He Solves the Case—But Never Escapes ItJonathan Smyth Doesn’t Move On. He Carries It.
- haleyn4
- Jul 16
- 1 min read

Some detectives close a case and move on.Jonathan Smyth isn’t one of them.
In The Case of the Screaming Tunnel, Frank F. Fiore introduces us to a man who solves mysteries the way most men endure grief—with silence, scars, and the weight of what can’t be undone.
Because when Smyth uncovers the truth, it doesn’t set anyone free.It just makes the lie harder to live with.
You Don’t Get Closure. You Get Consequences.Smyth doesn’t wrap things up in neat little endings.He doesn’t hand over the villain and get a medal.He exposes what people fought to hide—and watches as they try to bury it all over again.
He doesn’t get thanked.He gets blamed.
But that’s part of the job—at least for him.
Frank F. Fiore Writes for the People Who Stay HauntedThis isn’t a detective who walks away clean.This is a man who adds another name to the list of regrets.Another sleepless night.Another weight in the gut.
Fiore doesn’t give him relief.He gives him truth—and a world that punishes him for it.
Why Readers Keep Turning PagesBecause they recognize something in Smyth:The burden of knowing.The ache of caring too much.The quiet resolve to do what’s right—knowing it won’t be enough, and doing it anyway.
Smyth isn’t trying to win.He’s just trying not to let the worst of the world go unchecked.
This Isn’t Just a Case. It’s a Curse.The tunnel screamed once.Smyth heard it.And now it echoes inside him.
📗 Read The Case of the Screaming Tunnel and follow the detective who never leaves a case behind.🔗 Now available on Amazon.







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