EBookObsessed
Written on May 25, 2018
Timothy Blake is what you get if Sherlock Holmes and Hannibal Lecter had a baby. Blake notices the most innocuous things, psychoanalyze the parties involved and usually draws the correct conclusion. That is why the FBI director calls Blake in to assist on difficult cases. And if he can solve the case before the FBI, the director pays him in death row inmates. Since the story takes place in Texas, the U.S. leader in the death penalty, there are always plenty of choices for dinner. Tim is like the death row boogeyman. The inmates discuss the man who comes to the prison looking to pick out his next meal. It’s like a cannibal lobster tank. Ooo…that one looks tasty.
Tim is called in to assist in a kidnapping case. A teenaged boy is abducted and his mother calls in the FBI for their help. Because the Director doesn’t completely trust Tim, he gives him an agent babysitter to make sure Blake doesn’t do anything illegal or cross lines that would affect the FBI’s ability to prosecute the guilty parties.
Agent Thistle is brought in to watch over Blake. They have a good balance of good cop/cannibal consultant and Thistle actually comes to admire Blake since he seems to be working very hard to find the missing boy (and since she has no idea how he gets paid). And, yes, part of that hard work is because if the doesn’t find the kid alive, he doesn’t get his death row snack. But Blake does seem to have a moral compass, a very weak one, but it is there and it includes protecting Thistle from himself when mutual admiration causes Thistle to lose some of the fear the other agents have around Tim.
The name Hangman comes from the only financial income that Timothy Blake has since the FBI pays in body parts. He advertises under the name Hangman to solve any puzzle and people forward him money and puzzles to solve. Since that is the only money that he brings in, well, except for selling credit card numbers on the dark web, Tim lives on the poverty line. An orphan and former group home kid, Tim still only has two outfits to wear and his roommate is a drug dealer. He is sickly looking and has all the usual health issues of someone who is poor…really, really poor.
I have many, mixed feelings about this story. It was a really good crime drama. It kept me absorbed in the story. I am highly recommend this to anyone who can get past the whole cannibal thing because I don’t think this is a story I am going to forget any time soon.
On thing which will make you want to punch author Jack Heath if you ever met him in person is the fact that he starts each chapter with a riddle…AND NO ANSWERS.
Narrator Christopher Ragland did a great job with his presenation of the characters.
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