Love hurts. FBI agent Kelly Feinman knows this is true. While she is
recovering from an attack by a serial killer called the "Acid Man," her
husband leaves her. Physically and emotionally scarred by the murderer,
Kelly feels she will never be the same. She is cut off not only from her
husband and child, but also from her fellow FBI agents, who see her as a
rogue for going after the Acid Man alone. Love is hell. Matt Connor
knows this is true. His love for his girlfriend, Amy, is so intense that
he feels he is in heaven when he is with her. When Amy leaves him for
another man, Matt is shattered. In agony, he plans a diabolical scheme
that first calls for him to disappear from the face of the earth. His
revenge will make Amy wish she had never been born. Love can heal.
Matt's act of vengeance puts him in charge of Amy's infant son. He
discovers a soothing warmth in Jimmy's eyes that makes him wonder if
Amy's betrayal truly merited wrecking the child's life. Yet Matt's heart
cannot be made whole until he has won Amy back. Kelly cannot be made
whole until she understands the depth of evil that lurks behind the Acid
Man. Ironically, to rid herself and the world of her nemesis, she must
seek out Matt Connor, a wanted man she has been ordered to bring to
justice. In Falling, Christopher Pike explores the depth and breadth of
human emotion through two brilliantly etched characters: Kelly Feinman,
who pays a terrible price to understand the nature of true evil, and
Matt Connor, a classic antihero who captures the listener's sympathy.
The listener is drawn deeply into the hearts and minds of these two
people, who almost against our will force us to face our deepest fears.
It is that power that makes Falling impossible to forget.