Following his time in Iceland, Peter Ash is personally in a better place
than he has been since leaving active duty as a Marine. As The Breaker
opens, he's been managing his PTSD-induced claustrophobia, his
relationship with June is in a good place and he has solid and useful
work renovating buildings with his friend Lewis. Of course, he's a
wanted criminal in two nations and the slightest misstep could get him
thrown behind bars for a long, long time, but, you know, things,
amirite?
Unfortunately the last condition is going to prove a
problem when Peter and Lewis thwart what they think is a potential mass
shooting that turns into a mysterious robbery also witnessed by June.
The pair may have shown up on security footage -- Lewis has his own
reasons to desire anonymity -- and the victim is someone June thinks she
recognizes. Initial investigations seem to leave Peter and Lewis off
the hook and don't offer much for June to go on, but the theft of
material left behind after the robbery, including a pair of
internet-wired camera glasses that have Peter's face clearly on them,
makes the mystery more than academic. The more they probe, the more the
trio find out that very little of what they thought they saw matched
first impressions and the deadlier the matter becomes. An appearance
from an old acquaintance offers some insight and gives Peter a chance to
get out from under the murder charges keeping him off the radar -- but
indicates that the game is clearly one they might not want to play
anyway.
In 2020's The Wild One, Nick Petrie offered a
letdown in his stories about Peter, with a confusing and unconvincing
series of violent set pieces in back-country Iceland. Breaker is
mostly a bounce-back from that low point, although it crosses into
sci-fi techno-thriller territory that jars when paired with the
ordinarily more grounded world in which Peter, June and Lewis ordinarily
live and work. As Petrie notes in his afterword, none of the tech that
he writes about in the book is necessarily beyond current-day
possibilities with one or two exceptions. But the combinations in which
it is found -- along with the shadowy figure who puts Peter and Lewis on
the trail and the organization he represents -- belong to science
fiction and 007-esque spy thrillers more than the tough-guy suspense
genre in which Peter's been working. The combination isn't as successful
as intended.
Some other cracks, such as a little too much time
spent on the eventually irrelevant character of June's editor and the
tiring yet another journey through the mind of a psychopathic assassin, also hamper Breaker.
But the genuine interior reflection, from Peter and June especially
about the way that their current life limits what they might want to be
as a couple, plus the resolving storyline, helps bring the story over
the finish line in a rewarding way. The Wild One may have made Petrie readers wonder if they wanted to continue traveling with Peter, June and Lewis but The Breaker is a welcome reassurance that they're still on a road worth taking.
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