SPOILER ALERT
Another fascinating story from Easley. Cal Claxton has two major issues in his life at this point. Claire, his daughter, has chosen to go to Darfur with a Well Spring team to dig wells, a country that is seeing significant conflict. And, indeed, she and the team run into problems, being taken hostage by Janjaweed and then an Arab militia. She breaks her leg and is nearly raped, when a man named Mustafa comes to her aid. She does return safely.
As she is dealing with her situation, Cal finds himself in cold water as he agrees to assist his friend, Philip Lone Deer, guiding a fishing trip on the Deschutes River in Eastern Oregon. A small group of management executives from NanoTech are going to have a retreat with Daina Zakaris, a management consultant, to work out their problems, stemming mainly from rapid success and the disagreement over whether to go public. The CEO Hal Bruckner, who does not want to go public, is murdered on the first night, and someone who knew of Cal's participation from the first, decides to frame him. Both Cal and Philip believe that someone came through on a train that passes the Kasela exchange in the night and committed the murder. There is evidence to substantiate that theory. It had to be planned by someone from the group including Hal's wife Alexis (with whom Cal had had a brief affair after the last fishing trip), Mitch Hannon, Ha's nephew, Duane Pitman, who has created the new computer program that will increase the speed as well as the other capabilities of computers, or Andrew Streeter, a colleague of Hannon's who was slated to be fired by Hal. Pitman feels that he is not appreciated by the others, which is true, and he is in contact with two competing companies who want his invention. It a missing security agreement he made with Hal is not found he will take his invention with him. The detectives from Madras who come to the site to investigate are ruthless and not very bright. Det Vincent Escalante listens briefly to the theories put out by Cal and Philip but his partner William Dorn takes an instant dislike to Cal and wants to pin the murder on him. Cal's knife and parka are missing. His knife is found on a sand bar in the river across from where Hal's murder by his throat being cut. During the investigation Cal finds himself the brunt of Dorn's malice and physical abuse. Dorn who is known for his brutality is finally let go and prosecuted for other police excessive force.
Cal realizes he is going to have to find the murder by himself. He enlists the help of Philip, Nando Mendoza, Daina and others. He determines there was a man who an Indian boy Oliver Dan saw leaving a pickup near the tracks. Additionally, there was a carjacking shortly after the murder in which he believes the murderer killed the owner to use his car as a getaway, since the boys had stolen the pickup. He finds out that there is an assassin, El Cuchillo (the Blade), Timothy Atwater, who works for the cartel the Zetas, and eventually he determines that Streeter could have found El Cuchillo through his drug contact, Reynaldo, a major drug supplier in PDX. Cal finds another murder victim, CJ Manion, a girlfriend of the killer who knows too much, and is nearly picked up for that as he was seen there shortly after the body is discovered.
El Cuchillo comes after Cal and when killing him as he fishes with Philip is unsuccessful, he kidnaps Claire to get Cal to come to him. Cal and Daina had found the cabin where he was before he expected and he goes planning to save her, only to be discovered and ends up digging three graves. Philip and Diana comes to the rescue at the last minute. Archie survives a severe beating. In the process of the case Cal discovers that Daina is from Russia. When there is an explosion in the apartment next to hers she finds the documents for her friend who dies, and takes them to assume a new identity and life, so she does not have to return to Russia. Cal keeps her secret and begins a relationship with her when she returns to Seattle. This was a suspenseful and fast moving book, and thoroughly entertaining.