With a CIA mother and an FBI son, espionage is all in the family—but could mom have betrayed her country?
While dreaming of her imminent training in the Negev Desert, new Israeli army recruit Maya Klein almost loses her life in a bombing raid from which Hal Cohen, a friend of her family's, rescues her. Halfway across the world, former CIA officer Helen Gray is on the trail of mysterious Donald Wilson. Her son, Devin, an FBI agent, is meanwhile guarding software engineer Brian Chase, who’s been led by his dire financial straits to be a decoy in an FBI “honey trap.” Insomniac agent Harvey Rudd worries that the team of “borderline retired” operatives he’s thrown together will be unable to complete their hostage rescue mission. Author Konkoly rolls out all these charged narrative threads, disconnected pieces of an oversized jigsaw puzzle, within the first 30 pages of his new cat-and-mouse thriller, then keeps readers engaged and guessing with brisk shifts of location and clarifying nuggets of information. Helen’s death rocks Devin’s world, but his sadness turns to skepticism when it’s ruled a suicide. Worse, she’s suspected of felonious and possibly treasonous activities. Even as Devin acknowledges his mother’s impulsiveness and attraction to danger, this is hard for him to believe. A post-mortem audio recording sets him on the road to the truth. He teams up with fighter pilot Marnie Young, an old pal, to enliven the story and unravel the tangled plot, which circles back to the Mideast.
A lively, roller-coaster thriller that moves like lightning.