Saturday, May 15, 2021

Rust and Stardust by T. Greenwood (2014)

 

This novel is based on actual events. In the late 1940’s a young girl who is desperate to be in the cool girl click is given an initiation challenge. Florence (Sally) Horner is tasked to steal an item before being permitted to join the click. As she gathers her courage to do the deed, a man is watching her. When Sally slips the stolen notebook into her coat this man approaches her. His name is Frank, and he tells Sally he is an FBI agent and has witnessed the thief. Frank agrees to look the other way if Sally agrees to check in with him and keep it a secret. Sally readily agrees.

The next day Frank shows up again and tells Sally she must go to Atlantic City with him to face a judge but she must not tell her mother. Sally tells her mother she has been invited to go on vacation with her friend and her family. Sally’s mother is leery but relived that Sally has a friend and agrees to let her go. After several weeks Sally’s mom is getting worried even though Sally is regularly communicating. As the truth slowly comes out all seems lost.

It turns out Frank is a recently released convict who had been convicted of kidnapping and child molestation. As the police rush to Atlantic City to stop Frank he and Sally have fled to Baltimore. There they stay with a friend who believes Sally is Frank’s daughter. Strangely enough Frank still allows Sally to send home messages to tell her mother she is safe. It is while they are in Baltimore that Sally learns Frank is not an FBI agent; instead, he leads Sally to believe he is her long-lost father.

As the police again close in on them, the couple flee to Texas. While living in Texas, Sally confides in a friend that she has been kidnapped and sexually abused by Frank. Suddenly they are on the move again, this time to California. It is here that Sally is finally able to escape the almost 2-year ordeal.

I would like to be able to say things get better for Sally once she is home but that is not the case. Sally is no longer the 11-year-old she was when she left home; she is now 13 and grown far beyond her chronological age. Sadly, what happened to her over that two-year period does not compare to how her story ends.

I strongly recommend this book but please take the time to read the book before searching Google for information on Sally Horner.

4.13 stars on Goodreads, 4.3 on Amazon



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