The deserter A novel

Nelson DeMille

Book - 2019

When Captain Kyle Mercer of the Army's elite Delta Force disappeared from his post in Afghanistan, a video released by his Taliban captors made international headlines. But circumstances were murky: Did Mercer desert before he was captured? Then a second video sent to Mercer's Army commanders leaves no doubt: the trained assassin and keeper of classified Army intelligence has willfully disappeared. When Mercer is spotted two years later in Caracas, Venezuela by an old army buddy, top military brass task Scott Brodie and Maggie Taylor of the Criminal Investigation Division fly to Venezuela and bring Mercer back to America, dead or alive. Brodie knows this is a difficult mission, made more difficult by his new partner's inexper...ience and by his suspicion that Maggie Taylor is reporting to the CIA.

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Subjects
Genres
Adventure fiction
Suspense fiction
Action and adventure fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Published
New York : Simon & Schuster 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Nelson DeMille (author)
Other Authors
Alex DeMille (author)
Edition
First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition
Physical Description
530 pages : color maps ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781501101755
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

The mystery here concerns Captain Kyle Mercer, a special-ops officer in the army's Delta Force, the elite of the elite. Why has he gone rogue, deserting his post in Afghanistan and sending out grisly videos of himself beheading Taliban members? And where is this ""most infamous Army deserter since Benedict Arnold""? These are the questions put to army Criminal Investigation Division detectives Scott Brodie and Maggie Taylor, the leads in this often-dazzling and occasionally irritating collaboration between Nelson DeMille and his filmmaker son, Alex. The trail leads to Venezuela, and too much time is spent painting a sorrowful picture of this beautiful country, where ""the worst elements of humanity had defeated civilization."" For a time, the authors' jaunty, gleeful style, which seems to invite you to have as much fun reading the book as they had writing it, carries the text. But midway through comes a series of chapters that each promise confrontations and resolutions that never happen. Blessedly, an action-charged finale brings everything home. It comes with the spooky observation that a secret world is slowly taking over that other world, our world.--Don Crinklaw Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This outstanding thriller from bestseller DeMille (The Cuban Affair) and his screenwriter son centers on a search for an Army deserter who has fled to Venezuela after escaping duty in Afghanistan under strange circumstances. On the hunt for Delta Force Capt. Kyle Mercer are Scott Brodie, a hardened ex-soldier with impulsive, rogue tendencies, and Maggie Taylor, a cunning by-the-book Army cop who does her best to rein in Brodie's urges, both investigative and sexual. Brodie, the senior officer, quickly suspects his commanders aren't telling him everything about Mercer; his desertion may have less to do with disobedience than his knowing too much about military atrocities in Afghanistan. Nonetheless, Brodie and Taylor track Mercer to a jungle hideout far outside Caracas, where he's training a group of mercenaries with the apparent backing of President Maduro. In typical DeMille fashion, the last hundred pages move along like a ballistic missile, exploding in a satisfying finale on a remote airstrip. DeMille and son provide it all in this rumble through the jungle--authentic detail, lively dialogue, a vividly drawn setting, and an exhilarating plot. Agents: Jenn Joel and Sloan Harris, ICM Partners. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Army investigators track a deserter into the Venezuelan jungle.DeMille's last thriller (The Cuban Affair, 2017) successfully incorporated Cuba's precarious internal politics into the plot, and this onethe first he's written with his son Alexattempts to do the same with Venezuela's faltering existence. Kyle Mercer, a high-value Delta Force soldier, deserted his unit in Afghanistan, was captured by the Taliban, and then escaped his captors. He has been spotted in Venezuela, and Scott Brodie and Maggie Taylor, investigators for the Army's Criminal Investigation Division, are dispatched to bring him back to stand trial. This seems straightforward, but there are questions: Why did Mercer desert? Is the U.S. government wholly determined to have him brought back alive? And more immediately and practically, how can the CID team function in the failed state of Venezuela? The situation in Venezuela is painstakingly delineated, but it remains an element of the setting, never rising to the level of a plot device as Cuban political tensions did in the earlier novel; the result is a dreary repetition of the facts of life in Caracas: bribery and violence, violence and bribery. Brodie and Taylor are fortunate to secure the services of Luis, a Venezuelan driver who is a likable but somewhat predictable character, and with his help they are able to discover that Mercer has left Caracas and is now in the jungle in the south. The doughty investigators track him there, learn the ugly truth about his defection and about the real nature of Brendan Worley, the purported attach in Caracas. There is much to like about this story: Brodie's and Taylor's attempts to avoid a growing attraction; a useful discussion of the legal definition of "desertion"; some of the descriptions of the geography of southern Venezuela; and the reminder of what those in power will do to avoid embarrassment. But the story is too long and lacks dramatic variety, asking over and over the same questions: Where is Mercer? Why did he do it? Who wants him dead rather than alive?Too much and too little. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 CHAPTER 1 Kyle Mercer walked across the bare room. He had been on his feet for days, hiking across the tribal frontier, into the outskirts of this ancient city, down the canted streets of the old quarter, and into this empty apartment where the walls were covered with peeling paint and splotches of black mold. A plastic tarp flapped against the third-story window, moved by the warm winds rolling down from the valley. The tarp flashed a sliver of hot sunlight; then the room was dark again. Outside he heard the bustle of the street market, the rapid-fire Pashto tongue that had become familiar to him over the years. But it was different here. Here there were more people, more tongues, the staccato voices overlapping and bouncing off the close mud-brick walls of the old city. He wanted to walk now, down in the bazaar, past the piles of fruit and nuts and spices. To touch and taste and smell. He wanted to find a woman to fuck. But instead he was here, in the bare room, in the dark. Here, he had work to do. Here, there was no one to fuck. Just someone to hurt. The guy was still passed out, slumped in the wooden chair, hands tied behind him. His face was battered. He drooled a line of blood. Mercer walked over to the man and slapped him across the face. The eyes fluttered open. The mouth moved, but no sound. Mercer eyed the bloody pliers on the floor. He himself had once been threatened with them, but that felt like a long time ago. He had taken the pliers, and now they were his. But he did not use them to threaten. That wasn't his way. He just acted. You pull out one fingernail and the guy understands that it could happen again, nine more times, and he knows exactly how it's going to feel. And that's just what he'd done, all ten of them, because this guy was a tough son of a bitch. And that was fine. That was expected. The tougher the nut, the sweeter the meat. Mercer swung his foot into the guy's shin. The man yelped in pain. It wasn't too loud, because he was spent. Probably no one heard. Probably no one cared. Mercer leaned in. The man's left eye was swollen shut, so he looked into the right eye, a sliver of hazel surrounded by swollen purple flesh. "Where is he?" The man's lips trembled. His teeth--he still had all his teeth; he should consider himself lucky--slipped over his chapped lower lip. "F-f-ffff..." His lips went slack. "France? Fiji? Fresno? Where?" "F-f-ffffu... fuck you..." Mercer buried his fist in the man's face and split his nose open. Blood gushed out as the chair toppled backward and crashed to the floor, crushing the man's tied hands beneath the weight of his body. He moaned as the blood streamed from his face and pooled around his head on the concrete floor. Mercer walked to the far end of the room and sat in a dark corner. He closed his eyes. He was there again. It was so easy to be back there, in that dark, fetid room, chained down like an animal. He didn't care about the beatings, or the taunts. He could handle the captivity, the disorientation and uncertainty, losing track of time. He was trained for that. The worst thing was watching his body wither away from captivity and malnutrition. His most reliable and powerful tool, becoming this limp and desiccated thing. He touched his left arm beneath the white tunic he was wearing. Already the muscle tone was coming back. It had never fully gone. He had just let them think it had; that his will was spent, that his body had become an impotent object, drained of its lethal venom. They were fooled, and it was the last mistake they ever made. Mercer stood up, walked over to his captive, and looked down at him. Not long ago he'd been the one down on the floor, looking up. The one who didn't get to decide what happened next. He hadn't wanted to play this card. He'd thought the pain would be enough. He'd thought it would be the right thing, given the game they were all playing. But he had to go the next step. He crouched next to the man. The blood had stopped gushing from his nose. He was taking rapid, shallow breaths. "I've seen your house," said Mercer in a low, soft tone. "Near the American Consulate. Nice two-story place, white stone. Tree out front, looked like a eucalyptus. Your wife has short brown hair, a little plain looking but she keeps herself in shape, tight ass. Your son is how old? Five? Six? Nice looking boy." The man glared at him through his one swollen eye. "Give me what I want, and nothing will happen to them. Withhold from me, and something will. You have my word on that. This is your last opportunity. Tell me where he is." The man stared up at him, as though thinking. But not for long. He was going to protect his family. Any decent guy would. The man's lips parted; he was trying to speak. His voice was low and raspy. Mercer crouched lower so he could hear. "Tell me." The man told him. He spoke in little more than a whisper, but Mercer heard it. And once he heard it, he understood immediately. Of course that's where the son of a bitch was. Just another turn of the wheel. He pulled a combat knife from his belt and drew it across the man's throat. Blood spurted from his jugular. Mercer stood, wiped the blood from the blade on the dying man's pants. He looked at the man's shoes. Leather loafers. He hadn't noticed them before. They were nice, better than the sandals he'd taken off the last guy he killed. He took them off the man's feet and put them on. The blood coming out of the man's jugular slowed to a trickle, his chest stopped moving. He was dead. Through the tarp, Mercer could hear the muezzin intone the call to prayer from a nearby mosque. The incantation was low and solemn, almost mournful. All across the city, people would now pause their lives to answer the call, to bow their bodies in a communal act of submission. Kyle Mercer had once had something like that: common rituals, brotherhood. It had been the Army, and in a broader sense his country. Now all he had was a target. And a destination. Excerpted from The Deserter: A Novel by Nelson DeMille, Alex DeMille All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.