After my first book, “Memories Never Die” received so many great reviews, I decided that maybe I had a talent for exploring unique issues through story telling. There was only one way to find out and that was to write another novel.
Because “Memories Never Die” was never meant to be a continuing story, I knew I had to come up with a new cast of characters and a new type of adventure.
Then one day I came across the character of Senator Steven Westcott. As a United States Senator, I saw a way to create plausible stories that could subject Steven to intrigue anywhere in the world.
It took years before I could call “DNA Never Lies” finished. But soon after its publication I found out it had been worth the effort.
In “DNA Never Dies” we are introduced to Senator Steven Westcott. After retiring from the army as a Green Beret in the Special Forces, Steven decides to serve his country as a United States Senator. As the story unfolds, his wife and he are trying to recover from the loss of a daughter to a drug overdose.
Their world fully implodes when Steven is accused of murdering a young prostitute.
One of his own laws in the making comes back to haunt him when his DNA is used as evidence against him. The evidence is irrefutable, so Steven goes on the run to avoid spending the rest of his life in jail.
Without divulging too much of the story, it is enough to say that the world Senator Westcott knew at the beginning of the book is not the world he sees at the end.