When a late-night call sends Detective Maureen Vega to a North Side intersection, she finds a scene so brutal it changes the case before the first body is even covered: a dark Dodge Charger torn apart by gunfire, five people dead in the street, two survivors barely hanging on, and evidence that the killers did not come just to murder. They came to recover something.
What begins as a mass-casualty homicide quickly hardens into something far worse. The shooting on Maginn Street was no random eruption of street violence. It was organized, targeted, and methodical-a bloodbath designed to silence everyone in the car while a team searched the wreckage for a missing phone tied to the dead front-seat passenger, Darian Price. But the shooters leave empty-handed, and that single failure sets off a second hunt through Pittsburgh's North Side.
As Maureen and her partner Nick Orsini dig into the victims, the survivors, and the car itself, the pieces begin to form a much darker picture. Darian had gotten hold of a phone that was never supposed to stay in his hands. On it may be names, messages, warehouse photos, and financial evidence linking street soldiers to something larger, cleaner, and far more dangerous than a routine retaliatory hit. The dead are only the first layer. Under them is a structure of guns, money, shell properties, and insulated men who don't get their hands dirty unless something has gone very, very wrong.
With one shooter already dead, another still moving, and a shadowy organizer named Malik Voss beginning to emerge behind the violence, Maureen is forced into a race against both time and silence. Every survivor is a target. Every witness is afraid. Every answer seems to lead not away from the blood, but deeper into it. And somewhere out in the city, the missing phone is still in play-worth enough to kill for, worth enough to wipe out an entire car full of people, and worth enough to make sure the job isn't finished yet.
As pressure builds from the street, the media, and the chain of command, Maureen has to figure out whether she's chasing a massacre, a cover-up, or the opening move in something much bigger. Because if the wrong people recover that phone first, Maginn Street won't be remembered as the end of the violence.
It'll be remembered as the beginning.
Maginn Street Bloodbath is a hard, fast Pittsburgh homicide thriller packed with organized violence, political pressure, hunted survivors, and a detective who knows that once blood starts protecting money, the body count is never finished.
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