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Paul Johnston - The Nameless Dead (Matt Wells)

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Paul Johnston The Nameless Dead (Matt Wells)

The Nameless Dead (Matt Wells): summary, description and annotation

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Crime writer Matt Wells hasnt had much time for a career of latehes been too busy fighting for his life. And now he cant trust anyone, not even himself.His thoughts are not his ownhis subconscious has been infiltrated and a single word can trigger hidden orders buried deep within Matts memory, turning him into a killing machine.The FBI aims him at the man responsible for his conditioning: an architect of Nazi revival and devotee of the Antichurch of Lucifer Triumphant. This man took Matts life away and must pay.Even in a nation rife with antigovernment paranoia and conspiracy theories, nobody could believe the things Matt has seen. In a nation infected with trained assassins and ritual murderers, only he can piece together the truth and save the U.S. from impending disaster.

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Acclaim for
Paul Johnstons
Matt Wells novels

THE DEATH LIST

If you like your crime fiction cosy, comforting and safe, for Gods sake buy another book!

Mark Billingham

Very gripping, very frightening stuff. Though a good bit darker, will remind readers of James Grippando or even Donald Westlake in his serious mode.

Booklist

Morbidly inventive.

Kirkus Reviews

His masterpiece novelthe plotting is paranoid, the action is authentic, the characters are convincing, and the denouement is devastating. Its an absolute ripper.

Quintin Jardine

Impossible to put down and a fantastic read. Another author to add to the not to be missed list.

Crime Squad

A thrilling, blackly funny read.

John Connolly

A ferocious thriller.

The Observer

THE SOUL COLLECTOR

Johnston does an expert job in this extraordinary mixture of police procedural, head-banging vigilante lit.
Great stuff.

The Guardian

Captivating.

Daily Mirror

Clever in all the right ways: its plotting is a little out of the box with its mixture of all things serial killers; a touch of Golden Age puzzle solving (Colin Dexter would approve); a large dose of machismo bravado, and the emotional exploration of fledgling love.

Mike Stotter

A heady brewthe action is relentless.

Times Online

MAPS OF HELL

A superb action-packed thriller. Mindful of The Manchurian Candidate and The Prisoner, only much more graphic.

The Mystery Gazette

Frantic and engaging. Johnston has captured Matts fear and confusion in a way thats so vivid its almost palpable Begin your journey into the mind of one of the most creativeand criminally under the radarthriller writers working today.

Savannah Morning News / Savannah Now

Harrowing At times explicitly violent, its never gratuitous.

RT Book Reviews [4 stars]

THE NAMELESS DEAD
PAUL JOHNSTON

The Nameless Dead Matt Wells - image 1

To John Hamilton, last of the old breed

Long is the way

And hard, that out of Hell leads up to Light.

Milton, Paradise Lost

Prologue

Manhattan, December

T wo degrees above freezing, and peoples breath was rising over their heads like souls en route to another dimension. It was after 9:00 p.m. and the shops in Greenwich Village were still open, even if customers with money to spend were scarcer than beat cops near an actual crime.

Laurie Antoinette Simpson came out of the subway at Christopher Street-Sheridan Square and headed down Grove Street toward her apartment. Gasoline fumes hung in the air and burned her throat. She pulled the cashmere scarf that her mother had given her for her thirty-fourth birthday over her mouth, but that only impeded her breathing. She needed to get back to jogging. The problem was that the legal practice she had established in Harlem was swamped with civil rights cases, many of them involving immigrants. She no longer had time to produce the articles about extremist organizations that had made her name when she was still in her twenties.

Hey, Laurie.

She smiled at the young man with the straggly beard, who was leaning against a wall. Cousin Sam, how are you? I thought you went to Brooklyn.

Nah, nothing doing over there. Too much competition.

And there isnt around here?

He shrugged. People know me. Hey, you need anything?

No, thanks. You got somewhere to sleep?

Yeah, Im okay.

Those clothes could do with a wash. What have you been lying in?

Cousin Sam peered at the stains on his threadbare Levis as if he was seeing them for the first time. I dont know, Laurie. Maybe I

Save it, she said, raising a hand. Come around on Sunday afternoon and Ill wash them for you.

Hey, thanks. He looked over her shoulder. Gotta go. Customers.

Dont rip them off, she said, watching his skinny frame weave between the cars. Time was, shed have preached him a sermon about the dangers of drug use, but she knew that was pointless. Keeping him clean was the best she could do, that and being thankful that he wasnt really her cousin, with all his problems.

Shouting reached her from farther down the street. Two black youths, all Converse All-Stars and baggy denim, were being ejected from a music store. As she passed, Laurie heard the shop owner say they were lucky he wasnt calling the cops. Between curses, the young men claimed they hadnt done anything. She was about to take their side when one of them pulled a switchblade.

Knife, Andy! she shouted.

The troublemakers looked around at her, giving the shop owner time to grab a baseball bat. After exchanging glances, the young men took to their heels and disappeared around the corner ahead.

Thanks, Laurie, said the overweight man with a ponytail. Those assholes asked to see my Bob Marley bootlegs. I barely managed to hold on when they tried to grab em.

Times are hard, Andy.

You got that right. Got time for a drink? I have some ten-year-old Calvados.

Tempting, but Ill pass. Im in court first thing.

She continued down the street, keeping her eyes off the antique furniture store. She had paid the weird Frenchman who ran it plenty when she moved into her apartment. Nineteenth-century European fittings and expensive spirits had been her only weaknesses in recent years. Her mother was forever needling her to spend more on her appearance. She had such beautiful features, how did she expect to get a man if she let herself turn into an old maid? What was she doing in the Village when she could be on the Upper West Side? Her father would happily buy her a place and it was much more convenient for work, though why Laurie insisted on helping people who couldnt pay was beyond her.

The truth was, Laurie had no interest in moving closer to her parents. Her father was a property developer with a beach house in the Hamptons and a ski lodge in Aspen, but he had never been interested in her and would never even speak to her if her mother didnt hand him the phone.

Neither did she have any desire to find another man.

She stopped and looked up and down the street. It had been several months since Wendell had appeared to her, and over a year since she had last run after a tall black man and embarrassed herself by grabbing his arm and saying her dead lovers name. Wendell and she had been together for eight years. Sometimes she could remember every detail about him and the things they had done together, but more and more she could hardly recall his face without help. She only kept one photograph of him on the wall in her apartment because it hurt almost as much to see his sweet smile and perfect skin as it would to banish him from her minds eye. But suddenly she felt a strong desire to see his features again and extended her stride.

Six years since he had been taken by leukemia. Would she finally be able to look at the photo without tears? The prospect made her heart beat faster, as if she was going to meet her lover in the flesh following a long separation.

Laurie turned the key in the lock and went quickly up the stairsthere was no elevator in the converted family house. She felt the breath catch in her throat, aware that her feet were heavy on the steps. She really did need to get a fitness program organized. Filling her lungs, she opened the pair of locks and went inside. There was an unusual smell, something chemical, but she hardly noticed it, so eager was she to lay eyes on Wendell. She flicked on the light, shucking her coat and throwing off her scarf. Then she stepped toward the dining room door, her heart hammering.

There was a wide smile on Laurie Simpsons face as she walked into the knife that killed her. The last thing she saw, and it hurt much more than the blade slicing through her abdomen, was the red swastika that had been sprayed over Wendells face. She opened her mouth to let out a cry of anguish, but no sound came as she went to join her beloved.

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