The Da Vinci Code unsettles. SEALED UP shakes to the core!
UCLA anthropologist Nathan Hill, in a funk since his young
wife’s death, learns of staggering
millennia-old chronicles sealed up somewhere in a Mesoamerica cliff. This bombshell rocks him out of his gloom, and he leads a clandestine expedition to uncover them. What are they? Who put them there? No one knows. But, self-absorbed televangelist Brother Luke, who funds the expedition, thinks he does. If he’s right, his power-hunger will have off-the-charts gratification.
millennia-old chronicles sealed up somewhere in a Mesoamerica cliff. This bombshell rocks him out of his gloom, and he leads a clandestine expedition to uncover them. What are they? Who put them there? No one knows. But, self-absorbed televangelist Brother Luke, who funds the expedition, thinks he does. If he’s right, his power-hunger will have off-the-charts gratification.
Striking Audra Chang joins Nathan in his pursuit and brings
her own shocking secret. As they struggle through a literal jungle of puzzles
and dead ends, she finds herself falling in love with Nathan. Her secret,
though, may make that a non-starter.
When a shaman with a thirst for human sacrifice, and a
murderous Mexican drug lord with a mysterious connection to Brother Luke
emerge, the expedition appears doomed. Yet Nathan is convinced that fate—or
something—demands these inscrutable chronicles be unearthed.
And if they are . . . what shattering disruption will they
unleash?
Intricately layered and
remarkably researched, this enthralling suspense-driven and thought provoking
tour de force begs a startling question: Could it happen?
Amazon
Book Excerpt:
“How much farther?” Paul’s shirt was soaked from
sweat.
Itzel looked at him and laughed. “Just like
Torrance, huh?” Paul rolled his eyes.
“The cenote.” Ichika pointed to a
three-foot-wide path that was recently cut through the brush. They followed it
as it turned to the left then sharply to the right. The sinkhole loomed in
front of them. The water, a huge blue sapphire, sparkled 15 feet below. Thick
emerald-green growth reached down the sinkhole’s sides, but where they were
standing, the vegetation had been cleared all the way to the water’s surface.
Paul stood at the cenote’s edge and
stared down into the bowl. “You slipped here, you’d go all the way in.”
Itzel shuddered and pulled back; thoughts of her
father overwhelming her. Was this what it was like where he fell? She
trembled and turned away from the cenote. “Let’s leave.”
Paul looked at her and understood. He almost
said something about his stupidity, but decided one foot in his mouth was
enough. He motioned for Ichika to take them back the way they came. He put his
arm around Itzel, and she leaned her head against him.
“Where are the ruins?” Paul asked. Ichika didn’t
say anything, just pointed ahead. The brush and ferns that surrounded them were
head high and prevented their seeing anything except along the trail. As they
turned to go to where they first entered the path, Kish’s men stood waiting.
Ikan, Muluc, and Yochi had machetes, and Gukumatz held a tranquilizer gun.
Paul and Itzel stopped. Ichika, her eyes
fastened on the ground, kept going until she stood on the other side of the
men. She turned back toward Itzel but wouldn’t look at her. “What’s going on?”
Paul demanded in Spanish as he stepped in front of Itzel. Gukumatz raised his
gun and shot a dart into Paul’s stomach. Paul flinched at the pain and looked
down at his stomach. “What the ....” Paul yanked the dart out and threw it on
the ground. A small circle of blood soaked through his shirt. He lunged at
Gukumatz and swung his forearm around catching him on the bridge of his nose.
Blood spurted from Gukumatz’s nostrils as he fell to the ground; a gash flaring
open on top of his nose. Ikan and Yochi dropped their machetes and jumped Paul.
“What are you doing?” Itzel yelled in Lacandón.
“Where is Kish?” Muluc grabbed her and threw his arm around her neck, holding
her from behind.
“Don’t you hurt her!” Ichika screamed, as she
advanced on him. Gukumatz stood up and wiped his nose with his sleeve; blood
soaking through his shirt to his skin. His stare at Paul was chilling, and he
swore at him in Spanish. Paul tried to get up to come at him. It was all the
two men could do to keep him down even though his strength was ebbing. Gukumatz
turned away from Paul and pulled a cartridge and a dart from the bag on his
shoulder and loaded them into his gun. He walked to Itzel and shoved Ichika
aside. He lowered the gun and shot the dart into Itzel’s stomach. She flinched
at the pain and stared at Gukumatz. “You pig!” she spat.
Within a few minutes Paul and Itzel were
unconscious. Gukumatz pulled the GPS trackers from their belts, turned them
off, and slammed them against a rock. He grunted as he picked up Itzel and
slung her across his shoulder. The other three men lifted Paul. They headed to
the platform ruins.
The place of sacrifice.
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