Would you ruin your career for a man you know is guilty?
On the cusp of realizing her dream as a career military attorney, Captain Tracy Keener is ordered to defend Captain Adam Burke, a Special Operations officer who caused the deaths of his entire team. Everyone knows he’s guilty and defending him will cost Tracy her career, but she has no choice.
Captain Burke swears he was framed. Swears he’d acted under orders. Swears things that can’t possibly be true: breaches requiring corruption at the highest levels, the deliberate sacrifice of an entire military team. Impossible!
Until they’re proven fact. Under cease and desist orders and then threats to drop the case and let Burke go down, Tracy and Adam rebel, push for truth. . . and are targeted for assassination. To their horror, they discover others too are marked for death—millions of Americans Adam and she swore an oath to defend at any cost, including their own lives.
Yet to really succeed, Tracy and Adam must risk more than their lives. They must risk their hearts. That proves far harder, trapped in an intricate web of Duplicity.
Note: Duplicity was first published in 1999. This second edition has been rewritten and made suitable for most audiences.
AWARDS:
•Top Pick Award, Romantic Times
•Golden Quill Award
•Reviewer's Choice Award Nominee, Best Suspense Novel of the Year, Romantic Times
•Daphne Du Maurier Award Finalist, Best Mainstream Suspense Novel of the Year
PRAISE FOR DUPLICITY:
"Written in the tradition of A Few Good Men, this highly suspenseful story of a solitary woman's fight against an evil military conspiracy is one readers won't want to put down." - Library Journal
"Hinze's suspense-filled novel is one that will keep the reader turning pages and trying to guess the next moves in a complex and intriguing plot." -Raleigh News and Observer
"An exciting read. Guaranteed to keep you entertained." -- Rocky Mountain News
"[A] page-turner that fuses thriller and romance. Hinze has a knack for combining compelling realistic characterizations with suspense and a romantic plot line." - Publisher's Weekly