds except where the stain from her loosened bowels darkens their hue, a foul side result of asphyxiation. A plastic bag is ruthlessly snugged around her head.My hand flies to my mouth as I fight the sour wash rising up in my throat and the sting in my eyes. We’re too late. I back away. They’ve found her. Killed her. There’s no more I can do here. There’s no reason to stay.But it means others I need to protect are in terrible danger.I swiftly make my way back toward the center of the house. I find Stephanie coming in my direction.“Nobody,” she reports softly. “But the front-­door lock was jimmied open. Clean job.”“She’s here,” I say. “Dead. Poor thing. Didn’t think they’d look in her own home?”The question is rhetorical. I’d tried to help Leslie before she came here, but people don’t always listen to reason. Particularly when they’re terrified.“What now?” Stephanie asks.“We’re out of here.”Steph hands me her syringe, and I carefully slip both of them back into their pouch and then into my satchel; we had them ready to drug Leslie only if she wasn’t willing to come quietly. We were here to protect her, but she wouldn’t have known that.A framed photograph of Leslie and her son snags my eye. Arms around each other’s shoulders. Smiling faces. The same crinkly brown eyes. He was a sperm donor baby; Leslie the only parent in his life. I suppress the rush of empathetic grief I feel for Leslie’s teenage boy. We need to get out of here quick and clean.If they found Leslie, have they found us too?We slip out of the back of the villa just the way we came, our shoes tapping softly across the Mexican tiles. I pause and scan the empty blandness of the community before we make our move. The heat seems even more oppressive than it did mere minutes ago; perhaps it’s the indelible image of Leslie Virgenes’s flattened, lifeless face tightly wound in unforgiving plastic. I’m glad I stopped Stephanie before she saw the body. She doesn’t need to carry that picture in her head.I inhale a deep gulp of hot air. The community is quiet as a morgue, except for the angry drone of a lawn mower somewhere in the distance. I nod to Stephanie and we go, slipping quietly across the impossibly green grass, making a beeline for the van. I scan the street, my eyes searching for the telltale flick of a curtain, or a shadow crossing a window, but come up empty.We climb inside the van and I turn a corner before stopping to quickly strip off the computer geeque decals. As I hop back behind the wheel, a siren’s urgent wail pierces the silence.I see the flashing cherries of the approaching patrol vehicle. I pull away from the curb slowly and calmly despite my racing heart. I feel in my bones that this is no coincidence. Someone wanted the cops to find us with Leslie’s corpse. Read more

Customers Review:

Power and compassion run through Catherine, who helps people in extreme danger vanish from their predators. The rest of her Burial Society team, who she enlisted, each possess their own talents and surprises. I became hooked on The Empty Bed from page one.Nina Sadowsky has woven a gripping tale, which begins on different strings and seamlessly blends together in a compelling way. I found it fascinating how Nina was able to take me into each character’s mind, bringing their insecurities and strengths to the surface, so that I felt like I was reading about my own friends. When Catherine’s agents carry out her instructions to find a woman missing from her own hotel room bed in Hong Kong, twists and turns took me on a thrilling roller coaster ride! Now I want to see the movie!
I read the Burial Society but it’s not actually necessary in order to enjoy The Empty Bed. At first the jumping around of characters confused me, but I kept reading and I was quickly lost in the suspense. So lost I couldn’t put the book down and read it all on a lazy Sunday. If you like suspense and intrigue, this is for you.
The Empty Bed by Nina Sadowsky is the 2nd book in her Burial Society series. I did not read the first book in this series, but once I got used to the multiple POV’s, it did read well as a standalone. As noted, in each chapter, it was a different POV, which was a bit confusing early on; but about a ¼ of the way in, I knew the characters., though I was a little stumped as to where this was heading.Catherine is the lead in this series, as she runs The Burial Society, who help rescue people in dangerous situations, and helps them escape to sort of a witness protection system. She has a group of trained members, whom she sends to various missions; in The Empty Bed, some of these missions will tie in.The story starts with Eva and Peter Lombard going on a vacation to Hong Kong to fix their failing marriage, which Peter surprised his wife with. Eva notices a strange man seemed to be following her, and when she tells Peter, he just brushes it off as her imagination. The following morning, when Peter wakes up, with his wife not in the hotel room; after trying to call her, he decides she is playing hardship with him, and goes out on his own. Along the way he gets mugged, and when he gets help, he realizes that Eva was right, someone must have been following her and now she is missing.When Peter calls his boss for help, Catherine, who is a friend of the boss, is notified and sends a team to Hong Kong. Stevie and Jake (not their real names) try to work with Peter to find Eva, as well as protect him from those chasing him. We learn that Eva has old powerful friends in Hong Kong who are helping her, as she has no idea who is after her and why. As they get close to finding each other, the danger escalates for all of them, as the villain has ties to someone closer to Peter, and Eva might have a picture on her camera that they want. While Stevie and Jake protect them, it is Catherine who realizes her old friend may have something to do with whatever is going on. Can she trust him?Catherine is also working with a couple of other members to help a woman and her child escape an abused relationship from and powerful enemy. There is also another POV of an FBI agent who is trying to find the woman and child that are missing.The Empty Bed is an intriguing, exciting, action filled and intense mystery that had three storylines going at the same time, with two tying in. There were some twists and surprises along the way, though I will say it at times it was difficult to keep up with. With that being said, The Empty Bed had an excellent premise written very well by Sadowsky, and interesting society protecting those in danger and lots of action.
The Empty Bed picks up where The Burial Society left off. Catherine, an operative for said Burial Society, makes a practice of helping people escape their lives. Mostly women who are in bad marriages – and by bad, I don’t mean unhappy, but truly bad, marriages where they are beaten or threatened or living with monsters. Catherine helps them escape and become whole new people. New names, new identities, new lives. What she does is dangerous, and sometimes deadly, but she believes in it wholeheartedly. ‘In this novel we meet two new operatives, Stephanie and John. Catherine is training them to work on their own, and in their own way, they are teaching her a thing or two. Both are coming from tragedy in their own lives. Perhaps that is what leads them to want to work for the Burial Society. Perhaps in a way they are adrenaline junkies. Regardless, they have chosen this path.Peter and Eva are a thirty something couple living in London. Peter works in high finance. Eva has given up her journalism career to start a family, only she can’t seem to get pregnant. So now Eva spends her days walking her dog Baxter and shooting photos of whatever she fancies. Peter finds time for her when he can. So when Peter proposes a surprise trip to Paris for their anniversary, Eva is a bit skeptical. She’s just not sure what to make of his sudden attentiveness.Magali is an FBI special agent. She has worked her way up the ranks and is about to depart for undercover training. But she has one last case to clear off her plate, the disappearance of socialite Betsy Elliot and her son Bear. Of course the husband is the prime suspect, but Magali definitely doesn’t see it that way. How does a prominent wife and her six year old son just vanish off the face of the earth with no trace? Magali is going to make it her mission to find out.Just as with The Burial Society, I couldn’t put this one down. I stayed up way past my bedtime two nights in a row to finish it and find out what happens to all these people in this crazy, twisty, turny novel. Sadowsky is a master of suspense, taking you to the brink and then switching the story to an alternate point of view. Each character has layers to unpack, each layer bringing new revelations.I couldn’t wait for this follow up to The Burial Society, and as with some sequels, you often don’t know if they will meet your expectations. Not this one. Sadowsky surpassed all expectations I had for book number two. Now I have to wait, anxiously, to find out what happens with Stephanie, John and Catherine, and what “burials” they have in store next.4.5 starsThis review will be posted at BookwormishMe.com on 14 January 2020 .