On the Texas highways, death travels in disguise. He was a victim once - blindsided by a hit-and-run that stole everything and got him nothing. No justice. No accountability. Just an open road and a slow-burning rage that finally found its direction. Now the Phantom Driver haunts the endless asphalt of the Lone Star State, turning ordinary vehicles into precision weapons and careless drivers into targets.
Each collision is calculated. Each escape is flawless. And each strike is, in his mind, nothing less than justice delivered. Detective Harding has seen crashes. He's never seen anything like this. The pattern is too deliberate, the carnage too precise - and it's escalating. As he hunts a ghost through a thousand miles of scrubland and highway, he begins to understand something that chills him more than the evidence: the man he's chasing doesn't see himself as a killer at all.
In Exit Dead Ahead in Texas, every mile is a minefield, and the most dangerous thing on the road isn't a drunk driver or a texting commuter - it's a man who believes he's the only one paying attention.
On the Texas highways, death travels in disguise. He was a victim once - blindsided by a hit-and-run that stole everything and got him nothing. No justice. No accountability. Just an open road and a slow-burning rage that finally found its direction. Now the Phantom Driver haunts the endless asphalt of the Lone Star State, turning ordinary vehicles into precision weapons and careless drivers into targets.
Each collision is calculated. Each escape is flawless. And each strike is, in his mind, nothing less than justice delivered. Detective Harding has seen crashes. He's never seen anything like this. The pattern is too deliberate, the carnage too precise - and it's escalating. As he hunts a ghost through a thousand miles of scrubland and highway, he begins to understand something that chills him more than the evidence: the man he's chasing doesn't see himself as a killer at all.
In Exit Dead Ahead in Texas, every mile is a minefield, and the most dangerous thing on the road isn't a drunk driver or a texting commuter - it's a man who believes he's the only one paying attention.