You’d do anything for your family, right? And if a family member was desperate for money to save their child, you’d give your left arm to help. Most people would. But would you give your left hand and allow an experimental computer chip to be inserted?
Paul Mitchell goes on a mission to save his niece, but does terrible things under the influence of someone else.
They say they’re only monitoring him, and he's pretty sure that’s all they are doing. But after a few weeks, he wonders...what are they really making him do? Why are there times when he simply doesn't remember:
Every bit as readable as I've come to expect from Fred Alvrez' books. Also every bit as improbable, but I have also come to expect that, and it stays true to its own universe, so I can totally forgive it for playing fast-and-loose with reality. The suspense was well written, and I really loved how Paul was obviously trying to better himself - put a horrible incident behind him and tried to learn from it, instead of letting it bring him down.
The end was a tad sudden, but in line with the rest of the story.