Armed men turn a Navy SEAL training exercise into a potentially lethal ambush in this thriller.
Archaeologist Dr. Audrey Kendrick braves an impending winter storm to reach her workplace, Olympic National Park in Washington state. She suspects looters have knocked out the park’s security cameras, and she’s worried that she can’t contact local tribal elder George Shaw. At the park, she runs into Xavier Rivera, one of the SEALs overseeing a planned simulation. The two had a one-night stand a few months back. Later, when she didn’t immediately accept Xavier’s training proposal, he went over her head and nearly cost Audrey her beloved job. Not surprisingly, Audrey hasn’t quite found the time to tell him she’s pregnant. And more pressing issues take precedence—Xavier guesses these “looters” have live ammunition, planning to attack the SEALs, who are armed with nothing more than paint pellets. Audrey and Xavier set their ill will aside as they scour the cold, slippery forest terrain for George and, with communications down, try to warn the SEALs. The two are up against an enemy who proves willing to kill. In this series opener, Grant masterfully establishes the cast while keeping suspense elevated. For example, Audrey is angry with Xavier (whose “dick move” got that proposal passed), but her foremost concern is George. She’s a brainy, levelheaded woman whose familiarity with the park gives her the skills to face gun-toting men. At the same time, the initially faceless baddies are all the more terrifying when bodies turn up and people disappear. But the novel’s true star is the author’s sublimely detailed wooded setting as a storm hits and night falls: Xavier and Audrey “wove between trees large and small, scrambling over downed trunks and crawling across rocks covered by a thick mossy carpet.” There are also spurts of action as well as romantic interludes and quieter moments that provide welcome insight into Xavier’s despicable act.
Likable lead characters fight to survive in this sharp, relentlessly edgy tale.