The novel features
Washington D.C. Metro Police homicide detectives Alex Cross and John Sampson as protagonists. While investigating the wrongful conviction and execution of
US Army Sergeant Ellis Cooper, their investigation uncovers a series of Army personnel wrongfully convicted and executed for murdering countless civilians. In each instance, the murderer's
modus operandi involved painting the corpse. In the course of the investigation, Cross and Sampson discover that three
Army Rangers had committed similar
crimes during the
Vietnam War. The three Rangers, nicknamed the "Three Blind Mice" (Thomas Starkey, Brownley Harris, and Warren Griffin), had performed a series of unauthorized killings of unarmed villagers and subsequently painted the bodies red, white, and blue. Cross and Sampson track down the killers, but all three are killed in the resulting gunfight. Cross determines that the mastermind behind the murders is
General Mark Hutchinson,
Commandant of
West Point. Hutchinson had been ordering The Three Blind Mice to frame Army personnel who had committed atrocities while serving in
Vietnam. Another victim,
Colonel Handler, had discovered the plot and was killed so as to not jeopardize Hutchinson's candidacy for the
Joint Chiefs of Staff. Hutchinson captures Cross, but before he can murder him, Hutchinson is killed by members of a Vietnamese street gang in retaliation for his sanctioning of and involvement in Vietnam War atrocities. == See also ==