Quest for the Tablet
By Bruce Savage
()
About this ebook
Since Jack was a little boy his father and grandfather tried to teach him the customs and traditions of his native American heritage. But the stories and tales of gods and magic seemed unreal to Jack and unbelievable. That was until the day he came home from college to visit his father and grandfather and has a mystical vision of his own.
Jack is visited by a native American spirit that sends him on a quest to find an ancient tablet and return it to it's resting place where it belongs. The catch is that a madman is also on a quest to find the tablet and obtain its power to destroy everything.
Deep in the Mexican jungle, Paul Winslow is on a quest of his own. A quest that has taken him twenty years to find the tomb of Nimancha an ancient god worshipped by the Olmec people and buried with the tablet of Ninurta. Little known to Paul is that he has accidentally awoken Nimancha from his final resting place to protect the tablet.
A race has begun that will take Jack around the world and to the ancient city of Eridu in Iraq. A battle will be fought between good and evil and the outcome will determine the fate of the world. It's up to Jack and Nimancha to stop Paul at any cost before it's too late and the darkness spreads across the world and destroys everything.
Bruce Savage
Bruce Savage was born in Lewiston, Maine in 1967, the youngest son of 16 brother’s and sisters to Winfield Strout and Blanche Strout. He published his first successful work when he was 10 years old in Boy’s Life magazine. The publication paid him $1 for a joke he wrote. So excited about his accomplishment and seeing his name published he pursued the art of writing for the next 40 years. In 1984 he enlisted in the United States Army and served his country in Germany. In 1999 he graduated from Columbia Southern University with a Bachelor’s in Computer Science and Information Systems. He held several positions with several fortune 500 companies until 2002 when he dove head first and full-time into the world of writing and publishing. Since then he has produced 11 novels and counting. Casualties of War was his first novel followed by Psycho.He is currently working on many other novels that will be available soon as well as the screenplay for Russian Games. He currently lives in Florida and the Philippines with his wife Julie and his daughter. He frequently enjoys making donations and contributions to ending poverty and supporting those less fortunate and he is an avid animal rights supporter.
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Quest for the Tablet - Bruce Savage
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
About Bruce Savage
Books by Bruce Savage
Disclaimer
Copyright
Quotes
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Wait!
From the Author
About Bruce Savage
Bruce Savage was born in Lewiston, Maine in 1967, the youngest son of 16 brother’s and sister’s to Winfield Strout and Blanche Strout. He published his first successful work when he was 10 years old in Boy’s Life magazine. The publication paid him $1 for a joke he wrote. So excited about his accomplishment and seeing his name published he pursued the art of writing for the next 40 years. In 1984 he enlisted in the United States Army and served his country in Germany. In 1999 he graduated from Columbia Southern University with a Bachelor’s in Computer Science and Information Systems. He held several positions with several fortune 500 companies until 2002 when he dove head first and full time into the world of writing and publishing. Since then he has produced 11 novels and counting. Casualties of War was his first novel followed by Psycho.
He is currently working on many other novels that will be available soon as well as the screenplay for Russian Games. He currently lives in Florida and the Philippines with his wife Julie and his daughter. He frequently enjoys making donations and contributions to ending poverty and supporting those less fortunate and he is an avid animal rights supporter.
Bruce Savage – Quest for the Tablet
Books by Bruce Savage
The Novels:
GOD’S ASSASSIN
NO MERCY FOR THE DEAD
EUROPA'S CHILD
RUSSIAN GAMES
QUEST FOR THE TABLET
ORIGIN
SHORT SCARY STORIES
PSYCHO
CASUALTIES OF WAR
KNOW YOUR ENEMY
MORE SHORT SCARY STORIES
For previews and information about the author:
Visit www.brucesavage.com.
Disclaimer
Quest for the Tablet
By Bruce Savage
Copyright © 2015
Quest for the Tablet eBook Edition
This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite eBook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems without the express permission in writing by the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
First Edition 1.0
Bruce Savage – Quest for the Tablet
Copyright
Copyright © 2015 www.brucesavage.com
All rights reserved.
ISBN-10: 1517789095
ISBN-13: 978-1517789091
Bruce Savage – Quest for the Tablet
Visit: www.brucesavage.com or your favorite book seller to order additional copies.
Bruce Savage – Quest for the Tablet
Quote
Reality is quite different then what we believe it to be. – Thich Nhat Han – a Buddhist monk.
Chapter 1
They say that Native Americans have a deep understanding of the nature of life. A deep respect for it. There are many myths and superstitions that go hand and hand with most Native American traditions and beliefs. The ability to see into the future or the past. The ability to walk around inside of dreams and understand animals. The beliefs of many different gods or spirits that are responsible for the creation of the universe and the creatures in it. Most of these myths are just that…myths, or so Jack Skywalker believed.
He grew up on the reservation in Arizona. Listening to his father and grandfather talk about tradition and Indian legends. Watching the ceremonies that they would perform in honor of their way of life. But never really believing any of it. Never letting their teachings take hold or sink in.
His grandfather used to tell him that myths are legends and sometimes myths are the truth. It was a matter of whether or not you believe in the myth that makes it the truth. Not everything is black and white. His grandfather was the medicine man or doctor on the reservation where Jack lived and grew up. It depended on whom you spoke to and what was wrong with you. He was a very respected and honored member of the Apache nation. His grandfather had hoped when Jack was young that he would become a medicine man someday and carry on the tradition. He had hoped that Jack would take hold of his culture and embrace it as his father did when he was young.
But that wasn’t what Jack wanted. Inside Jack there was a voice calling him. He knew that someday he would do something great with his life. As do the young. But he didn’t know what. Growing up on the reservation there was very little to do and a lot of trouble for a boy that’s restless to get into. And that’s how Jack spent most of his youth getting into trouble. The scar on his arm was his reminder of that trouble and a wakeup call to get his act together.
When Jack was sixteen he decided to play a prank on a couple of his friends. Tommy Lightfoot and Gordon Willow. The plan was brilliant or so he thought. To scare the day lights out of his friends and show them who the chief of pranks really He captured a rattlesnake and placed it in a burlap bag to bring along with him on an overnight camping trip he and his friends were going to have out in the desert. He told them that he was bringing it to perform a ritual and set it free.
This they didn’t trust, because they knew Jack. They grew up with Jack. When his friends were asleep he was going to let the rattle snake loose near their sleeping bags and wake them up. But the prank back fired when Jack didn’t take into account that the rattlesnake hadn’t eaten in a while and didn’t appreciate being bounced around inside of that burlap bag. As soon as Jack opened the bag that snake struck at him and got a good hold on his arm. The snake bit deep into Jacks arm and he let out a scream so loud, that it woke his friends up.
Tommy could see Jack flailing around on the ground with the snake and he rushed to Jack to help him.
For crying out loud Jack hold still!
Tommy said trying to get Jack to stop rolling around on the ground and hold still long enough to get hold of the snake.
Tommy in desperation finally grabbed the snake by the back of its head and yanked it off of Jack. With one quick jerk he threw the snake over by a cactus fifteen feet away. The snake quickly got it’s barring and took off into the desert night as fast as it could.
Gordon get my anti-venom kit in my back pack, hurry!
Gordon raced to Tommy’s backpack and fumbled through it in a frantic race to find the anti-venom kit at the bottom. He raced over to Tommy almost tripping into the campfire that was still burning from supper. Here quick, give him the shot before the poison sets in!
Jack stay still; this is going to hurt a little bit.
Tommy said trying to get Jack to settle down."
No kidding! Like I’m not in enough pain as it is!
Jack said reeling from the pain of feeling his arm muscles tighten up.
The venom was beginning to work its way through Jack’s nervous system and he could feel his heart racing. He was finding it difficult to breathe, because it felt like an anaconda had rapped itself around him and was squeezing his chest.
Gordon, hurry up and get back to the reservation and get some help. We need to get Jack to the Hospital!
Gordon took off into the night and back to the reservation and returned with Jacks father, who was frantic and angry.
If it weren’t for Tommy’s father reminding him to bring along the anti-venom kit, Jack would have died that night. But instead Jack got off with two weeks in the hospital and a scar on his arm. And grounded for six months by his father. Who wasn’t at all amused by what he did. And his father made sure during those six months he was grounded that he tamed whatever wild spirits were in Jack once and for all. And made him aware of the value of life.
One of Jacks punishments he had to do was recite essays on his culture in the Apache language. His father made sure he recited them every day after supper and he knew how much that annoyed Jack. But his father didn’t really notice that by the end of the six months Jack had developed an interest in archeology and an interest in the past. An interest that he would pursue for the rest of his life. And take Jack on adventures that he would never dream of.
Jacks father was a tribal lawyer and a historian on the Apache people. His father passed this interest in his people onto him when he was young. It was something that Jacks father always took great comfort in. Learning and understanding where he came from and where his people were going. He became a lawyer to defend the rights of his people and insure that their way of life continued on for many generations.
When Jack decided on a career to follow his father was shocked that he had chosen archeology as his choice. Knowing very well how little Jack was interested in his own culture. This made his father proud because he knew that maybe someday it would lead him back to his people and a respect for his culture. Even though Jack’s father knew he had his eye on leaving the reservation, and his people, he still had hope that Jack would learn someday the importance of knowing where he came from and to understand the value of knowing your culture’s history.
When Jack left for college it was one of the hardest things his father had to face next to losing his wife to cancer when Jack was young. Seeing his son leave, just like he knew Jack would someday, hit him pretty hard. But with the pain of seeing him leave came hope of him returning. And the hope that Jack would mature and be a part of the culture that he was born into.
Jack was going home for two weeks to visit. He had just graduated from UCLA with a Doctorate in Archeology. He was looking forward to spending time with his grandfather and father after not seeing them for the past two years. The last time he was home he had made the mistake of insulting his grandfather by arguing his point about the difference between myth and scientific fact. Jack had let his education overstep his common sense of respecting his grandfather.
Time had passed. And Jack felt that he had matured as a person, and that these two weeks might help him smooth out some of the wrinkles that he had caused growing up. His grandfather was 90 years old now. And Jack was a little afraid that he might not last another year. In his heart he wanted his grandfather to see that he was a man now and that he was headed down a good path in life. He had worked hard to achieve something in his life. And hoped to get his grandfather’s blessings, even though they might have shared very different points of views.
His car sped along the canyon road near the White Mountains heading toward the Apache reservation. He had been driving all night hoping to get home no later than early morning. A strong wind started to stir and kick up dust. Jack didn’t really think anything about it until the wind picked up and the dust started to get thicker. He knew he should pull off to the side of the road, or risk going off