U.S. Marshal Daniel "Dan" Cole leads a handpicked interagency task force built for one purpose: close cases fast, clean, and permanently. For months, the unit's results are undeniable-until a string of deaths begins to gather around the edges of their work. Different people. Different places. Different circumstances. The only common thread is a fleeting point of contact with Cole's investigations... and a sense, hard to name but impossible to ignore, that some doors are closing too neatly.
Investigative reporter Maggie Morris wasn't looking for Cole. An anonymous message forces his name onto her page, and once it's there, she can't erase it. Reeling from the loss of one of their own, the task force's internal dynamics shift: grief calcifies into resolve, loyalties sharpen, and an unseen hand begins shaping what can-and cannot-be proved. Somewhere inside the machinery of federal justice, someone is playing a longer game than arrests and convictions, and the cost of "doing it right" starts to look like something else entirely.
Taut, morally razor-edged, and relentlessly paced, Closure is a thriller about power, process, and the quiet moment when a principled man convinces himself the line has already been crossed-by everyone but him.