The National Defense Agency investigates murder and corruption in this Midwestern noir.
Early one morning, Grace Abernathy walks her dog in Mercy Creek, Iowa. She lets the collie off his leash in Peterbo County Park, and he begins sniffing around some maintenance sheds. In a poorly covered grave, the dog finds five bodies. The victims are a local group of friends—Pat Green, Susan Grisel, Mike Belmont, PhilipRichards,and Billy Cannon—who worked for R&G Construction. When media outlets report on the mass grave, Henry Granger, CEO of R&G, grows concerned. His company, which trucks guns and drugs along Interstate-35 toward Mexico, had been trying to eliminate a mole. Granger answers to Mr. Juarez in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, who must now be reassured that his American partners are competent. The murder victims included an undercover FBI agent. The National Defense Agency sends Capt. KD Thorne and Warrant Officer Jeffery Blunt to run a “parallel investigation” of Mercy Creek’s law enforcement and discover corruption. When the agents arrive, Sheriff James Crowder cooperates fully despite being on Granger’s payroll. The sheriff’s son, Jimmy, was the only member of the group of friends working for R&G left alive. Jimmy suspects a coverup and only wants justice. Can Thorne and Blunt use him to expose Mercy Creek’s violent underside? This second volume of King’s KD Thorne series is a ballet of tension and rough justice. A journalistic lens captures small-town America’s downward slide, as the economically vulnerable Mercy Creek needs R&G’s warehouse to survive. Thrilling escalation begins as Granger tries to apply pressure to the determined agents. Thorne is barely fazed when his goons kidnap and torture her, describing it as being “rode hard, put away wet.” Blunt, a Black agent, feels an extra touch of horror when a deputy pulls over the protagonists’ car. Knowing it’s a setup, he tells Thorne: “I’m going to do my best to keep from being killed.” In the final third, morally gray characters deliver satisfying moments, and the author’s winning agents go big to prove they can’t be trifled with. A sweet closing scene brings these action heroes back down to Earth.
A trim, gripping, casually brutal small-town epic.