Friday, October 14, 2022

 The Darkest Acts



The Darkest Acts

I’ve become something of a Walsh Ritter fan over the past several months. And in this, his third outing, Jeff Crawford takes us along slightly different tack. A wise move, as it not only helps to keep the storyline fresh, but allows a continuation in Ritter’s evolution.

Read the blurb and you’ll see what I mean:

*************

Weeks following his escape from the mountain hunting cottage where Walsh Ritter had put an end to the Victorrio bloodline by killing Angelina Victorrio, he has made his way to what he believes to be the most serene town he had ever passed through, the town of Pleasanton, Wyoming.

The mountain fortress where he had been held captive for so long would have broken nearly any other man, and then his experience with Angelina had just about been more than he could bear. He needed a place with clean beds, peaceful streets, good food, and no one trying to kill or torture him. Walsh Ritter could not have been more wrong about a place to take his sabbatical and possibly begin his retirement.

Secrets are revealed that prove Pleasanton and its residents to be the most vile and heinous place and people Walsh has ever encountered. All of the pain and anger and misery that has built up over the past five years is about to be let out and the town of Pleasanton will see what real brutality and darkness looks like.

*************

Yes, after surviving a prolonged catalogue of abuse, Ritter has every intention of putting the past behind him; going somewhere quiet; settling down; kicking back and just taking life easy. A wise choice, seeing as he’s carrying an unholy array of physical and mental scars that would see a lesser man in an asylum.

Yet it seems fate can’t forgive the brutality of Ritter’s past. No sooner does he try to do the right thing, than it comes back to bite him in the posterior. How, exactly, I’ll leave to the flair and skill of Jeff Crawford’s storytelling, which portrays Ritter’s predicament with an aplomb that will keep you riveted from beginning to end.

(If you’ve followed Ritter’s journey from the beginning – as I have – you know exactly what he’s been through). You can empathize with his earnest desire to blend into the background and disappear. So much so, that when trouble rears its ugly head? Ah, you’ll appreciate his self control. For all his black heart, he really is a man of his word. He has a personal code that he will not waver from . . . even if it digs him a deep hole with a personal invitation to jump in.

And THAT is what this story is all about. Ritter’s determination to see things done, even when the whole world – or in this case, town – is against him. He suffers for his principles. Hugely, as you’ll see. But unbeknown to his abusers, the secrets of the past 5 years have prepared him for this moment. To survive. To keep focused. To wreak a terrible revenge that will never be forgotten.

I absolutely loved it, and can’t wait for the next installment of . . . The Gun Hand series.
Seriously, do yourselves a favor and saddle up. This is one series you don’t want to miss.



No comments:

Post a Comment