Hillary Clinton's campaign hands are on the hunt for the traitor who leaked embarrassing information about the boss to the authors of a tell-all book on the Democrat's doomed campaign.

They may already know who did it. Clinton confidante Huma Abedin has been accused of cutting a deal with 'Shattered' authors Amie Parnes and Jon Allen to protect her reputation.

A spokesperson for Clinton rejected that explanation, however.

'Huma didn’t talk to them,' a Clinton rep told Page Six.

Hillary Clinton's campaign hands are on the hunt for the traitor who leaked embarrassing information about the boss to the authors of a tell-all book on the Democrat's doomed campaign. They may already know who did it: Clinton confidante Huma Abedin

Abedin's reasons for spilling secrets in exchange for a more flattering portrayal, if that's what she did, border on the obvious. Her husband's predatory behavior caused the FBI to take another look at Clinton's email scandal 11 days before the election.

After DailyMail.com revealed that Weiner knowingly sexted with an underage girl, the FBI launched an investigation into the former politician. In the process of sweeping his electronics, the authorities found emails they believed could be pertinent to the Clinton investigation.

Abedin's reason for spilling secrets is obvious: Her husband's predatory behavior caused the FBI to take another look at Clinton's email scandal

Her case was opened, then shut again two days before ballots were cast. Clinton and her aides have since torched the FBI for its sloppy handling of the sensitive situation and accused the bureau and its head, James Comey, of costing her the Oval.

Several embarrassing episodes in 'Shattered' involve Abedin.

She's cast in the book as 'a disaster waiting to happen' and blasted as a 'major vulnerability.'

‘In any other political operation she would have been cast aside publicly and brutally long before this moment. Now her detractors fears were being realized and the risk could no longer be ignored,' the book says of the Weiner debacle.

Clinton ‘knew she needed Huma to vanish’ but could not banish the woman for whom she had a ‘deep, almost maternal compassion,' Parnes and Allen write.

Abedin made the choice for her boss and ‘fell on her own sword,' Shattered says. She told Clinton, ‘I’ll do whatever. I’ll put my situation in your hands’.

The characterization of Abedin in the book has some Clinton insiders wondering if Abedin talked to Parnes and Allen.

'There’s some speculation that Huma Abedin cooperated to save her own reputation. However, she and Hillary are still very close,' a source told Page Six.

Abedin may not have been but a 'Shattered' source, but there's no doubt that several people in Clinton's inner campaign circle talked.

Abedin may not have been but a 'Shattered' source, but there's no doubt that several people in Clinton's inner campaign circle talked

According to Page Six, Dennis Chang, the finance director for Clinton's campaign, is sniffing about.

'The knives are out to find the people who spoke about the campaign to the authors of this book. Dennis has been texting prominent campaign staffers, asking who talked,' a tipster said. 'He’s on a witch hunt to find out who talked to save their own skin, throwing Hillary and her campaign manager Robby Mook under the bus.'

Parnes and Allen gave the staffers cover by allowing them to speak anonymously and promising that their secrets wouldn't be published until after the election in order to get widespread access.

Staffers vented about obvious mistakes that were made by Mook and other top aides in the lead-up to the election.

But they also shared private details about Clinton, offering up juicy tidbits about the witch hunt she conducted after her first, failed bid - she reportedly read her staffers emails - and her election night call to President Barack Obama.

After calling Donald Trump to congratulate him, Clinton rang Obama to apologize for losing the election.

'Mr. President, I’m sorry,' she said. Obama told her, 'You need to concede.'

He stressed the point to Clinton's campaign chairman, John Podesta, as well.

Clinton did not formally concede at that time. She had Podesta tell her supporters, some of whom had been waiting to see her 12 hours, that it wasn't over, and they'd have more to say later in the day.

She publicly conceded at a restricted event the next morning.

A spokesperson for Clinton has alleged that some of the information in the book was made up.

'It was our campaign. We lived it. So we don’t need a book to know what really happened, and what’s in there that’s flat-out made up,' a rep said to Page Six.

Allen rebuffed the spokesperson in an email to DailyMail.com.

'We stand by our reporting,' he said.