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No Survivors

Tom Cain

Plot Summary

No Survivors

Tom Cain

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2006

Plot Summary
The second book in the Samuel Carver series, Tom Cain’s crime thriller, No Survivors (2008), follows the hero as he tracks down a former lover and uncovers a deadly plot to set off a nuclear holy war. In 2009, No Survivors was nominated for the Barry Award for Best Thriller. Cain is a penname of David Thomas, an award-winning, bestselling novelist and journalist who spent 25 years working for Fleet Street newspapers in the United Kingdom and writing for major US publications. He studied at Cambridge University.

Samuel Carver, an independent assassin known as the “accident man,” is notoriously good at his job—and he never gets caught. What sets him apart from other assassins is his talent for making a murder look like an accident. So far, the police have never investigated him for a murder.

Samuel Carver isn’t his real name; his real name is Paul Jackson. Carver has always been independent, strong, and difficult to handle. Fed up with military service after 12 years with the Royal Marine Corp, he reinvented himself, starting with his name.



No Survivors picks up where the first book in the series, The Accident Man, left off. Carver had recently saved his lover, Alix Petrova, from her terrifying Russian spymaster. It wasn’t an easy fight, and Carver sustained multiple physical and psychological injuries. Doctors diagnosed him with catatonia, and when the book begins, he is recovering in a Swiss sanitarium. It is unclear when, or if, he will return to service.

Alix loves Carver and she is spent the past three months by his side. Not knowing how to get through to him, she hopes he will recover. Unfortunately, although he needs dedicated medical care, there is no way to continue paying his medical bills. If Alix cannot come up with the money, the doctors will release him early.

In the meantime, a Russian man discovers a highly confidential document from the Cold War listing the location of every nuclear bomb planted during the war. The bombs have not been disturbed, but if the list falls into the wrong hands, it will be only a matter of time before war breaks out.



Elsewhere, Waylon, a Texas millionaire, preaches about Armageddon. He is convinced that Doomsday is near but that God cannot bring about Armageddon on His own. Believing that God needs his help, Waylon goes looking for weapons to start a holy war. Encountering the paperwork, he decides to steal one of the bombs.

Back in Russia, Russian intelligence officials find out about the leaked document. They order Alix to find the list and to bring it back safe. They suspect that Kurt Vermullen, a retired war general, knows where the list is and that he is planning to sell the bombs to arms dealers. If Alix doesn’t catch him before he sells the bombs, it will be too late to prevent a global war. The officials don’t care what Alix must do to secure the list—even if it means seducing and sleeping with Vermullen.

Meanwhile, Waylon tracks down Vermullen, planning to steal a bomb from Vermullen to convert it into a mobile weapon. Once he refines the technology, he can drop the bomb on Jerusalem to trigger a religious war. He is convinced that God will thank him for his assistance and that he will go to Heaven.



Alix reluctantly leaves Carver to go after Vermullen. She tracks him down and flirts with him to earn his trust. After she has gone, Carver wakes up from his catatonia. Finding out where Alix is, he decides to go after her. It’s a dangerous gamble—if he interferes with the Russian mission, they will kill him.

Alix starts sleeping with Vermullen. She finds him nauseating, but the plan is working. He tells her about the secret list and how he plans to make millions from selling the bombs to criminal organizations. He says he has one arms dealer in mind, and he asks Alix to accompany him on the yacht trip to complete the exchange. Alix worries that he is leading her into a trap, but she agrees to go anyway.

The truth is even more worrying. Alix finds out that Vermullen is now working directly with Waylon. He heard about Waylon’s Armageddon theory and he supports it. Vermullen isn’t taking a bomb to an arms dealer—he’s taking a bomb to Waylon so he can fly it over Jerusalem in a private jet.



Carver tracks everyone down. It turns out that for Waylon, who is dying of a terminal illness, triggering Armageddon would be his legacy. Carver stops Waylon from unleashing the bomb, saving the world from a catastrophic holy war. At the end of the book, Carver and Alix are both safe.

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