All along the East Coast, someone has evaded sophisticated security systems to break into thirteen of America's most iconic historic sites. More puzzling, the intruders haven't stolen anything from the landmarks. Instead, they've left behind pieces of a dismembered woman.
Hamilton Coles, a former CIA operative working in a special unit charged with protecting the nation's most important historic monuments, is assigned to the case. He quickly enlists the help of his former lover, Cary Mallory. She's a historian and antiques dealer who might be able to unravel the common denominator underlying the break-ins: they all have some relation to the US Constitution.
Who's behind the break-ins, and what message, if any, is the murder meant to send? And could it be just a coincidence that the victim's DNA reveals that she was related to Nicholas II, the last Russian tsar?
The Constitution Murders is a thrill ride that whisks readers across state lines and multiple continents as Coles and Mallory pursue the clue that will finally give them the answers they seek. But is it worth putting their own lives in jeopardy to learn the truth?
About the Author: Conover Hunt, a native of Hampton, Virginia, is a nationally known public historian. She has published seven nonfiction books on American history, John F. Kennedy, and James and Dolley Madison.
Over the course of her career, Hunt has worked on the preservation of historic sites and organized new museums and traveling exhibitions. She served as lead curator in the creation of the Sixth Floor Museum in Dallas, at the site of Kennedy's assassination.
Hunt received a bachelor of arts in art history from Newcomb College of Tulane University and a master of arts from the University of Delaware as a fellow in the Winterthur Museum's Early American Culture program.
The Constitution Murders is her first novel.