The book starts out with Phin at a man named Engelbreit's house, reading a book, as he always does. As Engelbreit wakes up and heads to eat breakfast, two men burst into the house with little warning and murder Engelbreit via gunshot to the chest. Phin manages to make a narrow escape from being murdered as well, but has to continue to run. The men are going to blame the murder on Phin, and in order to escape them and their accusations, he must run, and keep running. The book then follows Phin through his crazy adventure running from a man on a horse who seems to always know where he is, claiming the horse tracks like a bloodhound. Phin doesn't remember the man, but assumes he is a part of the group that killed Engelbreit, considering he is chasing him. The chase goes on for a long while, but the inevitable eventually happens. Phin collides with Ned Plume, Engelbreit's murderer. Despite claims of cutting Phin's throat when finding him, Plum simply lets him go.
This book was overall very good. It had a great storyline, great characters, great action, great everything. Almost. The ending seemed a little weak to me. The entire book is filled with high-paced action and suspense and mystery. Then you get to the end, and Phin and Plume collide. What does Plume do? He lets him go. To be honest, a sad, more logical ending would have been better. But no, Plume just, lets him go. That's it. Other than the end, I loved the book. I would recommend to anyone who enjoys historical fiction, high-paced action novels, or both.