About This Book
Court Gentry has spent years operating in the world's blind spots — a CIA-trained assassin so effective, so invisible, that entire governments pretend he doesn't exist. When the people who built him decide he's a liability, Gentry finds himself hunted by the same shadow networks he once served. What follows is a chase across multiple continents that never lets up, driven by a question that's harder than it sounds: how does a man with no ties, no cover, and no allies survive when everyone with money and motive wants him dead?
Greaney writes action sequences with the precision of someone who has done the research and the discipline to make it count — the geography is real, the tactics feel lived-in, and the pacing is relentless without ever feeling mechanical. What sets this first entry apart is how efficiently it establishes Gentry as a character worth following: morally complicated, darkly funny in brief flashes, and defined more by what he refuses to do than by what he can. Readers who like their thrillers lean and kinetic will find this one hard to put down once the opening act locks in.