This book was a re-examination of a Cold Case which happened back in the early 1920s. It is about a minister who was having an affair with a married parishioner. He was a handsome and charismatic local minister; she was the church choir's beautiful soprano soloist. In 1922 they were found together, brutally murdered, along a secluded lane in New Brunswick, New Jersey-a popular spot for lovers' trysts. Each of the victims was married-to someone else. And although the police believed this would be an easy case to crack, it became one of the most high-profile unsolved crimes of the decade. At first, the primary suspects seemed obvious-the betrayed wife and husband of the slain lovers. The minister's wife was one of the town's wealthiest and most socially prominent citizens; the soprano's husband was a man of modest means, working as the church sexton. But as the investigation progressed, new suspects were uncovered and key eyewitness testimony was found to be false-deepening the mystery surrounding the murders.