This book represents my first encounter with J. Todd Scott. And what an epic tale it is. The story features numerous main characters. The first is Sybilla "Billie" Laure. Sybilla grew up in a cult named the Ark of Lazarus. The head of the cult, Etan Laure, is about as nice a guy as you'd expect a cult leader to be. He tells his "flock" what to where, when and what to eat, no intimacy is permitted, and of course, he has established multiple levels of ascendance for the faithful to strive for.
Another main character is Limon CO police chief Elise Blue. Elise is one of the cops on the scene of a grisly murder: a man has been shot and stabbed to death, but Elise notices that his grievous wounds did not stop him from pursuing his assailants--and nailing one of them right on the noggin with a toaster--probably because the said assailants also kidnapped his daughter Renata. Chief Blue suspects the man's wife, who is none other than Sybilla Laure under another name, of having done her husband in and made off with their daughter.
Finally there is Renata herself. Everyone else in the book is given dialogue to represent their point of view, except Renata. She communicates with one of her abductors solely through soulful messages emanating from her eyes. Even though most of the adherents to the Ark of Lazarus perished in a fire that followed a raid by the FBI years before, a new cult has sprung from the ashes of the old--the New Lazarians. The New Lazarians plan to commit mass suicide, and they believe that Renata will be the vehicle through which God will resurrect them four days later.
One of Scott's strengths in this novel is that he clearly knows how to make cultists sound real. I have never been seduced by a cult, but Scott makes the members sound authentic. If there's a weakness, I'd say Scott spends too many pages on faith; the nature of it, the rewards of it, the cultish punishment for losing or misusing it, and most pervasive, the search for it among those who are vulnerable due to loss. He makes some important points, but I would have put those points in a scholarly article as opposed to a novel. Oh, and just one more thing: Renata's parentage is called into question toward the very end. Like I have mentioned in previous reviews, I wish that "my mother is not really my mother" stuff had met its end in Psycho II.
For all that, The Flock really is one helluva thriller. As the resolution thunders forward, the characters earnestly question themselves and their beliefs. Their uncertainty regarding the "signs" predicted by Etan Laure will rattle the reader's sense of predictability. The Flock is a terrific thriller all the way around.