This is an excerpt to introduce you to Seth and Erin:
Despite the heat, Seth felt icy.
Dread could do that to him. Or so he had recently discovered. Deep breathing
usually calmed him, so he sucked in a lungful of desert air and told himself to
relax. It didn’t help. By the time he’d walked from the aircraft to the
immigration hall he’d ripped off a jagged piece of thumbnail, already bitten
raw. He handed his US passport to the Botswanan border official, and, after a
frown, and a stamp, he joined the crowd at the baggage carousel. Botswana in
southern Africa was the last place on earth he’d ever have picked for a holiday
destination. But he wasn’t here on holiday. Not even close.
His backpack was slow in coming. Tired
from his long-haul flight from New York, he leaned against the wall and closed
his eyes. Almost as if to mock him, the hated vision that had brought him to
Botswana burst into his mind. In an instant he was back in ancient times,
watching a man he knew only as Gideon. As usual, Gideon was huddled on a
windswept hill with his band of hopeless soldiers, waiting to be slaughtered by
a huge army gathered in the valley below.
Seth snapped his eyes open to
stop the battle from waging in his mind. It wasn’t that he was particularly
squeamish; he’d watched enough movies to iron clad his stomach against gory
visuals. But no movie had ever left him icy with dread the way Gideon’s battle
did. And the reason for that was simple. The moment the visions had started, he
had known that the war, fought so long ago in a place he’d never heard of, was
far from over. And, as reluctant as he was, he too was being enlisted to fight
in a cause he didn’t understand or want.
He forced himself to focus on the
present: Erin, who waited for him in the arrivals hall; his brother Kyle, whom
he’d come to Botswana to visit; Kyle’s expedition to find the Lost City of the
Kalahari . . .
He ripped off another piece of
fingernail. Thinking about the search for the Lost City was almost as bad as
the war-vision. I hope Kyle never finds
the damned place. He slapped his hand on his thigh. Enough! Grabbing his backpack off the carousel, he set his face
into a smile and strode into the arrivals hall.
The first hurdle was finding
Erin. She was due to arrive an hour earlier on a flight from Cape Town in South
Africa, one of Botswana’s neighbours. He’d never met her, although they had
spoken over the phone once. Then she’d described herself as “a short,
seventeen-year-old (a year younger than him) with a mass of ginger hair.” She’d
sounded nice. Meeting her was the one ray of brightness in this otherwise dark
picture.
He stopped to scan the crowd. A
petite girl with shoulder length, reddish-blonde curls, dressed in skinny jeans
and a purple blouse, immediately caught his eye. It had to be Erin. Nice legs. What’s it with girls that they always under-sell themselves? He
studied her face with his artist’s eye.
Vermeer would’ve killed to paint her. Suddenly wishing he didn’t look so
grimy after his three plane-changes, he walked over to join her. “Hi, I’m Seth.
You’ve got to be Erin. My brother’s just married your sister Izzy.”
“And after only knowing each
other for about a week.”
Her dimpled grin was infectious,
making him crack his trademark crooked smile. “Madness.”
“Mysterious.” Erin cocked her
head to one side, seemingly appraising him. He knew he had been accurate when
he’d told her he was tall and dark-haired. But what he had failed to mention
was what girls had often said they liked about him: his strong, angular face,
softened by expressive brown eyes. He watched her eyes rove over his grey Muse: Resistance t-shirt, taking in his broad shoulders and chest. From
there they darted down his black camo-pants to his boots. Amused by her blatant
assessment, he cocked his head to one side, watching her. Suddenly Erin giggled
– was she embarrassed? – and picked up her bag.
“We’ve yet another plane to
catch. My fourth in the last twenty-four hours,” Seth said, hoping to explain
away his rumpled appearance. “To a place called Maun.”
“So we do. Let the adventure
begin.”
Stay tuned for more excerpts and even a book trailer to come!
Sounds like a good book. Thanks for your review.
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