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When Dr. Jack Carson falls asleep at the wheel and loses his son in a tragic car accident, his life crumbles around him. Struggling to put the broken pieces back together, Carson faces death again three years later when he finds a body at the mental hospital where he serves as a psychiatrist. A note on the body says the killing will only end with Carson's murder. Alex Tanner, the beautiful and intelligent detective assigned to his case, gives Carson reason for optimism. However, the killer, who blames Carson for his mother's suicide, is watching and waiting, whispering despair from the shadows. A childhood spent with a sadistic father has left the murderer with a calculated and awful purpose. He doesn't just want to kill Carson; he wants to create an existence so miserable the psychiatrist will understand the true meaning of evil. Can Carson swim through a river of darkness and come out clean on the other side, or will the darkness prove indelible?
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Descendants of Johann Wendel George Traut (1689-1760) of Kleinfischling- en, Landau, Germany, who came to America in 1738. He was married (1) to Maria Appolonia Steinlin, with whom he had seven children born between 1723 and 1738. He settled in Strasburg Township of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where in 1739 he married his second wife, Maria Magdalena Walter (1717-1760). They had seven children born between 1739 and 1749. Descendants and family members live in Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Missouri and elsewhere.
George Webb married Nancy Knuckles, daughter of John Knuckles, 13 February 1795 in Botetourt County, Virginia. They had two children. He married Caroline Ritchie, widow of John Ritchie, and they had one child. He died in about 1821 in Tazewell County, Virginia. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Virginia, West Virginia and Ohio.