Download Royce Madison Mystery Series (Books 1-6) by Kieran York (.ePUB)

Royce Madison Mystery Series by Kieran York (Books #1 to #6)
Requirements: ePUB Reader, 2.2 MB
Overview: Kieran lives in the Rocky Mountain foothills with her schnauzer, Clover. She enjoys gardening, music, literature, art, and theatre. She considers her valuables to include Clover and other family and friends, her library, her antique typewriter collection, her guitar, and her garden.
Genre: Fiction > Mystery > FF, Lesbian, LGBT

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Timber City Masks (Book #1): Introducing Royce Madison, sheriff’s department diehard deputy and dyke-about-town. When Royce’s father, Sheriff Grady Madison, was killed, his murder went unsolved. Haunted by her father’s death, Royce vowed that no other murder would go unsolved in Timber City, Colorado.
In this first intriguing mystery, Royce explores the boundaries of sexuality, family loyalty, and town fear as she searches for the murderer of her lover’s best friend. Possible suspects abound in the murder of the wealthy Trish Chandler-Sumner. Was it her no-good jealous husband Luther, who also happens to be the current sheriff’s brother? Could it have been Ray, the gentle, guitar-playing young Native American implicated by one questionable witness?
When Valeria, the object of Royce’s obsession, reveals that she was sexually involved with the murdered woman, the tables tilt. But who knew the truth? What mask hides the real killer?
Unsolved crimes means we haven’t struggled hard enough for the truth. I hate being robbed of the truth. And if we accept the blank page and tag an innocent person, we’re accepting a lie. When law enforcers do that, the law becomes neutralized. Our inaction can put us on the inside of a mask looking out. No better than the perpetrator. ~ Royce Madison

Crystal Mountain Veils (Book #2): The second in the Royce Madison mystery series concerns the intrigue of a small Colorado murder. As if finding out who really killed tabloid gossip monger Sandra Holt weren’t challenging enough, Timber County’s acting sheriff Royce Madison also has to deal with a drifter stalking her girlfriend and an election opponent who’s ready to fight dirty.
With the Family Morals Coalition pumping big bucks into her opponent’s campaign and everybody in town anxious for her to make an arrest, Royce has to dig deep. As for the columnist’s death: everybody has a motive, and (almost) everybody had an alibi. Only another murder could make the case more complex.

Shinney Forest Cloaks (Book #3): In the third Royce Madison Mystery, Sheriff Madison and her deputies are searching for a missing woman. A newcomer to Timber County disappears without a trace. When there is the murder of that woman’s brother, the plot most certainly thickens.
Royce not only has her hands full with this crime, but there is also a planned protest against the burial of a homosexual solider.
In addition, her personal life seems to be falling apart. Royce’s fifteen year relationship is ending. The sheriff is now facing her midlife crisis and she fears her life will never again be happy. She longs for the return of tranquility in her Colorado mountain town. As well as tranquility’s return to her life.

Rasp Meadow Crossing (Book #4): Sheriff Royce Madison has always wanted to solve a cold-case crime. It had been a mystery that had perplexed her father decades ago. It had always remained in the back of Royce’s mind. However, he summer was getting too complicated for her to find time to look backward. She had been dispatched to assist in fighting one of the rampaging wildfires in Colorado’s backcountry. The murder of a gun merchant interrupted her firefighting tour – and she returned back to Timber City. Crime in Timber City hadn’t taken a vacation while she was away. Could the crimes be connected? If so, how? Add to that, her personal life was unraveling. She was nearly too busy to notice that her ex had returned to Timber. She had two murders to solve.

Silver Wilderness Range (Book #5): Sheriff Royce Madison is dispatched to a home on the outskirts of Timber City. The call is to remove a vagrant. Once there, Royce is perplexed. Seated outside on her own porch is an elderly woman named Daisy Barnaby. She had been the owner of that home for her entire life – and it had belonged to her family for at least a century. But now, Royce discovers, it had been turned over to the assisted living home where the octogenarian was recently sent.
Talking with the woman convinced Royce that it had all been done without Miss Barnaby’s permission. And Daisy swore that she had not signed anything relinquishing her property. Nor was she senile, she insisted. The senior citizen did not seem impaired in any way to the sheriff.
But there was more. Daisy disclosed that one of the patients residing in the Silver Wilderness Residence had been missing under dubious circumstances. Royce was not going to dismiss any crime in Timber County – real or imagined.Miss Daisy Barnaby was a friend of Royce’s grandmother. And she had been a teacher for nearly her entire life. She had not only been Royce’s father’s teacher, but had also been Royce’s grade school teacher.
Daisy had always been a responsible citizen, and of sterling character. So was it all a mistake, an illusion? Or would the facts show that Miss Barnaby was indeed of sound mind? The sheriff had every intention of finding out.

Wounded Badge Vista (Book #6): “Deputy down. Code Red.” There was alarm in the dispatcher’s voice when the radio blared, “Deputy down. Ten-eighteen. Urgent. Repeat, deputy down.” Dispatcher Wanda Thurlow’s voice cracked. Her words rushed, nearly dashing one over the next. “All available units to the Wounded Badge Vista parking lot.” Sheriff Royce Madison broke in, “I’m on my way, Wanda. I’m twenty minutes out.”
The heinous pointblank shooting of a lawman had changed Timber County. The manhunt was on, and it was imperative that it be solved with immediacy. Royce, and her force, were all targets of a vicious shooter. Endangered, they rushed to locate and arrest him. The difficulty was that the would-be murderer was determined, and seemed to be invisible. His identity was concealed, his disguise was illusionary. He was in no one’s vision, and everyone wearing a badge was in his sight.

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