Books by Eric Douglas

Thriller fiction and Non-fiction

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My name is Abby

October 27, 2014 By Eric Douglas

Copyright ® October 2014

By Eric Douglas

The leaves were beginning to change as Tom, Roy and John headed out for their last camping trip of the year. They had been friends for years; surviving marriages, divorces and everything in between. They knew each other’s issues, like women or booze. But those things didn’t matter; they had each other’s back.

They spent the day drinking beer while they fished in the small lake and talked about whatever was on their minds. Afterwards, heading back to their campsite, they noticed a pretty young woman at the next campsite over. She looked up as they approached their campsite and they waved. Tom’s attention stayed on the woman a little longer than the other two, though. His weakness was women. His fourth wife was half his age and waiting at home. Roy and John knew that wouldn’t mean much to their friend if he stood a chance to spend the night with a new woman.

For the next hour or so, Tom watched the woman and made eye contact a couple times. He got friendly smiles in return. He kept watching to see if the woman had any friends, but no one showed. After dinner, and a few more drinks, Tom decided it was his time to move.

“Hi there,” he said, with the faintest slur in his speech. “My friends and I wanted to know if you would like to join us at our campfire. We don’t want you to be lonely. Are you here by yourself?”

“Hi. Some friends were supposed to join me, but they backed out at the last minute. I love to be out in nature, so I came anyway,” the woman said with an easy smile.

Tom looked her up and down as she spoke and loved what he saw. She is exactly my type, he thought. Nice curves, short curly brown hair and a saucy look to her. I bet she is a lot of fun…

Tom suddenly realized the woman was still speaking to him. And he hadn’t heard a word she said. He stumbled for a second. “I’m sorry. What was that?”

“I said, my name is Abby,” the woman said, smiling. She knew exactly what Tom was doing.

“Hi there, Abby. My name is Tom. Come on over. Let me fix you a drink and introduce you to my friends.”

Tom put his arm around Abby’s waist as he led her to their campsite.

Tom introduced Abby to his friends and got knowing looks from Roy and John. Tom had a way of charming women, especially younger ones, and getting them where he wanted them. They laughed to themselves, although both men were a little jealous. How Tom could find a willing woman in the middle of a campground by the lake when there were no other single women around was beyond them.

After a few drinks, the conversation kept getting sillier and more risqué. Abby giggled at the men’s off-color jokes and threw in a couple of her own.

Suddenly, Abby got serious. “Do you want to hear a ghost story?” she asked.

Roy and John both agreed, but Tom was reluctant. He had hoped to be slipping away soon.

“Only if I can rub your back while you talk,” Tom said with a drunken leer. His magic fingers had gotten him lucky more than once.

Abby didn’t answer Tom; she just stared into the fire for a few minutes. About the time Roy and John were growing uncomfortable at the silence, and Tom was thinking his touch had distracted Abby from the ghost story, she began talking. Her entire demeanor changed as she began speaking. She was quiet and he voice clear and cold. The giggle was gone.

There was a young woman. We’ll call her Gail. She was deeply in love with Rex. Their love affair was magical. Rex treated her like a queen. Most of the time. Every once in a while, he would go to town with his friends and she knew there were women there. She knew Rex was unfaithful when he was away from her, but she told herself that it would all change when they were married. She told herself he was just sowing his wild oats.

In the Spring, the couple was wed and for Gail, everything was perfect. Things were good between the couple…for a few months. And then Rex’s friends came around to get him. She begged him not to go. To stay with her. But he pushed her away and said he would do what he pleased. He told her she had nothing to worry about, but not to wait up. He wouldn’t be home until the next day. Gail fell down crying as Rex left.

 Later, she pulled herself together and decided she wouldn’t give up her man without a fight. She followed Rex to town. She knew where he would be…The Saloon. She hitched her carriage to her horse and rode to town.

Pulling her hat low over her face, Gail entered the bar. It took her a few moments to realize Rex wasn’t there. She saw his friends at a corner table, but he was nowhere to be seen.

Gail told herself that Rex had a change of heart. He had come home to her. Immediately, she rushed to get back home. She didn’t want him to worry. Entering the stable to get her horse and buggy, she heard a sound. At first, she didn’t know what it was. It was a voice. A moan. And then she realized it sounded like Rex. Was he hurt? Had he been attacked?

Moving slowly, Gail pulled a dim lamp from a post and turned up the flame. It threw shadows all around, but there was no sign of Rex.

Maybe I was imagining things. Rex is at home waiting on me, she thought.

Turning back to her carriage, she heard another moan and then a giggle.

Who’s there? she called out Who’s there?

She heard rustling in the loft above her. And then she saw him. It was Rex. A moment later she saw a woman. They were both naked.

In a fury, she ran from the barn, leaving her horse and carriage behind her. She ran and ran, with no direction in mind. She was lost. He hadn’t even taken the woman to a bed. He was rutting in the hay loft like an animal.

Gail had no idea how long she ran when she found herself standing at the edge of a cliff. There was a lake 30 feet below her, lit up by the full moon above. With resolve, she knew what she was going to do. If he wanted other women, he wouldn’t have her any longer.

She was calm as she stepped out into the space in front of her and fell. She hit the water and never resurfaced. Gone.

John, Roy and Abby were all quiet when Abby was finished. Tom was still rubbing Abby’s back and grinning.

John and Roy stared at the fire and then got up quietly to go to their camper. They knew Tom was about to make his move. Abby’s story had disturbed them as well.

When the other two were gone, Tom spoke.

“So, you want to go back to your campsite?” he asked.

“Let’s take a walk down by the lake,” Abby suggested with a smile that didn’t reach her eyes.

“Sure….that sounds good,” Tom said, trying to think of a place he could take the young woman to get her out of her clothes.

The couple walked to the water’s edge, to a clearing where Tom and his buddies had spent the day fishing. Tom sat down on the ground and leaned back against a log.

“Why don’t you join me?” he said, reaching up for her.

“Did you listen to my story?” she asked, ignoring his reach.

“Sure, sure, it was a good one. All spooky and stuff,” Tom said, slurring more. “Now come on. Let’s get it on like that guy in the loft. We’ll do it like animals.”

Abby’s expression darkened further.

“Men like you are the problem. Gail never should have killed herself. She should have killed Rex. That was where she failed.”

“Come on, baby. I just want you. Let’s do this. You know you want it, too,” Tom said, trying to stand.

“I bet that’s what you said to the woman in the loft, too,” Abby said.

“What? What are you talking about? There’s no woman in a loft. Are you some crazy chick? That was just a story,” Tom said, unsteady on his feet. “I just wanna have a good time.”

“What if I told you the women in the story was named Abigail and not Gail. Would that make any difference to you?”

“No, just a dumb story,” Tom said, growing angry. He wasn’t used to getting this close, and spending this much effort, without getting lucky. “And it’s a dumb name, too.”

“Some people shorten Abigail to Abby,” the woman said. “Answer my question. Did you listen to my story?”

Tom was growing angry now. “Just a dumb story.” He lunged toward Abby.

“Not if it’s true.”

The next morning John and Roy found Tom face down in the lake, still wearing his clothes. He had drowned. There was no sign of Abby anywhere. Her tent and camping gear were gone. In fact, there was no sign anyone had been on the camp site at all.

+++++

The divers loaded their gear on the dive boat, excited for a morning out on the reef. Just before the boat left the dock, two guys ran to the boat carrying their gear. They had been out late the night before and were running slow. Climbing on board, one immediately eyed a pretty brunette sitting by herself. She had short, curly brown hair and looked great in her bikini. The first man on the boat glanced down to make sure his wedding ring was still back in the hotel room and then sat down beside the girl. She was younger than he was, but he liked it that way.

“Hi, I’m Joe.”

“Hi there. My name is Abby. Do you like ghost stories?”.

Filed Under: Books, Diving, New Releases

“Heart of the Maya” giveaway winners!

September 8, 2014 By Eric Douglas

Pageflex Persona [document: PRS0000038_00067]Working with the fine folks at DUI – Diving Unlimited International, we ran a contest to giveaway a copy of my latest dive adventure novel, Heart of the Maya. In the book, Mike Scott dons a DUI drysuit for his dives underneath an Adena Indian burial mound.

We had such a good response to the contest we decided to give away three copies of Heart of the Maya.

The winners are:

  • Harry “Stoni” Korb from Montreal, Canada
  • Leon Cubero from Pennsylvania
  • Brent Paul from Ontario, Canada

Signed copies of the novels will go out in the mail this week.

If you didn’t win, you can still get your very own copy on Amazon. If you want a signed copy, contact Eric directly at eric  @ booksbyeric.com.

For more information about the book, and the opportunity to read the first three chapters, visit the book description page..

Filed Under: Adventure, Books, Diving, New Releases

Flash Fiction Friday

August 1, 2014 By Eric Douglas

The things that spark our imagination: a shotgun with a silencer

Loren Eaton really likes flash fiction. Until I got involved with his Advent Ghosts project, I’d never tried it. His particular brand of flash fiction is telling a complete story in 100 words. Not more. Not less. It can be a lot of fun. And it can also be challenging. Sometimes what is most important is what is left unsaid.

You can see some of my other attempts at flash fiction here.

Loren also compiles what he calls the Commonplace Book, which is really a reference he uses to collect random tidbits that may show up in stories later. Today he posted a video showing a silenced shotgun. It was pretty amazing to see the shooter rapid-fire a 12-gauge shotgun and all you hear are “clicks” as the semi-automatic action racks a new shell into the chamber.

And both of our minds went spinning. I mentioned a collaborative project and he said “100 word story”. And sometimes, especially on a Friday, that’s all it takes.

Demonstration

The room was eerily quiet as the wooden door caved in, blown from its hinges.

Just before each splintering crash, Eric heard a click. Crabwalking across the room, in the back of his mind, he wondered if he was going to live through this demonstration.

“I guess he did it. Loren was able to put a silencer on a 12-guage.”

Eric looked up to see his friend enter the room, a wisp of smoke rising from the barrel.

“Okay, okay, I believe you.”

The gaping maw of the shotgun swung around and centered on Eric’s forehead.

He heard a click..

Filed Under: Adventure, New Releases

Heart of the Maya: First three chapters

June 9, 2014 By Eric Douglas

Pageflex Persona [document: PRS0000038_00067]Below are the first three chapters of my new adventure novel Heart of the Maya. This is the fifth Mike Scott adventure in the series. The story starts out on the campus of Marshall University where Mike earned a degree from the School of Journalism and then…well, just read it and you’ll figure it out pretty quickly. If you like what you read, download the whole book to find out how it ends.

If you “Look Inside” on Amazon, you can actually read a little bit more than this.

Chapter 1

“So that’s how I ended up meeting the Castros. We solved the mystery behind the wreck of the USS Huron, found Spanish gold meant for Cuban revolutionaries and shined some light on The Consortium that was responsible for the whole thing.

“My degree in Journalism from Marshall University ended up taking me all over the world where I learned about many different world cultures. And I’ve loved every minute of it,” Mike Scott said as he finished up his presentation at his alma mater. Because of his successes, culminating with the recent story of the USS Huron, he had been invited back to lecture as part of the University Artist Series. “In some ways, I feel like I’ve become an amateur archaeologist, although sometimes I feel more like Indiana Jones than a real scientist. So, on that note, I’ll take a couple questions.”

Mike’s presentation included photographs from many stories he had filed over the years and it had sufficiently wowed the students, faculty and general public alike. He explained how he had gotten his start and how luck, determination and skill had each played their parts in taking a small town boy from West Virginia around the world. As an international news photographer, Mike had won every major award available to him. After fielding questions for 20 minutes, he decided it was time to say good night.

“Thank you for these great questions, but I think they are about to turn out the lights on us. I’m going to wrap things up,” Mike began, but he was interrupted as a student stood up and began talking.

“Mr. Scott, I’m sorry but I have one more question about your days here at Marshall. What do you remember about the archaeological dig of the Adena mound when you were a student?” the young woman asked, nearly shouting over the crowd as they had begun to applaud. The audience quieted, slowly, half-standing and unsure whether to leave or stay. For his part, Mike stood stock still. He hadn’t thought about that incident in years.

“Wow, you’ve been doing some research,” Mike said a little taken aback.

“Yes, sir, I write for The Parthenon, the school paper, and I decided to check to see if you were in the paper when you were a student. I found the final story you wrote about the incident really interesting,” the student explained.

“Unfortunately, I don’t remember much. After our graduate student advisor drowned in the cave, we were ordered to drop the project and most of us were too upset to do anything else. I can say without a doubt that incident encouraged me to learn to dive and to continue my pursuit of journalism. It probably piqued my curiosity for archaeology as well. So, while I put that event behind me, it definitely shaped the rest of my career. Okay, well, thank you all for being such a wonderful audience. Good night!” Mike ended as he began picking up his notes from the podium. The crowd applauded and then began filing out of the Edwards Performing Arts Center.

As he finished up and spoke to the organizers of the speaking engagement, out of the corner of his eye Mike watched the young woman who had asked the last question. At 6’2”, it was easy for Mike to see over most of the crowd. The girl hung around and looked like she wasn’t quite finished. Mike was curious to see what else was on her mind. He was tired but he knew he wasn’t likely to get any rest right now anyway.

Still, he waited for the girl to approach. He wasn’t about to make it easy on her.

“Mr. Scott, do you have a minute? Can I ask you another question?”

“Technically you just did. But, sure. First, though, I get to ask two questions.”

“What’s that?” the student replied, slightly confused by his response.

“What’s your name?”

“Sophia Cruz, sir.”

“Okay, enough with the sirs. My name is Mike. Cruz? That was the last name of the grad student on the project. ”

“Yes, sir, umm, I mean Mike. He was my uncle, or would have been. He died before I was born.”

“Thanks for the reminder of how much older I am than you and just about everyone else on campus. So this meeting and your ‘discovery’ of the article wasn’t an accident, was it?”

“Actually it was. I decided to check back in the archives to see what you had written about and was shocked when I saw you were writing about my uncle Erick. I knew his story, or at least the family version of it, but thought I would see if you knew anything different.”

“Fair enough. Tell me what you know and I’ll see if I can remember anything else.”

“What was your second question?”

“Where can we get something to eat? When I was in school we would go to Hulio’s, but when I drove into town I saw it wasn’t there anymore,” Mike said with a laugh. “I’m hungry. And don’t worry, it’s my treat. I remember being a broke college student.”

 Chapter 2

The restaurant was crowded and noisy, filled with students, faculty and townies, but Mike quickly drowned it all out as he slipped into his memory of a time 25 years before. The restaurant was in the same location as one of Mike’s favorite haunts when he was a student, making it that much easier to forget the “here and now” and go to “then”.

It was 1989. I was a sophomore and taking an anthropology class for a humanities credit. It was a little odd for me to get involved with a dig out in the field like that, but I was also writing for The Parthenon and the professor in charge of the class said I could come along and do a story on it as well. It was great for me. I got credit for two classes at one time. The editor wasn’t thrilled, but it all worked out. I, of course, had dreams of working for National Geographic, like every other journalism student, so I saw it as my big break. I didn’t count on all of the hard work and digging, but that’s how we learn, I guess.

We were excavating an Adena burial mound that had recently been uncovered. There were several others in West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky, but none this close to the Ohio River in West Virginia. It was a pretty exciting find. The farmer who owned the land thought it was just a natural land feature and had ignored it for a long time. He was digging an access road on his property and cut through part of the hillside with a bulldozer. He stopped when he saw bones sticking out of the ground.

He immediately called the police. Once they realized the bones were ancient, not evidence of a murder or an old cemetery, he called the university and rerouted his access road. And then we got involved.

Finding a new Adena burial mound in the late 20th century was pretty exciting for all of us. Most of the mounds had been excavated or destroyed long ago. The Adena themselves existed from about 1000 BC up to 200 AD and had left these burial mounds all over the Ohio River valley as well as other places. They are viewed as a precursor civilization to many of the Native American populations that came along later. All things considered, they were pretty advanced for their time, too. They traded over the eastern United States from the Great Lakes down to the Gulf Coast.

So, we went out to the mound for weeks, slowly sifting through the dirt. We found several skeletons and then some burial beads and things. Whenever we would find something we would all gather around and ‘ooh’ and ‘ahhh’. Your uncle, Erick, was heading up our daily activities and kept us going. He supervised the whole thing, under the watchful eyes of the professors, of course.

The most amazing day, though, was when we found the well. We were digging into the hill, excavating sideways into the mound. We hit a section of stone that had been buried at the base of the mound. You could tell it wasn’t natural rock the way it was shaped. The stones were fitted together. We knew this was something really special.

Erick made us all slow down. He told me to get my camera and from then on, I was there to document everything they found. I shot rolls of film as the rest of the students dug around the stones. We eventually excavated a room inside the mound itself. There was this stone chimney on the floor a couple feet high. It was capped with another stone. The floor of the room was stone, too, so we knew we were down to bedrock. We decided the mound was probably built around this thing, whatever it was. Erick was careful, though, to not let us try to remove the capstone on the structure until we had the room dug out. They brought in some basic mining equipment to shore up the roof and the walls so we wouldn’t get buried if the mound collapsed.

After the professors came out and looked over what we had done, they gave us permission to remove the cap stone. It ended up being the cover to an underground cave system. At first we lowered lights down inside, but we couldn’t see much. We lowered a camera down the hole and found a big room with what looked like two more openings off to the side. On one side, there was water that came up from an underground spring. Of course, we were all convinced this was the greatest archaeological find of the century.

Eventually, we got permission to climb down and look around in the caves below. They brought in Adena experts from all over. None of the students were the first to go down, but we did get down there eventually. Of course, we spent our time measuring and photographing everything. I was having a blast. I got to file several stories and was having dreams of going straight to National Geographic before I graduated.

We didn’t find much in the caves at first. There were a few pieces of broken pottery and that sort of thing. There were paintings on the cave walls, too. It was interesting, but sort of fizzled out after a while. A lot of the experts speculated why the Adena had buried the caves under a mound, but it was mostly speculation.

And then Erick found something in the water. He was sitting at the edge of the pool taking a break when something caught his eye. It was just a straight edge, but Erick thought it might be important. He waded down into the water to get a closer look. It was a stone tablet with carvings on it, but it wouldn’t budge. He ended up going home and getting a mask so he could look at the stone underwater.

After much examination and expert opinion, the professors all agreed that the Adena had made the carvings on the stone right where it was. The stone wasn’t movable. That meant the water level was lower at some point. No one knew if that meant the water had just been a few feet lower or if there was a larger cave system below.

After that, Erick became a little obsessive about it. He said he thought the carvings on the stone looked more Mayan than Adena, but that didn’t make a lot of sense because while the Maya were around at the same time as the Adena, they didn’t flourish and really excel at everything we know the Maya for until after the Adena had dispersed. He told everyone who would listen to him that the real discovery and the answer to all of the questions surrounding this mound would happen in the caves below. It was all he could talk about. He wanted to make a dive into the flooded part of the cave and see what was down there.

The university, on the other hand, wasn’t thrilled about allowing anyone to dive into the cave to explore further. Everyone thought the risks were too high.

The rest is the hard part to discuss. We went back to the mound to continue the dig one morning. Your uncle told us to meet him there. When we got there, his car was already in the parking area we had set up. We looked all over the place for him, but couldn’t find him. Until we looked down in the cave. We saw Erick floating face down in the water. He had scuba gear on, but he wasn’t moving. He had decided to dive in the cave on his own and prove his theory.

After that, the university shut everything down. It was a big mess for a while. Promising graduate students weren’t supposed to die on university-sponsored digs. The farmer who owned the land ended up putting a steel door over the opening and closing it off to further exploration.

We were all told to move on to other projects. I didn’t end up learning to dive until I had graduated from college and then my career took off in other directions. To be honest, I never forgot about it, but I never thought about going back to the site after that.

Chapter 3

Mike and Sophia were sitting in Fat Patty’s, a local burger joint adjacent to campus. Mike glanced around the room, thinking of his old days. He didn’t feel like he had changed much in the 20-odd years since college, but his dark wavy hair was a little grayer now and things hurt more than they used to. He kept in good shape, mostly by staying active and on the go, rather than a significant exercise routine, but he didn’t think he looked a lot different than he did back in school. Of course, that was what he told himself. He was sure the students in the restaurant thought he was a professor…and an older one at that.

After they ordered, Mike had started talking, walking through the story as he remembered it, surprising himself with just how much he could pull up. Sophia had the good sense to simply listen and let Mike talk.

When he was finished, they both looked down and realized they were finished eating, having done so almost on autopilot while Mike spoke.

“That’s about all I remember,” Mike said when he finished. He looked down and realized his beer glass was empty, too, so he signaled the waitress for another round—beer for him and Diet Coke for Sophia. He had spent the entire time talking and he knew Sophia would have questions.

“Thank you for taking the time to tell me about all of this. You’ve given me more than anyone else knew or could remember. It was a pretty rough time for my family and they don’t like to talk about it much,” Sophia said, sadness in her eyes.

“I’m sure it was. I can’t imagine what it’s like to lose a child like that, especially one with so much promise,” Mike agreed. He had seen plenty of death on assignment, but some deaths were more memorable than others.

“I’ve always been curious about the whole situation and couldn’t find out much until just recently. My granddad was cleaning out some boxes in his attic and found some of Erick’s papers. After he died, the university boxed up everything in his office and sent it home. His parents, my grandparents, were so upset at the time they never looked at any of it. Grandpa didn’t want to look at it, but he said I could go through it if I wanted,” Sophia explained. “Most of it was pretty typical stuff for a grad student. He was teaching a class and doing his own work toward his doctorate so he was pretty busy. And then there was all of the field work from the dig.”

Sophia pulled some papers from his backpack and spread them out on the table.

“Of course, I was most interested in the notes from the dig to see if there was anything about what he planned to do. You’re mentioned in there a couple times, by the way, and he had a picture of yours as well. It had your name on the back of the print. I hope you don’t mind if I keep it,” Sophia said, suddenly afraid Mike would want it back.

“I gave that to your uncle. It belongs to your family. Was there anything else in there?” Mike asked. “I’m guessing you wouldn’t have brought all of this along if you hadn’t found something interesting.”

“Most of it is pretty mundane stuff. You could tell he was really excited about the dig. In the last couple days before he died, there are a couple of interesting things. He made a note on one page that he thought he was being followed. There is even a copy of a police report. He said he got run off the road on his way home from the dig site. He was in a university vehicle so he had to file a report even though there wasn’t any damage,” Sophia said, showing Mike the note on the report. “They didn’t seem to take it very seriously, though.”

“Pretty hard to prove. The campus police probably thought he was making it up to explain why he had a problem with the car. What else?”

“Whoever boxed everything up included a copy of the police report into his death, including the coroner’s report. It had a note on it, addressed to my grandfather, saying he should read it. He never did,” Sophia explained. “I didn’t see much in it that seemed out of the ordinary. They declared the cause of death as drowning.”

“That’s pretty typical for dive accidents, especially when the medical examiner doesn’t know much about scuba diving. They find traces of water in the diver’s lungs and airway and rule it as drowning,” Mike agreed. “And it’s consistent with someone who made a dive and ran out of air underwater. He was back in a cave and couldn’t make it back to the surface in time. He would have lost consciousness and then drowned. It’s a terrible way to die.”

“I thought that was the case and I did some research. I found out pretty much exactly what you just said. But here is what I don’t understand. In the police report, someone checked out Uncle Erick’s equipment. There’s a note that he had 2800 psi in his air tank,” Sophia said, pointing out the line in the report so Mike didn’t have to search for it.

“A full tank only has about 3000 psi, so that tank is essentially full. That doesn’t make sense. Someone could have made a mistake, I guess, but it’s not really likely. If that’s the case, he never made the dive. He died on the surface,” Mike said, concern growing on his face.

“And that would mean someone killed him, wouldn’t it?”

Mike was quiet for a few minutes while he looked through the accident report in greater detail. The police had called in a local dive instructor to consult on the incident. The diver had also noted that the equipment wasn’t assembled correctly. Erick’s regulator was on backwards and it was facing the wrong direction in the buoyancy jacket the grad student was wearing when he died.

“I never heard about any of this at the time. Not that I knew anything about diving yet, but it’s strange no one reported this,” Mike said, clearly puzzled by what he was reading.

“My family said Erick was an experienced diver. He had made more than 100 dives before the accident and been all over.”

“I’m really confused by all of this and I don’t like what I’m reading. Someone who has made that many dives wouldn’t assemble their gear so poorly. It becomes second nature after a while. You just can’t do it wrong. But the air thing has got me really concerned. We found his body floating on the surface and now I read he had a full air tank. He could have had a seizure or something, I guess, but really the only way that could happen is if he was unconscious when he got in the water and that means someone put him there. He was probably still breathing when he was pushed in the water and that was when he drowned.”

“So you think he was murdered?”

“I’m not ready to go there yet, but something is weird. If its murder, whoever did it knocked him unconscious and then put him in his gear, putting it together wrong, and then put him in the water,” Mike said, ticking off the points on his fingers.

“But you agree something is suspicious, right? I think we should go to the police. There’s no statute of limitations on murder right?” Sophia said, standing as she said it.

“Hold on a second. First, it’s late. Second, I’ve had a couple beers. The police are not going to want to see us right now,” Mike said, motioning Sophia to take a seat. “Third, I want to read this a bit more closely and see if I can figure out what’s going on. If we’re going to get the police to reopen a 25-year-old case that was ruled an accidental drowning, we’ll need to have more than this to go on. They will just write it off saying someone made a mistake about Erick having air in his tank. And we still don’t have any proof that someone didn’t make a mistake.”

“I noticed you said ‘we’ several times. You’ll help me figure out what happened?”

“I don’t see how I can do anything but help. You’ve just told me there is a chance someone killed a friend of mine; someone I looked up to. I’m definitely going to get to the bottom of this,” Mike said. “But remember, this won’t be easy. The police aren’t going to want to deal with this. That’s no reflection on them. They have a lot of other things on their plate. We’re going to have to give them more to go on than just our word.”

“What do you want to do next?” Sophia asked.

“Well, it seems I have a little celebrity status as an alumnus ‘who done good’. Let’s see where that gets us. Let me take these papers and read through them. We’ll meet on campus tomorrow and see if there is anyone still around who was here at the time and ask some questions.”

If you want to read the rest of the story, Heart of the Maya is available in softcover and on Kindle. Get your copy today!

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Filed Under: Adventure, Books, Diving, New Releases

Truth really is stranger than fiction

May 28, 2014 By Eric Douglas

Connecting the Maya to the Adena in West Virginia

Pageflex Persona [document: PRS0000038_00067]Just last week, I released my first full-length adventure novel set in West Virginia called Heart of the Maya. The story spends some time in the ancient past, but most of it is set in the present day on the campus of Marshall University and in Tulum, Mexico.

A year or so ago, I wrote a column about the Adena burial mounds in West Virginia and how we often ignore the history right beneath our feet. At the time, we had just also survived December 2012, when many “experts” were saying the Mayan calendar ended. Obviously, we lived through that “end-of-the-world” event. It all got me thinking about a connection between the Maya and the Adena in our own backyard. I dug around into the history of both cultures and noticed some interesting similarities, although there is no evidence to say they actually overlapped or had contact.

The same day Heart of the Maya came out, there was a news story talking about a group of divers that found the skull of a teenage girl inside a Mexican cenote dating back to the Ice Age. (Pronounced se-NO-tay, a cenote is a freshwater-filled cave system.) The skull is helping scientists connect modern Native Americans to the people of central Mexico from 12,000 years ago. They believe the people who settled all across North and South America migrated across the Bering Sea from Asia, through Alaska and Canada and then continued to head south.

After working on the story for more than a year and releasing the book, that news story came out suggesting that the connection I created in the dark recesses of my mind may not be fiction after all. So, while the story in Heart of the Maya is pure fiction, it is interesting to think that maybe the mound builders of West Virginia and the Ohio Valley might actually have moved south and eventually become the Maya.

Truth really is stranger than fiction sometimes..

Filed Under: Adventure, Books, New Releases, Travel

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