Uranium stolen in 1994 is used in a present-day attack on a United States Navy command ship with a threat of more to come in DeGrandpre’s thriller.
“Me?…I’m just an interpreter,” proclaims young CIA officer Bill Estes. Right, and Jack Ryan was just an analyst in Tom Clancy’s The Hunt for Red October. Based on his smarts and resourcefulness in this techno-thriller, Bill Estes, too, may have a franchise in his future. Estes, “a natural for the intelligence service,” is just 18 months into his employment with the CIA when he receives his first field mission to Kazakhstan. With no authority to make anything happen, he is promised that the mission will be “neither terribly exciting nor demanding.” Wrong on both counts: A nuclear device destroys a Navy command ship, wipes out a fishing village, and disrupts communications and electronics. Is this a test device? Estes believes so, and together with FBI Special Agent Michelle Marsh he pursues whoever stole the uranium used in the attack. The plan is simple, Estes tells Marsh: “Relentless pursuit.” The pursuit leads them to Konstantin Pavlovich, who is obsessed with nuclear gadgetry, and to mercenary and arms dealer Grigori Kirill, who, as he demonstrates with ruthless efficiency, is not someone to be messed with. DeGrandpre brings a sense of authenticity to this propulsive global thriller that spans decades and features far-flung locations from Tennessee to Russia. Understatement serves the author well, heightening the suspense and menace: “Kon never learned exactly what Yuri had done to upset Kirill; all he knew was that the man must have done something, because one day, some ex-Soviet KGB henchmen showed up in a military 4x4 and shot Yuri pointblank for trespassing.” Chapter headings undermine the story’s momentum, but the characters, major and minor, are strongly defined, and an effective open ending sets the stage for an anticipated second mission.
A superior thriller with real-world chaos and well-credentialed heroes that will engage fans of the genre.