Summary: "Peyton Collard was a good man once, but his life changed after a horrific car accident. Divorced, drunk, and severely damaged, Peyton is offered a life-changing sum of money to kill an evil man. But as he goes on a vigilante journey that leaves a trail of bodies across California, Peyton wonders about the identity of his anonymous patron. Soon, his questions become an obsession, and he embarks on a tense and potentially deadly investigation to discover the truth about the murders he's committed"-- Provided by publisher.
The author of the "moving head-spinner of a novel" (John Connolly) The Other Side of Night returns with a taut thriller following a desperate single father as he searches for the anonymous employer who hired him as a hitman.
Peyton Collard was a good man once, but his life changed after a horrific car accident. Divorced, drunk, and severely damaged, Peyton is offered a life-changing sum of money to kill an evil man. But as he goes on a vigilante journey that leaves a trail of bodies across California, Peyton wonders about the identity of his anonymous patron. Soon, his questions become an obsession, and he embarks on a tense and potentially deadly investigation to discover the truth about the murders he's committed.
"Peyton Collard was a good man once, but his life changed after a horrific car accident. Divorced, drunk, and severely damaged, Peyton is offered a life-changing sum of money to kill an evil man. But as he goes on a vigilante journey that leaves a trail of bodies across California, Peyton wonders about the identity of his anonymous patron. Soon, his questions become an obsession, and he embarks on a tense and potentially deadly investigation to discover the truth about the murders he's committed"-- Provided by publisher.
"My tale is one you won't have heard," says Peyton Collard. And it's true. Usually, characters who murder for money are stock characters in crime fiction, there to get blown away by Bond or Reacher. Here, he's the protagonist, but Hamdy still keeps us wondering. The narrator of this superb, white-knuckle thriller doesn't leave us wondering. He is--self-described--a loser, a screw-up, a drunk, a deadbeat, and a whiner. We meet him just before his murder career is launched, at the memorial service for a young woman he has killed in a car accident. We share his surprise when he's anonymously offered a lot of money to waste a dangerous degenerate. This is where the plot revs up, and where author Hamdy begins planting land mines. Surprise explosions make the pages shake, and they're his, not the reader's, to set off. The author treats us to wry insights into the mind of the protagonist, from the rationalization to the victimization, from self-pity to righteousness. At least, he tells us, "I felt guilty."