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Thursday, May 21, 2026

The Secrets Buried Inside Every Cold Case

 

There’s something uniquely haunting about a cold case for writers as well as readers.

Maybe it’s because the crime itself isn’t truly over.

Time has passed. Lives have moved on. People have changed. But somewhere beneath the surface, the unanswered questions remain waiting like ghosts.



As a suspense writer, I think that’s one of the reasons cold cases are so compelling to write. They come with built-in emotional weight. The mystery didn’t happen yesterday. The damage has had years to spread through families, friendships, and entire communities.

In many ways, a cold case story is really about the collision between past and present.

One phone call.
One anonymous letter.
One box of forgotten evidence.

And suddenly, a character who thought they’d escaped the past is forced to face it again.

That tension creates such a rich foundation for suspense fiction because the characters aren’t just hunting a killer or searching for answers. They’re confronting old grief, buried secrets, guilt, regret, fear, and sometimes even the lies they’ve told themselves in order to survive.

As a writer, that opens the door to deeper emotional storytelling.

Cold cases also naturally create atmosphere. There’s an eerie quality to abandoned evidence rooms, faded photographs, missing-person flyers curled with age, old newspaper clippings, and witnesses whose memories may no longer be reliable. Even settings themselves begin to feel haunted by what happened there.

I think that’s why I find myself drawn to these stories over and over again in my own books.



In Unsolved Amish Abduction, the past resurfaces ten years after Anna escaped her kidnapper when she receives her missing sister’s bracelet in the mail. What fascinated me while writing the story wasn’t only the mystery itself, but the emotional fallout of surviving something horrific while never truly knowing what happened to the person left behind.

That’s the heart of many cold case stories.

The unanswered question.
The thing left unresolved.

And from a writer’s perspective, those unresolved pieces create incredible suspense because the truth is often tangled beneath years of silence and carefully buried secrets. Every character may remember events differently. Some may be protecting others. Some may fear what the truth could destroy if it finally comes to light.

Cold cases also allow suspense writers to explore something else. I think readers deeply connect with hope.

Hope that the forgotten aren’t truly forgotten.
Hope that truth matters, even decades later.
Hope that justice, though delayed, is still possible.

Maybe that’s why these stories stay with us long after the final page.

Because deep down, we all want to believe that even the coldest cases can still be solved.

I’d love to hear your thoughts about Cold Case Fiction. What is it about cold cases that fascinates you most?

I’ll be giving away one eBook copy of Unsolved Amish Abduction to one commenter. Please remember to give your email address in your comments.

3 comments:

  1. the mystery
    bn100candg at hotmail dot com

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ccold case are partly about justice and resolving the past. I love them!

    ReplyDelete