Showing posts with label Lovecraftian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lovecraftian. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Valdis Damien van Dyne

Pierce Mostyn not only has Cthulhu to think about, he also has Valdis Damien van Dyne.

Sherlock Holmes had his Moriarty. Nero Wolfe had his Zeck. Nayland Smith had his Dr Fu Manchu. Hence, I think it only natural for Mostyn to have his van Dyne.

The Diabolical Mastermind trope has been around for a long time, and has served readers, moviegoers, and TV watchers quite well. The Diabolical Mastermind is the ultimate test for the hero.

A few readers have asked, “Why van Dyne, when you already have the ultimate evil in Cthulhu?” And that is a good question.

In part, I created van Dyne for a very human face to put on the evil in our world. I relish good cosmic horror. It is the ultimate expression of the objective meaninglessness of humanity. As such, cosmic horror shows us that our meaning and purpose is all inside. Who we are cannot be found out there. It can only be found within. We must discover who we are through introspection.

Nietzsche advises us to look to art for discovering who we are. What he meant was, just as the gods are all creators so are we humans creators. It is through the act of creating that we find ourselves and express who and what we are as individuals.

While cosmic horror pictures all of this for us, for many of us it is all too abstract. What does all that have to do with the day today evil I encounter?

The Diabolical Mastermind, in a way, puts a human face to the ultimate evil that causes the ultimate horror. It’s rather difficult to come to grips with Cthulhu or Azathoth. It’s much easier for us to understand a Moriarty, or a Fu Manchu, or a Valdis Damien van Dyne.

In Pierce Mostyn’s world, van Dyne is the human counterpart to Cthulhu. Both are evil. Both exert incredible and extensive influence in the affairs of the world. And both want to take over the world, caring little about the fate of the human inhabitants in the process.

If all goes well, Van Dyne’s Zuvembies will be published at the end of this month; when we will see another titanic struggle between the forces of good (Mostyn, Bardon, and the rest of the OUP gang), and the forces of evil — personified in Valdis Damien van Dyne. The fate of the world hangs in the balance!

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Pierce Mostyn Continues



In two weeks, the sixth Pierce Mostyn Paranormal Investigation, Demons in the Dunes, will hit the virtual bookshelves. And the word is that it’s the best Pierce Mostyn thus far. Which has me quite jazzed. I enjoy writing the Pierce Mostyn books and it’s good to know they are getting better and better.

I follow the school of thought that says don’t fully define your characters. Just start with a brief sketch and let them grow from story to story.

In practice, this means the characters may not come across as fully developed in the first book or two. Personally, I’m okay with that. I like to see a series character grow. And if what my advance readers are telling me is true, the characters are growing. Which means I am becoming more and more comfortable with them. And that is a very good thing.

Demons in the Dunes is also a bit different from the other books in the series in that the setting is not in the United States, but in the Empty Quarter of the Arabian Peninsula. There is nothing like an exotic location to spice a read!

For me, one of the most interesting things to watch in the series is the development of Dr. Rafe Bardon. And Demons reveals yet another side of the good doctor that we haven’t seen before. He is truly one enigmatic fellow!

You can find the entire series here. If you become a VIP reader, you’ll get the novelette “The Feeder” as a gift. It’s another rousing paranormal tale of adventure, and it’s not available in stores.

I’ll have more next week, so stay tuned!

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Pierce Mostyn in The Medusa Ritual




Pierce Mostyn, that intrepid foe of the things that go bump in the night, last appeared in Van Dyne’s Vampires, published October of last year.

Next week he will appear in a new adventure, his fifth: The Medusa Ritual.

The germ of the idea for Mostyn’s latest adventure can be found in the Hazel Heald and Lovecraft collaboration “The Man of Stone”. Collaboration, though, is a generous term; for, according to ST Joshi, Heald seems to have contributed virtually no prose to the story — based on textual evidence.

Thus, Heald probably only provided a story idea for Lovecraft to run with. Which he did, and that story then provided me with the idea for The Medusa Ritual. So thank you Hazel for that original idea!

However, while “The Man of Stone” got the wheels turning for The Medusa Ritual, there is nothing of the earlier story in the later one other than people being turned to stone.

While Van Dyne’s Vampires focused on what is essentially a mad scientist and his monsters, in Mostyn’s new adventure we return to the world of cosmic horror. That world where the terror originates from the realization that in the big picture we are completely and totally insignificant. A realization that can easily drive us to despair, madness, or self-destruction.

Nietzsche’s answer to achieving this awareness and its accompanying despair, was for the person to become a creative individual. To become as a god, in other words, for gods create; and in creating, the individual can thereby bring meaning to his or her otherwise meaningless life.

Nietzsche’s answer was essentially an existential one. We are in command of our fate. Counter the meaninglessness of existence by creating your own meaning.

Lovecraft, on the other hand, retreated into antiquarianism, and racial and cultural identity. The old days are good. The old ways are known and comfortable. My own kind are known to me. The foreigner is unknown, a mystery, and therefore suspect.

In Lovecraft’s fiction we see his philosophy play out in his vision of our world having been invaded by alien monster beings who have no regard for us. In strange, swarthy, and dark foreigners who do the bidding of these monsters. And in the insignificance of us Westerners and our science in the face of these ancient beings and their magical rituals. HPL’s conclusion is that it’s best if we don’t know too much of what is really out there, or know any of it at all.

When I come away from reading Lovecraft, I have the feeling that ignorance is bliss. In being ignorant, I can live my life in the delusion that this is a world of meaning and purpose. That I have essential meaning and purpose.

In “The Shadow over Innsmouth”, the narrator comes face to face with the horror of the curtain being pulled aside to reveal what truly is. He has looked into the abyss. In the end, when he realizes that he too will eventually join those monstrous denizens of the deep, rather than end his life, he resigns himself to his fate. For Lovecraft, once we know the truth, we either surrender to it, or go mad, or destroy ourselves. There is no Nietzschian optimism in Lovecraft.

Pierce Mostyn, knowing the truth, doesn’t go mad or destroy himself, but he is weighed down by the understanding that in the end all of his actions are futile. He resorts to duty to keep on going. Much like the ancient Roman Stoics. Duty gives him purpose and meaning in what is an otherwise meaningless and chaotic universe.

Now all of the above is a heck of a lot of philosophy. But don’t worry. It’s all in the background. The Medusa Ritual is not a philosophical treatise. It’s a tale of cosmic horror with plenty of action, adventure, monsters, and daring do. Just what we want to read. Right?

And it will be available, Amazon willing, on July 29th for your reading pleasure.


Comments are always welcome; and, until next time, happy reading!

Friday, May 10, 2019

The Medusa Ritual - Installment 15




The Medusa Ritual
A Pierce Mostyn Paranormal Investigation
by
CW Hawes


Dotty discovers something about herself, and Mostyn comes up with a new plan to secure her rescue and capture the mysterious and deadly book of arcane knowledge. But when Mostyn and NicAskill run into a living myth, will all be for naught?
Read on! The adventure continues!


Chapter 19


Pierce Mostyn slowly opened his eyes and coughed. He gradually maneuvered himself into a sitting position. He was covered in a grayish-colored dust and bits of concrete, brick, and earth. He looked at the humps of dust and dirt that marked where his team members lay, and slowly stood.
The last one in the line was only a few feet from where a wall of broken masonry and earth stretched from floor to ceiling. Mostyn made his way the that last team member and shook him. The person was Willie Lee Baker.
“Willie Lee, are you alright?” Mostyn shook him again.
A groan came from his lips, and Mostyn brushed away the stones and dirt. “Are you okay, Willie Lee?”
Baker shook his head and opened his eyes.
“Are you alright?”
“Yeah, I think so, Mostyn. I’m not in any great pain.”
“Good to hear.”
Mostyn moved down the row checking on each team member. They all were alive. Hammerschmidt’s back hurt, and NicAskill complained about her thigh. But there were no broken bones. Mostyn breathed a sigh of relief.
“Listen up,” he began, “we can only move forward. Somewhere ahead of us is Dr Kemper and the book and perhaps more unpleasant surprises. Drink some water, clear your heads, and get ready to move out.”
Mostyn took out his phone and brought up the holographic map of the tunnel system. The first thing he noticed was the dot representing Dotty Kemper had moved. He keyed his helmet mic.
“Sumer Base. Come in, Sumer Base.”
“We read you, Mostyn, but you’re breaking up.”
“Same for you, Langston. We had a cave-in.”
“Everyone alright?”
“We lost Petrie.”
“Sorry to hear that.”
“Thanks. I notice Dr Kemper’s moved. Where is she now?”
“She’s under central Chinatown. Before that she was under a church. I’ve highlighted the most direct route of you to reach her. You should see it on the hologram now.”
“Roger that, Sumer Base.”
“Mostyn, we’ve…”
The transmission disintegrated into static.
“Jones, anything you can do with the phone?”
“No, Boss. Maybe we need to get clear of this cave-in. It might be interfering with reception.”
“Okay, let’s move out. We need to quick time it.” And Mostyn took off at a jog down the tunnel, the rest of the team following. Behind Mostyn was Baker, and him were Stoppen, NicAskill, Hammerschmidt, and Jones.
A half-mile down the tunnel a side branch came in, and Mostyn took it. He continued on for five hundred feet and stopped.
“According to my calculations, we have at least a mile to go before we reach Dr Kemper. I’m going to divide the team. NicAskill and I are going to go on ahead.”
“And we slow pokes,” Dr Stoppen said, “will catch up as soon as possible.”
“No offense, Dr Stoppen,” Mostyn said.
“None taken, Special Agent Mostyn. Go rescue Dr Kemper and secure the book. We’ll catch up as soon as we can.”
“Sure you don’t need a photographer?” Baker asked.
“Sorry, Willie Lee,” Mostyn replied.
“Okay, I can take a hint,” Baker said, with a smile. “I need to go on a diet.”
“Your words, not mine,” Mostyn said.
Baker waved away Mostyn’s comment. “Yeah, yeah. You just want NicAskill to yourself.”
Mostyn simply smiled, and turned to Jones. “Keep everyone safe.” He had Jones study the hologram and the route he’d need to follow.
“Okay, NicAskill, let’s go.”
The two sprinted down the tunnel and quickly disappeared into the stygian blackness.

***

Dr Dotty Kemper took a look at herself in the mirror Zi had provided her. She’d bathed in an old-fashioned tin tub that had been brought in. She’d been given a massage. Zi had expertly applied her makeup.
I look pretty damn good, Dotty thought. To Zi, she said, “So what’s all this for?”
“The master will tell you. He will come soon.” Zi turned and left. Men came in and removed the tub and the mirror. On their departure, the door was closed and locked.
Dotty sat in a chair. “Well, Mr Mask,” she said out loud, “you’re either getting me all dolled up for my wedding or my funeral. And if it’s my funeral, then I guess I’m going out with a bang.”
After a moment, her flippant attitude vanished. “I don’t want to die.” The words came out soft and barely audible. “I don’t want to be some monster’s baby factory either. I want to be with Pierce. I want him to hold me, and kiss me, and make love to me, and treat me like a princess.” Tears collected in her eyes, and then ran down her cheeks.

***

Mostyn and NicAskill ran down the tunnel. The beams from their helmet lamps bounced off walls and floor. Rubble was everywhere. A testimony to the deterioration for the abandoned tunnel.
Holding the phone in hand, Mostyn kept them on course, moving every closer to Dotty Kemper’s location.
“Take that tunnel there,” Mostyn said.
He and NicAskill turned down a tunnel that came in on their right. However, fifty feet in the hologram collapsed and disappeared.
“Oh for crying out loud,” Mostyn exclaimed.
“What, Boss?”
“The hologram collapsed. Either my phone is dead, or we are out of range of Jones’s special phone. Mostyn tried contacting Sumer Base and was greeted with nothing but static.
“Looks like we’re out of range,” NicAskill said.
“It does. But the map should be in the app and shouldn’t be dependent on a connection to Sumer Base.”
“Well, whatever it is, we don’t have it. So now what?”
Mostyn pulled a compass out of a pocket. “She was north and east. We keep going.”
They ran for another four hundred feet and came to a stop. The tunnel came to a dead end in a vertical shaft. Mostyn walked to the edge. He looked up. Nothing but darkness beyond the reach of his helmet lamp. He lay on the floor, and peered over the edge into the shaft. He closed his eyes and swallowed, forcing down the bile rising in his throat. He took deep breaths to quell the vertigo threatening to overwhelm him.
He opened his eyes and took another look. Nothing but incredible darkness beyond the reach of the lamp. He pushed himself back from the edge and stood up.
NicAskill went to the edge and dropped a piece of rubble. After a couple seconds they heard it hit something solid.
“An elevator shaft?” NicAskill asked.
“Maybe. The question is, how do we get down?”
“You sure we want to go down and not up?”
“Not one hundred percent sure, but if I was our masked man, I’d hold dotty in a lower tunnel. Not a higher one. Less chance of her being found in a lower tunnel.”
“Makes sense, Boss.” NicAskill swept the vertical tunnel with her lamp. “Over there, Boss. A ladder.”
“And it has to be over there rather than over here.” Mostyn shook his head.
He and NicAskill slid off their backpacks, rummaged inside and retrieved the abseil lines and a small graphing hook. They attached the grappling hook to one end of the line.
“All set?” Mostyn asked.
“Ready to go.”
“Very good. Ladies first.”
NicAskill tossed the grappling hook across the expanse of the shaft. It caught on one of the rungs. She pulled on the line. Both the hook and ladder held. She sat on the edge, and the scooted off. Through the air she sailed, her boots hit the wall on either side of the ladder. She bounced back out a ways, came back in, and grabbed the ladder with her left hand. She let go of the line.
“Seems sturdy enough,” she called back to Mostyn.
She climbed a few rungs, retrieved the grappling hook and started down the ladder.
Mostyn repeated what NicAskill had done and in a few minutes both were in the lower tunnel.
“I don’t think this is part of the original system,” NicAskill said.
“Or maybe it is the original system.”
The tunnel was narrow, at most three people could stand side by side. The ceiling was only about seven feet above the floor. The walls and ceiling were rough hewn stone. The floor had been smoothed, in places with concrete. Mostyn figured that had been a more recent addition.
The lighting fixtures were few and far between and were not operating. They were located along the wall near the ceiling.
“God, it’s hotter than hell down here,” NicAskill said.
“No ventilation either,” Mostyn added. He looked at the compass. “At least it goes in the same general direction we want to go.”
The two packed up the grapnels and abseil lines, put their backpacks back on and took off down the tunnel. About a thousand feet on, the tunnel made a sharp turn to the left. Mostyn and NicAskill came to a quick stop. For standing before them were two creatures.
“Oh, my God!” NicAskill exclaimed. “There are lizard people.”



To Be Continued!




While waiting for the next installment, the entire Pierce Mostyn Paranormal series is available for your reading pleasure.

Do you hate cliffhangers? There’s none in this series. Each book stands by itself.

Do you think books are magic? That for just a little while you can be anywhere, doing anything? Then join Pierce Mostyn and experience some magic!

What people are saying about the Pierce Mostyn series:

“…a fast-paced story with lots of action, yet does not neglect the characters.”

“Hawes has a great time with this series and does a good job (too good) of leaving us wanting more.”

“This series is fun…”

“…a weird tale of adventure, humor, and horror.”




Are engaging characters your thing? Join my VIP Readers and you’ll get the Pierce Mostyn novelette, “The Feeder” — available only to my VIP Readers! 

And you’ll be the first to know when the revised book version of The Medusa Ritual comes out!



The Medusa Ritual is copyright © 2019 by CW Hawes. All rights reserved.

Friday, April 26, 2019

The Medusa Ritual - Installment 13




The Medusa Ritual
A Pierce Mostyn Paranormal Investigation
by
CW Hawes


Deception and shell games. Along with a few shell companies. An ancient sorcerer, or someone pretending to be. And a game of tunnel, tunnel, who’s in the tunnel. The plot thickens, as they say.
Read on! The adventure continues!



Chapter 15


Mostyn sat at the table. Plates of sandwiches, and carafes of coffee and water ran down the center of the table. The team members, except for Dotty Kemper, were eating and drinking. Mostyn, however, just sipped at a styrofoam cup of coffee. The coffee was just how he liked it: strong with a hefty dollop of cream, real cream.
He’d listened to the the reports from Jones and Hammerschmidt, and NicAskill and Petrie. He’d told them what he’d discovered. Then the food arrived and he decided to let them eat before listening to what Stoppen and Baer had found out.
The coffee was hot. Those are good carafes, he thought. His mind drifted back to the morning before Bardon had sent Dotty and him out to attempt the capture of Tommy John MacIlhenney. Dotty had made coffee in her French Press. He liked her coffee. It was perfect. That was definitely one thing she did better than Helene. He smiled. Helene and coffee were like an airplane defying gravity after it had run out of fuel.
Dotty. Would he ever see her again? And if he didn’t what would he do? He had Helene. But Dotty was Dotty. He’d worked with her for a long time and he’d loved her for a good portion of that time.
He looked at his styrofoam cup of coffee and thought of her making coffee their coffee that morning. It was perfect. It was always perfect. She was gone and he hadn’t even told her he loved her.
They would get her back. They had to get her back. That was all there was to it.
He became aware of someone saying, “Boss!” He looked up. Jones. Jones was yelling, “Boss”, and Baker was saying, “Earth to Mostyn. Come in Mostyn.”
“I’m here. What is it?”
“Otto was telling us about his morning,” Dr Winifred Petrie said.
“Did you find out something of importance, Dr Stoppen?” Mostyn asked.
“Yes and no,” he replied.
“Okay. I’ll take the good news first,” Mostyn said.
“The buzz is that a very ancient book was purchased and brought to LA within the last year or so. The Huntington made an attempt to find who owned it, in order to make an offer to buy it. They were not successful. Two private collectors are also pursuing a purchase, but have yet to find the owner.”
Mostyn nodded. “The bad news?”
“My contacts are of the opinion the book is just a legend at best, and a fake at worst.”
“But we know the book is real, otherwise Bardon wouldn’t have us looking for it.”
“So what do we do now, Boss?” NicAskill asked.
Mostyn took a deep breath, held it for a moment, and then exhaled. “I think we know four vital pieces of information. First, the book is real. I don’t think there is any other way to explain the strange cloud formations. Second, the management companies and Ching Wo are fronts for whoever we are after. Third, the fact the properties owned by Ching Wo are above an underground tunnel system seems to me to be intentional. And finally, all legends are based on truth. Consequently, we are either dealing with Wing Lee himself, or someone who has appropriated the legend. And in either case, the person commands great power. He is, for lack of a better word, a sorcerer of tremendous ability.”
“That all makes sense, Boss, but what do we do with the information?” NicAskill asked.
“I think it’s time we do a turn at urban spelunking, because my gut is telling me that’s where we’ll find the book.”
“Aw, man,” Jones blurted. “We’re not going underground again? Tell me we’re not.”
“Were you listening, Jones?” Mostyn said.
With a smile on his face, Baker said, “You used the word ‘spelunking’. That has a few too many syllables for Jones.”
“Fork you, Mr Camera Man,” Jones said. “I know what the word ‘spelunking’ means. I may have blonde hair, but I’m not dumb.”
NicAskill punched him in the arm. “You just don’t want to get cobwebs in those golden locks, right?”
“Shit,” Jones muttered. “Fine. Back to being mole people. I love being a mole.”
“You enjoyed K’n-yan,” Mostyn said, with his best poker face.
Jones threw his hands up. “Alright, alright. When do we take the tunnel tour?”
Mostyn’s phone chimed. He took it out of his pocket and looked at it. When he was done reading, he put it back.
“The report on Ching Wo Company, Inc. came back. It’s a shell company, owned by another shell company, that is also owned by a shell company, et cetera, et cetera. However, it seems the end of the line is a company in Taiwan. The Mo Yan Corporation. It is privately held, but no owners or officers have been found at this point.”
“Is this relevant?” Dr Stoppen asked.
“No,” Mostyn replied. “I think it safe to say that Wing Lee, or his imposter, is the owner. And does the information alter anything for us? I don’t think so. If anything, a Taiwanese company tends to re-enforce the legend.”
“Do you believe we’re actually dealing with this Wing Lee?” Petrie asked.
“Yes,” Mostyn replied. “I’ve heard the voice. It was ancient sounding. Like a whisper emanating from a distant tomb.”
“So where are we going to access the tunnel system?” NicAskill asked.
“There are two entrances that I’m aware of, and there are probably more. One is in the Hall of Records. An elevator, in fact, takes you there. There is also a bar that was once a speakeasy located in the tunnels. The access point is in the basement of the bar. We’ll try one of these first and go from there. Any further questions?”
No one said anything.
“Finish your lunch. We’ll move out in forty-five minutes.”



Chapter 16


Dr Dotty Kemper opened her eyes. The light was dim, barely holding at bay the Stygian blackness. She felt cold and realized she was lying on concrete. The surface was pitted and rough. She sat up and saw that she was chained to the concrete wall. An iron manacle was on each wrist. They were connected by a chain. Another chain ran from the concrete wall to the chain connecting the wrist manacles.
“Where the hell am I?” she said.
“You are in the tunnels below the city.”
Dotty looked in the direction the voice came from and saw a man sitting in a chair on the edge of the darkness.
“Tunnels? Tunnels below LA?”
“Yes,” the voice said. “They are old. Very old. Many sections are barricaded because they are in poor condition. Other sections are lost to memory because they were here long before the tunnels dug by men.”
“Who are you?” Dotty asked.
“My name does not matter, Dr Kemper. I am to watch you and make sure you are okay.”
“Well, I’m not okay. I have a headache and I ache from lying on this concrete and I’m cold.”
“I’m sorry. There is nothing I can do to alleviate your pain, or provide you with warmth.”
“Then what the hell good are you?”
“The question has no relevance. I simply serve the master. I am to watch you and make sure you are okay. That you are in no life threatening distress.”
“I will be if you don’t get me a blanket.”
“I am sorry. I do not have a blanket for you.”
“Fine. Be that way.” Dotty stood. She turned around and pulled on the chain. Seems solid enough, she thought. Too bad for me.
She stretched the chain as far as it would go. About four or five feet of play. At least I’m not up against the wall with my hands over my head.
“Even if you were free of your shackles, you would not find your way to the surface,”
“Thanks for the information,” Dotty replied. She turned around to face the man on the edge of the darkness. “So I guess I’m not going to be the blushing bride, am I?”
“I do not know your fate. I only know that you gained the ire of the master.”
“Well, that’s just a goddamn shame, isn’t it?”
“You do not want to anger the master.”
“Between you and me? If I get my hands on that prick the only thing he’ll be master of is worm food.”
“You are in no position to make threats.”
“Threats? Listen, you mechanical dildo, that was a promise. You need to learn the difference.”
“You shouldn’t make promises you cannot keep.”
“Who appointed you to be my mother? Besides, how do you know I can’t keep my promise?”
The man stood and stepped into the feeble light cast by the electric lantern. Dotty recognized him as the older man who’d come into her suite with the masked man.
“You are in grave danger, Dr Kemper. You should not jest.”
She snorted. “I don’t believe in prayer, so that leaves me with jesting.”
“That is too bad.”
“What is too bad is that I didn’t die up there in my room.”
“That is true, Dr Kemper. That is very true.”

***

The elevator came to a stop and the door opened. Mostyn, NicAskill, Baker, and Petrie stepped out. The door closed and the elevator rose. After a couple of minutes the car returned with the rest of the team.
“Well, look at his,” Jones said. “Graffiti artists of the Underworld.”
“Have wall, will paint,” Baker quipped.
“Let’s get ready,” Mostyn said.
The team members were wearing street clothes to minimize attention and not arouse suspicion. Each one had a backpack.
They opened their backpacks and took out their helmets, equipped with an attached electric lamp, a flashlight, and a weapon. The packs also contained water, emergency rations, spelunking equipment, and a light-weight space blanket.
Jones carried the special OUP issued phone which allowed the team to maintain contact with headquarters.
“Let Sumer Base know we are in the tunnels, will you, Jones?” Mostyn said.
“Sure thing, Boss.” Jones made the call and when finished turned to Mostyn.
“They sent you a three D map of the tunnels, Boss. We’ve also gotten a lucky break. Sumer Base has started receiving Kemper’s subdermal transmitter signal again.”
“That is good news,” Mostyn said, while fishing his phone out of his pocket. When it was in hand, he tapped on it and displayed the 3-D map. A flashing green dot indicated where Dotty Kemper was located.
Mostyn studied the diagram for a moment and then called Jones and NicAskill over. “What do you make of this?” he asked.
The two special agents looked at the screen. Jones spoke first. “Doesn’t that beat all. She’s not even in one of the tunnels.”
“More likely, she’s in a tunnel that isn’t on any map,” NicAskill said.
“That’s what I said,” Jones replied.
“Yeah, right, Jones. And Einstein had marshmallows for brains.”
Mostyn studied the holographic projection of the tunnel system. After several minutes, he said, “We’re going to rescue Dr Kemper.”
“We’re supposed to look for the book,” Dr Stoppen said.
“And I’m willing to bet where Dr Kemper is, the book will be close by,” Mostyn replied. “Now get your packs on, and follow me.”



To Be Continued!




While waiting for the next installment, the entire Pierce Mostyn Paranormal series is available for your reading pleasure.

Do you hate cliffhangers? There’s none in this series. Each book stands by itself.

Do you think books are magic? That for just a little while you can be anywhere, doing anything? Then join Pierce Mostyn and experience some magic!

What people are saying about the Pierce Mostyn series:

“…a fast-paced story with lots of action, yet does not neglect the characters.”

“Hawes has a great time with this series and does a good job (too good) of leaving us wanting more.”

“This series is fun…”

“…a weird tale of adventure, humor, and horror.”




Are engaging characters your thing? Join my VIP Readers and you’ll get the Pierce Mostyn novelette, “The Feeder” — available only to my VIP Readers! 

And you’ll be the first to know when the revised book version of The Medusa Ritual comes out!



The Medusa Ritual is copyright © 2019 by CW Hawes. All rights reserved.