I'm delighted to introduce you to my author friend
Anne Montgomery. Anne is visiting today with her new release
A Light in the Desert, an intriguing Soft Thriller novel I
think you'll enjoy.
A Light in the Desert traces the
story of a pregnant teenager who bears an odd facial deformity, a Vietnam
veteran and former Special Forces sniper who, as he descends into the throes of
mental illness, latches onto the girl, and a group of Pentecostal zealots – the
Children of Light – who have been waiting over thirty years in the Arizona
desert for Armageddon.
The Amtrak Sunset Limited, a passenger train en route to Los
Angeles, is derailed in their midst’s, a deadly act of sabotage. Their lives
are thrown into turmoil when local and state police, FBI investigators, and a
horde of reporters make camp by the twisted wreckage of the Sunset Limited. As
the search for the saboteurs continues, the authorities find more questions
than answers. The girl mysteriously vanishes, the assassin struggles to
maintain his sanity, and a child is about to be born in the wilderness.
EXCERPT
Most of the two hundred and forty-eight passengers on the
Sunset Limited were asleep when David Flowers – weaving slightly as the sleeper
car rattled along at fifty miles-per-hour – moved along the passageway en route
to the bathroom. At the end of the car he saw Mitchell Bates, a twenty-year
Amtrak veteran.
“Don’t forget to get me up when we get to Palm Springs,” the
passenger said. “Don’t wanna sleep through my stop.”
“Don’t worry about a thing,” Bates responded, smiling. “That’s
what they pay me for.”
Two cars back, Kelly sat wide awake, fingers cupped around
her eyes, the outside edges of her hands pressed tightly to the window. She
could see the moonlit desert careening by, the scattered mountains black
against a star-filled night sky. She felt the gentle rolling of the car: a
strangely pleasant feeling. A sense of calm surrounded her, maybe because, for
the first time since her father died, there were other people who cared about
her. Kelly glanced over at Miranda, still engrossed in a two-month-old,
dog-eared issue of Glamour Magazine. Had her mother ever had a friend?
Up in the cab, the engineer watched as the massive headlight
bathed the track ahead in bright white light. He’d been on this run hundreds of
times. A curve that would lead the train onto a trestle that spanned one of the
deeper washes between Phoenix and L.A. was just ahead. The headlight blazed – a
star shooting in the darkness – wrapping the track in light as harsh as any
clear desert day.
But the damage was under the rails where no light could
penetrate.
****
Ramm was driving on the dirt road that would take him back
to the cabin. That edgy, too-much-caffeine feeling gripped him again. He should
be on the train, the one protecting Kelly. Had he made a mistake contacting the
watchers, which meant he had put himself in play again? The community in which
he’d worked for so many years was relatively small and there was always the
possibility that word had spread about the debacle in Jerusalem. By contacting
the watchers, he might have put himself in jeopardy, which could also bring
harm to those around him.
Ramm’s head began to pound, the migraine accompanied by a
hazy aura. His psychological state was fluctuating.
How long could he stay ahead of the problem without medication? What if he
blacked out again? What if he was hospitalized and people started checking on
him?
Feeling impotent, powerless, Ramm jammed on the breaks. The
truck skidded to a stop on the soft shoulder where blacktop and dirt merged at
the turnoff. He rubbed his face hard then gripped the steering wheel. When he
looked up and peered through the windshield, Ramm blinked several times,
confused.
There, in the night sky before him, floating in a spectral
light, was Kelly’s face. Ramm squinted, shutting his eyes tight, then looked
again. The ghostly image was still there, hovering before him, her troubled
visage beckoning him to follow. She merged with paintings and sculptures – the mother of Jesus in all
her quiet grief, the face of Mary on the shimmering white marble of
Michelangelo’s St. Peter’s Pieta, on Raphael’s Madonna del Granduca, her
desolate melancholy depicted by Masaccio, Veneziano, and countless other
artists through time.
Ramm painfully unclenched his hands from around the steering
wheel. The suddenness of the bright light caught him off guard. His first
reaction was to grab for the loaded Glock he kept under the front seat, but when
the glare splashed past him, followed by the steady beat of the passing
railcars, he relaxed.
Then, an unexpected wave of heat engulfed Ramm, and he
pushed open the cab door and stepped out, breathing deeply, trying to clear his
head. The noise hit him like a blow, shattering the desert calm, causing Ramm
to reflexively drop to the ground. He lay there listening to the calamitous
groaning, a ghastly noise that washed over him like a rogue wave.
To read more from A Light in the Desert
please click a vendor's name:
Anne Montgomery has worked as a
television sportscaster, newspaper and magazine writer, teacher, amateur baseball
umpire, and high school football referee. She worked at WRBL‐TV in Columbus,
Georgia, WROC‐TV in Rochester, New York, KTSP‐TV in Phoenix, Arizona, ESPN in
Bristol, Connecticut, where she anchored the Emmy and ACE award‐winning
SportsCenter, and ASPN-TV as the studio host for the NBA’s Phoenix Suns.
Montgomery has been a freelance and staff writer for six publications, writing
sports, features, movie reviews, and archeological pieces.
When she can, Anne indulges in her passions: rock
collecting, scuba diving, football refereeing, and playing her guitar.
Fascinating premise, and haunting prose, Anne.
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