The End

The end.  I can’t believe this book ended with a cliffhanger.  Many things were resolved, but just as many were left unanswered.  This book has been really interesting from beginning to end and if it weren't for how long the book is, I would totally reread the book even though I already know the answer.  It would be a lot easier to understand everything throughout the book if I were to reread.  At the end of the book, after a lot of consideration, the higher-ups within the CIA have deemed Mitch Rapp as innocent, however... Stan Hurley is absolutely convinced that Mitch Rapp is only a liability.  This, in turn, makes Stansfield, the higher up in charge of both Stan and Mitch, increasingly angry.  They eventually caught the mole who was Victor and got him to spit out a bit of information about the person he worked for.  Victor had only joined Stan for one reason.  It wasn’t to bring Mitch in but to kill him.  In the previous books, he has had a very deep hatred for Mitch ever since he was taught a lesson by him.  The person who Victor worked for was Paul Cooke.  Even though Paul Cooke was the deputy director of the CIA, he still sold out Rapp.  He had a deal with a DGSE agent, Max Vega, and a wealthy Spaniard with radical Islamic ties.  He gets paid two million dollars for a picture of Rapp and accepts the deal.  At the very end of the boo,k Mitch Rapp goes back to being an assassin and with Cooke out of the way Thomas Stansfield gets promoted to director of the CIA.  However, Cooke and Fournier have a lot more in plan for Rapp.  Kidnapping the vulnerable people in his family will only be the start.

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