“Greaney is a master among the top thriller writers in the world…”

“Intense, explosive, daring, funny, and ultimately just flat out awesome”

Ben Coes, New York Times bestselling author of Independence Day

“Fast-paced [and] tightly written…A great ride.”

Larry Bond, New York Times bestselling author of Red Dragon Rising

“The story is so propulsive, the murders so explosive, that flipping the pages feels like playing the ultimate video game.”

THE NEW YORK TIMES 

“A blistering thriller that builds to a soaring and explosive climax.”

“Fast, tough, enthralling, and the best so far in the amazing Gray Man series.”

David Bell, bestselling author of Somebody I Used to Know

“Punches with bone-busting power…Flesh-and-blood priceless”

Stephen Templin, New York Times bestselling author of Trident’s First Gleaming

“Hard, fast, and unflinching.”

Lee Child, #1 New York Times bestselling author of A Wanted Man

“Mark Greaney reigns as one of the recognized masters of action and adventure. Back Blast is no exception.”

New York Times and #1 internationally bestselling author Steve Berry

“Takes the best of Clancy and Ludlum and mixes them into a fantastic story with an unforgettable character”

James O. Born, author of scent of Murder

Back Blast
CHAPTER ONE

A dimly lit street in the center of Washington Highlands was a hell of a place for a nighttime stroll.

The Highlands were in the southeastern corner of the District, over the Anacostia River in Ward Eight. Full of high-rise government housing, low-income apartment complexes, and derelict single-family homes on tiny lots strewn with garbage, Ward Eight had been the second most dangerous ward in the District behind Ward Seven, but it had recently retaken the lead thanks to a triple murder in the last week of the reporting period.

But despite the late hour and the area’s infamous reputation, a lone pedestrian ambled calmly through the misty evening, heading north on Atlantic Street SE as if he didn’t have a care in the world. He walked along a broken sidewalk, catching the glow of most all of the streetlamps that had not been shot out or burned out and left black by a city that didn’t give a damn about its poorest residents. He wore blue jeans and a wrinkled blue blazer, his dark brown hair was tousled and damp, and a clean-shaven face revealed him as white, which, around here, at this time of night, meant he was probably up to no good.

It was ten p.m., and the neighborhood appeared devoid of any life other than the solo pedestrian. But while the street itself was barren, several sets of eyes tracked the man’s movements. Astonished senior citizens looked out from behind their barred apartment windows. A single mother up with a sick kid watched through the bolted Plexiglas door of her duplex unit with a wince of regret, knowing good and well the damn fool in the street was going to get rolled at best and murdered at worst. And a teen with a cell phone on a darkened stoop of an apartment building watched the man carefully, reporting what he saw to an acquaintance at the other end of the connection with hopes of collecting a finder’s fee if his friend showed up with a crew and beat every last item of value off of the hapless outsider.

But the teen and his friend were out of luck, because another group of predators were closer, and they also had their eyes on this target of opportunity.