(19. - 1262.) The Wrecking Game by Chris Forrest - Rancher Big Dave Watson getting killed, while making breakfast, draws the attention of County Sheriff Hal Wannamaker, Senior Special Agent James C. Beechem of the FBI and the Texas State Police.
There is concern that a gas well recently blown up on Big Dave’s land is domestic terrorism. There are underlying issues over insurance and Big Oil with regard to the explosion.
In Toronto, Ray Carver runs into a car turning left in front of him on a yellow light. The car turns on its side. The woman driving is strung up in the vehicle. The moment instantly becomes intense when a firefighter sees a baby in the car.
Ray had circled the block three times waiting for a car to turn in front of him but he “went too fast” and “drew the wrong mark”.
Ray is assessed as having a soft tissue neck injury.
After leaving the hospital he joins his team for a beer. Their leader, Vince Calder, says they will lay low after the screwed up “go-ahead”. They do not want an insurance investigation.
Ray “doubts the potential for empathy in its own right”. Empathy for those injured during a criminal endeavour would interfere with business.
Ray has been far from empathetic in life. He trolls meetings of alcoholics, drug addicts and gamblers looking for troubled souls he can lure into crime.
Constable Gabriel Kruzik of the Toronto Police has an almost photographic memory. He analyzes the accident starting with the female driver’s assertion that the driver of the car who hit her waved her through. He believes there is a new “squad” in Toronto committing insurance fraud.
Kruzik grew up in the Regent Park complex, “The Projects”. He is married with a child and his wife pregnant with their second.
Benjamin Blackstone is a member of a Texas biker gang with the evocative name, The Lord’s Riders. The ruthless, highly intelligent Blackstone is deeply involved in what happened in Texas.
Empathy is not part of Blackstone’s life. He is a philosopher reflecting on God and religion. He “knows, like any man who has been shot at or stabbed and left for dead and lived to see the truth, that God is both within and without”. He had a revelation on his 82nd day of solitary confinement.
Blackstone is an Old Testament Christian committed to vengeance on those who betray him. Mercy and forgiveness are also not part of his faith.
For Blackstone “the only group living without a code of honour were those running the world with nine-to-five men.” He despises them.
He heads north to Canada pursuing an informant.
Leads on the murder of Big Dave take Beechem and another experienced agent, Jen Logan, to Canada. Beechem and Logan had been a team years in the past.
Contemplating his life, Ray makes contact with the driver of the car, Alisha Saito. As with other characters her life is a mess. Can it be possible he has a touch of empathy in his soul?
Ray lives a life on the dark side. He tells Alisha:
“... There’s crime everywhere, even in small towns. It doesn’t discriminate.”
The consequences of the American disaster are rippling through the world of the fraudsters. A big score is needed. A scheme is hatched that will need the full team.
Ray is a great pretender. How much pretence is in his developing relationship with Alisha?
For accident fraudsters, a compliant lawyer and doctor are needed. Regrettably neither is hard to find.
The scheme is complex.
After I concluded Ray was just a master manipulator, Forrest surprises me with Ray described as having a “saviour complex concerning women”. His actions in this part of his life are honourable.
It is amazing how many police organizations become involved when crimes cross borders. There are the Toronto City Police, the Sûreté du Québec, the RCMP, the Ontario Provincial Police, the FBI, the Texas State Police, a County Sheriff’s department and the Department of Homeland Security. Some are operating as Lone Rangers. Unlike T.V. police there are consequences.
Everyone converges on Toronto with a great sense of urgency.
As in the best noir there is a building sense of dread in The Wrecking Game. Violence is coming and it will be bad.
The police have some good luck. I do dislike the break in a case coming from luck. In real life, I have not found that evidence comes from good fortune.
Forrest has characters with big personalities that could have been stereotypes but, whether good or bad, are thoughtful fully developed people.
He provides evocative descriptions of Toronto. An example involves Alisha. Having grown up in the Okanagan Valley of central British Columbia, she finds herself uncomfortable and slightly intimidated by the immense towers that surround Bay and Wellington. Though I had visited family in the Toronto suburbs, I can remember having the same feelings standing on that corner decades ago as a young lawyer who grew up on a farm in Saskatchewan.
There is a dramatic ending with twists I never saw coming. It is wonderful to read a thriller with complexity in plot and characters.