By Rebecca Marks
At forty-two, Dana Cohen has retired from her twenty-two-year career as a
detective in the NYPD and moved back home to the rocky cliffs above
Long Island Sound to take stock of her life. Her drinking has become
problematic, and she increasingly relies on it as her life becomes more
complicated. Her estranged husband, Pete Fitzgerald, surprises her at
her house, armed with flowers and promises to finally be faithful.
Although Dana sends him packing, when he’s later accused of murder, she
jumps to his defense. He swears he’s innocent, and she wants to believe
him. But with all the evidence pointing directly at him, reasonable
doubt is a very scarce commodity.