This installment of the series takes readers to Berlin and the branch of Private run by Chris Schneider. As the top earner Chris takes most of the difficult cases and likes to work alone. Recently he has been working on three high profile assignments: an influential but very secretive billionaire named Hermann Kruger whose wife Agnes suspects him of infidelity and who has mysteriously disappeared; a talented football player named Cassiano who is the top striker for the Hertha Berlin Sports Club but whose erratic play of late has led to suspicions he may be throwing games and night club owner Maxim Pavel who owns the drag queen club Cabaret, is associated with the Russian mafia and rumoured to be ex-KGB. But there is another project Chris became involved in after he was visited by an unknown woman at the office. Shortly afterwards, Chris requested some personal time off but has not returned as expected. No one has heard from him or knows his whereabouts. His colleagues have become worried and set out to find him, looking into the cases he was working to see if they are connected to his disappearance. Jack Morgan flies in from L.A. to help as the team works together to try and locate Chris. While searching his files to get details of his cases, the team discovers their state-of-the art firewall has been breached and their computer system hacked. A visit to Chris's apartment comes with another shock. It has been ransacked, his personal computer has been smashed and the hard drive is missing.
Mattie Engel is a top agent at the company and was once engaged to Chris. She still cares for him but called off their engagement when she found he never fully opened up to her. She knows his parents were killed in an automobile accident when he was eight and he grew up in an orphanage somewhere in the countryside southeast of Berlin. But he shared little with her about his childhood and she knew there was something from that time that haunted him. He had terrible nightmares in which he would scream for his mother but would not discuss them with her. It was what eventually had pulled them apart. Mattie felt she cold not marry a man who had so much inside him he could not share, no matter how much she loved him.
Mattie throws herself headlong into the search for Chris and finds that in each of the cases he left behind there are people that may have wanted him dead. She teams up with Tom Burkart, Private Berlin’s latest hire who until recently had been a top operator with Germany’s elite counterterror unit. The two are drawn into a macabre case of a monster who calls himself the Invisible Man. He has a penchant for plastic surgery, make-up, costumes and masks which allows him to move about in plain sight but still be anyone he chooses to be. He loves to kill and uses an abandoned slaughterhouse as a dumping ground for bodies. When they discover the slaughterhouse, they learn the case may also involve the fate of six orphans from east Germany who had a mysterious past.
As Mattie works the case, she is held back by Hauptkommissar Hans Dietrich, a high commissioner for Kripo where she once worked. The commissar has an excellent reputation for solving crimes but he is very private, moody and likes to work alone. He is not happy with Mattie carrying out a shadow investigation and refuses to cooperate with her. He has secrets of his own and with the recent death of his father he becomes even more reclusive.
As Mattie’s investigation being her closer and closer to the truth, she risks her own life and that of all those dear to her.
The narrative is told from two points of view, Mattie’s as she searches for Chris and the shadowy figure known as the Inviable Man. Like many stories set in Germany, readers get a sense of the madness during the time of the East German Republic and the fallout experienced by its people before the fall of the Berlin Wall. It was a time of nasty political intrigue, dreaded secret police, horrible torture methods and dank, rat infested prisons. It was a time when mad men carried out heinous crimes but also a time when a few heroes tried to stop the corruption and brutality.
Patterson has been known for creating some great villains in the past and many who have read his many books will remember The Weasel Geoffrey Shafer, The Mastermind Kyle Craig and the Son of Lindberg Gary Soneji as well as others from the Alex Cross series. After reading this book, readers will have another to add to the list of people they will not soon forget.
This gruesome, terror filled narrative moves at a quick pace and readers hardly have a chance to catch their breath as the tension and horror mount with every page they turn, and those short brief chapters Patterson is known for just keep pulling them on. When the Invisible Man senses the authorities closing in, he knows he must disappear, but before he does, he must erase every connection to his past including incriminating documents and people who could identify him. He likes to have things cleared away before he moves on to something new and although he likes to plan things carefully, this time he has a limited time to complete everything that needs to be done.
I am pleased to see there are references to past cases, events and relationships in these books, making it a true series rather than a group of distinct separate novels cobbled together with a cameo appearance of Jack Morgan in each installment. Readers are brought up to speed on the relationship between Jack and Justine and there is a reference to the London Olympics. I hope to see more and more of that in each new book as readers watch the evolution of Jack Morgan as the lynch pin of the series.
This is an especially intense, violent, fast paced crime thriller with several tense scenes and some unexpected twists and turns. But it turns out to be one of the better books in the Private collection and raises hopes that the series will continue on this high note.