What if saving lives meant taking others?
She loves her day job—and makes a killing at it.
Meet Abby, a woman who’s mastered the art of saving others by hunting those who do harm. By day, she hides behind an ordinary life. By night, she becomes the kind of monster abusers should fear.
But when the trail of blood leads closer to home, everything changes.
Abby doesn’t know much about her family—and what little she remembers isn’t good. Years of dead ends and quiet research finally uncover something new: a story woven with heartbreak, betrayal, and murder.
As she follows the clues, the line between her work and her past begins to blur. And when those two worlds collide, Abby will have to decide whether she can keep doing what she does best… or confront the harsh truth she’s been searching for.
Mother Mercy
Abby doesn’t know much about her family, and the memories she does have aren’t great. She spends most of her time killing abusers to save their victims. By night, researches her own history.
It hasn’t led anywhere till recently.
What she discovers is a sad tale of heartbreak and murder.
She tries not to let the new lead get in the way of her work, but when work and personal life cross paths, it’s never a good thing. But maybe this time can be different.
More info →About the Book
Mother Abby follows Abby, a woman who has turned vengeance into her profession and survival into an art. What begins as another mission for justice takes a darker, more personal turn as her search for answers unearths secrets about her past. With every revelation, Abby finds herself questioning everything she thought she knew about who she is and what she’s fighting for.
This gripping story explores the cost of justice, the weight of memory, and the fine line between retribution and redemption.
About the Author
Chandra Arthur crafts stories that blend psychological tension with moral complexity, exploring what happens when ordinary people are pushed to extraordinary limits. With Mother Mercy, she delivers a powerful, character-driven thriller that asks one haunting question: how far would you go to get justice?














