ALL HUMAN TRAFFICKERS MUST DIE A corrupt Minneapolis real estate investor has, since the Super Bowl and Final Four, managed a growing number of AirBnB properties that serve as low profile brothels. He’s a national level money launderer in real estate and construction, who started off taking a portion of his profits as sex on demand with teenage (and younger) girls trafficked through the Twin Cities. The profit to risk ratio with human trafficking is a fraction of what it is for narcotics — and he can still launder money with fake renters and AirBnb while his people move women, girls and boys from house to house and rent them till they bleed. And die. He maintains a lucrative sideline with multiple advantages — his best houses have hidden sound and video recording systems that capture — in living color — the activities of some very wealthy and highly placed individuals as they partake of his human trafficking products. He’s a fat spider in the middle of a gigantic web that stretches from Chicago to Sinaloa, with a hard drive full of video that makes him, well, untouchable. Until he pisses off a 18-year old girl with dangerous friends. Two old and battered and very lethal retired Marine Force Recon Master Gunnery Sergeants. And now, things get a little Salty.
Marcus Wynne is a charter member of The Been There, Done That Club. He's got all the T-shirts and knows all the secret handshakes. He enjoys poetry, ballet, knife fighting, and serial monogamy with fierce feminists. He is the author of multiple best-selling thrillers and urban fantasies. When he's not busy telling lies for money as a fictioneer, he runs a research and development company for the Department of Defense. He's honored to provide training and consultation to the finest warriors in the world.
Marcus took the exciting world of the Revengers to a new characters POV. This was more about Ariel than it was about the team of dudes doing bad things to bad people. A evil but believable antagonist was drawn well. Parts of filler material that would of make the story better felt rushed, but the action was always detailed and brutal in the style we love Marcus' writing for.