Atsiliepimai
Aprašymas
Evil rides the borderlands—and it knows your name.
Nocona Ketemoczy, a battle-scarred Marine turned border agent, is barely holding his life together when girls start disappearing from the scrub and river crossings of West Texas. Their bodies—when they're found—bear the unmistakable signature of ritual killings tied to Palo Mayombe, an African-Cuban religion twisted here into a weapon of terror. Locals whisper about an old woman with cataract eyes and a rotted smile: the Witch of Sonora, a presence that has stalked Nocona's nightmares since he was a boy and now walks the caliche roads in broad daylight.
Drawn into the case is Hannah Durand, an eighty-something ranch widow who runs Casa de Katia, a hard-scrabble safe house for trafficked girls hidden in the hills outside Rocksprings. When a half-starved migrant named Ava arrives with a black cauldron and bones inked down her arm, Hannah recognizes a mark she's only ever seen in forbidden images on the dark corners of the internet. She knows at once: whatever is hunting her girls has stepped onto her land.
As a historic Halloween flood slams the Hill Country, Nocona is forced to confront two enemies at once—the cartel lieutenant building a torture-and-trafficking hub along the Rio Grande, and the generational trauma that has turned his Comanche and Mexican blood into a tinderbox for the Witch's whispers. His one true ally is Jo McKenney, a razor-sharp former Army Ranger and Del Rio border agent whose own moral injuries from Afghanistan mirror his own. When Jo goes missing while surveilling a remote ranch near Seminole Canyon, Nocona realizes he may be too late—for the girls, for Hannah, and for the woman he's finally allowed himself to love.
From haunted canyons and flash-flooded rivers to a shipping container "temple" lined with skulls, Witch of Sonora is a visceral blend of crime, supernatural suspense, and spiritual warfare, steeped in the stark beauty and violence of the Texas borderlands. This novel asks a single searing question: when evil wears both human and supernatural faces, what will you sacrifice to save the ones who can't save themselves?
Evil rides the borderlands—and it knows your name.
Nocona Ketemoczy, a battle-scarred Marine turned border agent, is barely holding his life together when girls start disappearing from the scrub and river crossings of West Texas. Their bodies—when they're found—bear the unmistakable signature of ritual killings tied to Palo Mayombe, an African-Cuban religion twisted here into a weapon of terror. Locals whisper about an old woman with cataract eyes and a rotted smile: the Witch of Sonora, a presence that has stalked Nocona's nightmares since he was a boy and now walks the caliche roads in broad daylight.
Drawn into the case is Hannah Durand, an eighty-something ranch widow who runs Casa de Katia, a hard-scrabble safe house for trafficked girls hidden in the hills outside Rocksprings. When a half-starved migrant named Ava arrives with a black cauldron and bones inked down her arm, Hannah recognizes a mark she's only ever seen in forbidden images on the dark corners of the internet. She knows at once: whatever is hunting her girls has stepped onto her land.
As a historic Halloween flood slams the Hill Country, Nocona is forced to confront two enemies at once—the cartel lieutenant building a torture-and-trafficking hub along the Rio Grande, and the generational trauma that has turned his Comanche and Mexican blood into a tinderbox for the Witch's whispers. His one true ally is Jo McKenney, a razor-sharp former Army Ranger and Del Rio border agent whose own moral injuries from Afghanistan mirror his own. When Jo goes missing while surveilling a remote ranch near Seminole Canyon, Nocona realizes he may be too late—for the girls, for Hannah, and for the woman he's finally allowed himself to love.
From haunted canyons and flash-flooded rivers to a shipping container "temple" lined with skulls, Witch of Sonora is a visceral blend of crime, supernatural suspense, and spiritual warfare, steeped in the stark beauty and violence of the Texas borderlands. This novel asks a single searing question: when evil wears both human and supernatural faces, what will you sacrifice to save the ones who can't save themselves?
Atsiliepimai