La Salle's Ghost
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
Late at night, drifting alone on the Gulf of Mexico, Charlie Sweetwater sits aboard his boat, alone with his thoughts, when from the darkness he hears a man swimming toward him from the middle of nowhere. But not just any man. His name is Julien Dufay, the wealthy French scion of a family-owned petrochemical dynasty headquartered in Houston. Charlie saves the man’s life, but, of course, no good deed ever goes unpunished.
As Charlie is drawn deeper into Julien’s erratic orbit, he discovers a man possessed. Dufay is consumed by his vision of discovering the site of Fort Saint Louis, the famed—and doomed—17th century settlement of French explorer, Robert Cavelier de La Salle.
Thanks to Julien, and his own restless curiosity, Charlie is pulled into a web of obsession, murder, danger and greed. Julien wants to find the long-lost colony (and the treasure of artifacts buried with it) as a legacy for himself, his family and the greater glory of France. But the project’s ambitious sponsor, Jean-Marc Dufay, is hell-bent on getting at the rich natural gas resources hidden beneath the site, and will think nothing of using his own brother as a pawn to feed his ambitions. Standing in the way is the stubborn old man on whose South Texas ranch Julien and Jean-Marc are converging, along with the rancher’s trio of scurrilous sons, who have their own covert agenda—an agenda that can be lethal to outsiders.
Charlie struggles to make sense of it all, with the help of the beautiful marine archeologist who is excavating La Salle’s shipwreck La Belle in nearby Matagorda Bay. But as he digs deeper into Julien Dufay’s danger-fraught quest, he discovers that history has a way of repeating itself, and that some ghosts just won't stay buried.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Arceneaux (the pseudonym of three Texas-based writers: Brent Douglass, John Davis, and James R. Dennis) tries too hard to deliver a rousing thriller loosely based on French explorer Robert de la Salle's 1687 failed colony on the Texas Gulf Coast. One steamy Gulf night in September 1995, shrimper Charlie Sweetwater hauls an exhausted swimmer onto his private Chinese junk. The man Charlie rescues, eccentric Frenchman Julien Dufay, has plans for building a history museum on the site of de la Salle's lost colony for the greater glory of France. Meanwhile, Julien's brother, Jean-Marc, who's sponsoring the project, wants to exploit the site's natural gas resources. Stereotypical characters and a plethora of story lines make for an awkward mix, though the frequent references to savory Gulf food and even hotter interplay between Charlie and Julien's wife add some spice. Possibly too many cooks spoiled this Texas-style bouillabaisse.