Title: The Last Ancient
Author: Eliot Baker
Publisher: Burst Books, imprint of Champagne Books
Pages: 316
Genre: Supernatural Thriller, Historical Mystery
Format: Paperback/Kindle
Author: Eliot Baker
Publisher: Burst Books, imprint of Champagne Books
Pages: 316
Genre: Supernatural Thriller, Historical Mystery
Format: Paperback/Kindle
Around Nantucket Island, brutal crime scenes are peppered with
ancient coins, found by the one man who can unlock their meaning. But what do
the coins have to do with the crimes? Or the sudden disease epidemic? Even the
creature? And who--or what--left them?
The answer leads
reporter Simon Stephenson on a journey through ancient mythology, numismatics,
and the occult. Not to mention his own past, which turns out to be even darker
than he'd realized; his murdered father was a feared arms dealer, after all.
Along the way, Simon battles panic attacks and a host of nasty characters --
some natural, others less so -- while his heiress fiancee goes bridezilla, and
a gorgeous rival TV reporter conceals her own intentions.
Book Excerpt:
The deer’s blood catches the golden hour light. It radiates throughout
the animal’s carcass in fall hues that reflect the island’s rustling red leaves
and honey-colored needles littering the sand. Such eerie, blasphemous beauty. I
fire shots from my Nikon.
“That’s six. Six deer
mutilations this month,” I say to my experts. Click. Click. Click.
Branches partially
cover the deer. Its eyes are wet brown marbles rimmed and veined in burning
red, as though it had been hung upside down for a day. Its lips are peeled back
above the gums in a grimace of broken teeth. Brain matter spills through a
crack in the skull. Two yellowjackets buzz over the red pulp. Land. Feed. Hover
above their feast. Click. The neck is attached to the body by a flap of
hide. One of the deer’s forelegs is missing. Inside the hole in its torso I can
see that its entrails have been removed. I get on my elbows and snap pictures
from the cold, damp sand. The heart is gone, too.
Dr. Pauline Driscoll,
Nantucket’s town biologist, is squatting beside the carcass. She’s furious at
Sgt. Brad Fernandez, who is cursing and stomp-cleaning a gore-splattered boot
into the sand. She affects his tar-thick Roxbury accent. “Nice shaht cut, ace!”
Her silvering French braid swings out the back of her UMass baseball hat as she
unpacks measuring tape, sample tubes, and baggies from her turquoise external
frame pack. Sgt. Fernadez kicks bloody goo into the bushes.
“Maybe I wanna
carry da machete fuh once, Doctor Driscoll,” he says.
Dr. Driscoll mutters
and scribbles into her notepad. She is oblivious to her windswept beauty. Her
dark eyes shine and sparkle, and she’s maintained her triathlete’s figure
despite being on the other side of forty. She’s over a decade older than me,
but I understand why Sgt. Fernandez wants to impress her.
Dr. Driscoll carves out
an eyeball, coaxing it from the deer’s eye socket with a gloved hand. Tendons
follow the jelly marble from the orbital cavity like melted provolone. She saws
through the tendons with a retractable scalpel. Fernandez gags. It makes him
look like a blushing Boy Scout in his green Environmental Police uniform and
billed hat and bulky black utility belt. Driscoll smiles school-girl sweet,
dropping the eyeball into a baggie. She offers Fernandez the instrument and
baggie, asking him if he’d like to carry the scalpel for once.
Fernandez holds up one hand at
her and balls the other over his mouth, gulps twice. “You’re one sick hippy,”
he says.
Driscoll hums a macabre
rendition of Melanie Safka’s Lay Down as she scoops bits of brain from
the crack in the animal’s skull.
I sniff the shrieking
wind. It’s bowing the barrens of pitch pines toward our clearing in the scrub
oak like gnarled magnetic filaments. I can smell the ocean, almost hear it, but
not see it. From our elevated bald spot in the suffocating brush, I can see the
sandy path we just traversed. It cuts like a surgical scar through the open
conservation land’s tufts of bladed grass and bristling patches of black
huckleberry and pasture rose. It winds up Altar Rock into the reddening
horizon, where a hunter stands silhouetted on the rim of the valley, binoculars
pressed to his face. The strapped shotgun jutting from his shoulder makes him
look like a fierce insect with an antenna.
“You poor baby,” says
Driscoll, passing a black fine-toothed comb over the deer’s patchy fur. She
taps the comb and a dozen ticks fall like grains of volcanic sand into a
plastic dish. “Those teeth, that pelt--man, you were one sick fella.”
Fernandez breathes,
gets down on one knee, and starts shaving samples from the spine with his own
folding knife. He then slices off chunks of muscle and organs that he places
into baggies under Driscoll’s direction. Click.
“I’m bustin’ heads, and
you can quote me on that,” says Fernandez through clenched teeth behind his
trimmed mustache. “Someone was huntin’ before dawn.”
“Or something,”
I say, snapping close-ups of the spray radius. Drops of blood shine like rubies
on wooden pendants in the foreground against a hazy cloud of thorns. The experts
exchange looks and groans.
“Anyways, this is
roundabouts where da Pike brothers said dey heard something freaky ’bout an
hour ago,” says Fernandez. “Said it was like a deer cry, but kinda mutant, with
loads a struggle.”
Dr. Driscoll stands and
examines the sand and rocks for tracks. She picks up the machete she used to
carve a trail here through the scrub oak. “Man, what is wrong with
people?” she says and hacks at the thorny curtain with skills she picked up
surveying birds in the Amazon and in Africa. She asks Fernandez if he can find
any boot prints. He shakes his head.
I ask them to speculate
on a predator. No dice.
“How about speculating
on how it got in here then?” I say. “We lost the tracks and the blood trail way
long ago.”
“Good point,” admits
Dr. Driscoll.
The deer’s remaining
foreleg suddenly stiffens as though saluting, hitting Driscoll’s thigh.
“Oh, fuck me hard on
Sunday!” says Dr. Driscoll, jumping into Sgt. Fernandez’s arms.
He whispers, “Relax, it’s a
fresh kill. And sure, Sunday’s good for me.”
Driscoll shoves Fernandez, and
says to me, “Don’t you dare put that in the article.”
“I’ll think about it,”
I say, and try to smile. Can’t. I’m shaken.
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