The curtain rose and the players, invisible to the audience, took their places. Their names were Suspicion, Intrigue, and Violence.
When beautiful, malevolent Maxine Culver died after a fatal fall backstage, the cold finger of suspicion touched Susan Howard, whose career she had wantonly stifled, and Dr. David Radcliffe, the husband she had long ago deserted.
Drawn together by their mutual predicament, Susan and David discovered they were falling in love.
But how much did the frightened girl really know about the man Maxine had rejected? Had smoldering bitterness created a murderer? If so, Susan’s life was endangered by her love. And if not, could she be sure that the shadow of the diabolical Maxine wouldn’t someday wedge itself between them?
Rona Green was born on 16 June 1911 in Birkenhead, Cheshire, England, UK. Her education includes: Pitmans College in London, a Diploma in English Literature at Royal Society of Art, Birkenhead School of Art Literary. She married Frederick Walter Shambrook, and had a son.
A former actress, before writing, she worked also as journalist and sub-director of publishing company Amalgamated Press, and as assistant editor of George Newnes Ltd. Published since 1942, she started publishing mainly contemporary doctor nurse romances, before writing also gothic romances, and when the market for gothic novels softened, she wrote historical mystery romances. In 1970, Broken Tapestry, her contemporary novel about a broken family, won the Romantic Novel of the Year Award by the Romantic Novelists' Association. In 1989, she wrote her The Model Wife: Nineteenth Century Style, a book about social constumbres, including clothing. In 1992, she wrote Writing Popular Fiction, a complete guide for writers.