“Young lady, I could lift you from the ground with my palm between your thighs. I could send you to different worlds and give new meaning to ecstasy.” Barbicas stood and handed the girl back her phone number. “But not today.”
Elias shook his head and picked up the phone. “Such intrigue.” He mumbled. It was necessary for his safety, and that of the mission, he supposed, but costly and sometimes comical. From here he knew what to do, they would take care of the foolish girl's improvising and he may be the last to see her alive. Barbicas pressed the 'send' button.
The passage you have just read is part of the introduction to one who has been called "the most interesting person," in The Radio Murders: The Collectors and The Radio Murders: The Caller, excerpted below. It was not my intension to make a killer and clearly the antagonist in this story someone with such attraction. But as many mystery writers will tell you, it often happens this way.
Barbicas will play a very different role in The Radio Murders: The Caller. In The Radio Murders: the Collectors he was searching his soul. In Caller he discovers that he just might have one. It is not a pleasant revelation.
The Radio Murders: The Caller is in the writing lab now and will be ready for you to visit by Spring 2012. Thanks again for your support.









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