I released my 16th book last month and I’m pretty happy
about that. I thought I’d take today’s post to the past in order to highlight a book I had published in 2010, LAZULI
MOON. It’s an Indiana Jones-esque tale with a female adventurer and a
sexy doctor both on the hunt for a fabled blue diamond with healing powers.
Here’s the back cover blurb:
Three people search for the
legendary Lazuli Moon in the Valdivian Rainforest.
Two of them will find a treasure
they never expected.
One won’t live to see another day.
Archaeologist and professor Dr.
Nivia Charu can’t let the Lazuli Moon remain hidden forever. With her teaching
position threatened and no funds for an expedition, Nivia fears the blue
diamond fabled to have healing powers will never be unearthed.
Physician Dr. Benjamin Forrester
wants to cure his uncle’s cancer. His attempts at manufacturing a remedy,
however, have failed. Desperate and out of options, Ben needs a miracle, and
Nivia may just hold the key.
Up against a crazed boat captain
and ancient curses, Ben and Nivia join forces to seek the Lazuli Moon. What
waits for them in the depths of the rainforest will either make them famous or
kill them.
Excerpt:
Chapter One
They came. Great pale beasts.
Part man, part animal in the eyes of the people. All with the smile of the
serpent. Wielding blades of silver that reflected the sun’s rays and sliced
into the skin of the Palol. Blood spilled in the stone-paved streets, pooled at
the feet of the children, dripped from the bodies of the finest warriors. The
beasts showed no mercy as they trampled through the gardens, knocked down the
homes, ravaged all the Palol held dear.
A wretched sickness descended
upon the Palol. A fierce disease brought by the hands of the Spanish beasts as
they touched the people. Soon even the warriors were brought to their knees by
the sores. In desperation, a Palol princess, having watched her one true love
turn ill, came to the shores seeking the sea god, Dirai, and his great power.
Tears fell into the sea with her plea for a cure, a healing for her people.
As the full moon rose in the
black sky, a magnificent gemstone washed up onto the sand. The color of sky and
big enough to fill the princess’s palms, the jewel glittered in the night. The
princess took it, sure it was a gift from Dirai, and ran back to the Palol
capital city, Simad. She held it high in the city’s center, and moonlight cut
through the flawless blue diamond. All who stood in its light were healed.
Shouts of joy filled the streets.
Children danced. Lovers kissed. Warriors took up their spears and drove the
Spanish beasts to the sea. The foreign paleskins were cut from their
four-legged bodies. They bled the same scarlet river as the Palol, threw the
same cries of agony into the wind, fell to the sand as
the same life spirit left what
remained of their shells. The Palol were about to claim their empire as their
own once again. Dirai had shown them mercy, offered his mighty protection, and
delivered them from Death’s ruthless stranglehold.
Then a storm raged and drew the
water up into a mountainous wave that washed the land clean…of everyone. The
ocean swallowed the Spanish and the Palol, for the sea god, Dirai, grants
wishes, but not without sacrifice.
****
Dr. Nivia Charu ran a slender finger along the tattered pages of the
ancient volume open in front of her on the desk. Her gold-brown eyes shifted to
the picture she used as a bookmark. Dr. Arjun Charu, legendary archaeologist
and beloved father, stared back at her, a faint smile on his lips as if he knew
a great secret or had done something truly clever. Probably both were the case.
He had always been full of mysteries and witty charm. From his contagious laughter
to his enthralling stories of the Palol, Nivia’s father was her hero. She had
adored him as much as he had adored her, his only child.
“You wouldn’t be so proud of me now, Pitaji.” Nivia sifted a breath
through her teeth as she glanced at the letter under her left hand. The college
crest spread across the top of the letter, and in tiny print, her superior had
assaulted her with words. Again.
“If I don’t publish something within the next month, I’ll lose my
teaching position,” Nivia told her father’s picture. “I’m out of extensions.
Out of time.”
She rested her head on the still open book, her long curtain of black
hair spilling about her face. The pages had always smelled like salted air to
Nivia, and she inhaled until her lungs couldn’t expand any farther. Letting the
air gush out, she watched the dreaded letter ripple in the breeze she’d created
and fall off the edge of the desk.
If only it were that simple. If only she could blow her troubles away
so easily. If only she could make some headway on finding the blue diamond of
the Palol. The Lazuli Moon, as it had been termed through the ages due to its
lapis lazuli coloring and full moon shape. The search for it had consumed her.
She spent all her free time—and some of her working time, to be honest—on
deciphering the legendary stone’s whereabouts. Her father had sought it, had
died trying to find it, and Nivia feared her obsession was as unhealthy as her
father’s had been. She hadn’t gotten together with friends in years. Hadn’t
been on a date in a decade.
Instead, she dreamed, read, analyzed, hypothesized, wrote. All the book
manuscripts she had in files on her laptop revolved around the Lazuli Moon and
the Palol Empire. If she had any hope of finishing one of them in time to save
her job, she had to find the blue diamond fabled to have healing powers. The
legend surrounding the gem had captivated her father since he’d obtained the
book now open on Nivia’s desk from a colleague. He couldn’t shake the
compulsion to find the diamond, and now Nivia suffered from the same
affliction. Without the diamond, all her information was conjecture. Myth.
Nonsense.
“I can’t lose my job, Pitaji. I can’t. Even for the Lazuli Moon. Even
for you.”
With tears in her eyes, Nivia kissed her father’s picture and wedged it
into the binding of the book. She closed it and placed the tome into her tote
bag. She had a place for it on the shelves in her home office. The book rarely
occupied that space because Nivia was forever rereading the same passages,
looking for some clue she’d missed. Some morsel that would uncover the stone’s
resting place. Most of Nivia’s colleagues didn’t believe the diamond existed.
Those few that did believed it to be lost at sea during what probably was a
devastating hurricane when the Spanish arrived in what was now the city of
Valdivia in Chile. Her father, however, had believed otherwise. He had read
accounts of miraculous healings in that area of the world, and had been
convinced the Lazuli Moon was on land somewhere. He made it his life’s quest to
find the blue diamond. He’d used his last breath trying to recover it.
Nivia shook her head. When news of her father’s death had reached her,
she’d made a vow to continue her father’s pursuit. She’d made a good go of it too.
Had turned up additional information. Had confirmed some of her father’s
musings. The only thing she needed was the actual location and the money to go,
but her bank account was almost empty, her job in jeopardy, her professional
reputation in question. She couldn’t afford to go on an adventure.
The Lazuli Moon would have to stay buried.
If you’re ready for an adventure in the rainforest, download LAZULI
MOON today!
Toodles,
Chris
The Maple Leaf Series, Books One to Six, available now
The Shielded Series, Books One to
Three, available now
Wolf Kiss, Book One in The
Warrior Wolves Series, coming soon
7 comments:
Wow...that's one tough goddess! :-) The book sounds great, Chris!
Fabulous excerpt. Way to set up the drama. I'm hooked!
Visiting our past books is like catching up with old friends. They get better with time. Great excerpt, Chris.
Exciting, Chris. Thanks for posting an oldie but a goodie.
Wow! Such imagination and belief in the healing spirits. Interesting way for the natives to explain away the diseases brought by the Spanish. The tone of parable and myth here. Nice work!
Congratulations on your 16th book!!! Wow, excellent excerpt & blurb. Exciting!
Congrats on your 16th book, Chris. How exciting. This story sounds like so much fun.
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