![]() Still, things started out well – I enjoyed being introduced to Wicket, a wary product of the foster care system who also happens to be a hacker, a girl who walks a tightrope of mistrust, unable to believe in the intentions of law enforcement, her new foster parents, or the idea that she’s finally safe from her abusive, drug-dealing Dad. Wick has a bad attitude and sarcasm to spare.īut she’s going to find this killer no matter what.Īre you familiar with the ouroboros? You’ve probably seen one – it’s that image of a snake eating its own tail – and weirdly an ouroboros is how I find myself thinking of this book, because this is a story that locks itself in so tightly it eats itself in the end. Is a happy ending possible with the threat of Wick’s deadbeat dad returning, the detective hunting him sniffing around Wick instead, and a killer taunting her at every step?įoster child. ![]() Then Griff, trailer-park boy next door and fellow hacker, shows up, intent on helping Wick. Until her sister Lily is the next target. ![]() Wick has the right computer-hacking skills for the job, but little interest in this perverse game of hide-and-seek. These are the words written on Tessa Waye’s diary. ![]()
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