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Price Reduction! GRIDLOCK: The Third Ryan Lock Novel by Sean Black is Now Just $2.99 During It’s Reign as KND Brand New Thriller of The Week Regularly ($4.99) *Plus Hundreds of FREE Thriller Titles

How many Kindle thrillers do you read in the course of a month? It could get expensive were it not for magical search tools like these:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are brought to you by our brand new Thriller of the Week, Sean Black’s Gridlock: A Ryan Lock Novel. Please check it out!

4.1 stars – 20 Reviews
(Price Reduced! Regularly $4.99)
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

From the British publisher of Lee Child and Tess Gerritsen comes the third spell-binding thriller from rising star of crime fiction, Sean Black

THE CITY OF ANGELS HAS A STALKER

Adult movie actress Raven Lane is one of the most lusted after women in America, with millions of fans to prove it. But when a headless corpse turns up in the trunk of her car, she realizes that fame carries a terrible price.
Fearing for her life, and with the LAPD seemingly unable to protect her, Raven turns to elite bodyguard Ryan Lock for help.
Lock stops bad things happening to good people, but can he stop the tidal wave of violence now threatening Los Angeles as Raven’s stalker targets – and kills – those closest to her?
As events spiral out of control, Lock is drawn into a dangerous world where money rules, sex is a commodity to be bought and sold, and no one can be trusted, least of all his beautiful new client…

Reviews

‘Leaner and meaner with every book. Gridlock is as cool and sharp as a knife’ – Meg Gardiner, New York Times Bestselling Author of The Nightmare Thief

‘This series is ace. There are deservedly strong Lee Child comparisons as the author is a Brit (Scottish), his novels US-based, his character appealing, and his publisher the same. This is his third’ – Sarah Broadhurst, The Bookseller

‘Black’s star just keeps on rising’ – Evening Telegraph

‘Sean Black writes with the pace of Lee Child and the heart of Harlan Coben’ – Joseph Finder, New York Times Bestselling Author of Paranoia

‘This is a writer, and a hero, to watch’ – The Daily Mail

About The Author

Described by crime fiction legend Ken Bruen as ‘the future of thriller writing,’ Sean Black is known for writing lightning-fast, high-concept conspiracy thrillers, which often tackle controversial subjects (animal rights, pornography, the drug war on the American-Mexican border).A writer who isn’t afraid of getting his hands dirty, to research his debut novel, Lockdown, he underwent a month-long close protection training course in the UK and Eastern Europe. The book went on to sell at auction to Transworld, the publisher of Dan Brown, Lee Child and Tess Gerritsen, for over half a million dollars and went on to debut on the official Nielsen/Bookscan bestseller list in its first week on sale. As part of his research for the second book in the series, Deadlock, he spent time inside Pelican Bay Supermax prison in California (see the television interview on his Amazon author page). The third book in the series featuring ex-military bodyguard, Ryan Lock, and his colleague, retired Marine Ty Johnson, Gridlock, will be released in paperback on July 5th.An Ivy League and Oxford University graduate, he has just finished work on the fourth book in the series, The Devil’s Bounty. The Devil’s Bounty will be available in hardback and as an e-book in August, 2012.
(This is a sponsored post.)

Enjoy This Free Excerpt From KND Thriller of The Week: Dark Mind (Emily Stone Series) by Jennifer Chase – Over 30 Rave Reviews

On Friday we announced that Dark Mind (Emily Stone Series) by Jennifer Chase is our Thriller of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the thriller, mystery, and suspense categories: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

Dark Mind (Emily Stone Series)

by Jennifer Chase

4.4 stars – 35 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

A Serial Killer Plagues an Island Paradise

Vigilante detective Emily Stone continues her covert pursuits to find serial killers and child abductors, all under the radar while shadowing police investigations.

Emily searches for an abducted nine-year-old girl taken by ruthless and enterprising slave brokers. Following the clues from California to the garden island of Kauai, she begins to piece together the evidence and ventures deep into the jungle.

It doesn’t take long before Emily is thrown into the middle of murder, mayhem, and conspiracy. Locals aren’t talking as a serial killer now stalks the island, taking women in a brutal frenzy of ancient superstitions and folklore. Local cops are unprepared for what lies ahead. In a race against the clock, Emily and her team must identify the killer before time runs out.

Reviews

“An intriguing alpha-female heroine… impressive action scenes and taut suspense.” – Kirkus Reviews

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

Tuesday 1030 Hours

 

Intensity overrode the room’s rising humidity.  The claustrophobic staleness of the tight quarters pushed the confrontation between interrogator and suspect to the extreme.

Emily Stone calmly watched her partner from her cramped vantage point.

His eyes, dark and piercing, focused on the suspect.  Sculpted biceps appeared pumped and ready for action – nerves heightened.  He showed restraint, but clearly wanted to unleash mayhem.

“Where’s the little girl?”  Rick Lopez demanded with his jaw clenched.

“I… I… don’t know who you mean.”  The man’s voice wavered and he couldn’t keep eye contact.

“You know where she is.  Give me the address.  Now!”

Rick pushed the skinny, young man backward against the wall.  Cornered.  Sweat saturated his receding hairline of straggly, sun-bleached hair as his shoulders slumped forward making him appear older.  Weakening, he would cave in and spill the truth

Time stood still for the trapped man.

He rubbed his stubby fingers tightly against one another on the bottom fabric of his loose Hawaiian shirt.  The bright yellow pineapples and colorful surfboards twisted and morphed on the garment beneath his sweaty hands.

Rick took a deep breath.  He backed up a couple of feet from the man and averted his gaze for a few seconds, hands slightly trembling; obviously he wanted to pummel the guy’s face out of pure hatred.

Time ticked away for a nine-year-old girl.

The corner of the cramped depot conveniently used for storing small sailboats, catamarans, and kayaks remained still and silent.  Cluttered with miscellaneous parts, the room waited, quiet like a strange fiberglass tomb.

A calming breeze wafted in with a comfortable, steady eighty-degree temperature.  Trade winds never disappointed in the time of need as the distinct trace of Kauai’s moisture integrated into the atmosphere, from the concentrated outside plant growth, daily rainfall, and close proximity to the Pacific Ocean.

Emily stood in the corner, shifting her weight somewhat from side to side, and continued to observe her partner’s interrogation.  She surveyed Rick closely as his frustration level accelerated.  All of his typical warning signs radiated in the room with his clenched jaw, brusque voice inflection, prominent vein in his forehead, and a stare that could stop an angry mob dead in its tracks.

She loved Rick for his skill and perseverance; but most of all, making her passion of hunting down serial killers, child abductors and pedophiles his own.

She loved him.

She knew Rick felt at a disadvantage without his trusted Glock pressed firmly in his right hand.

The exhausting clues for three days led them to Kauai from the San Francisco area; the island provided a stopping point for child slavery brokers.  They were able to determine that this man provided transportation and they weren’t leaving until he gave them all of the information he knew.  They hoped that they weren’t too late and that the little girl wasn’t already on her way to another country, only to disappear into the mass culture of black market slavery.

Emily’s fists clenched as her knuckles protruded an ashen white.  Occasionally, her hands brushed by her side out of habit.  Absent of her own Beretta, she couldn’t get used to being unarmed and vulnerable on the island paradise.  Her petite body braced.  She waited for the right moment to move into the conflict, as her unwavering eyes never averted from the weakening man.

The young man began to weep.  “Look, I don’t know…” He slowly sank to the floor with his head in his hands.

Forcefully, Emily stepped forward with purpose and thrust a photograph into the suspect’s face.  “Where is she?”  In the picture, a beautiful little girl with long brown hair and wispy bangs smiled sweetly at the camera.  The photo represented a much happier time taken during a family picnic at the Golden Gate Park in San Francisco.

The man couldn’t bear to look at her, but finally focused his gaze on the innocent, shining face.

The man knew.  Eventually he would break.

Emily slapped his face with the photo and insisted, “Where is she!”  The picture with dog-eared corners and moisture damage from the humidity shook slightly in her hand as she waited for an answer.

 

* * * *

 

Darkness.

The sickly sweet, rotted tropical fruit and moldy earth filled her nose and burned her eyes.  Tears welled up and spilled over, falling down her tender cheeks.  She clenched her fists against the dank soil underneath her.  Tightening and releasing her tiny hands and slim fingers, she held her breath.  Each compressed grip helped to stable her heightened fear and kept her from screaming, but it didn’t stop an escaped whimper or two.  She didn’t want to alert the bad men.

Cassie Thompson listened for them, frightened of what they were capable of doing to her.  Knees pulled up in front of her weak body, she pressed her spine up against the weather beaten foundation of the basement.  The cool, mustiness of the structure chilled her bones even though she was hot to the touch.  Her teeth chattered slightly.  The sound of her stomach grumbled from the lack of food for the past several days.  Her lips were dry from thirst.  She managed to find a piece of a mango that wasn’t rotten, but that was hours ago.

Her time neared. 

Cassie listened, poised, not ready to accept the terrible things in the mind of her captors.  The floors creaked and groaned above her, one set of beams moved with a heavy footing.

When they had removed her blindfold and tight plastic restraints after the long plane ride, the stocky, dark haired man with black, smeared tattoos on his neck, face, and arms tried to touch her in a groping manner.  His long ponytail mesmerized her and she thought about how she wanted to grow her own hair longer, but her mom had said no.

The other man, tall, clean cut with a slight British accent looked like someone’s dad, stopped the burly man and stated he shouldn’t touch the girl.  He stressed the importance of untainted merchandise and receiving top American dollars.

The weakening floorboards stopped momentarily just above her head.  Muffled voices engaged in casual conversation with idle laughter and raised voice inflections every other sentence.  Wooden chair legs scraped across the floor, stopped, and then followed with a heavy affirming creak.  Lighter, quicker footsteps moved away and faintly disappeared to another part of the house, perhaps out the front door.

Silence.

Desperation filled Cassie again.  She crawled cautiously on her hands and knees to the one area of the basement that revealed a crack of light filtering through.  Dust particles swirled around like delicate confetti through the spotlight of freedom, which drew the little girl closer to its precipice.  She stopped for a moment to listen for any incoming danger.

Nothing.

Wiping her tear stained face with grains of putrefied earth, she willed herself to continue.  She softly told herself that she could do it.  Remembering a story about a young girl, about her age that survived under the rubble of a building after an earthquake.  Cassie could survive this horrible situation too.

Letting out a breath stifled from a whimper, she inched toward the light as the crawlspace narrowed above her head.  The native island soil pushed between her little fingers and packed down firmer into the earth, it felt warmer to the touch than from the other side, and the distinct odor increased in intensity to more of old garbage and feces.

A few small gnats and flies buzzed about their business, swooping around her head.

Cassie leaned toward the tiny crack, focused her eyes and prayed it was a way out.  At first she couldn’t see anything but a brown color and a blinding light.  Realizing that it was a palm tree trunk, she moved her gaze farther to the left and surveyed the yard and saw miscellaneous junk, tires, and an old car mixed between the overgrown jungle foliage.

Humid heat and daily rainfall deteriorated and molded anything in its wake.  It appeared to be the back yard of a home, long forgotten and neglected.

Her heart sank.

Who would ever find me now?

Her right hand touched something smooth and cool poking up from the dirt basement.  Looking down, she gasped in horror as she followed the outline of a small skull, smooth, whitish, and right beneath her vantage point.

Thoughts of horror flashed through her mind.  Vivid, gruesome thoughts that no nine year old should ever have to realize or contemplate.  Cassie’s breathing quickened and she fought to keep from fainting.  Faint light specs floated around her vision like tiny, blinking stars.

The soft whirring of a motor broke her defeated attitude.  Her vision cleared.  The sound was faint and then the engine stopped altogether, but Cassie knew she had heard a car approaching up through the back way of the property.

Someone drew near.

Help.

She willed herself to peek out through the prisoner’s spy gap again.

Please help me.

* * * *

 

Rick turned off the car ignition.  The convertible Jeep engine pinged, ticked, and then quietly settled down among the overgrown island plants.  The lookout point, obscured by the neglected junkyard used as a dumping ground, hid the house.  A disgusting display of the lack of environmental awareness in such a beautiful, untainted part of the Hawaiian Islands greeted their covert approach.

Emily and Rick assessed their opportunities and weighed their options in an unfamiliar setting in silence, scanning the entry and exit points, backup alternatives, ambush areas, potential weapons that would be useable, and odds of being spotted and identified by law enforcement or nearby nosey neighbors.

Emily broke the tense silence and asked, “What do you think?”

“I’m beginning to think that we were lied to.”  He pushed back against the seat with his hands still on the steering wheel.  “Bastard.”

“You sure that the GPS is correct?”

Looking down at his cell phone, “Yes, when we actually get a signal out here.”  The bars on the cell phone flickered on and off in a hypnotizing, frustrating display.  He tossed the phone on the dashboard, the bright screen flashed one more time and then vanished.

Without wasting another moment, Emily pulled the release of the Jeep door and stepped halfway out of the vehicle before Rick touched her arm.  She turned to see his face.  A look she knew well – be careful.

Rick had met Emily during a case in California, while investigating a series of homicides; more accurately two serial killers terrorized their beach town.  His path had crossed hers and he had chosen to retire his position as a police detective to hunt down these predatory animals that stalk children in order to kill by impulse and compulsive need.   All of this accomplished behind the scene, covertly and under the radar, pushed the couple to act.

Emily smiled as she looked directly into Rick’s eyes.  “I know the drill.”   She paused and spoke softly.  “Let’s bring Cassie Thompson home… safe.”

Rick nodded.  He grabbed his small, zippered pack filled with a few techno gadgets along with the cell phone and hooked it around his waist.  A miniscule earpiece with a thin wire microphone clipped to his right ear and extended down half his cheek became a standard operating piece of equipment.  He scanned the immediate area before he shut the driver’s door.

They were close.  The heaviness of the air shifted.

Emily pressed the car door gently shut after she firmly placed the earpiece around her ear.  They relied on their high-tech walkie-talkies to communicate.  The oversized leaves from what resembled a common household plant flapped in the island breeze on both sides of the Jeep, tapping the sides of the quarter panels in a primitive drumming manner.

Emily tapped her jean’s front right pocket to make sure that her emergency zip ties and cell phone hadn’t fallen out.  Still annoyed that she didn’t have her trusted Glock or even her small Beretta, she would have to improvise if it came to a sticky situation.

The humidity turned up the wet, sticky button of Mother Nature.  She paused – statute-like.  A peculiar gut feeling tightened in her lower stomach and overrode her senses making each breath laborious.   The faint, almost lulling sounds of the overgrown foliage seemed to stop on cue and take notice of something unnatural or even more chilling.  She always felt in tune with nature and paid close attention to the subtle cues.

Emily turned and made intense eye contact with Rick for a few seconds, acknowledged silently what they were about to do, then quietly they both moved in opposite directions, stealthily, closer to the house and into the unknown.

Wishing she had a machete to hack a direct pathway to the shack, Emily pushed the monster vines from her vision, craning her neck awkwardly to avoid a gigantic leaf ready to slap her across the face.

Rain droplets popped like sparkling jewels on many of the plants in the shaded areas.  More showers threatened at any moment to wash away the remnants of the previous morning’s downpour.

Emily looked behind her, listening to the steady breathing of Rick through the headset as he hiked up behind the property.  Neither of them were used to the high humidity of the islands.

“Everything okay?”  She whispered.

Pause.

“10-4.”  Rick’s husky low tone assured her.

She couldn’t see him, but knew that he was working the perimeter of the property to gain a better vantage of the situation at a higher elevation.  Her job mandated that she make a brief visual of the house and anything that looked suspicious or a possible place where the kidnappers would keep a child hostage.  Whatever they found, they would report it immediately and anonymously to the local police.

That was the plan anyway.

The pungent smell of mold and deteriorating rubber masked the natural aroma of the outdoors.  Numerous mismatched tires stacked in several piles, some taller than Emily, obscured her view.  The ground sunk uneven in several places, Emily wished she had worn her hiking boots instead of her running shoes.  Her feet felt wet and uncomfortable, undermining her steady balance.

She listened as she approached the house.  It really wasn’t a house, but more of a makeshift cabin in the jungle.  Emily moved in closer to get a better look at the structure.  She slid along the back exterior wall where peeling beige paint chipped and shredded in moist, curled chunks.

A faint scraping noise stopped Emily dead in her tracks.  At first, she thought it was something in the big palm trees around her, a bird maybe, but she concentrated on the location of the noise.  Looking down toward the ground, she squinted her eyes.  Along the area where the house was built up on a high foundation to prevent water damage from the heavy rains and floods, she saw tiny movement.

Emily thought her eyes were deceiving her, but then she saw it again.  A tiny finger poked through the hole of the loose board followed by a terrified whisper.  “Help me.”   The finger disappeared.  

Instantly, Emily dropped to her knees and peered into the crack leading to the dirt basement.  “Cassie?”

A tired little voice replied.  “Yes.”

Emily looked around to make sure they were alone.  She leaned forward and said softly, “I’m here to help you.  Stay put.  Help is here honey.  Just wait quietly, okay?”  She ran her fingers around the loose board and wiggled the planks.  The wood was old, but still stubborn under her strength.  She would need some type of tool to wedge them loose.

Pleasehurry.” The little voice said.

Rick’s urgent voice crackled in Emily’s ear.  “What’s happening?”

“I found her… back of the cottage in the basement.”

“Stay put, I’ll call in for backup.”  A click ended the communication.

Emotion overwhelmed Emily.  “Okay”, she managed to say.  She knew that Rick would get the police and then he’d be at her side almost immediately.  Together they would pry the wood loose and whisk Cassie to safety.

The boards were brittle as Emily leaned in and applied a little more muscle.  The wood and nails creaked, squeaked a high pitch sound, and then moved slightly.  The humidity took hold of Emily as she worked harder to free the little girl as a light mist floated down and attached itself to anything that wasn’t already wet.

Pain radiated through Emily’s body, shot down her arms and ricocheted up through her neck.  Her breath caught in her lungs and she tried to overcome the heavy, humid air.

A muzzle of a shotgun pressed hard against Emily’s back.

She froze.

A man’s voice ordered.  “Get up.”

 

CHAPTER TWO

Tuesday 1145 Hours

 

Tall stacks of administration of justice textbooks covered the small desktop.  The phone sat on the far left corner with one line lit up, blinking red.  Pencils and pink message stubs divided into three piles of importance neatly arranged on the right side of the desk.

File folders topped the stacks to keep wandering eyes from viewing the actual book titles.  Everything anyone wanted or needed to know about crime scene investigation, including evidence collecting and processing, proper investigative photographs, witness statements, and first responder responsibilities encased the volumes.  Various neon sticky notes protruded from the tops and sides of the books marking important points to remember.

The rotation of the two ceiling fans kept a constant beat.

Four metal desks shared with detectives and patrol officers with equally uncomfortable chairs rounded out the small room housing the Kauai police department substation – unoccupied at the moment.

A small adjoining room proved just big enough for one administrative dispatcher who doubled as the records clerk.  Nothing fancy, but basic amenities sufficed for the small law enforcement work force on the garden isle.

Sergeant Lani Candena flipped open his laptop computer, eyes serious and focused, smile forgotten as he cracked his knuckles one by one, and he waited for the operating system to boot up.  The recognizable jingle welcomed him as the desktop icons popped into view.  He sat for a moment looking at the folder that read: Working Investigations.

It remained empty.

He imagined the unobtrusive file folder full of working investigations, crime scene photos, statements, and persons of interest, but only in his mind.

Kauai had three homicide cases over the past ten years, but the perpetrators hadn’t received swift justice.  The murderous trail had turned ice cold almost immediately – they were officially cold cases.

Lani clicked on his email – nothing interesting.  The spam software apparently hadn’t been doing its job.  He couldn’t get his mind on work; it was preoccupied with his application sitting in human resources at the Los Angeles Police Department.

Growing up in and around Honolulu made Lani even antsier to get to the mainland.  Island fever raged inside him.  He never fit in with the locals or even the small town police department being a half-breed, dad a native islander and mom from a small farm in Iowa.

There were cutting and hurtful names he had endured growing up, but none of them tainted his dream to become a cop.  He spent the first eight years at Honolulu PD, but jumped at the chance to move to Kauai to catch drug dealers, solve a homicide or find a missing tourist.  It plagued him daily as big dreams, but with little reality.

Lani’s thoughts of becoming a big city detective were interrupted as Faye bustled through the doorway of her small workspace.  Her floral dress shifted on her robust body as she approached the sergeant’s desk.  “Lani, here’s a message for ya.  Seems some tourists have seen too many movies.”

Lani ignored the pink message note as it floated onto one of his textbooks.  “Explain Faye.”  He replied patiently.

Rolling her eyes dramatically, waving her arms as rolls of fat jiggled in progression, Faye finally spat out, “Some tourist called in to say that a kidnapped girl from the mainland was seen at a property over in the northeast area.”

Lani raised his eyebrows slightly, but showed no other emotion.

The jolly woman continued, “No one else is available to check it out because of those college kids up at Princeville causing a fuss.”  She giggled at Lani’s subtle reaction, but she knew his moods well.  “Looks like you’re it.  Directions are on the message.”  Faye returned to her desk, picked up the phone, and said in a sweet voice, “Kauai PD how may I direct your call?”

Lani picked up the message, quickly read it, and realized the cottage was near the Blackman’s property.  It instantly piqued his interest.  He knew that they were growing marijuana, but couldn’t catch a break for probable cause.

Maybe now he could?

The large clock on the wall read noon as the second hand slowly clicked away the time.

Food first and then check out the cottage?

Lani thought more about it… He had a large breakfast and lunch could wait.

He opened the bottom drawer of his desk and retrieved his service pistol, a Glock 19, and returned it to his holster on his side.   It was the only time he actually felt like a sworn police officer – armed, ready to protect and serve.  After shutting the drawer, he adjusted his gun belt against his dark blue uniform, grabbed the message slip, and left the office.

Faye gave him an absent, theatrical wave as his extremely tall, muscular frame disappeared out to the parking lot.

 

CHAPTER THREE

Tuesday 1205 Hours

            “Who are you?”  The man demanded with a slight British accent as he thrust the rifle harder into Emily’s back.  “I said… who are you?”

Slowly Emily stood up straight, keeping her hands held high and in view, and assessed the situation.  She turned to face her accuser.  He stood tall, not quite six feet, blonde hair clipped meticulously, no facial hair or tattoos, and with the steely blue, dead eyes not likely to forget.  He didn’t resemble most child abductors or predators, thought Emily.  That observation unsettled her.

“I’m lost.  I was out hiking and got completely turned around.”  Emily tried to muster some tears with her sweet tone, even though she wanted to shove the rifle butt into his face dropping him to his knees.

The man didn’t blink.  “What were you doing?”  He gestured toward the bottom of the outside wall.

“What… what do you mean?”  Emily wished that her headset was still active and that Rick could hear the conversation.

He took another step toward Emily and jerked the earpiece from her head, crushed it in his fingers and tossed it on the ground.  He aimed the barrel at Emily’s face and motioned.  “Move.”

With no other choice and to bide some time, Emily walked around the cottage and up a well-used path with uneven stepping stones.

 

* * * *

 

Rick tried to use the Internet and email from his so-called “smart” cell phone to get any other emergency services to listen to his request on the island about the little girl being held hostage.  He tried the local FBI office and SWAT, but just got voice mail with the standard message.

No luck. 

Is it true that everything is slower and more laid back on the islands?  Even a kidnapping?

            He clicked the high-tech walkie-talkie back on.  “Em, we have to go in without backup.  Stay where you are.”  He waited.  “Em?”

That intuitive voice in his head kicked into high gear.  He realized that Emily didn’t have her headset and he knew something was wrong.  Now, his stomach churned through various layers of acids and knotted the abdominal muscles.

Rick took a higher path through the overgrown jungle, hiked for a couple of minutes, and doubled back to the house.  The rain began to pour, warm and inviting, a strange contrast for any kind of weather.

Two large wooden boxes sat next to the house filled with garage items, lumber and spray cans.

He knew the routine as his mind ran through all of their covert investigations and all of the close calls they had together.  The scenarios never failed him or kept his adrenaline from surging.  It was the part he hated the most – the thought of losing Emily if something were to go wrong.

Dead wrong.

He pushed through more enormous plants and found himself on far side of the property just as Emily entered the house with a man that had a shotgun sighted at her head.

 

* * * *

             

Two tattered wicker chairs sat on opposite sides of the porch in front of two sash windows.  The screens around the sitting area used to keep most pesky mosquitoes away had long since deteriorated, curled and ripped vertically from age and constant humidity.

First step, then the second onto the porch felt like a carnival fun house with sloping sides and uneven movement from the weight of two people.

The blonde man pushed Emily’s left shoulder with the barrel of the gun urging her into the house.  The rickety screen door squeaked as Emily slowly pulled it open, it slipped slightly off at a strange angle due to neglect.

Darkness greeted her with an unknown agenda.

She contemplated her next move and waited for an opening to pounce – the sooner the better.  The man didn’t expect any resistance from a woman who appeared submissive and frightened – all the classic victim behaviors that Emily was not.

The brightness outside wasn’t enough to overexpose her eyesight inside the cottage.  The interior windows covered with heavy black drapes and lack of any luminescent made for a creepy entrance.  Slasher movies with chainsaw murderers flashed through her mind.

The hair stood up on the back of Emily’s neck even before the pungent smell of old garbage, booze, and human body sweat hit her senses.  The putrid odor kept increasing as she moved deeper into the living room and made her swallow hard to keep from gagging.  She knew if she continued into the house it would be next to impossible to escape – too many unknowns not in her favor.

Elements of surprise slowed her pace.  She counted down the seconds and inventoried the thrift store furniture consisting of a broken down couch with protruding springs, two overstuffed, mismatched chairs, and a small fold out table with two straight back chairs.

Pieces of mangoes, pineapples, and empty beer bottles covered the table; the fruit had turned dark around the edges allowing flies to feast on the blackened remnants.

“Company.”  The British man announced as the screen door slammed shut behind them, the broken door still wobbled on its rusted hinges, squeaking for a few seconds.

Emily’s odds for escape now doubled with two people in the house, instead of just one man with a shotgun.

Her uncertainties now realized.

Trapped.

Small steps forward, left foot, right foot, then pivoting to the left and spinning around to face her attacker, Emily pounced on the man, pressed against him close enough to smell his sickly sweat, and shoved the shotgun upward blasting off a shot through the ceiling.  Splinters and chunks of drywall sprinkled the living room like an early snow dusting of winter in the mountains.

The room echoed from the blast.  A couple of seconds passed before the world had normal audible sounds.

Emily knew she couldn’t over power the man, but she used her quick self-defense moves to her advantage.

Momentarily stunned, the man blinked twice and before he could retaliate, Emily slammed the heel of her right hand into his face making direct contact with his nose.  Blood instantly spurted from his membranes and she felt the slippery, warm liquid on her hand spattering her face and white t-shirt.

Rage and adrenaline pumped through her body and catapulted her forward as she landed a solid right hook on his jaw.  He didn’t stand a chance and dropped to the floor.  The shotgun flew, completing one full revolution, end over end, and rested next to the sagging couch.

Fighting the urge to kick his face repeatedly for what he had done to the little girl in the basement, Emily took a set of plastic zip ties from her pocket, rolled the bleeding man on his side, and expertly looped his hands.  She pulled them tight – too tight.  She didn’t care.  He moaned, dazed by the blitz attack.

Just as Emily turned to find an entrance to the basement to find Cassie, a large, muscular man with dark tattoos that seemed to ooze around his grubby white tank top grabbed her by the neck and pushed her backwards onto the couch.  Her fall wasn’t cushioned and she could feel every sofa steel spring jab into her back.  Pain pierced her spine.  The hulk of a man pressed his body against Emily and squeezed the air from her lungs.

Paralyzed.

He groped at her sides and her jeans in a frenzy of excitement.

She couldn’t move her arms or wiggle her body loose from his enormous weight thrust against her one hundred-fifteen pound frame.  Slowly turning her head to the left, she saw the dark inked flesh of his right shoulder and sunk her teeth deep into the muscle.  The powerful human jaw cut through soft tissue and then sliced through the muscle.  He cried out in agony with an animal wail, retreating long enough for Emily to slide out from under him and hit the uneven wooden floor.  Emily crawled toward the shotgun and prayed that it had another bullet in the chamber.

Before she could reach the gun, she was tugged roughly by her hair, dragged a couple of feet backward, picked up like a rag doll, and thrown to the floor on the other side of the room.  The huge man with a long ponytail stood in front of the door blocking any means of escape for Emily.

Bleeding from his shoulder, red ooze seeped further down his shirt as he stood staring at her with a wide, terrifying smile on his face, reminiscent of the inbred family member intent on wreaking havoc on any unsuspecting visitor who happened upon their place in the woods.  It piqued some type of sick, twisted game to him.  He was oblivious to his partner lying on the floor whimpering softly and didn’t care if he were alive or dead.  His focus was on Emily as his personal sadistic plaything until he killed her.

Not clear if he was a brutal psychopath or merely a caged wild animal that acted as the muscle partner in crime, Emily knew she was out manned, out maneuvered, and out gunned.

She stood up shakily and readied herself in a standoff against her opponent.  Her options were to hope that Rick would rescue her, probably not going to happen soon enough, or hand-to-hand combat with an overdriven testosterone, dominated Neanderthal, which was highly unlikely, or plan three…

She tried to stand up straight to size up the fervent man as a sharp, searing pain exploded down the base of her neck to her lower back, like a lightening bolt, which caused her knees to quiver.  Light headed with difficulty breathing, Emily remembered her early training at the police academy, which seemed like another lifetime ago.  She kept her physical training updated even though she wasn’t a sworn police officer anymore.

She pushed off with her left foot and took three well-placed steps, covered her face leading with her elbows, and crashed through the single paned, sash window.  She tucked and rolled at the perfect time, hit the catawampus porch, bounced once, and continued down the two stairs to the soft, reddish dirt of the island.

Continuing to roll to the side, she knew that the hulking man would soon be on her tail.

As Emily caught her breath and happy to see that her arms weren’t sliced to ribbons, she saw some familiar shoes approaching fast.  She rolled onto her back to sit up just as the front door opened with a crash that ripped the screen entrance from its hinges.

A two-by-four swung through the air and made precise contact with the angry man’s chest, he dropped immediately to the ground with a dull thud that undoubtedly rattled his internal organs.

Rick stood over the large man with a satisfied look on his face, steadying himself for another blow if necessary.

The large man, face down, windless, remained knocked out cold.

Rick tossed the board aside and helped Emily up, gently touching her cheek and wiping her hair from her face.  “You okay?”  His eyes said more than his simple words.

“I’m fine.”  Emily smiled as her body screamed in agony.  “Let’s get these guys contained before the cops get here.”

Rick grumbled.  “I don’t think they’re coming.”

“What?”

“It’s different here.”

“What do you mean?”  She said slowly.

“Island police protocol.”

“They didn’t believe you?”  Emily looked surprised.

“It may be a while before the cops get here.  Let’s get the girl to safety and leave the rest for the local cops to clean up.”

Continued….

Click on the title below to download the entire book and keep reading

Dark Mind (Emily Stone Series) by Jennifer Chase>>>>

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Dark Mind (Emily Stone Series)

by Jennifer Chase

4.4 stars – 35 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

A Serial Killer Plagues an Island Paradise

Vigilante detective Emily Stone continues her covert pursuits to find serial killers and child abductors, all under the radar while shadowing police investigations.

Emily searches for an abducted nine-year-old girl taken by ruthless and enterprising slave brokers. Following the clues from California to the garden island of Kauai, she begins to piece together the evidence and ventures deep into the jungle.

It doesn’t take long before Emily is thrown into the middle of murder, mayhem, and conspiracy. Locals aren’t talking as a serial killer now stalks the island, taking women in a brutal frenzy of ancient superstitions and folklore. Local cops are unprepared for what lies ahead. In a race against the clock, Emily and her team must identify the killer before time runs out.

Reviews

“An intriguing alpha-female heroine… impressive action scenes and taut suspense.” – Kirkus Reviews

“Author Jennifer Chase takes the reader into the world of black magic, sorcery, child porn, murder and the Dark Mind of a serial killer with an ending you just won’t see coming with a final twist that let’s you know that there is much more in store for Emily and Rick. Where the next case leads them only author Jennifer Chase knows and we all hope to find out soon.” –Fran Lewis, Book Pleasures

About The Author
Jennifer Chase holds a bachelor degree in police forensics and a master s in criminology. In addition, she holds certifications in serial crime and criminal profiling. She’s a member of the International Association of Forensic Criminologists. She is a freelance writer, award winning author, and criminologist. She has an intense curiosity about crime and the varied connections between the actual crime and the criminal mind. Her academic background has helped to prepare her to write in the thriller and true crime genres.
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4.7 stars – 9 Reviews
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Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

When danger comes lurking in the night, most people run home and hide—safe behind a locked door. For others, though, running home isn’t the answer. For these unlucky ones, when the front door closes and locks at night—the horror’s not locked outside. It’s locked inside.

Isabel Delgado knows all about horror. For nearly five years, her step-father subjects her to the kind of abuse and depravation that no child should ever have to endure. But Isabel survives. Her spirit is strong and she never gives up hope. On the morning of her 16th birthday, Isabel takes a stand. She wakes early, gathers her things in a school backpack, and with a last look behind, she runs. But Isabel’s not prepared for what she finds.

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One Reviewer Notes
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And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Prologue

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

4:45 p.m.

ISABEL DELGADO WAS in
trouble. She sneaked a glance out of the corner of her eye as the
uniformed security guard approached. She was seated on an iron bench
outside the Terraces food court, pretending to be absorbed in a
directory brochure of the Alderwood Mall in Lynnwood, Washington. The
guard drew closer. Not again, Isabel thought. She fought to
remain calm. She’d already been run off earlier in the day by a
different guard when she’d been unable to come up with a quick answer as
to why she was hanging around in the same area all morning long. That
guard threatened to call the police and have her arrested for loitering
if he saw her again. Isabel had left in a hurry. She’d completely
circled the mall, figuring that the guard wouldn’t wait that long to
catch her again. But in the end she had nowhere to go, so now, three
hours later, she was back, and another guard was approaching.

Isabel
had no desire to push her luck, but she was out of ideas, and she was
out of prospects. She’d tried to lay low since the earlier episode while
she waited for something to happen, and she’d been pretty successful—no
one had even talked to her except for a cute girl with red hair a
couple of hours ago who’d said that she, too, was running. But then the
girl suddenly left ten minutes later, and Isabel was alone again. Since
then: nobody. Which was fine with her. She knew she needed to do
something—but she didn’t want to make a mistake. Above all, she didn’t
want to be sent back home—couldn’t be sent back home. She’d decided that
if she were arrested, she’d lie about who she was so that they couldn’t
send her back. Meanwhile, she waited—waited for something to happen.

She
used her peripheral vision and concentrated on the new guard. He was
younger. If he stopped, maybe he’d be nicer. From twenty-five feet away,
she could hear his footsteps as he approached, keys jangling quietly at
his side. He whistled softly to himself, the same quiet, absent-minded
way her father used to whistle when he came up the walkway to the house
at the end of the day. Suddenly, the guard’s radio crackled and came to
life, causing him to stop before he reached her. Isabel was startled,
but she caught herself—she didn’t look up.

The
guard listened and then keyed his microphone. “Unit Two, roger,” he
said. “I’ll be there in five.” At least his voice sounded kind.

He resumed his approach. Isabel suppressed a shudder as the man paused when he reached her. She felt him looking at her. Steady, now. She looked up. The guard was tall and nice looking. Isabel thought he had kind eyes.

The guard looked at her for a moment. Finally, he smiled. “Hey there. What’s going on?”

Isabel
fought back the urge to panic. She was a quick learner and, after the
last encounter, she’d prepared a story. “I’m waiting for my mom.” She
trembled inside but she worked hard to keep her voice even as she used
the words she’d rehearsed in her mind. “She’s picking me up.”

“That
right?” The guard considered this. “If she’s picking you up, how come
you’re not waiting down at the benches by the curb?” He paused and
looked at her. “Say,” he added. “Aren’t you the girl who we ran off
earlier this morning?”

Isabel
tensed up and started to panic. She hadn’t expected that particular
follow-up question, and she was unprepared. She felt a quick surge of
adrenaline. All she could manage for an answer was a quick shake of her
head.

The
guard studied her for a second—an eternity for Isabel. He pursed his
lips, saying nothing, as if weighing whether or not to buy her story.
Then, apparently coming to a decision, he reached for his radio. Just as
he was about to key his microphone, though, he was interrupted.

“There
you are!” Isabel jumped. She turned and saw an attractive young woman
in her early twenties walking up the sidewalk, talking to her. Isabel
had no idea who she was.

“I
got mixed up,” the woman said, smiling brightly as she reached the two.
“I thought we were supposed to meet at the front of the mall.” She
turned to the guard, who’d frozen for a moment. “It’s okay, officer.
She’s with me.” She turned back to Isabel, “C’mon, sweetie. Let’s go
inside and grab a drink before we take off.”

Isabel
looked at the woman for a moment. She was dressed in a loose,
shimmering green knit sweater over a white blouse. She wore tight black
slacks and black shoes with heels so tall that Isabel wondered how she
could stand up. Her dark brown hair cascaded over her shoulders in loose
curls. Even her perfume smelled wonderful. She was one of the most
beautiful women Isabel had ever seen. The woman made a small, urgent
gesture with her head as if to say “C’mon.”

Isabel felt the guard staring at her, so she made up her mind quickly. “Sure,” she said, standing. “Let’s go.”

The
woman smiled and took Isabel’s arm. Together, they left the guard
standing on the sidewalk, watching them. They turned and walked through
the double doors into the food court. Once inside, the woman said,
“C’mon. Let’s sit over here for a minute and talk.” She led Isabel to a
nearby table.

The
food court at the mall is a large open area of dining tables surrounded
by restaurants. There were few shoppers there—the lunchtime crowd had
left, and the evening shoppers had yet to arrive. The smells of the food
from the different shops instantly reminded Isabel that she was hungry.

“Whew,
that was a close one, huh?” the woman said as she scanned the area
around their table. She turned back to face Isabel. “I’m Crystal. What’s
your name?”

“Isabel.” To say that Isabel was confused would be a big understatement.

Crystal
looked around again and then back at Isabel. “I couldn’t help but
overhear you talking to the guard, Isabel. It sounded like you might
need rescuing. Are you really waiting for your mom?”

Isabel shuttered. “Yes,” she lied. She didn’t know this woman. “She’s coming to pick me up.”

Crystal smiled. “Good.” She studied Isabel intently for several seconds. “Have you been waiting long?”

Isabel
couldn’t very well tell Crystal the real story—that she’d spent last
night under the cedar tree by the trash bins, remaining out of sight of
the roving security guards. Yet, despite her need to be guarded, she
thought there was something about this woman that offered an
invitation—a glimmer of hope. Something in her eyes and her tone of
voice made Isabel think that Crystal might be someone who could help
her. She certainly didn’t want to relive the frightening experience of
spending the night under the cedar tree again.

Isabel nodded. “A little while.”

Crystal nodded slowly. “Can I buy you a Coke or something? While you wait?”

Isabel
figured in the worst case, at least she’d be safe from the security
guards for a while. “Okay,” she said. Crystal bought them a couple of
drinks from one of the vendors and returned to their table.

The
two chatted about nothing in particular—food choices, the way this or
that person was dressed, movies. After a few minutes had passed, though,
Crystal’s tone suddenly changed, and she became serious. “Can I ask you
a real question, Isabel?” she said.

“Yeah.”

Crystal continued to study her. “You’re not really waiting for your mom, are you.”

Isabel
tensed up. Crystal had phrased it in the form of a statement, not a
question. “Yes, I am,” she protested. “Why do you say that?”

Crystal
shrugged. Her eyes bored into Isabel. “Because we’ve been sitting here
for oh—twenty minutes or so, and you haven’t looked back at the door
even once the whole time. You forgot your story.”

Oh, hell.
Isabel was mortified to realize that Crystal was right. She’d been so
relieved to have someone to talk to that she’d completely forgotten
she’d said she was waiting to be picked up. She tensed up and then
started to push away from the table.

“It’s
alright,” Crystal said, reaching across and putting her hand on
Isabel’s arm. “No need to leave. Don’t worry about it. I’m not the
police or security or anything like that.”

Isabel stayed seated but kept her chair pushed back.

Crystal looked at Isabel intently for several moments. “You’re running, aren’t you, sweetheart?”

Isabel
fought hard, but in the end, the weight of the last few days got to
her, and she couldn’t keep tears from forming in her eyes. She
hesitated, and then she nodded.

Crystal produced a tissue and handed it to Isabel. Isabel wiped her eyes and said, “Thanks.”

“It’s
nothing to be ashamed of, you know—running,” Crystal said. “Sometimes,
you’ve got to do what you’ve got to do, know what I mean?”

Isabel nodded.

“Did someone hurt you?”

Isabel studied the table without answering.

Crystal looked at Isabel. It was silent for a minute, and then she said, “I was just like you, you know.”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean I ran. I had to leave—probably about your age. What are you sixteen? Seventeen?”

“Sixteen,” Isabel said. “Yesterday was my birthday.”

Crystal smiled brightly. “Happy birthday!” Then, just as quick, her smile vanished. “Did you leave on your birthday?”

Isabel nodded, tears starting again.

“That’s dope. That takes guts,” Crystal said. “You should be proud.”

Isabel stared at her, then she looked down. “I had to leave,” she said quietly.

Crystal leaned forward. “Isabel,” she said, “look at me.”

Isabel looked up.

“It’s
like I said—I know what you mean. I had two stepbrothers who took turns
raping me for six years starting when I was ten years old,” Crystal
said. “When you say ‘I had to leave,’ I know exactly what you mean. I had to leave, too.”

Isabel stared at her. “Really?”

“Really.
I couldn’t stay another day.” Crystal rolled up the sleeve on her left
arm and revealed a series of scars. “See these? I used to cut myself to
make the pain go away.” Isabel cringed at the thought. Crystal noticed.
“You don’t cut yourself, do you?”

Isabel shook her head. “No.”

“Good
girl. A lot of girls do, you know. But it doesn’t work. The little
pain’s supposed to make the big pain go away. But it only works for a
little while. Then you find out that the big pain’s still there. And to
top it off, you’re left with these fucking scars.” She rolled her sleeve
back down. She looked at Isabel. “I understand where you’re coming
from, Isabel. I was right where you were five years ago.”

It was quiet for a few moments. Then Isabel said, “It’s my stepfather.”

Crystal nodded.

“For more than four years now.”

“Bastard. I’m so sorry, sweetie.”

Isabel nodded.

“I hate how these fuckers think they can do this to us and get away with it.”

Isabel
nodded. “You really went through the same thing?” She could hardly
believe that this beautiful woman had once experienced a horror similar
to her own.

Crystal
nodded. “Really. I showed you the scars, didn’t I?” She paused. “At
least the scars that show. Most of ’em don’t, you know.”

Isabel looked at her for a second and then said, “What about now? What do you do now?”

Crystal
smiled and flipped her long hair back over her shoulder. “I got lucky,”
she said. “I met a really great guy. Now, I work with him in his
company; we do entertainment scheduling.”

“You are lucky. You’re really beautiful.”

Crystal smiled. “Thank you. But you should know—you’re as pretty as I am, sweetie. Maybe even prettier.”

“Me?” Isabel said. She found this hard to believe.

Crystal
laughed as she pretended to look around; then she returned her focus to
Isabel. “Who else is here, girl? Yeah, you. A little makeup, some nice
clothes,” she waved her hand at Isabel, “you’d have guys falling all
over you. And I mean good guys. Guys who have lots of money and who’ll
treat you right.” Crystal seemed absolutely bubbly.

Isabel
rolled her eyes. Given her situation at home, she didn’t think about
boys very often. This was more than she could even imagine.

“Isabel,”
Crystal said, leaning forward again and speaking softly. “Listen to me.
You seem like a sweet girl. And I know where you’re coming from because
I was in the exact same boat.”

Isabel nodded.

Crystal
continued. “Donnie—he’s my boyfriend—Donnie and I have a spare bedroom.
If you want, I can ask him if it’d be okay if you stay with us for a
little while—until you’re on your feet, I mean. You’d have a safe place
to stay, plenty to eat. I’ll even take you shopping for some nice
clothes.”

Isabel
hesitated. “Why would you do that?” she asked. It had been a long time
since anyone other than her friend Kelli had been nice to her. She
couldn’t help being suspicious.

Crystal
smiled. “Because I guess I see a little bit of me in you, that’s why.
And I sure wish someone would have helped me out when I was in your
situation.”

This
resonated with Isabel. Things were moving fast, but at least they
seemed to be moving in the right direction. Still, she hadn’t planned
things out this far, and she was struggling to keep up.

“By the way,” Crystal said, “if you left yesterday, where’d you stay last night?”

Isabel looked down. “Under a tree,” she said.

“Oh, sweetie,” Crystal said, smiling, “you gotta stay with us. You don’t want to do that again, do you?”

That
reminder, plus the realization that she had no other real options,
pushed Isabel over the edge. “I don’t suppose it would hurt to stay with
you guys for a while,” she said. “I don’t have any money to pay you,
though.”

Crystal smiled. “I didn’t ask you for any money, did I?”

Isabel shook her head.

Crystal reached for her purse. “Let me call Donnie and ask him, alright?”

Isabel nodded. “Okay. Thanks.”

* * * *

Twenty
minutes later, Isabel and Crystal stood at the curb near the valet
parking stand. Isabel wore her backpack and carried her purse. Soon, a
white BMW 750i pulled up. All of the windows were darkened, so it was
impossible to see inside. “Here he is,” Crystal said.

Isabel
didn’t know much about cars, but she recognized the BMW logo and was
impressed. The car was very shiny—even the wheels were sparkling chrome.
The driver parked the car alongside the curb and got out. He was a
tall, very good-looking, young black man with his hair cut short. He
wore black slacks and a tight-fitting, short-sleeved black Under Armour
shirt, covered with a loose-fitting burgundy linen jacket. A large,
expensive-looking gold watch was just visible on his left wrist, peeking
out from under the sleeve of his jacket.

As
the driver walked around the front of the car to the curb, the
passenger door opened, and another young man stepped out. He was
shorter—average height and his skin was paler than the driver’s.. His
hair was straightened, gelled, and brushed back. He, too, was nicely
dressed—a sharp young man. Both men made an impression on Isabel. They
were as good-looking in their own right as Crystal was in hers. To
Isabel, they all looked like wealthy fashion models.

“Hey, baby,” the driver said as he walked up to Crystal and hugged her. “You all done?”

“Think so,” Crystal said.

“Good,”
the man said. “We are, too.” After a few moments, he glanced over at
Isabel. He let Crystal go and said, “Is this your friend?”

“Uh-huh,” Crystal said. “Donnie Martin—this is Isabel—” she turned and looked at Isabel, “—Isabel, I don’t know your last name.”

“Delgado,” Isabel said.

“Isabel Delgado,” Crystal said.

Donnie
walked over to her. He towered above her by more than a foot. “Isabel,”
he said, reaching for her small hand. “What a beautiful name.” His
voice was smooth and deep.

Isabel blushed. “Thanks,” she said. “It’s good to meet you.”

“The
pleasure is all mine,” Donnie said. His smile revealed a gleaming set
of perfectly capped white teeth. He nodded toward the other man. “This
ugly dude over here is my homeboy DeMichael. His friends—we—all call him
Mikey.”

DeMichael
stepped over and shook Isabel’s hand. Isabel thought his hands were
very soft—softer even than hers. “I’m very pleased to meet you, Isabel,”
he said. “Does everyone call you Isabel, or do you have a nickname?
Something like Belle or Bella—like that girl in Twilight?”

Isabel blushed slightly. “Some of my friends call me Izzy,” she said.

“Izzy,” he said. “That’s even better. I like that. If you’re straight with it, I’m gonna call you Izzy.”

Isabel smiled. “Okay,” she said, nodding.

DeMichael
gazed admiringly at Isabel’s hair. “Girl, you have beautiful hair,” he
said. “Long and thick and pure black.” He paused and then added, “Like
mine!”

Crystal
laughed. “Yeah, you wish. Except Izzy doesn’t have to spend a hundred
dollars and two hours getting hers straightened every two weeks.”

DeMichael reached for Isabel’s hair then stopped. “Do you mind?” he asked.

“No,” Isabel said.

DeMichael
ran his hand slowly through Isabel’s hair. “That’s dope,” he said,
seemingly in awe. “And you don’t have to do anything to get this?”

“No,” Isabel said. “That’s just how it is.”

“Damn,” he said.

“Imagine
if we hooked her up with Janeka,” Crystal said. “She can throw some
conditioner on that, and Isabel’s hair will shine like a black diamond.”

“Say,
look,” Donnie interrupted from the sidewalk at the front of the car.
“Y’all can share hair-styling secrets later. Right now, I need to talk
to Isabel for a second, and then we got to scoot.” He turned to Isabel.
“Crystal tells me you having some problems on the home front.”

Isabel looked him in the eye. “I don’t have a home,” she said. “Not anymore.”

“That’s what I’m talkin’ about,” Donnie said. “Bottom line—you’re temporarily out on the streets. Right?”

“I guess.”

Donnie smiled. “Don’t have to be that way, baby—this is your lucky day. Crystal told you we got a spare bedroom.”

Isabel nodded.

“Good. You’re welcome to come stay with us for a while. Till you get yourself established. That sound okay?”

“It does,” Isabel said. “Thank you.”

Donnie smiled again. “Good. We gonna do some great things.” He looked at her backpack. “That all your stuff?”

Isabel nodded. “That’s it.”

“Y’all travelin’ light.”

“I know.”

He
shrugged. “That’ll change. Crystal’ll probably hook you up with some of
her stuff for now. Use it as an excuse to go shoppin’.”

“Hell with that,” Crystal said. “I don’t need no excuse. Me and my homey Izzy—we’re going shoppin’ anyway. Tomorrow. Right, Iz?”

Isabel
hesitated, then started to speak, but Crystal interrupted her. “I
know,” she said. “You don’t have any money for shopping.” She smiled.
“Good thing for you, I do. You can owe me. We’re going to get you all
done up. Your hair, too. You’ll be so dope, people’ll have to wear
sunglasses around you just to knock back the shine!”

Isabel smiled as DeMichael opened the back door.

“I’m riding shotgun,” Crystal suddenly called out.

DeMichael
looked at Isabel. “Guess that means me and you in the back. After you,
my dear,” he said gallantly. Isabel crawled into the back seat. She
could hardly believe her luck. Less than twenty-four hours ago, she’d
been shivering the night away hiding under a cedar tree to avoid the
guards and to keep from getting rained on. An hour ago, she’d been
sitting on a bench with no idea how to proceed. Now, she was sitting in a
BMW, surrounded by nice people who wanted to help her out. She smiled
as the car pulled away from the curb.

Chapter 1

“CEASE FIRE! CEASE fire!”
The Range Safety Officer’s voice thundered down the line just as the
last shooter fired his final round of the stage. The electronic
noise-canceling features in my headset were designed to muffle the sharp
reports of gunshots while still allowing voice commands to come through
loud and clear—not that Gunny Doug Owens needed any help getting his
point across. Twenty-one years in the Marine Corps prior to joining the
Seattle Police Department as head firearms instructor gave him a
“command voice” that left no confusion, no ambiguity as to the meaning
of his message. Like many of the tough old sergeants I’d known in the
army, Gunny Owens didn’t so much speak when he was on the range; he
barked. It reminded me of basic training at Fort Benning.

I
lowered my Les Baer Thunder Ranch Model 1911 .45-caliber semiauto to a
forty-five degree angle, finger indexed along the barrel. Keeping it
pointed downrange, I turned my head quickly in each direction,
automatically scanning the area around me for new threats, just as Gunny
barked out, “Weapons to low ready!”

He
followed this up a second later with, “Unload and make safe!” The slide
on my weapon had automatically locked open when I’d fired the last
round. I pressed the magazine release button, and the empty magazine
dropped out and fell to the ground.

“After inspection by a Range Safety Officer, holster your safe weapon.”

The
RSO on my side of the line worked his way from shooter to shooter,
checking their weapons as he went and tapping them on the shoulders when
he was satisfied their weapons were completely empty, signifying it was
okay to holster their weapon. I waited my turn as the gentle breeze
cleared the smoke from the range.

When
Gunny saw that the assistant RSOs on either side of the line had
completed their inspections, he barked out “Line clear on the left?” The
assistant RSO on my side of the line held up his hand in
acknowledgment. “Line clear on the right?” The officer on the opposite
end of the line did the same.

“Good,”
Gunny said. “Ladies and gentlemen, the line is clear! You may remove
your hearing protection. Retrieve your magazines, and let’s check
targets.”

It
was a beautiful morning on June 5, 2012. The temperature was in the
high sixties, and the sky was partly cloudy. My partner, Antoinette
“Toni” Blair, and I had just fired the last sequence in the Washington
State Basic Law Enforcement Firearm Training course at the Seattle
Police Athletic Association range in Tukwila, just south of Seattle.
This is the same test issued to retired law enforcement officers
annually and, other than Toni and me, the thirteen guys on the line were
all retired police officers. Thanks to the Law Enforcement Officers
Safety Act that Congress passed in 2004, successfully passing this test
gave these retired officers the right to carry concealed weapons almost
anywhere in the nation. Can you say instant extended police force? At no
additional cost? Clearly, this was one of Congress’s smarter moves, if
you ask me. Of course, Toni and I were not law enforcement officers, so
passing the test wouldn’t give us the same privileges. But the practice
kept us sharp, and it helped keep our insurance premiums low. And if,
God forbid, we ever had to shoot anyone, regular documented training
would probably help us legally. We were fortunate that my friends at
Seattle PD allowed us to train with them and use the range.

I
reached down and picked up my empty magazine, dusted it off, and put it
in my pocket. Toni was two shooters to my left; I saw her do the same
thing. At twenty-seven years old, she’d just had a birthday two weeks
ago. She was dressed in camouflage-print fatigue-style pants that had no
business looking as good as they did on her, green tactical boots, and a
beige long-sleeved T-shirt that had an American flag and Made in the U.S.A.
printed on it in big, bold red letters across the chest—just in case
you were having trouble noticing the way she filled out the shirt
(which, I suppose, would have been pretty good proof that you were
legally blind). The other guys didn’t know it, but I knew that the long
sleeves covered a full-sleeve tattoo on her left arm and a delicate
little Celtic-weave tat on her right. Her thick, dark hair was covered
with a backward-facing baseball cap, itself covered with her
ear-protection headset. She wore yellow-tinted shooter’s glasses. She
looked like a Victoria’s Secret model at a gun show—she was distracting
as hell, and I was glad there was space between us. When we straightened
up, she caught me looking and she smiled.

Oops.
This wasn’t one of her “I love you” smiles or even one of her playful
ones, for that matter. We’ve been friends for a long time—I’ve known her
for more than five years. I’ve seen her use about twenty different
smiles—she’s got one for every occasion. I know most of them pretty
well, but as for this one, her meaning was quite clear. She was giving
me the nasty, evil little grin that usually comes when we’re locked in
competition. We both hate to lose, and shooting qualifications bring out
our competitive natures. She looked pretty smug—must have fired another
clean stage. I turned away and started walking downrange to inspect my
target.

“Holy
crap, Nichols!” Gunny yelled as he inspected the first shooter’s
target. “You do know you’re supposed to be shooting target number one,
right? You fired five rounds, but I only see three damn holes!” He
turned and looked at the next target on the line. “You got any extra
holes on your target?” he said to that target’s shooter. “Nope?” He
turned back to the first unlucky guy. “Nichols, you had two rounds off
the whole damn target! That’s pathetic. Ten points each—it’s going to
cost you a twenty-point penalty.” He shook his head with disgust.
“What’s worse, if this were real life, that means you’d be the proud
owner of two .40-caliber projectiles flying through the air at 1,100
feet per second looking for something solid to hit besides their
intended target.” He looked at the sheepish shooter. “You understand
that’s bad, right?”

The man nodded. “Sorry, Gunny.”

“Yeah, you are,” Gunny nodded in agreement. “Looks like we’ll be seeing you back here this afternoon.”

Gunny
moved down the line, examining each shooter’s target. His comments were
usually short and to the point. “You pushed this one,” or “You flinched
before you pulled the trigger here, see? Caused you to jerk low left.”
The shooters—all experienced police officers with years and years of
training—listened carefully. Gunny Owens was held in universal high
esteem. He’d forgotten more about shooting than most of us would ever
know.

He
reached Toni’s target and stared at it for a second. “Holy hell, she’s
doing it again!” he called out. The other shooters turned to look at
Toni’s target. “This young lady,” he said, “—a civilian, I might
add—qualifies on this very course every ninety days without fail. And I
have never—I repeat never—seen her put a round outside the ten ring.
Look at this shooting here. Y’all should do so well. Excellent! Well
done, young lady.” Toni smiled demurely. “A solid 250,” Gunny said.
“Perfect score.”

Gunny
continued down the line until he reached my target. He examined it
carefully, counting the number of holes. When he was finished, he turned
to me. “Staff Sergeant Logan, did you yank one off the target?” Gunny
liked to call me by my former military rank.

“Hell
no, Gunny,” I said. “Look here.” I pointed to one of the bullet holes
in the center of the target that was a bit more oblong than the others.

Gunny
leaned forward and inspected the hole. “Oh, yeah,” he said, smiling. “I
see. Same damn hole.” He stood up. “Folks, listen up! Another perfect
score from the other civilian in the group.” He paused for a moment, and
then he continued. “Although technically, I ain’t sure you can call him
a civilian—he’s former U.S. Army 101st Airborne. It don’t happen often,
but from time to time, the army turns out a damn fine shooter. Right,
son?” That was about as high a compliment as an army grunt’s likely to
get out of a marine (MARINE: “Muscle are Required—Intelligence Not
Essential”).

“Hooah, Gunny!” I yelled out. You better believe it.

“Damn right,” he said, nodding his head sharply. He turned and continued his inspection.

After
he finished with the last shooter, he returned to the center of the
line. “Gentlemen, and Ms. Blair,” he said, “Y’all gather round.” When
we’d formed in a group around him, he said, “One of y’all’s coming back
this afternoon.” He turned to the offender. “That’s you, Nichols. I want
you to practice with Officer Mendez here,” he pointed at one of his
assistant RSOs, “right after lunch: 1300 hours. If you’re ready, you’ll
get another shot at qualifying at 1400. We’ll see if you can keep all
your rounds on your own target this time.” He looked at the rest of us.
“As for the rest of you—you’ve all officially qualified.
Congratulations.” The men nodded their heads quietly. They’d done this
before and most were good—if not very good—shooters.

“Before you leave, though, we do have a dilemma,” Gunny continued. “We have a tie for top honors—two perfect scores.” Here we go, I thought. Same as last time.
“And as some of you may know, I don’t like to end things with a tie. No
closure that way. So what say we have ourselves a quick little
tiebreaker shoot-out?”

“Yeah!” the men agreed enthusiastically.

“Good. Randy—do me a favor and throw a couple of clean targets on lanes three and four, would you? The rest of you, follow me.”

Gunny
walked us back past the fifteen-yard marker where we’d fired the last
sequence. He kept walking, past the twenty-five yard marker until he
reached a marker that said thirty-five yards. “We’ll do it from here,”
he said. “Make it interesting. A little over one hundred feet—a real test.
Ms. Blair—you’re on number three. Staff Sergeant Logan—you’re on lane
four. Everybody else: behind the line.” I looked downrange at the small
targets. One hundred feet is a long pistol shot if you have something
solid to brace against. Without a brace, it was really long.

He
waited until the targets were set and everybody was behind us. “Okay,
you two,” he said. “I want you to load one round—and one round only—into
a magazine. This will be a one shot, do-or-die competition. We’ll run
you through one at a time. Who wants to go first?”

“I will,” Toni said quickly. I looked at her, and we locked eyes. She no doubt was trying to psych me out. Good luck with that.

“Ladies
first, then,” Gunny said. “Oh, I forgot. We’ll use the electronic
timer. You’ll start from the low ready position, two hand grip—or one
hand if you want. Your choice of stances. When the timer beeps, you’re
to raise your weapon and fire. You’ll have two seconds to get your shot
off before the timer beeps again. If you go over, the timer will tell
us, and you’ll be DQ’d. So don’t go over time.”

Two
seconds! Two seconds was very fast from thirty-five yards. I glanced at
Toni. If she was concerned, she didn’t show it. She was already
concentrating on the target.

“You two ready?” We nodded.

“Okay, everyone. Hearing protection on!” Gunny reverted to command voice.

“Shooter number one, at this time, load and make ready!” Toni slapped a magazine into her Glock 23 and cycled the slide.

“Shooter, assume a low ready position!”

Toni crouched down, her weapon held before her pointed toward the ground at a forty-five degree angle.

“Shooter, watch your target!”

BEEP! The electronic timer sounded. Toni instantly raised her weapon, sighted, and one second later, fired. BOOM!, followed nearly instantly by BEEP! as the timer sounded again. Toni had beaten the clock by a fraction of a second.

Everyone
looked downrange and strained to see the bullet hole in the target.
“One point eight seven seconds, and she’s in the bottle,” Gunny called
out, “chin level, just a hair right of center. Seven points. That’s fine
shooting from thirty-five yards, young lady. Especially in under two
seconds.” The “bottle” is the broad, bottle-shaped area of the target
that includes the upper torso and the neck up to the center of the head.
Toni’s shot was very nearly right on the centerline in the “neck” of
the bottle, but it fell midway between the four-inch diameter “ten” ring
centered around the top of the target’s nose and the six-inch diameter
“ten” ring centered around the target’s heart—in other words, just under
the chin. It was an outstanding shot, but looking at Toni, I could tell
right away she was not happy. She felt me staring, turned to me, and
stuck her tongue out.

“The
bad guy is definitely down,” Gunny said. “Probably for good, I’d say.
But—with a score of seven,” he smiled with a nasty grin, “the door got
left open for the staff sergeant just a hair. Ms. Blair, go ahead and
unload and make safe.” Toni released her empty magazine and held her
pistol up for inspection by one of the assistant RSOs. He patted her on
the shoulder, and she holstered her weapon. The RSO turned to Gunny and
raised his hand.

“The line is clear,” Gunny said. “Let’s see if shooter number two can take advantage.”

As I stepped up to the line, Toni said, “Check your fly, dude.” I smiled. Psych!

I
was in a tough spot. This was going to be a difficult shot. I like to
win as much as she does. Lord knows she would’ve liked nothing better
than to beat me on the firing range. In four years, it had never
happened before. If she won one, she’d be delighted. This could be a
good thing. Maybe it was her time. Thinking about it made me consider
maybe giving her one—pulling the shot on purpose. But if I did that, I
still needed to make it close. She knows I’m a good shot, and if she
suspected I’d thrown the round, she’d have my ass. I made my decision.

“Shooter
number two, load and make ready!” I slapped the magazine with the
single round into my sidearm, released the slide, and lowered the weapon
to the low ready position.

“Shooter, watch your target!” I crouched and tightened my grip.

BEEP!
All at once, the outside world seemed to recede. Everything switched to
slow motion and all my training kicked in. As my arms came up to
target, my right thumb pushed the safety lever to the off position.
During the same motion, I took one deep breath, then held it. My arms
steadied on the target. My eyes instantly found the front sight, and the
front sight centered on the target’s head. With all my concentration, I
focused on the front sight. Steady. Squeeze. BOOM! The round fired. BEEP! The timer sounded. I didn’t need to look.

* * * *

We
said our good-byes to Gunny Owens at 11:00 and jumped in my red Jeep
for the drive back to our office. Our company is Logan Private
Investigations—or Logan PI, as we like to call it. We have a small
office on Westlake Avenue on Lake Union, right in the middle of Seattle,
less than a mile from I-5. Unfortunately, the south end of Lake Union
where we’re located was currently wrecked by construction. Microsoft
cofounder Paul Allen had decided to single-handedly rebuild Seattle, and
he was starting with the South Lake Union area. As a result, traffic
was stop-and-go. Actually, more stop than go—it was going to take a
while. I hit the play button on the MP3 player, and the sound of a very
sweet piano started to flow from the speakers.

Toni listened carefully when the singer started. “Is that—is that Brandi Carlile?” she asked.

“Yep.”

“I’ve never heard this before.”

“I know. That’s because it’s brand-new. It’s called Bear Creek. Just released today. This song is called ‘That Wasn’t Me.’”

She listened for a minute, tapping her foot to the beat. Then she said, “Awesome. I love it. She sounds like Adele.”

I considered this. “Yeah a little, maybe. On this song, anyway. Maybe a bit more country.”

We
listened to the new music for a minute while we waited for the traffic
to move. Toni’s cell phone rang, and I turned the music down.

“Okay,”
she said into the phone. “Tell her to wait. We’re down by the park—only
about a half mile away. As soon as traffic moves, we’ll be there.”

She hung up and turned to me. “That was Kenny. He says Kelli’s at the office.”

Kelli—Racquel
Genevieve Blair—is Toni’s eighteen-year-old little sister. I hadn’t
seen Kelli in a couple of months, although we’d been planning to go to
her high school graduation the following week.

“He say what she wants?” I asked.

“She wants to talk. To you and me both.”

Curious.

* * * *

Twenty-five
minutes later, we walked into our office. No one was in the lobby, so
we made our way toward the back, where we heard laughter coming from the
office of Kenny Hale—our technology guru. I followed Toni into Kenny’s
office. He was at his desk with Kelli sitting across from him.

“Hey, guys,” Kenny said when we entered.

“’Sup?” I said, looking from Kenny to Kelli. “Hey, Kelli.”

Kelli
and Toni look the same but different. Bear with me—I haven’t lost my
mind here. Toni’s tall—a solid five foot eight. Kelli’s a touch
shorter—maybe five seven or so. Both girls have striking
figures—something they inherited from their mom, I suppose (although I’m
not sure I’m supposed to have noticed that). Both have thick, dark
hair, although Kelli’s is long with no bangs and more of a brunette
color, while Toni’s is more mid-length with long bangs and almost black.
The biggest, most noticeable difference, though, is not their height or
their hair, but their eyes. Toni’s eyes are a brilliant blue—the color
of the Hope Diamond. Kelli’s are a deep emerald green. Both are
beautiful. So, like I said—the girls look the same but definitely
different.

“Hi, Danny,” she said. She turned to Toni. “Hey, sis.”

Toni
walked over to Kelli. “Hi, sweetie,” she said, leaning forward and
hugging her sister. She straightened up and eyed Kenny warily. “I see
you’ve met Kenny.” Kelli probably missed the look. I didn’t.

“Yeah,” she said. “We’ve just been talking.”

Kenny’s
a young guy—he just turned twenty-six a couple of months ago. He’s
maybe five eight and a buck fifty soaking wet. He’s got an unruly mop of
dark hair that he pushes over to one side. In fact, he looks just like
what he is—the quintessential computer geek. When it comes to anything
to do with computers, Kenny’s the real deal. He’s got aptitude and
native talent that’s off the charts. He grew up with computers in ground
zero of the computer world: Redmond, Washington. I’m not certain, but
I’d be willing to bet his first toy was a laptop. Knowing Kenny, he
probably took it apart, tricked it out some way, and then put it back
together. He’s got to be one of the most brilliant PC dudes in the
Pacific Northwest. His consulting services are in high demand—I’m sure
he makes at least as much moonlighting for the big tech companies around
here as he does from his Logan PI paycheck. Still, lucky for us, he
likes the excitement of detective work. I say “lucky for us” because
computer skills are a near prerequisite for PI firms these days.

Despite
the fact that he’s no physical specimen, Kenny is surprisingly
successful with the ladies. I have a theory about this. I think that
like a lot of nerdy guys, he was probably teased in high school by the
jocks and shunned by their pretty cheerleader girlfriends. Back then,
geeks were people to be, if not outright, scorned, at least avoided.
Now, seven or eight years down the road, presto-chango! Role reversal!
Now the smart-guy propeller-heads like Kenny have all the money and run
around in their Porsche Cayenne Turbos. Now it’s their turn to date the
pretty girls while the majority of high school jocks (meaning all those
who didn’t get Division I scholarships) work low-paying, manual labor
jobs (if they can still find them). Kenny was simply playing his new
role for all he was worth. It’s just a theory. Anyway, I like him. He’s a
good guy with a good heart.

Toni
feels the same way, but to her, Kenny’s a target she can’t resist for
some good-natured teasing. She teases him about his hair, his height,
his weight, even his girlfriends. And he gives as good as he gets. He
teases her about her hair, her height, her tattoos, and—until
recently—her lack of boyfriends. Normally, there’s a good-natured banter
between the two of them. Today, though, Toni’s little sister was here
to talk about something, and no doubt, Toni wondered if Kenny had tried
to put some kind of move on Kelli while they’d been waiting for us. I
doubted this—Kenny goes out with younger women to be sure, but even
Kenny has a lower age limit, which seems to be twenty-one or so. But
what the hell. Toni’s the big sister, and it’s her job to be
protective—thus, the stink eye. It continued, even as I led Kelli out of
Kenny’s office to our conference room.

Kenny noticed. “What?” he mouthed silently, holding up his hands.

Toni glared at him for a second, then she turned and followed us. Message sent.

* * * *

“So,” I said, when we entered the conference room. “Long time no see, Kelli. I haven’t seen you since your birthday.”

“I know,” she said. She looked at Toni then back at me. “You guys had just started going out. I’m so happy for both of you.”

Toni smiled. “Thanks, sis. We’re happy, too.”

“And now it’s time for graduation,” I said. “You all ready to go?”

“Sure am,” she said.

“You feel happy or sad?” I asked.

“Happy. Definitely happy.”

I smiled. “That’s good. What’re you going to do?”

“I’m going to U-Dub,” she said. “I start in the fall. I’ve already been admitted.”

“Cool!” I said. “Outstanding! Do you know what you want to study yet?”

“Yep.
I’m thinking LSJ—same as you guys.” The University of Washington offers
a four-year bachelor’s degree in something they call Law, Societies,
and Justice. Basically, it’s a fancy name for a criminal justice degree.
Toni and I met in early 2007 when we were seniors in the LSJ program. I
was still in the army, finishing my last year as a CID special agent.
It’s a good education if you want to make law enforcement your career.

“LSJ—that’s cool,” I said. “Are you thinking about police work?”

“Pre-law,” Kelli said. “I want to be a DA.”

I smiled. “Excellent. Somebody to put the bad guys away. You’ll make a great DA. Runs in your family, I think.”

Toni smiled.

“Yeah, I think so, too,” Kelli said.

“Well, that’s good,” I said. I leaned back in my chair. “So what brings you here today?”

Her mood sobered quickly. Where she’d been happy and smiling a moment before, she suddenly turned somber.

“I have a friend,” she said. “I think she’s in trouble.”

Toni
eyed her suspiciously, not certain if Kelli was referring to herself
when she said “a friend” and, if she was, trying to determine what she
meant by “in trouble.” Pregnant maybe? Big sister switching back into
protective mode, I suppose.

“What kind of trouble,” Toni said.

“I think my friend Isabel’s been kidnapped,” Kelli said.

Whoa!
That came out of left field! Toni and I both looked at Kelli as we
scrambled to catch up mentally. “What do you mean, you think she’s been
kidnapped?” Toni said.

“Hold
up for a second,” I said, raising my hand. “Don’t answer that just
yet.” Both girls looked at me. “Since the conversation’s headed this
direction, let me grab a couple of notepads, so we can take notes and do
this the right way.”

Toni looked at me for a second, and then she said, “Good idea.”

I
took a couple of steno pads from the credenza behind the conference
room table. While I was up, I grabbed three bottles of water.

“Kelli,
why don’t you start from the very beginning,” I said as I sat back
down. “Go slow. Give us plenty of details. Everything you can remember.”

“Okay,” she said.

“Start by giving us Isabel’s personal data. What’s her full name?” I asked.

“Isabel Delgado.”

“Do you know if she has a middle name?”

“I don’t know.”

“Address?”

“She lives at 4268 192nd Street in Lynnwood.”

Categories Thriller of the Week Tags ,

Nightmare Along the River Nile: Abducted by the LRA by Suzanna E. Nelson is Featured in Today’s Thriller of The Week FREE Excerpt – 4.6 Stars on 28 Reviews

On Friday we announced that Nightmare Along the River Nile: Abducted by the LRA by Suzanna E. Nelson is our Thriller of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the thriller, mystery, and suspense categories: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

4.6 stars – 28 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Elated after finishing high school exams, Edgar and his longtime friends are excited about their future and looking forward to their long vacation. Unbeknownst to them fate has other plans. Edgar’s life turns into a living nightmare when, on his way home, his bus is stopped by the LRA rebels in northern Uganda. Along with other passengers, most of whom are students, Edgar is abducted and taken to the rebel headquarters deep in the mountains of southern Sudan. Things turn even worse when, instead of being forced to become a soldier, he is sold into slavery. His life is changed forever.

Edgar’s friends learn of his fate and embark on a very difficult and unpredictable rescue mission. With the help of a fellow captive, Edgar attempts a daring and dangerous escape, knowing that his re-capture would end in a fate worse than death. But will he succeed? The dramatic finale awaits you as you follow Edgar while he is being chased down by warlords whose mission is to return him to the slave owners and collect a large reward.

The story gives readers an insight into the pain and suffering that Edgar endures at the hands of his captors; and his unshakable faith and hope of eventually being free. Through Edgar’s story, the reader will come to understand the resilience that human beings can exhibit under extreme circumstances, the power of faith and the meaning of true friendship. Looking collectively at the people who are involved in Edgar’s captivity and the ones who assist him, we are reminded that people are capable of good or evil, regardless of color or creed.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Prologue

 

Al-Hajj Abdul Asuman welcomed back one of the men he had sent to investigate the slave camps. The two met in a little restaurant at the edge of Nimule town, located in southern Sudan, near the northern border of Uganda.

Al-Hajj Abdul was a tall, distinguished man with a full head of gray hair and a very dark complexion. He was from the Nubian tribe and looked about sixty-five years of age but no one knew for sure.

Rashid Omar, a small-time trader, was about twenty years younger. He occasionally conducted some business for Al-Hajj Abdul. The two men had known each other for many years.

‘So how are you, Al-Hajj?’ Rashid asked as they hugged one another.

‘Oh, Rashid, you don’t know how long I have been waiting to hear from you. How long has it been?’

‘Almost three months, but I assure you, my friend, the journey was worth it. I learned some information about what you wanted and also managed to acquire some camel skins,’ Rashid said with a big grin on his face.

‘That’s good news, Rashid. Come, let’s find a quiet place where we can talk in privacy,’ the older man said as he led his friend to a table in the corner of the restaurant.

Al-Hajj Abdul ordered some tea with special herbs and then examined his friend closely. ‘You look very good for a man who has been traveling this long, Rashid. So tell me, what did you find out?’

‘Well, Al-Hajj, where should I start?’

‘Just from the very beginning,’ Al-Hajj Abdul replied excitedly.

Rashid breathed in deeply. ‘Okay. When I arrived at Imela, I found transportation to the slave market. I went there, hoping to learn something. The name Isa Faquil was mentioned as one of the men who bought slaves and I was told where he lives. I managed to get on a truck that was heading west towards Rokon, but I got off a few towns after we crossed the Nile because I needed to go north. I spent days in one small town looking for transportation northward. I finally found some traders who were going in the same direction and we started talking. I told them I had heard of a businessman named Isa Faquil who dealt in camel hides at a good value, and the hides were in demand in the south.’ Rashid paused to drink some tea and quickly light a cigarette.

‘You know, smoking weakens your speed like an old mare. I thought you would have stopped by now,’ Al-Hajj Abdul commented.

Rashid smiled and drank some more herbal tea before he continued, saying, ‘Old habits die hard, my friend. Anyway, one thing led to another, and these traders decided to show me a marketplace where I could find Isa Faquil. It took us two days to get there. On the way, they complained that business was slow because of the impending guerilla war; and the only safe times to travel were the early months of the year, which were rough because of the rainy season.’ He paused to sip his tea.

‘We finally arrived at the marketplace. I thanked them and offered them money for letting me ride their horse, but they refused, saying, “Men meet one another but trees don’t.” I still haven’t figured that one out. Anyway, they left me at the market—’

Al-Hajj Abdul cut him short. ‘Rashid, I hope you didn’t go through all these towns asking a lot of questions.’

Rashid puffed on his cigarette and smiled before answering, ‘Al-Hajj, you know very well that the one thing one doesn’t do is rush an Arab trader.’

Al-Hajj Abdul smiled and nodded in agreement. ‘Please continue.’

‘At this marketplace, I happened to meet a man who was selling a good stallion for forty thousand . He finally took thirty-eight and sold me the beautiful animal. I changed my story, of course. I told him I needed the horse to deliver a message to a Sheik Nadim, but first I would have to see a man named Isa Faquil, who would tell me where to buy some good ornaments, since I wasn’t interested in the garbage they were selling in that market,’ Rashid said.

The older man smiled. ‘I knew I needed a smart person like you to accomplish a sensitive mission like this.’

‘Well, this trader knew of another trader who came from the area, so after the market closed down late in the afternoon, he took me to this man, who was selling camel and donkey hides. His business was slow that day and he wanted money, so we came to an understanding. Again, I was fooled. I thought the journey would be short, but it turned out to be a day and half. I was glad he was with me because I wouldn’t have managed to make it alone, not knowing the little makeshift bridges and paths in the area. We finally got to a small town about fifteen miles from Isa Faquil’s residence. I thanked the man and made plans for my next move.’

Rashid lit another cigarette. Al-Hajj Abdul waited patiently for his friend to continue the story.

‘Al-Hajj, do you remember the cheetah hide I tried to sell to you and you declined, saying you didn’t deal in animal hides anymore?’

Al-Hajj Abdul thought about it for a moment before he nodded.

‘Well, after a couple of days and after finding out where Isa Faquil’s place was, I decided to go there with my stallion, which was already well rested. I found Isa Faquil in the process of cultivating some land near his residence. Apparently, the man had become prosperous since he got into the hashish business. Nevertheless, I pulled out my cheetah hide and tried to sell it to him.’

Rashid glanced at his tea and then took another sip. ‘Al-Hajj, you gave me instructions, and I had already spent too much money with nothing to show for it.’

Al-Hajj Abdul interrupted impatiently. ‘Don’t play with me, Rashid, just tell me everything. You will get your money.’

Rashid nodded and resumed his story. ‘There were a lot of slaves working in his fields. When Isa left to get the money, I took a good look at the slaves and saw your young man talking to another slave. I remembered him from the picture you showed me. After a while, Isa came back from his tent and saw me examining the slaves. He laughed and asked me if I wanted to buy any. I said I was interested in only two, and I showed them to him. He said that those didn’t belong to him but he could sell me any of his. I shook my head firmly and threw him off-guard by accepting two camel hides in exchange for my cheetah hide. I rode back to this little town and made plans to visit Mullah Sadiq Bin Fahad, who owned the two slaves. A few days later, on my way to see Mullah Sadiq, I saw army trucks packed with slaves, so I turned back to find out what was going on.’

Rashid puffed on his cigarette. ‘I went back to Isa’s pretending to want another hide. Incidentally, I met your friend, the Arab trader from here, Saleh Salim, who was there trying to buy some ornaments. A few questions later, I found out that all the able-bodied slaves, including all of Mullah Sadiq and Isa Faquil’s slaves, had been taken away to work in a town outside of Juba.’

Al-Hajj Abdul shook his head in despair. ‘By Allah, that was a missed opportunity,’ he said.

‘I pretended I wanted to buy something. Saleh got up to show me some things, and I walked outside with him. Since I had seen him with you numerous times, I knew he was working for you, so I told him where I was staying and made an appointment to see him later. He said he would pay Mullah Sadiq a visit before we met.’

Rashid looked at Al-Hajj Abdul and asked, ‘Shall I continue?’

Al-Hajj Abdul’s eyes opened wide. He knew it was about money. Traders were predictable. ‘Rashid, you know me very well. Have I ever gone back on my word?’

Rashid shook his head. ‘No, of course not, Al-Hajj, I will tell you everything.’ He paused. ‘Anyway, Saleh paid a visit to Mullah Sadiq before we met. He then told me that hundreds of slaves had been taken to unload heavy equipment to be used in the oil fields and other places where they had discovered more oil. I convinced Saleh to follow the trucks and see for himself. I figured he wouldn’t have the same problems I would, considering the fact that I am only half-Arab and dark. So Saleh left and followed the truck route.’

‘Did you see Saleh again?’ Al-Hajj Abdul asked.

Rashid nodded. ‘Yes, I saw him about three weeks later. He had come to buy other merchandise to take with him. He told me that when he reached the trucks’ destination, he crossed a bridge and saw a large ship being unloaded by the slaves. He stayed in the area doing some business and finding out more information. He had taken clothing items, which he sold to some soldiers. He heard the soldiers saying that the slaves would be moved soon to begin digging trenches for the summer campaign against the Sudan People’s Liberation Army—the SPLA. Saleh told me that it would probably take about two weeks to unload a large ship like the one he saw.’

Rashid paused to drink some more tea from a fresh pot. ‘I thanked him and gave him all the money I had left; all fifty thousand pounds,’ Rashid said, shaking his head.

Al-Hajj Abdul had not become wealthy by accident. He knew that the price Rashid was quoting was of course exaggerated, but there was a life at stake. If he paid Rashid well, word would go around and people would rush to work for him.

‘Tell me, Rashid, how much did you spend altogether?’

‘Well, I bought the horse, which—’

Al-Hajj Abdul cut him short. ‘Don’t tell me the details of horses and meals, Rashid. Just tell me how much everything cost and give me the information you wrote down.’

Rashid reached for his bag and unzipped it, taking time to look inside carefully. He finally pulled out a lot of papers on which he had written all the information he had gathered.

‘Here is the account of what I have been doing for you since I left,’ Rashid said as he handed over the papers.

Al-Hajj Abdul took the papers and slowly perused the details on every page. It was an eleven-page, handwritten report, and it took him about thirty minutes to read it.

‘Good work, Rashid. I appreciate this, and I won’t hesitate to call on you when I have more work. Now, how much did you use in addition to our agreement?’ he asked.

Rashid removed another piece of paper from his bag and made the calculations. ‘The final figure I come up with, Al-Hajj, is two hundred and forty-five thousand pounds,’ he said humbly.

The older man reached into his small, unique-looking, brown camel-skin bag, counted five hundred thousand Sudanese pounds (two hundred dollars), and handed the money to Rashid, whose eyes opened wide with surprise. He knew that traders like Rashid made less than half of that money in a month.

‘You see, Rashid, not only do you get your bonus, but I’ve added more for your patience and good work. May Allah be with you, and don’t hesitate to call on me anytime you hear anything,’ he said, getting up and patting Rashid on the shoulder before walking out.

*   *   *

Al-Hajj Abdul reached his residence as the sun was starting to set. His daughter brought him a light meal.

‘Aisha, where did the young men go?’ he asked her.

‘They went to play football.’

‘Football!’ Al-Hajj Abdul echoed, laughing himself hoarse. ‘When did this start?’

‘They started a few weeks ago. They bought some sneakers and a ball and took Ghani and a few other boys to play. I believe they have a team now,’ she said.

Al-Hajj Abdul continued laughing as he stood up. ‘I will go and lie down. When the boys come back, you wake me up, Aisha, you hear?’

‘Yes, Papa,’ she answered humbly as he walked to his room.

When the boys got back, Aisha told them that Al-Hajj Abdul was looking for them. They quickly took showers and changed their clothes before dinner. It was a custom at Al-Hajj Abdul’s residence to eat their evening meal exactly at eight. They joined Al-Hajj Abdul at the dinner table and greeted him one by one before taking their seats.

‘So, young men, I hear you were playing football. Did you win?’ Al-Hajj Abdul asked with a smile.

Ghani nodded affirmatively. ‘Yes, father.’

‘It is good you boys have found something to pass your time while you are here,’ he said as they started eating.

It was a local custom to eat first and talk later, so they ate silently until they finished. The ladies removed the utensils and bowls, but Al-Hajj Abdul stopped the boys from leaving.

‘Young men, don’t leave yet. Ghani, please make sure the camels and the donkeys are all in good shape,’ he said. Ghani left and Aisha brought some tea, which she served and then left.

‘How do you like the tea, boys?’ he asked.

‘It is the best black tea I have ever tasted,’ Wilbur responded.

Al-Hajj Abdul sipped his tea slowly before he spoke. ‘I have some good news for you. Our quest has not been for nothing, and I hope Allah will give us more success,’ he said slowly.

All the boys put down their teacups and turned their eyes on the older man.

‘You remember I sent a few people to investigate the slave camps,’ he said as he poured himself more tea.

They all nodded.

‘Today I met with one of the men I had sent north, and he had some news. Your friend Edgar is indeed alive,’ he stated.

The boys couldn’t control themselves. They jumped up and down hugging one another.

Al-Hajj Abdul interrupted their cheer, saying, ‘Young men, cool down—we still have problems. Before my man Rashid could get Edgar released, all the slaves were taken away to unload equipment.’ He then told them the whole story, including what his other man, Saleh, had witnessed. Nevertheless, the boys were smiling.

‘Young men, I want you to understand that the struggle continues,’ Al-Hajj Abdul stated. ‘There is one problem that we have right now. Last week I got information about a rebel build-up, suggesting that this summer there is going to be a military offensive here in southern Sudan. This means traveling from one area to another will be very dangerous in the coming months,’ he concluded.

‘But, sir, isn’t there a way we can smuggle him out or even buy him back?’ John asked with enthusiasm.

‘No, what you are suggesting would put your friend in a lot of danger. I have learnt that the slaves will be taken to the front line to dig trenches sometime after they finish unloading the ship. I want to send Ghani to see Al-Hajj Musa Lara to find out anything he can about this coming campaign … Don’t worry about this now. I know you boys need to celebrate the news, so why don’t you go to town and enjoy yourselves. Remember, however, we still have a lot of work ahead. Don’t lose hope. I will talk to you tomorrow,’ Al-Hajj Abdul said, dismissing them.

*   *   *

All three of them bowed to pay their respect to Al-Hajj Abdul before going to their quarters to prepare themselves for the night out in Nimule town.

‘I will go and talk to Ghani. He may be able to suggest a good place in this town,’ John said as they neared their rooms. Shortly after, Ghani and John came back.

Surprise and confusion was written all over Ghani’s face. ‘Guys, are you sure that my father gave you the go-ahead to go out and celebrate, at night?’ he asked, still not believing what John had just told him. The boys nodded.

Ghani shook his head. ‘This is the first time I have seen my father do this. Okay then, I will show you the town, but first I have to change,’ he said as he rushed out.

‘Well, boys, let’s be thankful that we know where Eddie is. Remind me to cross over the border tomorrow to call my uncle with the good news,’ Wilbur said.

‘Now let’s paint the town red, gentlemen. Are you ready?’ Sam asked as he led the group through the hallway.

Ghani soon caught up with them, and they walked cheerfully towards the town. ‘Nimule is a small town with all kinds of people, but it is relatively safe,’ Ghani said with a smile. They walked through the town very relaxed.

*   *   *

As they walked, John thought about the last time all three of them were this happy. It was three months ago, while having drinks with Edgar. Before John realized it, he was in deep thought, reminiscing about old times with his three friends, especially Edgar.

 

 

Chapter 1

 

I was feeling relieved after my high school exams. I also felt confident about my performance, though I tried my best not to show it to my fellow students. Education hadn’t been easy, especially for us students from northern Uganda. Endless wars that brought about untold misery and poverty had been going on for as long as I could remember. Fortunately the constant encouragement by my mother coupled with the fear of disappointing her transformed me into a good student.

I always remembered my mother saying, ‘Edgar, your father worked hard but had no education, and look how he ended up.’ She would pause and then continue, ‘Mark my words, son. With education, people may not like you, but they will respect you.’ She even insisted on fetching water herself from the borehole a mile away so that I would not take time away from my studies. Luckily for me, I had been given financial support by the Catholic church to fund my education.

All these thoughts went through my mind as I walked towards the nearest pub with my three best friends: Wilbur, Sam, and John. We had decided to celebrate the end of the final exams by having drinks.

‘Eddie, you are too quiet. What’s the matter? Aren’t you happy we have finally completed the exams?’ Wilbur asked me.

My friends called me Eddie most of the time. Wilbur, or Willy, as we called him, was very carefree. His family was well-off and lived in the capital city of Kampala, so I wasn’t surprised by his easy attitude. At six feet, Wilbur was the tallest of the group. Sam, John, and I were about an inch shorter, but Sam and I were bigger in size.

I smiled and patted Willy on the back. ‘Relax, Willy. I am coming to the pub with you to celebrate, aren’t I? And here we are.’

All four of us were joking and laughing as we entered the pub. At my insistence, we chose the booth farthest from the door. I didn’t want any of my teachers to see us in a pub. I still respected them even though I had finished high school.

Wilbur ordered some beers, and we started drinking and talking about everything else but school. This went on for a while as Wilbur, good on his promise, kept our bottles coming. We talked about our plans for the next several months while we waited for the exam results.

I slowly realized that out of all my friends, I was the only one who didn’t have any plans for the immediate future. Wilbur Ochom had a job with his father waiting for him in the city. John Kimuli had already started working at his uncle’s gas station in Jinja, and Sam Ssenyonjo would be driving his minibus taxi and pocketing the money. I kept my thoughts to myself, not wanting any pity from my friends.

Suddenly, an idea popped into my head and I raised my beer bottle for attention. There was instant silence as they all turned to me. I put the bottle back down.

‘Guys, I have made a decision to be a volunteer worker for the Catholic church that sponsored my education. I want to teach children in the camps.’

Everybody looked at me in disbelief. John tried to say something but merely shook his head in resignation.

It was Wilbur who finally found words. ‘Look, Eddie, you don’t have to act like a saint.’ He paused and took a sip of his beer. ‘I know a few people who want to hire honest people like you. I could get you a job,’ he finished.

‘Hey, Eddie, you could work with me in the minibus until you get steady work,’ Sam added with a big smile.

I was moved by the offers from my friends, so I looked down at my beer to get my composure back. ‘Thanks a lot for your offers, guys. You’re true friends, but I have made up my mind. This will give me a chance to be with my mother for some time. I really haven’t spent much time with her since I started high school. I’m sure things will work out for the best,’ I said.

All of them nodded slowly, even though I could tell they were not happy about it since the area was not safe. I checked the time and noticed it was getting late.

John eased out of his seat and headed for the phone booth. More drinks were brought before John came back with a big smile on his face. ‘Gentlemen, you will be staying at our place for the night,’ he said, looking around.

I sipped the beer in silence and then looked at my friends in wonder. We were about to embark on different paths. Some were going to be successful while others were not. Life is always like that, I thought with sadness. We finished our drinks and took a taxi to pick up our luggage from school before heading to John’s residence.

We were welcomed by his sister and brother and shown where we would sleep. After a nice dinner, we sat in the living room, where we got involved in different discussions. Finally, one by one we retired to our respective bedrooms. I could not fall asleep for a long time, as I was thinking about my future and weighing the uncertain period ahead.

Sleep finally came in the form of a strange dream. The little I could recall the next day was that: I was being chased by armed men through a dense overgrown tobacco plantation while trying to move away the leaves that were hitting my face. I kept running harder, urged on by my mother. Somehow she reached out and caught me with both hands, but some sort of force kept pulling me further and further from her until she was out of sight. She kept pleading for me not to abandon her.

I woke up suddenly with tears in my eyes, unable to understand what was happening. I felt better when I realized I had been dreaming, but I still kept wondering why the dream had felt very real. I checked my watch and realized it was six-thirty a.m. I got up and went for a run to clear my head. I tried to figure out the meaning of the dream, but I couldn’t make any sense of it. The more I thought about it, the more disturbed I became. I didn’t care what people said about dreams not being real. In this dream, my mother had seemed too real to be ignored.

I arrived back a little after eight o’clock. I had been gone for a whole hour and a half. Everybody had already freshened up and gone to the dining room for breakfast. I greeted them and went straight to the bedroom for my shower kit. I felt a lot better after showering and changing into fresh clothes for the journey, but the dream was still in my head. I tried to ignore it. Who knows, maybe I had too much to drink last night, I thought to myself as I joined others at the breakfast table.

‘Morning, Eddie, how was your night?’ all of them intoned in unison.

‘Pretty good, although I had a strange dream,’ I answered with a smile.

Everybody around the table laughed heartily, including Maggie, John’s sister, who teased me and wanted to know about my dream. I wasn’t sure what to say, so I avoided her eyes and concentrated on eating breakfast.

We finally finished the breakfast and thanked our hostess. I snuck away to the bedroom and straightened the place out before picking up my suitcase and mattress and walking into the living room. Students always took their own mattresses to boarding schools.

‘Gentlemen, we would not want to keep the bus waiting now, would we?’ I said with humor.

John looked at his watch quickly. ‘Well, we still have some time, but let me check on my uncle and see if he can give us a ride to the station. I’ll be right back,’ he said, walking towards the door. His uncle lived nearby.

I put my luggage down and joined the others in the living room. In a few minutes we heard the sound of a car engine, and then John hurried inside the house. ‘Eddie, you are lucky. We just got a ride. Let’s get you on that bus.’

I got up, shook hands with Maggie, and started to pick up my luggage.

‘I will help you with your things,’ Sam shouted, taking the suitcase from me. Wilbur picked up the mattress, and we all headed for the door.

‘Thank you for the ride,’ I said to John’s uncle, Mr Bill Kimuli.

He brushed off my gratitude and opened the passenger doors. ‘Anything for my nephew. Get in quickly,’ he said jokingly as he started the car.

As the car pulled off, I waved to Maggie until the house was out of sight. She was an impressive girl, very humorous and obviously very intelligent.

‘You know, the road to your area is dangerous these days,’ John’s uncle shouted above the noise of the car. ‘You should disembark at Malaba and wait for the usual military convoy.’

I nodded in agreement but did not commit myself by saying anything since I did not have a lot of money.

We got to the Jinja bus station as they were announcing the bus to Gulu.

‘There is your bus, son, hurry,’ Mr Kimuli shouted as he parked the car on the shoulder of the road. We quickly got out and ran towards the bus. I inquired about the fare, and to my relief not much had changed in the four months since I last took the bus.

‘Well, what are you going to do, Eddie? Will you wait for a convoy or head straight to Gulu?’ Wilbur asked, looking me straight in the eye.

I shrugged. ‘I don’t know, Willy. But don’t worry. It’s not the first time I’ve gone home, you know.’

Sam and John looked at me with uncertainty. ‘Eddie, I haven’t kept up with the situation up north; but let me write down the license plate number of your bus anyway,’ Sam said as he walked to the back of the bus with a pen and a piece of paper.

Sam came back with a concerned look on his face. ‘Look, Eddie, I really think you should change vehicles at Malaba and wait for a military convoy.’

I nodded, and we sadly hugged one another before I climbed onto the bus.

‘Don’t forget to send us some kind of message when you arrive home,’ Wilbur shouted above the noise of the bus engine.

I got a seat next to a window so that I could talk to my friends before the bus took off.

‘Hey, guys come around here,’ I shouted loudly through the window.

John arrived first, but the bus was starting to take off. ‘Don’t forget to write,’ he shouted.

‘You can call the number I gave you for the Catholic mission. I will definitely be there tomorrow,’ I shouted back.

They were now chasing after the bus while waving to me.

‘I will call you tomorrow morning!’ John shouted.

The bus was moving very fast, and it was impossible to hear their words as we waved hard at each other. The bus joined the main road, and the station started fading until I lost sight of my friends. I sat back in my seat and relaxed. The boy next to me seemed too young to engage in a constructive conversation, so I reached into my jacket pocket for a Sidney Sheldon novel and started looking for the right page. It was going to be a long journey.

Along the way I must have dozed off because I suddenly woke up feeling uncomfortable.

The conductor was tapping my shoulder. ‘Excuse me. Your fare, please,’ he said.

I rubbed my eyes, sat up, and looked around. ‘How much does it cost to Malaba?’ I asked him.

The conductor looked at me in surprise. ‘You mean they didn’t tell you? This is a direct service bus.’

I shook my head. ‘They said something about a military escort at Malaba because of rebel activity.’

The conductor smiled and shrugged. ‘You know, young man, there are times when the rebels hit even when they see the military. It’s all in God’s hands.’

I reached in my pocket and paid the full fare to Gulu.

The conductor took the money and thanked me. He must have seen my concerned look because he said, ‘I tell you what—we shall talk to people at the next rest area and get the full picture of what’s ahead of us.’ Then he walked off.

I reached down to the floor and picked up the little novel that I had dropped. Maybe I am being paranoid. How else could these buses keep moving on these roads if there isn’t any degree of safety? Every time I went home, it was a nerve-racking experience.

I looked at the boy on my right. He was about fifteen years old. I decided to talk to him. I learnt that his name was Rob and that he went to school in Kampala. He said he was going to visit his grandparents for the holidays.

‘Don’t you think it’s unsafe to venture so far from home?’ I asked.

He shrugged his shoulders. ‘Papa said it’s safer than it’s been for years, especially since they introduced military convoys.’

I learnt that he was in senior two at a reputable school and wished to continue with his education up to university, for engineering. I sincerely hoped the boy would achieve his dream.

The driver announced that the bus would stop at a rest area in a few minutes for some minor repairs. I checked my watch. It was getting late, and I was feeling hungry. I welcomed the idea of stopping and getting some food. Also, the conductor would hopefully find out more about the rebel situation in the area. The bus slowed down and made a turn into an area where numerous vehicles were parked.

‘Welcome to Kali. We shall leave here at six-thirty. You have roughly an hour and a half. Please be back on time, otherwise we will leave without you,’ the driver announced through the microphone.

I got up and followed the rest of the passengers off the bus.

‘Hey, Eddie, it looks like it’s going to be a long journey to Gulu,’ Rob said to me with a big smile. I squeezed his shoulder and smiled back. He was about six inches shorter than me, but he was built like a wrestler. I thought he was pretty big for his age.

As we descended from the bus, Rob pulled on my hand and said, ‘Come on, Eddie, I have been here before. I know a good restaurant where we can eat.’

I obliged and followed him through the maze of cars. I could use a good meal, not to mention the restroom. The restaurant was clean and newly painted, which meant it might be expensive. Oh, what the hell, I thought to myself.

‘Hey, Rob, where is the restroom?’ I asked.

He pointed to a white door in the corner. ‘Don’t forget to get the toilet paper at the counter if it’s a long call,’ he said, smiling.

I nodded and changed directions. I got the roll at the counter and then went straight towards the restroom. Afterwards I washed my hands and face and also combed my hair. I felt much better as I walked back into the dining room.

‘Over here, Eddie,’ Rob shouted when he saw me. ‘I hope you don’t mind, but I ordered for us and the food is on me.’

I was surprised and embarrassed. How can I let this boy buy a meal for me? I started to protest, but something in the boy’s eyes made me relax. There wasn’t any arrogance, just happiness.

I will accept this one time on the condition that I buy the drinks.’

‘Okay, let’s shake on it,’ Rob said, giving me his hand.

I took it and squeezed it. He jumped up from his seat like a demon. I let go of his hand and burst out laughing.

‘Damn! I’d be crazy to let you do that to me again,’ he exclaimed as he shook his hand.

The waitress brought our meals of meat stew, mashed potatoes, and lettuce on the side.

‘Excuse me, Miss. Can you please bring us a couple of soft drinks?’ I asked. Rob asked for a Fanta, and I ordered a Sprite. ‘Oh, and can you make two separate bills, one for food and the other for drinks?’ I asked. She nodded and left to get the drinks.

I prayed before our meal, a habit I had picked up at home from my mother, and then we dug in. The meal was delicious and very timely. I ate all the food on my plate in silence and didn’t look up until I was finished.

‘Thanks, Rob, I really needed that,’ I said, reaching for my drink. Rob raised his Fanta in a toast, and we both gulped them down. I looked at my watch and noticed we had spent about an hour in the restaurant. We still had about thirty minutes, so we chatted some more before we settled our bills and headed for the bus.

By the time we got there, everybody was back in their seats getting ready to go.

‘Hurry up! We almost left without you,’ shouted the conductor.

The bus started moving before we were fully seated. The conductor was checking tickets and at the same time issuing new ones for the newcomers. When he got to our chairs, I reached over Rob and touched the conductor’s hand.

‘Did you find out if the road is safe?’ I asked.

‘There hasn’t been any rebel activity in a while, so we are heading straight to Gulu,’ he said. He checked his watch. ‘If all goes well, we shall arrive at around nine.’

That meant we still had a journey of two and half hours before we got home. I thanked him and sat back in the seat. I closed my eyes and started daydreaming about home and my new volunteer job.

Some people in my hometown lived in protected areas that were sustained by contributions from various churches and organizations. I was looking forward to teaching in these areas. I liked teaching; it gave me a sense of self-worth. I also wanted the children to have a better future. I hated seeing hopelessness in our people.

The bus slowed down. I opened my eyes and elbowed my young friend Rob. ‘Hey, what’s going on?’ I asked.

He stood up to peep through the front windshield and then quickly sat down, his eyes wide with fear. ‘Oh no, I knew I should not have come.’

I didn’t wait to hear any more. I stepped over him and tried to look. We were stopped in a park near the road. There was some kind of roadblock, but something didn’t seem right. A lot of thoughts started running through my head. Suddenly, something exploded very loudly, and I was thrown towards Rob. Another loud explosion followed, and then silence reigned all around. The bus headlights went off and everything became dark.

‘What’s going on, Eddie?’ Rob asked.

I didn’t know what to say. I just put my index finger on my lips. ‘Shh … I believe we are in deep trouble,’ I whispered.

There was some commotion outside the bus, and then a powerful light emanated within the bus. The light moved silently from face to face, slowly going towards the back. These couldn’t be the rebels. They were simply too cool. They didn’t seem to be in any kind of hurry. Nobody dared say a word. It was the most frightening time of my life.

‘Listen, everybody!’ a male voice shouted in fluent English. ‘I want you to walk towards the front and out of the bus, starting with the seat in the back. Now!’ he finished harshly.

People started walking out of the bus, and Rob and I followed silently. The man with a flashlight was standing next to the driver’s seat. Behind him was another man with a pointed gun. I noticed a leg protruding from under the driver’s seat, and I recognized the clothing. It was our driver. My heart sank. Oh, my God. The explosions! The bastards had murdered him. But why? He had slowed down the bus as they requested, but they had still killed him.

Suddenly, the reality of our situation dawned on me. These were the rebels. I prodded Rob to hurry up. I didn’t want to see any more death.

‘You! Stay!’ a voice barked.

I hoped it wasn’t me they were calling and kept walking down the stairs.

‘I mean you, going down the stairs, come back.’

I turned around to face him, scared stiff. He motioned with a flashlight for me to climb back up, which I did. He kept looking hard at other boys and kept motioning the strong-looking ones to stay behind until there were five of us. One woman tried complaining about her son, and they simply told her to go and wait for him outside. When she refused to go, they laughed and told her to take him. As the two were walking down the stairs, they were mowed down by bullets. The woman and her son fell outside the bus.

‘Okay, everybody! That should be a lesson to you. We are not here to play around, understand?’ the man with the flashlight said.

We all nodded, too dumfounded to say anything.

‘I want everything cleared out of this bus and thrown through the windows on the right in ten minutes flat,’ the man said to the five of us boys. ‘Now move!’

We almost fell on top of each other as we hurried to unload the luggage. We worked fast, throwing things out the windows. Urged on by the rebels, we even broke a few windows. We finished quickly and were told to step out of the bus to join the others in the line. A lot of flashlights were outside, either pointing at us or at the bus.

‘Now listen, you morons, I don’t like to repeat myself! Everybody get your things quickly and form a line,’ a man with a big flashlight shouted.

I was scared to death. I realized that the only hope we had was if by chance an army convoy passed by, but the odds of that were one in a million. In the meantime, all I had to do was try my best to cooperate with our captors.

They ordered us to start walking towards a hill deep inside the park.

‘No talking. You hear!’ the man with the big flashlight shouted again. I took him to be the leader because he was commanding everyone.

We kept climbing up for what seemed like eternity until we arrived at a flat area.

‘Halt!’ the leader screamed. ‘I want everybody to sit down and turn around. Look this way!’

We all did as we were ordered. He stepped back from us. Suddenly there was a big explosion and our bus was on fire way down in the park. Our captors all laughed loudly as if it was funny. I felt sick to my stomach.

‘Attention!’ the leader shouted. ‘As you have seen, we punish with death, so don’t push us. If you behave, your time with us won’t be bad,’ he said and then walked away to join the other rebels.

I was trying to figure out what I had done to deserve this, but I kept drawing a blank.

‘On your feet, we have a long journey ahead of us!’ the leader shouted.

I didn’t look back, I just picked up my things and followed the rest. My nightmare had just begun.

Continued….

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Elated after finishing high school exams, Edgar and his longtime friends are excited about their future and looking forward to their long vacation. Unbeknownst to them fate has other plans. Edgar’s life turns into a living nightmare when, on his way home, his bus is stopped by the LRA rebels in northern Uganda. Along with other passengers, most of whom are students, Edgar is abducted and taken to the rebel headquarters deep in the mountains of southern Sudan. Things turn even worse when, instead of being forced to become a soldier, he is sold into slavery. His life is changed forever.

Edgar’s friends learn of his fate and embark on a very difficult and unpredictable rescue mission. With the help of a fellow captive, Edgar attempts a daring and dangerous escape, knowing that his re-capture would end in a fate worse than death. But will he succeed? The dramatic finale awaits you as you follow Edgar while he is being chased down by warlords whose mission is to return him to the slave owners and collect a large reward.

The story gives readers an insight into the pain and suffering that Edgar endures at the hands of his captors; and his unshakable faith and hope of eventually being free. Through Edgar’s story, the reader will come to understand the resilience that human beings can exhibit under extreme circumstances, the power of faith and the meaning of true friendship. Looking collectively at the people who are involved in Edgar’s captivity and the ones who assist him, we are reminded that people are capable of good or evil, regardless of color or creed.

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Reviews

“This book does the outstanding job of creating awareness and teaching us about a horrific and ongoing human-rights abuse situation by way of a compelling action-filled story. It will be difficult for you to put this book down before you find out what happens to Eddie” – Allbooks Reviews International

“The book is a good read, with important lessons about decency and true friendship and human cruelty” – Africa Book Club

“Publicizing the alarming truth behind modern slavery stands as the novel’s primary achievement” – Kirkus Discoveries

“…I was moved by the ingenuity, courage and devotion of Edgar’s friends. That raised the story above the thriller category…” – Richard Sheeler

From The Author
This story was inspired by actual events that happened to many young boys and girls in northern Uganda in the 1990s. The story was conceived from many interviews that were conducted with survivors and former child soldiers who managed to escape the LRA.
(This is a sponsored post.)

Tom Bane’s Masks of the Lost Kings (Suzy da Silva Series) is Featured in This Free Thriller of The Week Excerpt– Think “The Da Vinci Code Meets Indiana Jones,” But Her Name is Suzy

On Friday we announced that Tom Bane’s Masks of the Lost Kings (Suzy da Silva Series) is our Thriller of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the thriller, mystery, and suspense categories: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

4.4 stars – 36 Reviews
Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

A SECRET LOST TO TIME
Following the sudden disappearance of treasure hunter Ben Sanders in Mexico, beautiful archaeologist Suzy da Silva is snatched from the cloistered environs of Oxford University and thrust into a deadly maelstrom of intrigue and discovery.
Joining forces with astrophysicist Tom Brooking she crosses four continents, to unlock the dark secrets of Tutankhamun’s tomb, the Holy Sepulchre and the mysterious Mayan Temple of Inscriptions to reveal a mysterious truth.
Together they risk their lives, pursued by martial assassins and renegade special forces, fighting the forces of evil to discover hidden knowledge so precious that it has lain dormant for over a thousand years…

One Reviewer Notes

“Masks of Lost Kings” is solid entertainment. Ancient mysteries, conspiracy, murder and Suzie – the young archeologist with a provocative theory. It’s all there from the depths of Egyptian tombs to terror on the streets of Cairo. She is on a grant to study in Egypt and gets involved in an enigmatic tangle as brooding as the Sphinx. She doesn’t know what’s going on and neither does the reader. That all adds up to an engrossing story.” – Amazon Reviewer, 5 Stars

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

 

CHAPTER ONE

They emerged from the black, dripping jungle night already bruised and drenched from the hot

rain of the Tumbala Mountains. Ben and José, his tribal guide, were making progress, but it

didn’t feel like it. In every direction unbroken jungle spread out around them in spirals of

verdant green, impeding their every move, slowing down every step as it clutched at their limbs,

trying to trip them up and hold them back. Something was following them in the trees above

their heads. Ben guessed it was monkeys disturbed by the flames of José’s Cahune palm torch

and made anxious by this intrusion into their nighttime privacy. Mosquitoes patrolled in jerky

circles, mounting regular painful attacks on their sweating skins. All around, the buzz of cicadas

crested and receded like tropical ocean waves, making it hard to listen for any sounds of

impending danger.

Just like the heat, a sense of menace cloaked the ancient Mayan rain forest like a deadly veil.

The gods had been starved for over a thousand years. Now they wanted a sacrifice. They

demanded blood.

The temptation to turn and run was almost overwhelming, but Ben knew he couldn’t give

up now. This search for a sacred truth was his chosen quest. If he could pull this off, his

reputation as an archaeologist and astrophysicist would be assured. He would win his place in the

history books forever. His hunger for the truth had led him inexorably toward this ancient prize,

the captivating pyramidal Temple of Inscriptions. Beneath its stone interior lay the mysterious

subterranean death crypt of King Pacal that Ben was risking everything to unveil. The tribal

elders and survival experts he had consulted had all issued the same warning, telling him of the

wet season’s bloodthirsty mosquitoes, vicious horseflies and mud traps that could suck in a man

up to his knees, or worse. Everyone said it would be best to wait until the place dried out in

summer, but the lure was too great and Ben was too impatient. He couldn’t risk waiting even for

a few months and losing out to a rival. Inside this jungle lay a giant Mayan lost city, with a secret

concealed for a thousand years, a secret that he now had the code to unlock.

The sweet smell of orchids filled the hot, wet air and brilliant blue butterflies floated

randomly past, like musical notes, suspended in narrow beams of moonlight.

Ben’s shirt snagged on the spiky tropical leaves, making him twist awkwardly. His foot shot

out from under him, toppling him sideways. Suddenly he was falling through the air as if the

ground had opened up beneath him. Grab something, his mind shrieked. Anything! A jolt

slammed through him as his hand caught a tree root, halting his fall, while his left knee smashed

into hard stone. Dirt and rocks were falling around him. His muscles screamed in pain as he

clung on in the dark. He must be hanging over the side of a ravine but he had no idea how deep

it was beneath his flailing feet. The root shifted in his hands as the earth began to surrender its

hold. He glanced up, and a fresh shower of dirt stung his face. Above him was a sheer vertical

wall of rock. He could see from the glow of José’s fire torch that he had fallen at least twenty

feet. He braced himself to look down; despite the darkness it looked like a fall of at least another

hundred feet beneath his dangling muddy boots.

“José, throw me the rope!” Ben shouted, his voice hoarse.

Terrifying empty seconds passed before Ben saw the end of the rope just a few feet above

his head. Letting go of the root with one hand he snatched at it, his fingertips glancing against it

and then finding purchase. Transferring his weight, he felt the rope give as José struggled to hold

him. There was no choice but to trust the man he’d only known for a few days. Letting go of the

root with the other hand he started to haul himself upward. At the lip of the ravine, José braced

himself against a rock to shoulder his young American employer’s weight. A few minutes later,

Ben was lying on the floor of the jungle, gasping for breath, his heart thumping, elated to still be

alive.

“I thought I was a goner,” Ben exhaled, when he was finally able to pull himself to his feet.

“Lets get moving, José, we’ve got work to do!”

“No hay problemo, Don Sanders,” José grinned, equally relieved to have avoided going

back to his village to explain he had lost the important foreigner down a ravine. “Soon we see

the jungle temples. We go around the ravine south, then along, and we are in Palenque soon,

very soon.”

Pointing forward with the greasy smoke of his palm torch, José cut a swathe through the

cloud of mosquitoes that had gathered. When he first arrived in the jungle, Ben had been

stunned by its ecological diversity. But, since then, it had stung him, sucked his blood and

dehydrated him to a harrowing thirst. Now he just wanted to claim his prize and get back to

civilization. He shivered as a territorial howler monkey bellowed threateningly in the distance.

José led as they forced their way through the undergrowth for another hour, every limp

sending a wave of pain through Ben’s badly bruised knee. Suddenly José halted and peered

through the foliage ahead. Ben followed the guide’s gaze and thought he could just make out

unusual shapes looming into the moonlit sky about a mile to the southwest. Was this the ruins of

Palenque? The colossal pyramid city some experts called the cradle of Mayan civilization?

“Let me through, what is it, José?” Ben pushed him aside. “Are we here?”

José dropped to the ground, lying prostrate, his torso pressed to the jungle path, peering

ahead. Ben carefully knelt down to get the same view. From here, he could see a panoramic view

of the stone plaza of Palenque, spectacular in the low moonlight, a ghostly hologram of ancient

pyramids. Ben could hardly breathe with the excitement of finally being so close to his goal.

As they stood up, the flickering light from José’s torch illuminated the face that suddenly

leered out of the foliage several feet beyond Ben’s shoulder, making them both recoil in shock.

“Shit!” Ben exclaimed. The giant stone skull loomed out of the undergrowth. José was

transfixed by the stare of the black hollow eyes, overawed by this giant Mayan harbinger of

death. “It’s just a slab of stone, José! Ignore it,” Ben instructed, eager to push on. “It’s just a rock

sculpture.” Ben looked around. “José, we’re here, we’re finally here, the Temple of Inscriptions!

Get over it, would you? Come on!”

Mustering the last of his strength, driven by the renewed energy now coursing through his

veins, Ben set the pace, racing toward the silhouettes of the pyramids, refusing to be slowed by

the vines and trunks that twisted toward his limbs.

His senses had gone into overdrive, heart pounding with another welcome rush of

adrenalin, his footsteps eventually thudding across the plaza stones, his vision tunneling into the

immaculate features of the step Pyramid, the Temple of Inscriptions. Now, at last, he was truly

on the verge of a great discovery and had only to infiltrate the crypt inside for everything to be

revealed. The pyramid seemed to glisten before him like a spectacular granite prize. He reached

the foot of the grand stone stairway, the steep, carved steps stretching skyward. This was the

awe-inspiring resting place of King Pacal.

José crept up behind him, breathless and quivering like a frightened animal, terrified that his

wild-eyed young employer was about to offend the ancient jungle’s demigods and bring the

wrath of the heavens down on both their heads.

Ben knew that, from the start of the expedition, José had feared an ancient curse contained

in the crypt would envelop and kill them, like the legendary Tutankhamun’s curse. It had taken a

lot of talking—and a lot of money—to persuade him to overcome these fears and lead Ben to

this point and reveal how to get inside. Within a few hours José would be safely back with his

family, furnished with amazing tales with which to regale tourists for the rest of his life. Ben had

more important things with which to concern himself. He didn’t need José’s primitive fire torch,

so he extracted his flashlight, handheld tally counter, compass, and a metal crowbar from his

backpack.

The crypt was locked but unguarded. After all, who would ever imagine anyone going to this

much trouble to try to break in? If things went according to plan, he should be in and out in less

than twenty minutes.

A powerful wave of apprehension washed over Ben as he prepared to enter the pyramid,

but he pushed it aside. There could be no turning back now.

“I’m going in,” he said, pointing his crowbar to the pinnacle of the pyramid. José shook his

head and looked like he might be about to weep.

“I feel evil spirits at work here, the curse of Pacal. My tribal elders warned me not to come.

Please, please—” José’s begging voice faded as Ben walked trancelike up the steps of the pyramid

toward the flattened summit.

The distant howler monkey let out another territorial bellow. Was it trying to warn them?

Had the evil spirits awoken it?

Ben’s knee was sore with pain as he reached the top of the ninth and final layer of steps. At

the summit he found the silent stone room called the Sanctuary. As he entered through the

center of its fifth stone doorway, he was enveloped in silence, all the jungle noises suddenly

evaporated. A cone of light from his flashlight scythed through the dark room and he shivered as

he imagined the grotesque sacrifices that might have been made here, the torrents of blood that

would have washed over the stones. Then he saw it.

The padlocked metal grill was above an open stone floor plug, the plug having been thrown

away long ago by officials. He crept toward it.

Centering the crowbar on the padlock, Ben levered with all his strength, bearing all his

weight downward, sweat springing from every pore of his body. He felt some give in the lock,

but it was hard to keep a grip. He pushed harder, harder—it wasn’t moving—harder, harder …

his grip slipped. BANG! Thrown to the floor, his shoulder almost exploded as it hit the hard

stone flanking. But adrenalin masked the pain as he saw the padlock split open, leaving two

broken pieces on the floor.

Wrenching the metal grill aside, he squeezed through into a triangular stairway tunnel,

leading him down into the darkness of the Temple’s underworld. The steps were smooth. He

shone his flashlight around and saw that the ceiling was corbelled, stones stacked carefully on

top of one another to support the massive weight of rock. Awash with sweat, his hand slipped

from the wall and he stumbled painfully. He gasped for air; it was like trying to breathe through a

wet blanket. The tunnel’s descent was fast and steep and Ben tried to get a firmer purchase

against the smooth walls. He shone his flashlight down again, carefully counting the stone steps

as he went with the tally counter. Soon, there were five thousand tons of rock above him and he

could almost feel the weight of it on his shoulders. Outside, the walls had been lavishly

decorated with murals and stucco sculptures of Mayan life, but here it was devoid of life, just

plain, anonymous walls. The steps seemed to be getting steeper, almost vertical and he had to

slow down for fear of slipping again and falling to the bottom.

Breathing became even harder. It was stiflingly humid. Could he survive this? Then he

paused, smiling in relief; he had reached the middle chamber. His flashlight started to flicker and

dim. He cursed himself for not thinking to bring spare batteries. He switched it off for several

seconds while he caught his breath. Impenetrable black surrounded him. He was two hundred

feet down and even steeper steps now led out beneath ground level. He knew that the tunnel

bored its way through the bedrock toward the magnificent death crypt of Pacal. He felt his way

to the first step down; it was tiny and treacherous.

Unbeknownst to Ben and José, two men were soundlessly descending the steps just above

them, camouflaged in black balaclavas and leopard-spot uniforms, primed with assault M16s,

stealth-assisted with infrared night sights.

Counting the steps down the narrow corbelled stairway, it was all exactly as Ben expected

from his research. It seemed like time had stopped as he crawled inside the Crypt of King Pacal

and switched his failing flashlight back on again, shining it quickly around, wanting to get his

bearings before the faint beam might die. The giant sarcophagus lid was as inspiring as he had

always imagined and he knelt beside it in awe, trying to take in the enormity of the moment. He

had finally arrived in the secret chamber of Pacal, a living Sun god to the Mayan people. Ben had

solved the code all by himself. He was going to be famous when he got back to civilization.

Running his fingers over the bas relief on the top of the sarcophagus lid, which showed

Pacal lying in a position like an Apollo astronaut ascending to the stars, he leaned closer to study

it. A beast from the Underworld was reaching out to devour him and carved on the breastplate

with beautiful precision was a tree of life, the Foliated Cross. It was astonishing and scary at the

same time. The flashlight beam was flickering, reminding him that he had limited time and

couldn’t afford to indulge himself. Battling to get enough air into his lungs he stood up and

made his way back up the stairs with the light out, carefully recounting the steps on the way up

to the Sanctuary.

“Doctor Sanders?” A distant voice cut through the darkness.

Ben froze.

“José? … José?” he called back. But in his heart he knew that this was not José’s voice

calling to him. “Who’s there?”

Then he remembered what he’d been instructed.

“The ceiling is corbelled—” he called.

No response.

“Who’s there? Hello? Hello?” he repeated. His fear urged him to turn the flashlight on and

dispel the blackness, but his survival instinct warned him to stay invisible.

“Doctor Sanders?” the voice repeated, louder and closer.

“Who’s there?”

He could hear footsteps now, running fast and coming closer. His nerves gave way as he

flicked the feeble flashlight back on.

“Drop the torch!” the voice commanded, “Drop it now!”

Ben caught a glimpse of what looked like combat fatigues on the steps above him.

“DROP IT!” yelled a second voice.

Ben obeyed, helpless to do anything else.

“Turn around!”

“Who are you?”

“MOVE!”

The second man was pressing his machine gun to the back of Ben’s head, forcing him up

the steps so fast he kept stumbling and scraping his shins painfully against the stones, sending

him ricocheting off the walls. What the hell was happening? This was his secret that he’d earned

through dedicated years of hard, intensive work. He wasn’t just going to hand it over. Fumbling

to see the tally counter, he struggled to wipe it clean, memorizing the long count using all the

mental powers he had spent his life honing.

As they emerged from the Sanctuary room, one of the men snatched the tally counter from

Ben before marching him back down the outside steps to the foot of the pyramid where José

stood, distraught, next to a third heavily armed and camouflaged man.

“Don Sanders,” José begged, his voice quaking. “What is going on? We should never have

done this.”

It seemed to Ben their captors could be narco-traffickers, a common hazard in the region,

although not usually this far north in Mexico.

“We can pay you not to kidnap us,” he said, dismissively. He didn’t want them to know how

scared he was. “We are here on a scientific mission.”

The men said nothing, their expressions hidden beneath their balaclavas.

“So, what do you want?” Ben continued. “What are your orders? Just tell us what you

want.”

Without warning, the brutal and earsplitting crack of machinegun fire echoed round the

natural amphitheater of the surrounding forest canopy. Bullets raked through José’s legs. He

screamed in agony, jerking as if a thousand volts of electricity were passing through his torn

body. Ben pulled the crowbar concealed inside his jacket and hurled it with all his strength at the

head of the man firing the gun. It struck its mark and the man staggered back against the base of

the pyramid. Recovering his balance, the man swung his gun angrily round at Ben. Another short

round of rapid fire from the gun and Ben felt a bullet slice across the top of his skull followed by

a rush of warmth as blood began flowing down the side of his face. Ben reached up and felt a

loose piece of skin flapping across his scalp. Stunned by the speed and force of what was

happening, he slumped to his knees. The attacker lunged toward Ben and yanked away the piece

of partially severed flesh from the side of his head.

Ben’s scream ripped through the night, setting the howler monkey off once more.

A flock of giant fruit bats rose through the jungle canopy, startled by the explosion of noise,

and swooped around their heads. Ben clung on to consciousness as his captors dragged him and

José by their hands toward the opposite pyramid; the Mayan moon goddess Ixtab needed her

appeasement. They scaled the rock stairway of the pyramid, unconcerned by the screams of

damaged bodies smashing against each step on the way up to the ancient sky altar.

Reaching the apex, as if working to the beat of a divine metronome, the three men stopped,

stripped off their balaclavas and donned jaguar skins and headdresses with feathers. Ben was still

breathing, trying to hold on, his vision almost obscured by his own blood. José groaned, barely

conscious.

“Stop! Stop!” he pleaded.

Ignoring his screams, they hoisted the broken bodies onto the stone altar. At the leader’s

curt nod, the other two ripped back the bloodied fabric of their captives’ shirts, exposing their

chests.

“Please, NO!”

Turning to the first of their two victims, the leader raised high a samurai-sharp obsidian

dagger. It hung motionless for a split second, reflecting the brilliant white light of the full moon

as it prepared for its deadly descent. Then, with brutal speed, it ripped through the hot evening

air, plunging true and straight into the chest of its victim. Embedded deeply, the leader

maneuvered the blade left and right, slicing with the cold efficiency of a butcher. The selfappointed

nacom priest levered the blade around the heart, severing the aorta and vena cava.

Then, drawing the knife out above the ribcage, he cut a fist-sized hole in the flesh. Sliding his

hand into the cavity, he grasped the beating heart in his powerful fingers and ripped it out with a

single wrench. It pulsated and jerked in his palm as it clung to its receding life force, its exit

wound drenching the smooth rock altar beneath with thick, red blood. The assassins reached

into the dark pool to smear the warm blood all over their bodies, faithfully following the

ceremonial duties of the nacom priesthood. Finally, slicing it free from its life-supporting

arteries, the priest raised the beating heart high above the altar as an offering to the full moon.

The blood sacrifice was complete. The gods were satiated. Turning to the bleeding corpse, with a

single heavy kick, he sent it tumbling off the altar to roll down the side of the pyramid, coming

to rest in a distorted tangle of limbs at the bottom where, in ancient times, the priests would

have dismembered, skinned and eaten the corpse while still fresh.

 

Continued….

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