Storming Heaven
Mark Beamon, the maverick FBI agent introduced in Rising Phoenix, has been given one last chance by the Bureau. Shunted into a job running a sleepy Southwest office, Beamon is under strict orders to shape up and do things ‘by the book’—the FBI way. There’s only one problem: Crime doesn’t go by the book.
Flagstaff, Arizona, is shocked when a millionaire auto dealer and his wife are brutally murdered in an apparent botched robbery and kidnapping. It’s one of the bloodiest, clumsiest crimes Special Agent Beamon has ever seen. The missing teenage daughter, Jennifer Davis, who stands to inherit everything, is the prime suspect. Did she and her boyfriend fake her abduction?
The boyfriend has an alibi, and Beamon has a feeling. Something is not right about this case. With his new assistant in tow, and his new girlfriend all but forgotten, Beamon follows a trail of faint clues and strong hunches that lead from a remote Unabomber-type cabin in the Utah mountains, through the labyrinthine headquarters of the cultlike Church of the Evolution, into the shadowy, interlocking boardrooms of a high-tech communications empire.
Beamon has tossed the book aside again, and Washington is furious; for the church has powerful friends, as do companies like Vericomm and TarroSoft. Then a bombshell is dropped. The ‘murder’ of Jennifer’s parents was a double suicide. But why? What did the Davises gain by killing themselves while their daughter watched? Are their deaths part of a morbid plot designed to bring America to its knees? Either way, time is running out, and Beamon’s career—not to mention a young girl’s life—is on the line.
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Kyle Mills
I grew up in Oregon but have lived all over—D.C., Virginia, Maryland, London, Wyoming. My father was an FBI agent and I was a bureau kid, which is similar to being an army brat. You tend to spend your time with other bureau kids and get transferred around a lot, though I fared better on that front than many others.
One positive aspect of this lifestyle is that you can’t help but absorb an enormous amount about the FBI, CIA, Special Forces, etc. Like most young boys, I was endlessly fascinated with talk of chasing criminals and, of course, pictured it in the most romantic terms possible. Who would have thought that all this esoteric knowledge would end up being so useful?
Mark Beamon
Mark Beamon consists of five books. The current recommended reading order for the series is provided below.

