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The Second Horseman

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From Kyle Mills, New York Times bestselling author of Vince Flynn's Mitch Rapp novels, comes a story of a professional thief whose latest job could save the world. Brandon Vale is a career thief---the best there is. Or at least he was before he was thrown in prison for a jewel heist gone bad. And even more embarrassing, he had nothing to do with it. His time inside is going fairly quietly until the night he's broken out against his will by Richard Scanlon, the now-retired FBI agent who framed him in the first place.Scanlon, who still has ties to the United States intelligence community, has discovered that a Ukrainian crime organization is auctioning twelve nuclear warheads to the highest bidder, but he can't convince the government that the sale isn't a hoax. The only way he can get his hands on the $200 million necessary to take the warheads off the market is to do something that goes against everything he stands steal it.The choice Brandon is given is help Scanlon and hope to live through it, or turn himself in and face the repercussions of his "escape." Suddenly, Brandon finds himself with only weeks to plan a Las Vegas heist that that he's been dreaming about for years, but has always thought was probably impossible. And to make matters worse, Scanlon insists on choosing his team personally. Led by the relentlessly intelligent and undeniably beautiful Catherine Juarez, not a single one of the former government operatives he picks has so much as shoplifted a pack of gum in their lives.As the day of the heist approaches, Brandon's carefully constructed plans begin to break down and he suspects that the elaborate double-cross he's devised to save himself could cost millions of lives. He finally has to ask himself just how far he's willing to be dragged into a game that he can only lose.With The Second Horseman, the heart-stopping, all-too-real novel, Kyle Mills proves once again that he is one of the freshest and most original thriller writers working today.

356 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 8, 2006

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About the author

Kyle Mills

33 books2,510 followers
I grew up ­in Oregon ­but have l­ived all o­ver—D.C., ­Virginia, ­Maryland,­ London,
W­yoming. My­ father wa­s an FBI a­gent and ­I was a b­ureau kid,­ which is ­similar to­ being an ­army brat.­ You tend ­to spend ­your time ­with other­ bureau ki­ds and get­ transferr­ed around ­a lot, tho­ugh, I far­ed better ­on that fr­ont than m­any others­.

One positi­ve aspect ­of this li­festyle is­ that you ­can’t help­ but ­absorb an­ enormous ­amount abo­ut the FBI­, CIA, Spe­cial Force­s, etc. Li­ke most yo­ung boys, ­I was endl­essly fasc­inated wit­h talk of­ chasing c­riminals and, of cou­rse, pictu­red it in ­the most r­omantic te­rms possib­le. Who wo­uld have t­hought tha­t all this­ esoteric ­knowledge­ would end­ up being ­so useful?­

I came int­o writing ­from kind ­of a stran­ge angle. ­When I gra­duated fro­m college ­in the lat­e eighties­, I had th­e same dre­am as ever­yone else ­at the tim­e—a corpor­ate job, a­ nice car,­ and a hou­se with lo­ts of squa­re footage­.

It turns o­ut that no­ne of that­ really su­ited me. W­hile I did­ go for th­e corporat­e job, I
d­rove a bea­t-up Jeep ­and lived ­in a tiny ­house in a­ so-so Bal­timore nei­ghborhood.­ Most of t­he money I­ made just­ kind of accumulated­ in my che­cking acco­unt and I ­found myse­lf ­increasin­gly drawn ­to the unc­onventiona­l, artisti­c people w­ho lived a­round me. ­I was comp­letely ena­mored with­ anyone wh­o could ­create so­mething fr­om nothing­ because I­ felt like­ it was be­yond me.

Enter rock­ climbing.­ I’d read ­an article­ on climbi­ng when I ­was in col­lege and t­hought it ­looked lik­e an incre­dible thin­g to do. Someday, ­I told mys­elf, I wou­ld give it­ a try. So­ one weeke­nd in the ­early ’90s­, I packed­ up my car­, drove to­ West Virg­inia, and ­spent a
we­ekend taki­ng lessons­. Unknown ­to me at t­he time, t­his would ­be the sta­rt of an
o­bsession t­hat still ­hangs with­ me today.­ I began ­dating a ­girl who l­iked to cl­imb and we­ decided w­e wanted t­o live som­ewhere wit­h taller r­ocks and m­ore open s­pace.

Moving to ­Wyoming wa­s the best­ decision ­we ever ma­de. The ­place is ­full of th­e most ama­zing peopl­e. You mig­ht meet so­meone on a­ bike ride­ and find ­out they w­ere in the­ Olympics,­ or climbe­d Everest,­ or just g­ot back fr­om two mon­ths trekki­ng in Nepa­l. In a ­ roundabou­t way, it ­was these ­people who­ made it possible fo­r me to wr­ite a nove­l. They se­emed to ha­ve no limi­tations. E­verything ­was possi­ble for th­em and I w­anted to b­e that typ­e of perso­n, too.

I was work­ing for a ­little ban­k in Jacks­on Hole, spending my­ days maki­ng busines­s loans an­d my afternoons and ­weekends c­limbing. F­or some re­ason, it f­inally occ­urred to m­e that I’d­ never act­ually trie­d to be cr­eative. Ma­ybe I coul­d make som­ething fro­m nothing.­ Why not g­ive it a s­hot?

My first b­right idea­ was to le­arn to bui­ld furnitu­re. That p­lan had ­some draw­backs, the­ most obvi­ous of whi­ch being t­hat I’m no­t very han­dy. It was­ my wife who suggest­ed I write­ a novel. ­It seemed ­like a dum­b idea, th­ough, sinc­e I majore­d in finan­ce and had­ spent my ­entire col­lege caree­r avoiding­ English c­ourses lik­e the plag­ue. Having­ said that­, I couldn­’t complet­ely shake ­the idea. ­Eventually­, it nagge­d at me lo­ng enough ­that I fel­t compelle­d to put p­en to pape­r. Eight m­onths late­r, I finis­hed Rising­ Phoenix a­nd about a­ year a­fter that ­I managed ­to get it ­published.­

The succes­s of Risin­g Phoenix ­and my sub­sequent books has ­allowed m­e to make ­my living ­as a write­r, which i­sn’t bad w­ork if you­ can get i­t. Other t­han that, ­my life ha­sn’t chang­ed all tha­t much. Ag­ing elbows­ have forc­ed me to r­eplace cli­mbing with­ backcount­ry skiing ­and mounta­in bike ra­cing. I got the ­ not-so-sm­art idea o­f restorin­g an old p­ickup to replace the­ dying Jee­p. And, I still­ live in W­yoming...

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5 stars
518 (30%)
4 stars
621 (36%)
3 stars
426 (25%)
2 stars
97 (5%)
1 star
32 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 66 reviews
Profile Image for SteVen Hendricks.
691 reviews32 followers
January 30, 2023
Book Review - “The Second Horseman” is a one off exciting tale by Author Kyle Mills (Vince Flynn Mitch Rapp series) about a career thief named Brandon Vale who was considered one of the best there is. Unfortunately, in this fresh new and different thriller tale, Vale is serving out a prison term for a robbery gone bad, albeit one that he didn't commit. But then he is broken out of prison against his will by the former FBI agent who framed him in the first place. Richard Scanlon, who still has ties to the U.S. intelligence community, has discovered that a Ukrainian crime organization is auctioning off 12 nuclear warheads to the highest bidder, but he can't convince the government that the sale isn't a hoax. The only way he can get his hands on the $250 million necessary to take the warheads off the market is to arrange for Vale to steal it. And this is where the excitement begins! A much different kind of action thriller that I’m use to reading but different doesn’t always mean bad! Mills wrote this unusual thriller long before he started on the Mitch Rapp series and it’s not bad. Again, not my usual read but since I caught the book on bargain sale at Walmart for $5.97, it’s a really cool looking hardcover, plus it’s by a fantastic author who is killing it with the Mitch Rapp series, I decided to take a chance and I was glad that I did! Vale is not only ‘slippery’ as a snake but he’s smart, tough and resourceful. Experienced spies met their match with this guy and there is no doubt that he wouldn’t be a great spook himself if that’s what he wanted to do. Again, a different kind of espionage-like read but fun and suspenseful. Well worth the six bucks for the book.
4 reviews
March 26, 2024
While this is good reading, it’s difficult to understand why this is “Fade Book 2” as there’s no character from Book 1.
Profile Image for Ginny.
1,418 reviews15 followers
March 30, 2018
Picked this up because Kyle Mills has been commissioned to continue the Mitch Rapp series by Vince Flynn's family. I wanted to see his style. I think there were some gaps in his story line, places where you are left to guess how the story got from point A to point B. But the main character was very likable and the ending was cute. I am reserving how I feel about him continuing the Rapp series until I read the first book that he authored under that franchise. Meanwhile, if I see another Mills book, I wouldn't be adverse to picking it up.
Profile Image for Tim.
2,497 reviews329 followers
February 9, 2013
Interesting and pretty good, though I think the ending could have been better. 8 of 10 stars.
Profile Image for Marina Kahn.
424 reviews18 followers
May 1, 2024
I picked up this book as a continuation of my reading goal to continue reading a number sequence in the title. So I'm only at number 2 right now; therefore the Second Horseman was my read for this month.
I knew nothing about the author Kyle Mills; so as I began to read this novel I was really taken in. It gave an interesting perspective of life in prison and how an intelligent person who's not particularly strong or buff can survive among various criminals and corrupt prison guards. Brandon Vale knows how to stay alive; he only wants to serve his time and get out with a minimum of physical and mental damage.
Unfortunately, his old boss Richard Scanlon, the guy who set him up as the fall guy for a jewelry robbery has other ideas. Richard helps break him out of jail even though Brandon really doesn't want to break out. He only has a very little time more to serve and breaking out would mean returning to a much longer sentence if caught.
It turns out Brandon learns about some war head held by a Ukrainian group who's asking $200 million for them and apparently doesn't want the warheads to fall into the wrong hands. So he develops a scheme to rob the Las Vegas Casinos of the cash and he needs Brandon to execute the plan. What develops is a a complicated plan to go through the heist a la Ocean's 11 type of adventure. Very exciting edge of seat stuff.
But after the heist the scene switches to Ukraine and then Jordan as Brandon is forced by the real brain behind the plan to obtain the warheads, Edwin Hamdi to hand off the money and retrieve the war heads. How Hamdi thinks this is possible, no one knows, since Brandon is not a physical action guy nor does he speak foreign languages; Brandon is just not the hero type. To his rescue comes his handler, Catherine Juarez, she apparently can fight guerillas and criminal Ukranians.
At this point, the reader has to suspend reality; here are two people, trying to pass of as Arabs while at the same time rescue 11 warheads and save the world. The story becomes two disjointed and unbelievable.
Must say though that Brandon and Catherine are likeable characters. Gotta go with a 3 star rating.
1,250 reviews23 followers
April 4, 2020
Brandon gets broken out of prison and blackmailed into pulling off a heist. The reason for the heist is to pay for some nukes that have gotten loose. The plot is more complex than that but it is simply summarized.

Mills writes well enough and the story is a clever enough plot. The characters are interesting, especially Brandon, who not only isn't a tough guy, fears violence. In fact, when he is broken out of prison he wants to shout for them to let him in. His wit is enjoyable and his snappy comments keep the story interesting.

The novel's best portions are those describing the planning and execution of the actual heist itself. Well-thought out and almost causes the reader to hum the mission Impossible theme as it unfolds. However, the author decided that the heist itself wasn't the focus of the story and it descends into a comical spy novel. In fact, it becomes much more like an action comedy and sadly the author tries to create tension by taking it into a world where nukes are a real threat and powers will take every possible step to stop them. At this point, the novel loses its fun tone and the serious tone just doesn't play very well. An interesting book, but falls flat towards the end.
Profile Image for Mike Kennedy.
961 reviews25 followers
March 12, 2023
Solid not spectacular book from Mr. Mills. Brandon Vale is a master bugler who is serving out a prison sentence when he is suddenly broken out from the prison by an unknown party or parties. He soon finds out the people who broke him out, want him to steal a semi full of money from the Las Vegas casinos. This money is to be used by US government officials to purchase 12 nuclear warheads. Brandon is torn by this, and he must find a way to make the best of this tough situation.

I found the plot slightly lacking, but I did enjoy the character of Brandon Vale. I thought he was smart, witty, and interesting to follow along his story. I don’t think this is the best work that Mr. Mills has done, but it is still an OK thriller. I don’t feel like I wasted my time reading this, but I think Mr. Mills has many other books that should be read before this one.
640 reviews1 follower
May 27, 2023
Thought this was an interesting twist on often told storylines. Brandon Vale was sent to prison for a burglary he actually didn’t commit, by his former boss, Richard Scanlon. Scanlon later decides he needs Brandon’s talents as a thief to save the world from a nuclear war. As improbable as that sounds, it makes for an interesting story. Kyle Mills has been writing the Mitch Rapp series previously written by Vince Flynn. Instead of making Vale into an adept spy, he uses his unique skills and sometimes lack of skills to muddle through, trying several times to make his escape. There were gaps in the story which kept me from giving it more stars, but all in all an enjoyable read. Looking forward to more Mitch Rapp books and others by Kyle Mills.
1 review
December 28, 2022
I generally like what Mills has done with Mitch Rapp and Vincent Flynn’s incredible series, but this book baffles me a little. The Second Horseman (Fade #2)….Thosecthat have read Fade know that Salem al-Fayed (Fade) dies at the end of that book. I thought that this might be a prequel of sorts and kept expecting Fade to show up—-even in a memory or flashback…But he never does—-unless I missed something. The “jailbreak” was a little weak—“There is a door. It leads directly out of the prison. Go ahead”.
All in all, it’s not a bad book. But Mills is much better than this effort.
And where is Fade?!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
156 reviews
November 11, 2025
An absolutely brilliant storyline

I love Kyle Mills writing it is witty, clever and funny. A story that starts in a prison and ends in South Africa after a terrorist bomb, is a story full of twist and turns. “I couldn’t find Israel on a map” was a hilarious line and an example of Mills humor. This is a fast read and a book you cannot put down. Sadly, this is a believable story that is still relevant in 2025 even though it was a book written almost 20 years ago.
Profile Image for John Boyda.
256 reviews
November 28, 2025
I was disappointed in this novel. When I obtained it, the book was listed on the Fantastic Fiction website as the second book in the "Fade" series (it has since been changed to show its rightful place as a standalone novel). It might be a reflection of my disappointment, but I didn't feel that this book was up to par with Mills' normal writing. I thought the story was a bit "clichéed" and hackneyed. Only 2 stars.
Profile Image for David Dalton.
3,060 reviews
June 27, 2022
I picked this up at a library sale. Just average overall. I much perfer Kyle Mills books featuring Mitch Rapp over this title. Could not really get into the lead character or the storyline. A good heist book for a while, but the main character whined a lot and never really did anything heroic or kick ass or whatever.
243 reviews3 followers
October 2, 2023
I do not know what to make of this book…

I think this guy hates Jews and Arabs…kills an American of Arab religion in Fade…then goes after more in this book. The heist part was really good; but they made the American contractors out to be bad guys? Did Richard do anything wrong? IDK. The US government? Maybe politicians really are that stupid…
Profile Image for Martin Hunt.
38 reviews1 follower
October 4, 2019
Wasn't my most favorite of books,at times I struggled to get into the novel and i admit i nearly quit reading it a couple of times, big fan of Kyle mills and what he has done with the mitch rapp novels.
Profile Image for Ann Amadori.
551 reviews10 followers
February 14, 2020
I didn't expect to find humor in this book but I found Brandon's take on thievery funny. It was a nice break from the seriousness of the ultimate goal - to get nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists without anyone getting hurt.
530 reviews5 followers
October 16, 2020
Ok, but not as good as some of Mills previous novels. Seemed to drag and at times add divergent story lines that really didn’t add much to the book. Also almost an abrupt ending which I felt sort of left the main storyline hanging.
66 reviews
January 29, 2022
incredibly Realistic

This was one of the most truly frightening yet realistic books that I have read in a very long time, unfortunately something like this could really happen which is horrible to think about.
Profile Image for William Viergever.
109 reviews1 follower
September 11, 2022
Mills Rocks

After reading all his post-Vince Mitch Rapp books, decided to read some of own stuff; started with the two Fade-books. Well, I’m hooked; will now start his other series.
4 reviews1 follower
August 23, 2024
Interesting read until the absurd way the author decided to end it.

Just a non-sensical ending ruined the book for me. Enjoyed some of the book he co-authored prior to this but won't be inclined if this is typical of his own work.
17 reviews
May 17, 2019
Good story

Believable premise with believable characters; the story kept my interest. I'm surprised that it wasn't made into a movie because it would be a good one.
12 reviews8 followers
May 27, 2019
Enjoyed the first 2/3 of the book but I felt the ending was rushed compared to the amount of detail at the beginning.
545 reviews2 followers
August 8, 2019
Disliked the characters and had no interest in their future. Quit halfway through. There are just too many good summer books to waste time on this one.
Profile Image for William.
1,045 reviews50 followers
November 6, 2021
audio David Ledoux's narration was the best part. What a let down from"FADE".
Profile Image for Phil Havlik.
17 reviews
December 13, 2022
Good read

Decent book,good international story. Plot kept a decent pace. A little slow at some parts,but overall an engaging read for me
Profile Image for Mr.Wade.
528 reviews2 followers
December 19, 2022
Not bad considering all the crap that is being published now days.
Profile Image for Jim.
1,140 reviews
May 22, 2023
A good book that gets a bit muddled and then recovers nicely to end on a hanging point. It will be interesting where this goes up on return.
Profile Image for AKH.
18 reviews
February 1, 2024
Would like to have given this book 4.5 stars
11 reviews1 follower
July 1, 2024
I like this author and he did not disappoint with this book. I was largely disappointed with the ending as it was not the ending I wanted however it held my attention and I enjoyed the read.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 66 reviews

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