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Discover THE ARKANA SERIES: Where Urban Fantasy Meets Archaeology Adventure while Book 1 is FREE! The Granite Key by N. S. Wikarski

Don’t miss today’s Thriller of the Day

The Granite Key (Arkana Archaeology Mystery Thriller Series Book 1)

by N. S. Wikarski
4.1 stars – 114 reviews
Currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members
FREE with Kindle UnlimitedLearn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Award-Nominated Series Finale. Best Mystery of the Month (L.A.S. Reviews, February 2017)
For Fans of Archaeology Adventure, Alternative History Thrillers, and Treasure Hunt Mysteries

THE ARKANA SERIES
College freshman Cassie Forsythe wakes from a disturbing nightmare after seeing her sister being murdered by a man in a cowboy hat who demands something called “the key.” Her dream morphs into frightening reality when her sister is found dead, exactly as her vision foretold.

Cassie’s life takes an even more bizarre turn once she learns that her dead sister, an antique dealer, has discovered the location of a cache of priceless Minoan artifacts. A secret society called the Arkana and a fanatical religious cult known as the Blessed Nephilim are each determined to claim the prize.

Caught squarely between these rival factions is Cassie herself after she stumbles across the only known map to the treasure. The girl allies herself with the Arkana in hopes of staying alive. With Nephilim assassins on her trail, that’s easier said than done.

Volume 1 – The Granite Key
In THE GRANITE KEY, an antique dealer is murdered for a mysterious cipher stone that reveals the location of a collection of ancient artifacts. The victim’s sister Cassie is stunned when she learns about her sibling’s double life as an Arkana agent. She’s even more stunned to discover the role she’s about to play in helping the Arkana recover the trove.

Along with two field agents, she travels to Crete to hunt for clues, unaware that ruthless Nephilim operatives are only steps behind. Will Cassie and her new team find what they seek before a Minoan crypt buries them along with their quest? THE GRANITE KEY holds all the answers.

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The Granite Key (The Arkana Archaeology Mystery Series Book 1)

by N. S. Wikarski
4.2 stars – 95 reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Archaeology That Defies History
Two rival factions launch a global hunt to recover a cache of priceless artifacts. A secret society known as the Arkana wants to preserve it for posterity. A fanatical cult called the Nephilim wants to exploit it for a darker purpose. Caught in the crossfire is an innocent teen who may be the only living person capable of finding their coveted prize.

Volume 1 – The Granite Key
In THE GRANITE KEY, an antique dealer is killed for a mysterious cipher stone which can reveal the location of a trove of priceless relics. The victim’s teenage sister reluctantly agrees to help the Arkana recover the artifacts. Along with two field agents, she is sent to the Minoan ruins of Crete to hunt for clues. While the trio rakes through megalithic tombs and Minoan palaces, enemy operatives are watching their every move. This search for lost treasure has placed two rival factions on a collision course with disaster. The only question is whether anyone will live long enough to claim the reward.

* * *

What Lies Inside: A Vampire Paranormal Romance (Blood Bound Series Book 1)

by J.L. Myers
4.6 stars – 167 reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
A page-turning paranormal series for fans of Twilight and A Shade of Vampire.Amelia never asked to unleash her inner vampire…she never even knew it existed.Amelia is sucked into a nightmare and killed at the hungry fangs of a monster…but then she wakes up and everything has changed. Her whole life has been a lie. What she thought she was—human—is nothing but a disguise, one she never even knew she was wearing.Amelia is a vampire and she always has been.Her family and even best friend Kendrick have known the truth all along, a lie they claim they kept to protect her. Sixteen going-on-forever, Amelia’s violent hunger could quiet a classroom in seconds. It could expose them and lead to her death. Killing for blood is forbidden—but vampires aren’t the only ones enforcing the rules.Another race exists that is more than willing to keep the toll down by any means they see fit.With her life spiraling, Amelia lives in fear of the day she finally loses control. The day she finally kills in cold blood. But then she meets Ty, a guy who is strangely familiar and hides a dark and dangerous secret of his own, and everything changes. Amelia senses Ty’s unnatural strength and, even more than that, for the first time she feels safe from herself.But lies and secrets won’t stay buried forever as her telling dreams turn into warnings. Amelia is unaware of the superior power she possesses and the danger she is in.

* * *

Shocking twists lie ahead in N. S. Wikarski’s action adventure Into The Jaws Of The Lion
**Sample now for FREE!!

Into The Jaws Of The Lion (Arkana Mysteries Book 5)
5.0 stars – 2 Reviews
Or FREE with Learn More
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

THE ARKANA SERIES: Where Alternative History Meets Archaeology Adventure
Volume Five – Into The Jaws Of The Lion

“There’s a 52% chance that the next Dan Brown will be a woman … or should we just make that 100% now?”  (Kindle Nation Daily)

The Arkana Thriller Series
Where do you hide an ancient relic that has the power to change the course of history? As Cassie Forsythe and her Arkana team discover, you scatter clues to its whereabouts across the entire planet. Five artifacts buried among the rubble of lost civilizations point to the hiding place of a mythical object known as the Sage Stone. Psychic Cassie, bodyguard Erik, and librarian Griffin find their quest hampered at every turn by agents of a cult known as the Blessed Nephilim. The cult’s leader, Abraham Metcalf, wants to exploit the power of the Sage Stone to win a war of religious genocide.

Although keeping the relic out of Metcalf’s hands is important, it is even more critical to keep him from finding the Arkana’s troves of archaeological treasure. This cache, which has taken centuries to amass, proves the existence of advanced matriarchal cultures on every continent predating patriarchy by thousands of years. The Nephilim would like nothing better than to destroy the cache and its guardians. The global treasure hunt for the Sage Stone has put the Nephilim and the Arkana on a collision course. The only question is whether any of them will live long enough to claim the prize.

Volume Five – Into The Jaws Of The Lion
Hot on the heels of their victory in Africa, a new clue sends the Arkana team to India in a race to claim the third Minoan relic. Beating the Nephilim to the prize is the least of their worries. Abraham Metcalf’s plan to release a deadly plague on an unsuspecting world moves one step closer to reality as does Leroy Hunt’s recapture of Metcalf’s child-bride. Every effort to throw the mercenary off the girl’s trail only draws him nearer to his prey.

A rift among the members of the Arkana team threatens to destroy the relic hunt altogether. Held captive on a frigid mountaintop in the Himalayas, they are forced to summon all their resources not merely to complete their quest but simply to survive the night. If you thought you knew where this saga was heading, be prepared for a shocking twist when Cassie, Erik and Griffin wander blindly Into The Jaws Of The Lion.

Click here to visit N. S. Wikarski’s Amazon author page

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of Into The Jaws Of The Lion by N. S. Wikarski:

KND Freebies: Intricate thriller RIDDLE OF THE DIAMOND DOVE is featured in today’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt

There’s a 52% chance that the next Dan Brown will be a woman… or should we just make that 100% now?

Think “Medium meets The Lost Symbol“…

Brand-new from Kindle Nation fave N. S. Wikarski comes the long-awaited fourth book in her fascinating seven-part Arkana archaeology thriller series — with more of the wonderful characters, sly humor, intrigue and mayhem that come together to create the absorbing world of her intricate, fast-paced mysteries.

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Where do you hide an ancient relic that has the power to change the course of history? As Cassie Forsythe and her Arkana team discover, you scatter clues to its whereabouts across the entire planet. Five artifacts buried among the rubble of lost civilizations point to the hiding place of a mythical object known as the Sage Stone. Thus far psychic Cassie, bodyguard Erik, and librarian Griffin have succeeded in recovering two of those artifacts.

Cassie and Company find their lives threatened at every turn by agents of a religious cult known as the Blessed Nephilim. The cult’s leader, Abraham Metcalf, wants to exploit the power of the Sage Stone to unleash a catastrophic plague on the world. The quest for the next piece of the puzzle has led both sides to Africa. They must comb an entire continent–their only lead a riddle carved onto a mysterious dove sculpture. Even as the Arkana team struggles to decipher the clue, new dangers hover over their colleagues at home.

Metcalf’s child-bride Hannah has taken refuge at the home of the Arkana’s leader Faye while mercenary Leroy Hunt creeps ever nearer to her hiding place. His search for the girl brings him dangerously close to the secret location of the Arkana’s troves–a collection of pre-patriarchal artifacts which confirm an alternative history of the origins of civilization itself. While Hunt closes in on Hannah, Metcalf’s son Daniel dogs the footsteps of the Arkana field team in order to claim the next artifact before they do. Daniel recruits a clever ally along the way who might be more than a match for the opposing side.

When the forces of the Arkana and the Nephilim converge on a ruined city in a forgotten corner of the dark continent, the shocking outcome is beyond even Cassie’s powers to foresee. The quest for the Sage Stone will veer in an unexpected direction once both sides solve the Riddle Of The Diamond Dove.

Praise for earlier books in the Arkana series:
“Secret societies, murder, history, religious zealots, hidden artifacts and mysterious codes all come together to create a world the reader wants to inhabit….”

“Oh boy, what a cliffhanger! I cannot wait for the next book in this series...fascinating characters…”

“Nancy is a fabulous writer and I could not put the book down…”

an excerpt from

Riddle of the Diamond Dove

by N. S. Wikarski

 

Copyright © 2013 by N.S. Wikarski and published here with her permission

Chapter 1—Dirty Deeds

Right Now—Halfway Across The World

The truck came to an abrupt stop in a trackless expanse of nowhere. The driver cut the engine and climbed out of the cab. He surveyed the landscape. It was a moonless night and that was a good thing.  He could scarcely see his hand in front of his face but it didn’t matter much. This terrain was so familiar to him that he didn’t need to. He switched on a flashlight and walked to the back of the truck. Opening the canvas flap, he motioned for the occupants to come out. Two men jumped down, each one carrying a shovel.

The driver walked several yards away from the vehicle. Taking a quick glance over his shoulder to make sure nothing was moving out there in the dark, he pointed his flashlight at the ground. “Here,” he commanded. “Dig here.”

The two others complied. The driver stood motionless, pointing his flashlight at the bottom of an ever-increasing hole in the ground. None of them spoke. The only sound was the relentless scoop and swish as dirt fell into a pile beside the depression in the earth.

“Wait!” the driver hissed. He thought he’d heard a car engine. He flipped his light off—turning his head this way and that to catch the faintest sound in the distance.

His companions leaned on their shovel handles and waited too.

After a few minutes, the driver switched his light back on. “Just the wind,” he muttered.

The others resumed their task. The hole grew bigger—a rectangular shadow even darker than the night sky. When the pit was about five feet deep, one of the workers paused.

“Is this enough?” He peered up at the driver for confirmation.

The man with the flashlight nodded.

Needing no further instruction, the other two crawled out of the trench and walked to the back of the truck. One clambered inside and shoved a heavy wooden crate toward the edge. It was bound with thick strands of knotted rope.

Both men heaved and strained to slide the object off the truck bed. Staggering under the full weight of the box, they carried it to the hole. The driver threw them two more coils of rope which they slipped around the box to carefully lower it into the ground.

“Good,” said the driver with satisfaction. “Close it up. It will be dawn soon. We need to get out of here.”

It took far less time to fill in the hole than it had taken to dig it. The two men pounded down the hill of dirt with their shovels to make it less conspicuous.

“A fair night’s work,” the driver thought to himself as he stepped inside the cab and started the motor. He was an expert at hiding things out here where nobody ever came—objects that weren’t meant to be found. He would wait a while until things cooled down and then he and his friends would return. In the meantime, he doubted anybody in the world would ever think to look here for what they’d just buried.

Chapter 2—A Naming Convention

 

Cassie Forsythe stood back at the edge of the clearing so she could better observe the collection of oddly-dressed people filing up the front steps of the old schoolhouse. The evening air was frosty and steam issued from their mouths as they spoke to one another. It had been a long time since she’d attended an official meeting of the Concordance—the Arkana’s governing council. The late-winter sun was just sinking behind the pine trees that surrounded this little gap in the woods. It all looked so peaceful and harmless. A country schoolhouse in a forest glade—just like a Currier & Ives print. Cassie smiled wryly at the thought of the Vault beneath the school that housed the global records of the secret organization for which she worked. This job had taught her how deceptive appearances could be.

Someone tugged playfully at her coat sleeve. She turned quickly. “Oh, it’s you, Griffin.”

“You needn’t sound so disappointed,” the lanky brown-haired young man teased.

Cassie appraised her companion suspiciously. “What are you so happy about? You’re practically grinning from ear to ear.”

“I’m smiling because this afternoon I had my last check-up with the Vault physician. Though technically I haven’t needed it for the past month, she told me to discard my wheelchair. I’m officially fit for active duty.”

Oh, my goddess, Griffin, that’s great news!” She gave him a swift hug. “Congratulations.”

The Brit smiled and blushed with pleasure. “Now that I’m ambulatory again, we can start planning our next field mission.”

“Yo, what’s up,” a laconic voice joined the conversation.

“Hello, Erik, we were just about to step inside,” Griffin offered. He added pointedly, “You’ll notice I said ‘step’.”

The Security Coordinator sized the Brit up. “Right, I heard you left the land of the lame today.”

“At least he’s left the land of the lame, dude.” Cassie emphasized the word “left.” “That’s your permanent address.”

“My ankle healed up weeks ago,” Erik protested.

“I wasn’t talking about your ankle.”

“You two have begun rather early.” Griffin made an elaborate show of checking his watch. “Less than five minutes and you’re already at one another’s throats.”

“Oh we’ve been at each other’s throats since this afternoon,” Cassie replied, glaring at Erik. “We spent the last four hours at the shooting range. I nailed every target. Every single one and he still won’t let me carry a gun on our next trip.”

“He won’t let me carry a gun either,” Griffin countered.

Cassie gave her colleague a pitying look. “That’s because you couldn’t hit the side of a barn with a pickup truck. You have terrible aim.”

“Point taken,” Griffin admitted.

Erik intervened, turning to Cassie. “I already told you that I’ll let you carry a stun gun, all right?”

“Oh great,” Cassie snorted. “I’d have to be up close and personal with a bad guy before I could do any damage.”

“That’s exactly why I’m not giving you anything with more range than that. Your reaction time is way too fast. If you had a real gun, you’d end up killing one of us from twenty feet off.”

Cassie scowled. “Right this minute, I’m gonna have to agree with you.”

“Take two stun guns. Take a dozen. I don’t care. But no guns that shoot bullets!”

“What are you three plotting now?” A booming female voice rang in Cassie’s ears.

They all turned guiltily as if caught with their hands in the cookie jar.

Cassie gave a rueful sigh. “Nothing, Maddie, but it’s amazing how paranoid we all get when you ask that question.”

The Operations Director grinned. “I like to keep you on your toes.”

Griffin rose on tip toe.

Maddie looked at his feet, unimpressed. “Yeah, yeah I got the news. The wheelchair’s been decommissioned. Kudos.”

Cassie turned to the Operations Director and pleaded, “Maddie, help me out here. I’m a great shot but Erik won’t give me a gun for the next leg of our relic hunt.”

The resident Amazon paused to light up a cigarette. She wafted the smoke away from her companions before replying. “Sorry, kiddo, no can do. I don’t let Erik make too many unilateral decisions because that’s how things get blown up or set on fire. But when it comes to arming the three of you, weapons are his call.”

“See, I told you she’d say that.” Erik smirked in triumph.

“Nerts!” Cassie folded her arms truculently.

Griffin looked anxiously toward the foyer of the schoolhouse which was nearly empty by now. “We should go inside before all the seats are gone.”

After taking a few more hasty drags on her cigarette, Maddie crushed it out in the frozen grass.

The four hurriedly climbed the stairs that led to the main hall of the schoolroom which was abuzz with life for a change. Usually the room was quiet and empty—merely a transition space to the elevators in the back vestibule which led to the secret Vault beneath. Tonight all the chandeliers were blazing with light and the stained glass windows shimmered in the glare. The tiered box seats lining the walls were filled with two hundred of the oddest specimens of humanity ever assembled under one roof.

“It’s like a United Nations of fashion victims,” Cassie murmured. As she recalled from her last experience with the assembly, trove-keepers from around the globe tried to incorporate some item of their native costume into their clothing. The results were usually bizarre.

After hanging their coats on racks near the door, the four scurried to the box seats. Cassie dived for the first available space she could find on the bottom tier next to a woman wearing a little black dress and a capelet of parrot feathers. Her headdress looked like a Smurf hat made entirely of red and yellow plumes.

Although Cassie did a double take at the headdress, none of her companions seemed to notice.

“Scoot over,” Erik demanded.

All four were able to squeeze in and settle themselves just as the proceedings commenced.

The low rumble of conversation in the hall died to a whisper when a tiny elderly woman in a gold brocade coat dress and matching pillbox hat made her way to the center of the room.

“Faye always reminds me of visiting royalty when she gets decked out for one of these meetings,” Cassie whispered to Erik.

He nodded in agreement. “Hard to believe her usual outfit is a housedress dusted with cake flour.”

The Memory Guardian of the Arkana came to a halt in front of a huge circular table which was already occupied by thirty oddly-dressed dignitaries. Her own high-backed wooden arm chair remained empty. She preferred to stand to address the gathering. Smiling briefly as her gaze travelled around the room, she said, “My thanks to all of you for coming here on such short notice. Our reason for assembling this evening has only happened a few times before in the long history of the Arkana. I’m glad so many of you could join us for the ceremony.”

“Ceremony?” Cassie repeated. “What’s she talking about?”

Erik shook his head, Griffin looked perplexed and Maddie shrugged her shoulders.

Faye continued speaking. “You’ll recall the last time we all met in grand assembly. It was to debate sending an expedition to recover a legendary artifact—the Sage Stone.”

Whispers of acknowledgement traveled around the hall.

“At least some of you are aware that the team I picked to undertake that mission includes Griffin our Chief Scrivener, Cassie our Pythia, and Erik our Security Coordinator.”

All eyes turned to the trio seated in the bottom row. Those sitting above them leaned forward to get a closer look.

Cassie squirmed in discomfort at the scrutiny. “This had to happen on a bad hair day,” she mumbled under her breath.

Faye’s gaze came to rest on the fourth member of their party. “In addition, our Operations Director Maddie has taken charge of overseeing their activities from home base. She has accepted this duty along with her responsibilities as manager of Global Operations. A heavy load, to be sure.”

“Global Ops is nothing compared to riding herd on you three,” Maddie whispered pointedly to the trio. “I’ve got the gray hairs to prove it.”

They pretended not to hear her and focused intently on the tiny woman standing at the round table.

“The quest to discover the location of the Sage Stone has taken our team from Crete to Turkey to Spain to America. During that time, their lives have been repeatedly endangered by operatives of the Blessed Nephilim. Griffin is even now recovering from a gunshot wound received during their last field mission.” Faye paused for a moment. “Throughout the course of this quest, they have all shown extraordinary bravery. Thanks to their determination, we have now acquired two of the artifacts necessary to reveal the ultimate hiding place of the Sage Stone.”

Spontaneous applause erupted from several corners of the room and soon everyone was giving them a thunderous ovation. Cassie was blushing. Griffin looked dumbstruck and even Erik reddened but the applause didn’t faze Maddie. She smiled and waved in acknowledgment.

Faye waited for silence before proceeding. “The Concordance Circle met in private session a week ago. We debated how best to reward the service each of these individuals has rendered.”

“So this meeting is all about us?” Cassie gasped.

“Shhh!” Erik warned.

“There is a rare past precedent for the action we take tonight.” Faye turned to face the four very surprised individuals sitting in the bottom tier of seats across the room from her. “Would all of you please rise and approach the table?”

They looked uncertainly at one another.

“Oh, what the hell!” Maddie got up and strode forward.

The trio followed her lead until they all stood in a row facing Faye.

Cassie noticed an odd collection of objects resting on the table directly in front of the Memory Guardian. She had no time to consider their meaning.

Faye was speaking again. “Maddie, step forward please.”

The Operations Director towered over her diminutive chief.

The old woman gazed up at her. “In the event an individual renders extraordinary service in your position in the organization, she is accorded the title of Chateleine—castle protector and keeper of the keys.” Faye selected one of the objects on the table. It was an old-fashioned gold-plated key on a gold ring. She handed it to Maddie. “Take this as a symbol of your new title.”

Applause echoed around the room.

For once in her life, Maddie was speechless until she managed to stammer, “Th… th… thank you.” She then rejoined the other three.

Faye’s gaze traveled across the group and came to rest on the Security Coordinator. “Erik, you’re next.”

The blond man cleared his throat, betraying the only sign of nervousness he was likely to show.

When he stood in front of the Memory Guardian, her eyes twinkled mischievously. She addressed her comments to the Concordance as a whole. “Many of you already know Erik’s penchant for distinguishing himself by getting into trouble.”

An appreciative chuckle rose from the crowd. Erik grinned unabashedly, proud of his bad boy reputation.

“Tonight, the Circle honors his virtues. When a Security Coordinator on a field mission has distinguished himself as Erik has done, he is given the title of Paladin—the Pythia’s defender.”

Faye reached toward the table and selected a small silver dagger with a scrollwork handle. She held the object out to Erik. “Receive this symbol of your new title.”

Erik bobbed his head in acknowledgement and took the dagger.

More applause followed.

Apparently the new Paladin wasn’t used to positive attention. He ducked back into line with the others.

“Griffin, if you please,” Faye called next.

The tall Brit looked pale enough to faint but he did as commanded.

Addressing the group as a whole, Faye said, “Young as he is, our Griffin can already claim the remarkable achievement of being appointed Chief Scrivener at the ripe old age of twenty two.”

Knowing laughter once again travelled around the hall.

“There is no higher title than Chief Scrivener for someone in Griffin’s position so we have decided to augment his existing title. Henceforth, Griffin shall be known as ‘The Right Honourable Chief Scrivener’.” Faye reached for a quill pen made of ostrich feather lying on the table. Handing it to him, she said, “Receive this token of your elevated rank.”

Griffin bowed from the waist before accepting the pen. Shyly, he refused to make eye contact with the cheering crowd in the bleachers and darted back among his fellows.

Cassie felt her palms begin to sweat.

Faye’s attention settled on her. “And last, but certainly not least, I call forward our Pythia, Cassie.”

The young woman tucked back the curtain of hair that had swung over the left side of her face.

Faye reached out and took her hand, squeezing it reassuringly before releasing it.

“And what can I say about our most recent recruit? Someone who knew nothing of the Arkana before she found herself gifted with telemetric powers like her sister before her. Someone who was forced to master her talents in a few short weeks and use those skills during a perilous field mission. Since that first expedition, she has repeatedly put her own life at risk for the sake of our cause.”

Applause echoed off the walls.

“Again, there is no title higher than ‘Pythia’ for one with Cassie’s abilities, so the Circle has no alternative but to augment Cassie’s rank as well. She will henceforth be known as ‘The Right Honourable Pythia’.” Faye reached for the final object on the table. A small crystal ball resting on a brass pedestal. Handing it to the young woman she added, “Receive this symbol of your rank.”

Cassie looked around the room and saw several people leap to their feet in a standing ovation.

She took the object from Faye, dashing away a few tears before rejoining her colleagues.

Faye raised her hands for quiet. The applause ceased immediately and people sat back down.

“My friends, this is more than a change of title for these worthy individuals. All four of them shall henceforth exercise voting rights within the Circle.”

More applause followed.

“We get to sit at the grown-up table?” Cassie whispered aside to Erik.

“Sounds like it,” he murmured back, stunned.

In the time it took Cassie to blink, four empty chairs had magically appeared at the large circular table. The thirty individuals already seated there smiled as if to invite the four newcomers to join them.

“Go ahead,” Faye urged. “Take your seats.”

They all silently did as requested.

When everyone was settled, Faye spoke again. “And now your first official act as members of the Circle will be to vote to adjourn this meeting and retire upstairs for refreshments. All in favor?”

Four new hands shot up into the air to join the thirty already raised in assent. The motion carried unanimously.

Chapter 3—Cold Case

Leroy Hunt stood in the middle of Daley Plaza in downtown Chicago holding a cup of steaming black coffee. He grimaced at the very thought of swallowing that witches’ brew. Its sole purpose was to keep his hands warm. He stamped his booted feet in a vain attempt to get the blood circulating to his toes. The March wind off the lake was cutting right through his denim jacket. March! Back where he came from it would be spring already. He gazed up humorlessly at the Picasso statue staring down its long nose at him. It looked like a fifty foot cross-eyed horse. At the moment, Leroy wished he had a real horse that he could mount and tell to “giddyup.” Why in the name of creation did old Abe want to meet here? Leroy’s first choice would have been a bar, closely followed by a strip club but he knew that a Bible thumper like Metcalf wouldn’t cotton to those suggestions. Out of the corner of his eye, he caught some movement on the opposite side of the plaza.

A late model limo had parked just long enough to let out its passenger. Leroy waved to the geezer climbing out of the back seat and motioned him toward a bench under a tree. Of course there was no shade since the branches were bare but sitting near the trunk did cut the wind some. Hunt got to the bench first and sat down.

Abraham Metcalf, prophet and Diviner of the Blessed Nephilim, took his sweet time hobbling over. “Good afternoon, Mr. Hunt,” the old man said stiffly.

“Boss.” Leroy tipped his Stetson hat. “Set yourself down and take a load off.” The cowboy marveled at the change that had come over his employer in the three months since they’d met last. Although the old man was in his seventies, he’d always carried his age well. Now it looked as if the years had piled onto him like a pack of coon hounds on a cottontail. His eyes were sunken and the bags underneath them had sprouted little bags of their own. Both his beard and mane of white hair were shaggy. The black overcoat that covered his funeral suit hung on him like a sack.

Leroy tried not to show his reaction to this transformation. “How you doin’, Mr. Metcalf?” he asked jauntily, setting the coffee cup down on the bench between them.

Metcalf shrugged off the question. “I’ve had better years.”

“No doubt, no doubt,” Hunt agreed sententiously. “Must be hard for you with your Missus still missin’ and all.”

Metcalf winced at the reference. “Yes, that’s the reason I wished to speak to you. Have you had any luck finding her yet?”

Leroy thought back to his fruitless search for Metcalf’s fourteen year old runaway bride. The trail had gone cold at an antique shop in the city. Of course, he knew she’d made her getaway with the help of Metcalf’s son Daniel but he couldn’t afford to tell the old man that. Daniel was Leroy’s meal ticket—the one person in the world who could find those blasted gewgaws that Metcalf had such a powerful urge to collect and that Leroy had an equally powerful urge to steal afterward. The last thing Hunt wanted was for the old coot to catch wind of the fact that his own son helped his wife to give him the heave ho. Metcalf would kill the relic hunt and his son, not necessarily in that order.

Shielding Daniel wasn’t Hunt’s only concern. He had to make sure he got to Hannah before any of the Nephilim did. That way she couldn’t get chatty with anybody at the compound about who helped her get away. The mercenary’s face betrayed none of these worries. Instead he replied blandly,” I’m sorry to say, I ain’t had no luck findin’ the little gal yet.  I’m guessin’ your own crew ain’t done much better?”

Metcalf sighed deeply. “The devil has taken her. Mark my words, this was no ordinary disappearance.”

“You don’t say,” Leroy drawled, sporting an expression of innocent surprise. He knew the devil had nothing to do with it—unless the devil had taken to disguising himself as a pasty-faced runt named Daniel.

“She was only a child. The devil led her astray and spirited her beyond our reach. None of the brotherhood can find her. I had hoped that one of the Fallen, such as yourself, might have had a better chance.”

It always rubbed Leroy the wrong way whenever one of the Bible thumpers referred to outsiders as “Fallen” but he couldn’t very well let the old man see his annoyance. Instead he asked, “How much time I got left before your son and me need to hit the road to find that next doodad?”

Metcalf sighed even more deeply than before. “Daniel spends all his days at the library in this city.” He looked around the plaza with distaste. “I don’t like the amount of time he is forced to toil in the land of the Fallen.”

Leroy ignored the “F” word again. “Now you don’t need to worry about Daniel none. He’s true blue.”

Metcalf shot him a grateful look. “Thank you, Mr. Hunt, for that reassurance. I believe he is. He says he’s approaching a breakthrough—that within the month he should know where to search for the next relic.”

“That suits me just fine,” Hunt agreed, picking up the coffee cup to thaw his fingers. “Can’t stand much more of this northern air. Them folks that hid the doodads a couple thousand years back seem to favor your warm and sandy lands. I’ll take a hot desert over this iceberg any day of the week.” He glared at the Picasso as if it was somehow responsible for the misty drizzle that was freezing his face off.

“Since you came back from your last mission, surely you’ve discovered some small scrap of evidence that might lead to my Hannah,” Metcalf persisted bleakly.

Leroy wasn’t about to tell him that he’d spent every day since their return three months ago tailing Daniel. He figured that Miss Hannah might try to make contact with her rescuer again once she was somewhere safe but that idea hadn’t panned out. Hunt was going to have to cast a wider net. “No, sir, nothing so far but there’s a couple of other things I could maybe try.”

“Good, I’m glad to hear it.” Metcalf’s voice held a glimmer of hope. “She must be approaching her time to deliver my son.”

Hunt recollected that she’d be pretty far along in her pregnancy by now. Inwardly, he was baffled by the old man’s yen for a little gal that was barely old enough to ride a bicycle without training wheels. He wondered if the Nephilim allowed their kids to have bikes at all. Probably not. It might smack of too much fun. He couldn’t see what the old coot was carrying on about anyway. He had three dozen other wives stashed in the cupboards and closets of his creepy compound. So what if one went missing? He returned to the conversation. “You’re sure the baby’s gonna be a boy? Did you have her checked before she ran off?”

The Diviner seemed puzzled by the question. “Of course it’s a boy. What else could it be?”

Deciding not to pursue the question any further, Leroy changed the subject. “I gotta wonder why you picked this spot to meet, sir. I don’t mind drivin’ way out to your place in the sticks.”

“Your presence at the compound has attracted an inordinate amount of attention lately. Every time one of my flock sees you in my office, the gossip and speculation begin all over again.”

“Gotcha, boss. Best I do my work for you out of sight.”

The old man stared at him hard. “Bring her back to me, Mr. Hunt. You’re my last hope.”

Leroy smiled reassuringly. “I mean to do exactly that, sir. Don’t you worry none.” He failed to mention the shape she’d be in when he did bring her back. Dead.

… Continued…

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Riddle of the
Diamond Dove

(Arkana Mysteries #4)
by N. S. Wikarski
Kindle Price: $2.99

N.S. Wikarski’s Historical Mystery The Mountain Mother Cipher is Our eBook of the Day at just $2.99 on Kindle or Currently Free Via the Kindle Lending Library, with 5.0 Stars on 2 Reviews, and Here’s a Free Sample

The Arkana series is a seven book treasure hunt that spans 12,000 years of lost human history. What’s it all about? Take one secret organization trying to reconstruct humanity’s cultural roots and mix with a fanatical cult intent on destroying civilization altogether. Both believe the solution to their problem is a lost relic known as the sage stone.

Part history lesson, part mystery, the books tell the story of our forgotten past. Spanning every continent for the last dozen millennia, they reveal cultures most people never knew existed. Prepare to be amazed. Technologically-advanced, peace-loving, gender-balanced. Who were those people? More importantly, why and when did we stop being like them? Those mysteries and many others will be solved if you’re ready to enter the world of the Arkana.

Picking up right where The Granite Key left off, The Mountain Mother Cipher carries the relic quest from Greece to Turkey as the Arkana team struggles to stay one step ahead of its rivals. Trouble on the home front threatens both organizations when Faye and Abraham are each forced to deal with some unwelcome developments.

From the reviewers:

Thoroughly enjoyed this one too. A couple of added characters who were good and learning more about the Nephilim ways. Scary! Also the Memory Guardian, Faye, and her Grandson will make for some good mysteries to solve coming up. Cassie had her work cut out for her in more ways than one this time. Kept me reading to the very last page!!! Looking forward to #3!  –  Laurie Steffan

Excellent second book in the arkana series.  I loved this second book. Cassie’s character is maturing and showing how smart she is. It was a great journey to retrieve the first relic and can’t wait for the next journey. Nancy is a fabulous writer and I could not put the book down. I was reading it every night and finished it in a week again. Way to go Nancy! I am anxiously waiting for the next one. – D in Alameda

 

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And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of The Mother Mountain Cipher by N.S. Wikarski:

Kindle Nation Daily – Bargain New Release Alert! Hot off the presses and just in time for the holidays! From the author of The Granite Key, N.S. Wikarski’s THE MOUNTAIN MOTHER CIPHER at an Introductory Price of Just $2.99!

“There’s a 52% chance that the next Dan Brown will be a woman … or should we just make that 100% now?” –Kindle Nation

Who says that the new releases that we really want to read have to be $9.99 or $14.99 or $16.99?

The Mountain Mother Cipher (The Arkana Series)

by N. S. Wikarski

The Mountain Mother Cipher (The Arkana Series)

by N. S. Wikarski
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

The sequel to The Granite Key is here. The second adventure in the Arkana series carries the relic quest from Europe to Asia.

What would you do?

  • If you were the leader of a secret society struggling to unearth the forgotten past of the human race–
  • If you were a cult leader coveting a relic that would give you the power to end civilization as we know it–
  • If you were a 19-year old girl who could relive the history of an artifact simply by touching it–
  • If you had the power to save the world or to end it altogether simply by finding a meteorite hidden thousands of years ago by a lost civilization–What wouldn’t you do?

Here’s what Amazon reviewers have to say about the Arkana series:

  • “Anxiously awaiting the next one in the series.” –Laurie Steffen
  • “By the final page I was already looking forward to more adventures within ‘the Arkana.’” –BrendaW
  • “I absolutely cannot wait for the next book to come out.” –D in Alameda
  • “Oh boy, what a cliffhanger! I cannot wait for the next book in this series.” –Marta M. Rawlings
  • “I am looking forward to the next book. Ms. Wikarski, I’m afraid you have me hooked.” –Artimus
  • “I enjoyed it thoroughly, can hardly wait for the next book.”  –Ildi Garay
  • “The ending begs for the sequel and I will be sure to read it.” –Puggle

The set-up:

What’s the Arkana series all about? Take one secret organization trying to preserve humanity’s forgotten past and mix with a fanatical cult intent on destroying civilization altogether. Both believe the answer to their prayers is a lost relic known as the sage stone.Part history lesson, part treasure hunt, the books reveal the story of our past. Not the kind of history you were taught in school. Instead you’ll learn all the facts that were forgotten, erased or burned out of our collective memory. Spanning every continent for the past twelve thousand years, the series covers cultures most people never knew existed. Prepare to be amazed. Technologically-advanced, peace-loving, gender-balanced. Who were those people? More importantly, why and when did we stop being like them? Those mysteries and many others will be solved if you’re ready to enter the world of the Arkana. The time has come for the second adventure.

***

If you missed the debut of ‘the next Dan Brown’ with The Granite Key, here’s another chance to start the quest from the beginning. Just in time for the holidays!

“Think ‘MEDIUM meets THE LOST SYMBOL’ and it only begins to describe the pleasures of N.S. Wikarski’s THE GRANITE KEY (5 Stars).” –Kindle Nation Daily

The Granite Key (The Arkana Series)

by N. S. Wikarski
$0.00
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$2.99
(This is a sponsored post.)

A Generous, Free Excerpt From Our Thriller of the Week Sponsor: N. S. Wikarski’s The Granite Key

The Granite Key, from The Arkana Series, by N.S. Wikarski:

by N. S. Wikarski
4.1 stars – 11 Reviews

Here’s the set-up:
Forget everything you thought you knew about ancient history. The real facts have been buried… Until now! Imagine yourself a nineteen year old college student. Your life is normal in every way until a bizarre set of events drags you into a hidden world of danger. You are recruited by an underground society questing for artifacts that reconstruct the lost history of the human race. You are being pursued by a fanatical religious cult intent on acquiring a legendary relic before you do. A relic that, in the wrong hands, has the power to destroy the world.In a treasure hunt that spans twelve thousand years of human history and covers every continent, the Arkana series digs deep through the layers of fabricated history to reveal a past we never dreamed we had and a future we never dreamed we could have. A secret society. A fanatical cult. A telepathic girl.All vie to unlock the mysteries of the granite key. The quest leads halfway around the globe to the ruins of a forgotten civilization and a secret it has guarded for millennia. The fate of the world depends on who can get there first.

The Granite Key (The Arkana Series)

The author hopes you will enjoy this free excerpt:

Chapter 1 – Night Vision

 

Cassie felt herself sinking. She tried to drag herself to the surface. “Wake up stupid! It’s just a dream. This can’t be real. Wake up!”

She was standing in the shadows in her sister’s antique shop. It was late. Long past midnight. The room was dimly lit by a green banker’s lamp near the cash register. Sybil was standing in front of the glass showcase with a cell phone in her hand. There was a man standing near the door. A man wearing a Stetson hat and he was pointing a gun at her sister.

“Where’s the key, sugar?” His voice sounded lazy, casual. He had a southern drawl.

“I…I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Sybil stammered. Her sister put the phone down and started inching her way along the showcase toward the rear storeroom.

The man shrugged. “Don’t make no difference to me but you don’t want me tearin’ up your neat little shop just to find it, now do you?”

“I told you I don’t know what you’re talking about!” Sybil’s reply was shrill, unconvincing.

Cassie wanted to rush forward to pull her sister away from the man with the gun. Her feet were glued to the floor. She couldn’t move. She tried to scream a warning. “Get out of here, Sybil. Run!” but all she felt was a rasp in her throat where the words should be.

The man advanced out of the shadows. He was close to six feet tall, maybe in his late twenties or early thirties. Cassie knew this had to be a dream because of his strange outfit. Aside from the cowboy hat, he wore a short denim jacket, a string tie around his neck, jeans and snakeskin cowboy boots.

The gun flicked slightly in his hand. “I tell you what. The service in this establishment ain’t very friendly.” He flipped his hat aside and it landed on an oak sideboard. His dark brown hair was combed back in a high wave. “I guess if you don’t want to help me, I’ll have to roll up my sleeves and help myself.”  He moved forward toward the glass case.

Sybil darted past him and ran toward the front door. He was faster. He grabbed her by the arm. “Now that’s no way to treat your clientele, honey. Tryin’ to run off and shirk your responsibilities like that.” He twisted her arm behind her back.

Cassie could see Sybil wince in pain. Her sister looked around wildly for some other way out. The man tightened his grip with one hand and pointed the gun to her head with the other. Sybil struggled but he only wrenched her arm harder behind her back until she stopped struggling.

“It seems to me like you can’t hear what I’m sayin’.” The man cocked his head slightly, considering the matter. “Maybe we should go someplace private where I can get through to you better.”

He shoved her toward the door but she twisted out of his grip, running toward the back of the shop. He lunged after her, tackling her. She fell hard against the showcase, head first. Glass shattered and she lay still, face down on the floor.

Cassie could feel a cry of despair rising in her throat but no sound came out. She willed her feet to move. They seemed to twitch slightly but nothing more. All she could do was watch.

The man raised himself to a crouch position. A look of annoyance crossed his face. He reached forward to check Sybil’s pulse and frowned.

He stood back up, shaking bits of broken glass from his jacket. “Well, that ain’t no help at all,” he said in disgust.

In a flash, the scene changed and Cassie was back in her dorm room. She could feel the mattress beneath her. “Wake up, dammit!” she commanded herself. This time when she clawed her way up to the surface of consciousness, her mind obeyed her. She sat up shakily. Her skin felt clammy. She tossed off the covers and sat forward rocking, holding her head.

On impulse she grabbed her cell phone and started to call her sister. “It was just a nightmare, stupid! What are you going to do? Wake her up in the middle of the night to tell her you had a bad dream?” She snapped the phone shut and tossed it on the nightstand.

Gradually her breathing slowed and she lay back down. Curling herself into a fetal position, she drew the covers up to her chin. “It wasn’t real.  It was just a bad dream… Just a bad dream… Just a bad dream…” She chanted the words like a mantra for several minutes until she started to dose off.

Then the phone rang.

 

Chapter 2 – A Wake

At about three o’clock in the morning far outside the city, four people were staring bleakly at one other around a kitchen table. It was an old style oak table in an old style country kitchen. The kind with tin ceiling tiles and tall glass cupboards above the sink. A single yellow nightlight glowed from the wall.

At one end of the table sat an elderly woman in a terrycloth robe and slippers. Despite the late hour, she had managed to roll her white hair into a neat little bun at the nape of her neck. She sighed heavily. “I can’t believe this.”

“Believe it. Sybil’s dead.” The abrupt comment came from a blond man in his mid-twenties at the opposite end of the table. He sat slouched despondently in his chair, arms crossed, his legs sprawled out in front of him. “She called me and she sounded scared. She thought somebody was trying to break into the shop. Then the line went dead. I got there as fast as I could but the cops beat me to it.” He exhaled tiredly. “It’s my fault.”

“How do you figure?” The question came from a middle-aged woman with bushy red hair sitting to his left. There were distinct frown lines around her mouth. She took a long drag on an unfiltered cigarette.

The blond man glanced up. “If I’d just gotten there five minutes sooner maybe we wouldn’t be having this conversation. Maybe she’d still be alive.”

“Did she give you a physical description of her attacker?” The question came from a young man in his early-twenties seated to the right. He spoke with a British accent.

“Nope,” said the blond man succinctly. “For the past week or so she told me she had the feeling somebody was following her but she never knew who it was.”

“I think we all know who was responsible.” The elderly woman rose stiffly out of her chair. She walked over to sink, filled a kettle and put it on the stove to boil.

The other three stared at one another in shock. Anger flashed in the middle-aged woman’s eyes. “Those bastards! What do they want from us now?”

“Take it easy, Maddie,” soothed the blond man. “We don’t know for sure it was them.”

The woman called Maddie snapped back at him, “Then who else?” She ground out her cigarette and immediately lit a new one. “What the hell was she working on? Didn’t she tell you anything about it, Griffin?” Her sharp eyes focused on the Brit.

“No, nothing,” the young man whispered with regret. He rubbed his forehead distractedly. “Maybe if she had I could have helped her, or better yet, persuaded her to stop.”

The elderly woman shuffled toward the cupboard over the sink. “There’s still the matter of her sister,” she observed quietly. “Poor child, as if she hasn’t lost enough already. This is too cruel.”

“Does she know anything?” The blond man at the far end of the table sat forward in his chair.

The woman at the sink turned around to glance at him mildly. “Do you think you could find that out for us, Erik?”

Erik sat up at straighter, alert now. “What exactly do you have in mind, Faye?”

The kettle rumbled to a boil. The old woman rummaged around in the cupboard for cups and saucers. “I think you should follow her at a discrete distance. Keep out of sight but let us know immediately if anything unusual occurs.”

She went over to the stove to switch off the heat. “Griffin, it might prove useful to know what Sybil’s latest recovery was.”

“Yes, of course,” he agreed readily. “Anything I can do to help.”

Faye was now spooning loose tea into a porcelain pot.  She paused to consider. “What could they possibly want of ours? What, to them, would be worth killing for?”

 

Chapter 3 – Prayer Meeting

 

In the silent hour just before dawn, Abraham Metcalf was standing in his study, scrutinizing the spine of a volume of sermons on his bookshelf. Actually, his study was more the size of a public library and his home more the size of a medieval castle. It had to be. He was the head of a very large extended family. Despite the barest glimmer of light in the east, Metcalf was expecting a visitor. Fully dressed in a black suit, he cut an impressive figure. A mane of white hair swept back from his forehead, trimmed just long enough to reach the top of his collar. A white moustache and beard shaped into a precise goatee. Despite his seventy years, he possessed a muscular build and ramrod straight posture. His eyes were a frosty shade of blue. They bore a fierce expression under bristling white eyebrows suggesting very little escaped his notice or gained his approval.

A young man sporting a crew cut tapped lightly on the door. “A visitor to see you, Father.”

“Send him in.”

A man wearing a Stetson hat advanced into the study. Metcalf turned to face him. “Hats off indoors, Mr. Hunt,” he instructed curtly.

His visitor smiled lazily and doffed his hat. “Now that’s right kindly of you to remind me, sir. My momma, God rest her, would pitch a fit if she saw me forget my manners like that.”

Metcalf sat down behind his massive oak desk. He did not invite his visitor to be seated. He studied Hunt in silence for several seconds. The younger man did not flinch under his gaze but stood grinning, his stance relaxed.

“I don’t see the key in your hands, Mr. Hunt.” Metcalf observed.

“No need to stand on proper names now, is there? How about you call me Leroy and I’ll call you Abe?”

“You may call me Father Abraham if you wish,” Metcalf offered stiffly.

“Sorry, sir, but you ain’t my daddy. Don’t rightly know who he was, come to think on it.”

Metcalf’s face remained impassive. “I don’t see the key, Mr. Hunt.”

Leroy Hunt shrugged off the implied rebuke. “Well, sir, it was like this. I encountered a bit of trouble in obtainin’ said object.”

Metcalf had picked up a letter opener and was examining it intently. “Define trouble,” he commanded.

Hunt selected one of the chairs in front of Metcalf’s desk and sat down. “That gal you set me to followin’ had herself an unfortunate accident. We got into a tussle and she fell and bumped her head and well, sir, she’s dead.”

“Dead!” Metcalf echoed in disbelief.

“That’s right, sir. Not to rise again til Judgment Day.”

“Dead,” Metcalf repeated somewhat less emphatically.

“Yup, dead,” Leroy concurred, smoothing the wave in his hair.

The older man considered the problem in silence for several moments before he spoke again. “You did manage to search the shop at least?”

“That I did, sir. I spent about a half hour diggin’ around before somebody called the cops. I had to high tail it when I heard them sirens but I was through lookin’ anyhow. That key you set such store by, well sir, it wasn’t to be found.”

Metcalf stood up and towered over Hunt. “I’m most disappointed in your report, Mr. Hunt.”

Leroy chuckled. “I guess, if I was you and I wanted that key so bad, I’d be a bit down in the mouth too, sir.”

“I hardly think this occasion calls for levity, Mr. Hunt.” Metcalf’s eyebrows bristled in disapproval.

Hunt looked up at him appraisingly. “I don’t expect there’s much in your life, sir, that you’d think would be a fit occasion for levity.” Before Metcalf could supply a retort, he continued. “Now don’t you go worryin’ yerself to pieces over this. I still ain’t done. Gal’s got a sister, don’t she? How bout I follow her around for a bit. Maybe see what’s what?”

Metcalf relaxed his scowl by a hairsbreadth. “Yes, that would seem to be the proper course of action to take at this juncture.”

Leroy stood up and gave a mock salute. “You got it, chief.” He retrieved his hat and turned toward the door.

“Before you go, Mr. Hunt…”

“Sir?”

“Let us say a prayer together.”

A flicker of anger crossed Leroy’s face. “Like I said, I ain’t one of yours.”

Metcalf was already on his knees behind his desk, hands folded. “Yes, I know. That’s why I’ve entrusted you with a matter like this.  A matter that requires divine assistance to complete. You will pray with me now.”

Wordlessly, Hunt returned to the opposite side of the desk, knelt, folded his hands, and screwed his eyes shut as if in anticipation of a bad tasting medicine.

Metcalf addressed his remarks to the chandelier overhead. “Oh Lord, guide this man’s hand that it may do your bidding. Let him smite down those who oppose your will. Let the wicked be put to shame that the Blessed Nephilim may inherit the earth. Amen!”

 

Chapter 4 -Sisters And Other Strangers

 

Cassie was sitting cross-legged on the living room rug in her sister’s apartment. There were stacks of paper piled around her. Boxes of magazines and scattered articles of clothing littered the couch. Tears were running down her cheeks. She didn’t bother to brush them away. She had been crying for days now. Maybe it had been a week. She couldn’t remember. It started right after the phone call came. The police were at Sybil’s shop. They needed her to identify a body. But she already knew who it would be. The dream had been a 3-D Technicolor preview of the real thing.

She felt as if she was still inside her nightmare when she arrived at the antique store. The green banker’s lamp was on. Her sister lay sprawled across the floor face down exactly where Cassie had seen her fall. Only now there were photographers and police swarming like flies over her sister’s remains.

Rhonda, her sister’s business partner, was there too. White-faced and shaking, she came up to hug Cassie. The two clung to each other for several moments, too much in shock to speak.

The detective who questioned her sounded like he was standing in an echo chamber. His voice was distorted, coming at her from a distance. “What was Sybil doing in the shop alone at such a late hour? Was anything of value missing from the shop? Did she have any enemies?”

Cassie gave the same answer every time. “I don’t know.”

Even now she marveled at how little she knew about anything her sister was doing or why. “What were you involved in, Sybil?” Cassie didn’t know much about antiques but she did know that a lucrative black market trade existed. Had Sybil been doing something shady? Smuggling artifacts into the country illegally? Again she didn’t know.

The only thing she did know for certain was that a man in a Stetson hat wanted a key and her sister was dead because of him and she’d dreamed the whole thing while it was happening. But she didn’t think that was the sort of information the detective was looking for. He probably wouldn’t believe her. She didn’t believe it herself. She wasn’t given to weird, paranormal experiences. In all her life she’d never been accused of having so much as a hunch about anything. She was a rational person, more or less.

Her mind skipped forward to the present. She was sorting through a box of old bills and papers. The easy stuff. She couldn’t bring herself to sort through the clothes yet. She had tried earlier that day but it had been a mistake. She’d realized that the minute she pulled open a drawer of sweaters. There was lavender sachet inside. Her sister had always smelled like lavender. It was a comforting, familiar scent. Someone once told her that people remember the way things smell long after they’ve forgotten how they look or taste or sound. That the sense of smell is primal. Like blood, like family, like death. She shoved the drawer closed and left the bedroom in tears. She doubted she would ever smell lavender again without crying. It was safer to sort through the papers. They didn’t smell like lavender. They didn’t smell like anything at all.

She blew her nose and tossed the used tissue onto the pile that was accumulating on the floor. How many boxes had she gone through? Like the number of days she’d spent crying, she’d lost count of that too. It had all become a blur. Even the funeral. That mother of all ordeals. The service had been small and quiet because they hadn’t been living in Chicago long and there was no family. Aside from Rhonda, there was nobody who could be called a friend either. Sybil had been Cassie’s only anchor to this place and now the girl felt like a boat drifting with the current. When other people lost a sister, there was always somebody else to fill the void. Cassie doubted if anybody could understand what her particular brand of loneliness felt like. The word “orphan” didn’t begin to cover it. She broke down and started to sob.

“Enough!” she commanded herself sternly. She looked up at the ceiling to blink back the tears. For a few minutes she focused on nothing but breathing. Just breathe and don’t think. Breathe in. Breathe out. Breathe in. Breathe out.

Finally she calmed down enough to focus on the matter at hand. She reached for another box of papers. It looked like a bunch of old charge card receipts. Why Sybil had kept this junk was beyond her. She dumped the box upside down on the coffee table. As the pile of papers spewed out, something hard fell on top of them.

Cassie cocked her head sideways, examining the object. Strange looking thing. It was shaped like a ruler. About a foot long and about two inches wide, only it had five sides. Solid in the middle but five-sided. What would you call a shape like that? A polygon? She looked at the surface of the ruler lengthwise. There were strange markings inscribed in the stone. Some looked like long hash marks and some looked like pictograms. Like Egyptian hieroglyphics only they weren’t Egyptian. She’d seen enough of those in museums to recognize them. Along the sharp edge that divided the ruler into five sides, were more hash marks and loops.

Cassie made no move to pick up the stone ruler. She dismissed it as something from the shop that Sybil had decided to keep. Her sister did that all the time. She’d come across another “treasure” that she just had to have for her own. The apartment was full of things she couldn’t seem to part with. African masks on the walls. A rare Chinese vase in a niche by the door. Fragments of Greek friezes. It begged the question of where the money came from for Sybil’s expensive private collection. Cassie frowned and regarded the stone ruler again for a few moments. Maybe she’d ask Rhonda about it when she saw her next.

Her eyes swept the room. The papers and the clothes and the antiques and the artwork. So much more stuff to get through. Suddenly she felt very tired and a bit overwhelmed. Nobody else to do it but her. She sighed.

Without bothering to clean up the tissues on the carpet, she got up, grabbed her purse and left the apartment. She wanted to head back to her dorm room for a long, long nap. She could come back tomorrow. Everything would still be waiting for her. More memories to pop out of a drawer or jump off a shelf to remind her that she was alone in the world. It would keep. She’d cried enough for this day.

 

Chapter 5 – Corvette And Model-T

 

A dozen hours after Cassie fell into a restless doze, dawn broke over a suburb on the far outskirts of the metro area. It was a hamlet that had once been rural and still retained a few of its American gothic homesteads. Daylight crept toward the oldest of these original structures–a two-story farmhouse standing on an acre of green land. It was surrounded by one hundred and twenty acres of tract housing but had so far managed to resist being engulfed by the neighborhood. A high wooden fence surrounded the backyard which encompassed both a flower and a vegetable garden. The front lawn was wide and deep enough to accommodate massive shade trees that had been old long before the first cornfield was plowed.

Light advanced across the lawn to the house itself which was concrete stucco painted a shade of cornflower blue. A cupola in the middle of the roof had attracted a flock of burbling pigeons who hoped to warm themselves in the early sun’s rays. When an elderly woman emerged onto the Victorian gingerbread porch, the pigeons flapped off. Broom in hand, she immediately set about sweeping the front steps. An apple tree growing close to her porch was shedding its blossoms. It appeared as if her stairs were covered in bits of pinkish white confetti. She swept briskly, if absentmindedly. It was clear that she was lost in thought. She didn’t register that someone was coming up her front walk until he stood directly in front of her.

“Faye?” the young man asked tentatively.

“Oh, Erik, you gave me a start.” Her hand flew involuntarily to her heart. Then she smiled and motioned him towards the house. “Please do come in.”

He preceded her through the door.

“Why don’t we sit in here.” She directed him to the front parlor. In anyone else’s house it would have been called the living room but Faye was different. She radiated a sense of having skipped back in time. She was wearing a cotton housedress — the kind that was spattered with giant flowers in garish colors. It was topped with a green cardigan whose front pocket sagged from the weight of an oversized handkerchief. Her white hair was molded into a smooth bun at the back of her head. She might have been in her eighties or she might have been one hundred and ten. It was hard to tell. Faye had always been ancient. But her eyes were very bright, cornflower blue like her house, and they missed nothing.

The young man who visited her couldn’t have provided a starker contrast. If people were automobiles, he would have been a Corvette to Faye’s Model-T. He had a lean, muscular frame. Not extremely tall but not short either. His dark blonde hair was shaggy and perpetually in need of a barber. Maybe it was an image that Erik wanted to project. He was so good-looking that he didn’t have to worry about how his hair was cut. In his mid-twenties with elvish green eyes and a cleft in his chin, he was the stuff of which movie idols are made. Whether he was consciously vain was open to question. He liked to pretend he didn’t notice how women reacted to him. He believed he had a mission in life.

Erik removed his suede jacket and tossed it on the couch. His car keys landed on top of the coat.

Faye gestured for him to sit down. “Can I get you a cup of tea, dear?”

She was about to shuffle off to the kitchen but her guest stopped her. “No thanks, Faye, I’m fine.”

The elderly woman settled herself into a plum armchair opposite him. It had a doily perched on the headrest. The kind that was once known as an antimacassar. The chair itself might have dated from the time when men still used Macassar oil to dress their hair and the doily kept them from soiling the furniture. Faye probably expected that patent leather hair would come back into vogue someday and was prepared for it.

“Well then, what can you tell me?”

Erik shrugged. “Not much. She lives in a dorm at school. Keeps to herself a lot. I’ve been following her around ever since…” He trailed off.

Faye sighed. “Yes, we all miss Sybil, dear. It was a terrible shock. A terrible loss.”

Erik continued. “Anyway, ever since it happened, I’ve been following her. Went to the funeral but I kept out of sight. I didn’t see anybody odd. She went to Sybil’s apartment yesterday. I guess she was sorting through stuff. I stayed out in the hall for awhile listening.” He cleared his throat uncomfortably. “I heard a lot of crying.”

“Poor child,” Faye said quietly. She smoothed the folds of her housedress. “Poor lost child.”

Erik hunched forward on the couch. “Do you think she knows anything about Sybil’s recovery? About us?”

Faye shook her head. “No, Sybil was most emphatic. She told me that she didn’t want her sister involved. She wanted to keep her safe. She believed the less Cassie knew, the better.”

Erik looked skeptical. “I don’t see how keeping somebody in the dark is going to keep them safe. They’re more likely to do something stupid when they don’t know what they’re up against.”

The young man stood up and began to pace. “It just seems wrong. Somebody ought to tell her.”

Faye fixed her gaze on her visitor. Her expression was mild, almost curious. “Exactly how could we explain ourselves in a way that she would understand?”

Erik ran his fingers through his hair. “I don’t know. We probably can’t. But this whole thing is making me edgy. I don’t like it. Just hanging around and listening to a girl cry.” He threw himself back down on the couch, exasperated. “Can I quit yet?”

“I’d like you to keep watching her for awhile longer.”

Erik picked up his car keys and jingled them distractedly between his fingers. “What exactly do you expect will happen?”

“I expect that sooner or later the person who killed Sybil will reveal himself.”

“He probably found what he wanted in the shop. He’s probably long gone by now.”

Faye stood and walked over to the picture window. She watched the morning breeze shake loose another batch of blossoms. “And if he didn’t obtain what he was looking for, how long do you think it will take him to find Cassie?”

Erik stopped jingling the keys. He looked down at his hands. “I guess I wouldn’t want that on my conscience.”

“Nor would I, dear.” Faye turned toward Erik. “Let’s watch her a little while longer just to be sure.”

 

Chapter 6 – Compound Interest

 

Despite her best intentions, it was after sunset the following evening before Cassie found her way back to Sybil’s apartment. Time to put all this in the past, she told herself decisively as she got out of her car and crossed the street toward the Gold Coast high-rise. Yeah right. She was so eager to put things behind her that she’d procrastinated until nightfall to avoid confronting the residue of her sister’s life again. And she didn’t even have the excuse of going to classes anymore. School was on hold indefinitely. There was still the tricky matter of deciding where to live. She would probably move out of the dorm and into Sybil’s place. Right now that thought made her shudder. Not quite ready to deal with that idea yet.

She got off the elevator on the fourth floor and headed toward Sybil’s flat at the end of the hall. Her eyes were immediately drawn to the bottom of the door. There was light coming from inside. Had she forgotten to switch off the power the day before? Who knew? She shrugged and sorted through the keys on her ring. When she turned the lock, she thought she heard a click coming from inside. Cassie swung the door open wide. She stood on the threshold listening for a moment. The place was dark, completely still.

She walked across the room toward an end table to turn on the lamp. Something or someone slammed into her, shoving her sideways. She hit the wall, the breath knocked out of her lungs. Scrambling to her feet, she caught a glimpse of a man fleeing through the open door. Cassie gasped. He was wearing a Stetson hat and in his hand was an object she remembered seeing the day before.

He was down the hall, through the fire exit door and halfway to the ground floor before she could move.

“Hey, hey you! Stop!” She started to run toward the lighted hallway when she collided with another man. He shoved her back into the apartment. She didn’t think she recognized this one but the place was still dark so she couldn’t be sure.

“What happened?” he demanded.

“Who are you?” she countered. “Where did you come from? What are you doing here?”

“No time for that now!” His voice was urgent. “What happened?”

“A..a man. He must have broken in. He…he was wearing a cowboy hat,” she stammered.

The stranger grabbed her by the arms and shook her to get her attention. “Now listen! This is important! Did he take anything?”

Cassie was having a hard time thinking clearly. She could hear the blood pounding in her ears. “Yeah, I think…”

“What?” the man shook her again. “What was it?”

“It was a stone ruler. Five-sided. About a foot long with weird markings all over it.” She twisted away from his grasp. “That’s all I could see. Now who… ” Before she could get the rest of the question out, the man vanished.

She heard him shout back at her from down the hallway, “Call the police!” Then she heard the fire exit door slam and heard feet clattering down the emergency stairs.

Cassie was shaking. Delayed shock. She collapsed on the couch and switched on the table lamp. She looked around at the contents of the room. Trying to get her eyes to focus. To get her brain back to the present. Everything was just as she’d left it the day before. Except for one thing. The stone ruler was gone. Stolen by the man from her nightmare.

She got up weakly and crossed the room to a bombé chest that held a telephone. When she picked up the receiver to dial 911, she noticed an envelope underneath the base of the phone. It had been hand-addressed. All she could see was the initial letter “C”. Putting the receiver down, she slid the packet out from its hiding place. In Sybil’s script, the letters “C-A-S-S-I-E” were scrawled across the front. Her hands were trembling as she ripped the envelope open.

***

Erik could hear footsteps ahead of him at the bottom of the stairwell. He waited until the man had gotten to the ground floor before he moved forward. He didn’t want Cowboy to know he was being followed.

Once the exit door slammed shut, he raced forward. Outside he saw Cowboy climbing into a red pickup parked across the street from the highrise. It tore away from the curb, heading north. Erik noted the license plate number. Shouldn’t be too hard to follow. He jumped into his car and tailed the thief, careful to keep several vehicles between them. With all the early evening traffic on the roads he didn’t think he’d been spotted. Cowboy got on the northbound expressway. He drove past the looming shadows of downtown highrises, past the suburban bedroom communities, past the overcrowded shopping malls, past the point where any expressway lights remained to illuminate the road. It was almost an hour before the pickup took a westbound exit that led to nothing but farm land. Erik knew it would be harder to keep from being noticed out in the middle of nowhere. He got behind a semi-trailer that was going in the same direction. Cowboy drove on for another half hour through pitch black countryside then turned right onto a side road marked with a yellow Dead End sign. Erik couldn’t follow him in there. It would be too obvious.

He pulled his car off to the shoulder and got out, hoping he wouldn’t find one of those “Do Not Park Here” stickers plastered on his windshield when he got back. He started walking. Fortunately, lights appeared in the distance almost immediately. The road turned out to be a very, very long driveway. The building at the end of it couldn’t be more than a quarter mile away. Erik kept to the shoulder, in the shadows.

The road ended in front of a pair of iron gates about ten feet high. Each of the gates was decorated with a capital letter P with an X through the middle of it. Erik didn’t know anyone with that monogram. He noticed the guard shack with security cameras mounted on either side of the gates and quickly ducked farther into the shadows. A ten foot chain link fence topped with razor wire surrounded the property. Company was clearly not welcome in this place.

He couldn’t be sure how long the fence was but he could guess it stretched around several acres. Beyond the gate at the far end of the gravel drive, Erik could see Cowboy’s car. Somebody had been expecting his visit.

Erik headed for the trees that bordered the fence to the east where more of the layout was visible. He focused his attention on the house, if you could call it that. The building was as big as a castle, or maybe “fortress” would be a better word. It looked as if it could withstand a siege. The design was squat and square with a flat roof, like a massive cinderblock. Towers flanked the building on either end. Erik guessed there might be two on the back end as well. The building was studded with tall narrow windows recessed deep into the walls. Light glowed through drawn curtains making it impossible to tell how many people were inside. Floodlights bleached the limestone façade to a blinding whiteness.

Aside from the main building, Erik counted at least eight other structures around the perimeter–smaller replicas of the main house. Then he noticed an odd assortment of sheds, garages and trailers that must have been used for storage. A compound. He smiled to himself. It had to be them. Nobody else would live like this. Now he knew for certain who had hired Cowboy to steal Sybil’s find. The only thing he still couldn’t figure out was why.


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