The Zeus Payload

Nick King is a computer programmer and the lead technologist at his grandfather’s company, Gordon Defense Technology. When he’s not developing sophisticated security software for private and government clients, Nick and his friend and roommate, Dean Wright, travel to the Middle East in search of the terrorist responsible for the 1983 Beirut embassy bombing that killed Nick’s parents. Nick has promised his grandfather, Anthony Gordon, a former CIA operative, that he will find and kill the terrorist, Saleh, before his grandfather dies from heart failure and dementia.

When Nick is approached by CIA agents to complete his work on a cyberweapon that can infiltrate any computer system without being detected, he does so with the understanding that the technology will be used to protect the United States from future cyber-attacks. While completing the computer worm, King uncovers evidence of espionage and conspiracy within the CIA, with a trail that leads back to the Nazi Party. King, not knowing who to trust, and realizing the unstoppable power his product would bring to whomever controls it, commits treason, and removes the worm from the classified facility.

As the consequences of his creation are revealed to Nick, he goes on the run with Dean and a NSA agent, Tanya Rose, who originally accused Nick of being involved with the terrorist organization that killed her brother in Benghazi.

Saleh has been orchestrating the cyberweapon’s development for his own purposes, and plans to use it to attack the United States. Saleh lures King to Beirut, where their drama began thirty years earlier, and King must fight off Saleh, al-Qaeda, the CIA, the NSA, a white supremacist group, rogue agents, and assassins, to keep the ultimate cyber weapon out of the wrong hands, and keep the promise he made to his grandfather.

As if there are any right hands.

 

"The book is well-plotted, the main characters are well-defined, and the novel is easy to read and hard to put down."

Don Westenhaver, Vice President, Southern California Writers Association, and author

"Fast paced. Up to date plot and characters. A real techno thriller!"

—Michael K.

"Easy read couldn't put the book down, too anxious to reach the end, was pulling for the main character."

—Bobbie W.

"The Zeus Payload is a rocket disguised as a novel, and it's one hell of a ride. Every reader better catch a good breath because the action moves almost faster than the eyes can read."

Lorenzo Porricelli, President, Southern California Writers Association

"The Zeus Payload is complex, well-written and enjoyable."

Carol Foster, thriller enthusiast

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