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Patricia Cornwell — the author of the hugely popular Kay Scarpetta novels — is back with the second book in her blockbuster new series that kicked off last year with Quantum. Spin, which comes out Jan. 12, is another heart-pounder featuring Captain Calli Chase, a NASA test pilot, quantum physicist and cybercrime investigator who in the previous novel was drawn into a frantic, high-stakes search for her missing twin sister, Carme.
In the excerpt below, Calli has left NASA Langley in the wee hours of the morning during a driving snowstorm when her vehicle's navigation system, apparently hacked, directs her away from home and toward an abandoned motel on the outskirts of her coastal Virginia hometown. She worries it's a trap but hopes it might lead to a reunion with Carme (they call each other “Sisto"). So begins another adventure that will take readers from NASA to the White House and even outer space.
An excerpt from Cornwell's upcoming thriller Spin:
I slow down at the intersection of Beach and Hall when the engine switches off for seemingly no reason.
"What the . . . ?"
I'm sitting dead as a doornail in the middle of the road, the snow swirling around my white Silverado. When just as inexplicably, my truck turns back on with a roar.
"Holy shhhhh . . . !"
The doors relock, the heat and defrost resuming as the radio is muted, and the satellite map fills the display on the dash. The GPS tracking app announces that I can begin my route, showing me the address of the final destination, one I didn't enter and haven't visited forever.
My police truck has been hacked, the navigation controlled remotely. But that doesn't mean I have to do as it says. I don't have to follow the highlighted route. But there's no way I won't when it might be an illuminated tether that connects to my sister. What we called a mirror flash, a signal between us when we were kids, only we used radio transmitters and antennas, nothing visible.
It's also possible that someone else is sending me a message, setting up a trap. My years of training, my instincts dictate that I should head directly back to NASA. I should call for help along the way, reaching out to my mother, to Fran, to Dick, to someone.
But nothing's going to stop me from driving as directed, the app's female voice heading me south toward the Chesapeake Bay on Old Buckroe Road, a stretch that means something to my sister and me.
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