Former CIA analyst Francine Mathews has created โone of the toughest female secret agents weโve seen in a long time.โ* Using her firsthand expertise of international espionage, Mathews offers another brilliantly realized suspense novel so intense, so authentic, it lethally blurs the line between fact and fiction. In Blown, Caroline Carmichael returns in a white-hot tale of terror on the streets of Washington, where one woman must gamble her life to save her country.
As thousands of runners line up for the Marine Corps Marathon in Washington, D.C., no one suspects that in a matter of hours the event will become a race between life and death. CIA analyst Caroline Carmichael is about to tender her resignation, when the first reports of a terrorist attack pour inโand she instantly recognizes the hand of an enemy sheโs battled for years: the 30 April Organization. The neo-Nazi group is alive and well and operating in the United States, assassinating top officials and abducting a vulnerable child from the front ranks of a state funeral. When Carolineโs husband, Eric, is arrested in Germany as a 30 April operative, Caroline has no choice but to take to the streetsโand target the evil herself.
Eric has worked as a โlegendโ for yearsโa false identity so perfect, the CIA believes heโs deadโand gone deep undercover within the terrorist group Caroline is determined to destroy. Now his coverโs been blown, and Ericโs intimate knowledge of 30 Aprilโs plans makes him a target for both sides: the killers heโs betrayed, and the American government heโs sworn to protect.
Torn between a desire to save her husband and her duty to save her country, Caroline is drawn back into a treacherous labyrinth where trusting others is as good as suicide. For the enemy this time wears a familiar face: that of an American patriot, waving his flag alongside his gun. To stem disaster, Caroline has only one choice: to betray everyone in which she believesโor everyone she loves.
For an agent without coverโan agent whoโs blownโis worse than betrayed: sheโs as good as dead.
*USA Today