skip to Main Content

Back to Fiction

$20.95

Paperback,  6″ x 9″”
343 pages
ISBN 978-1-63381-182-9

 

 

by Christopher W. Morin

In the year 1716, the Province of Maine—absorbed and governed by the distant Province of Massachusetts Bay decades earlier—lies in a natural state, barren and devoid of English settlements and industry. After years of war with the native Wabanaki tribes and their French collaborators, the beleaguered English colonists have either fled far south to safety or been annihilated, their homes and livelihoods torched from existence.

But on a remote island just off the mainland shores of the once bristling but now decimated colony at Falmouth Neck, two determined families eke out an arduous existence in seclusion and live in fear of being discovered by warring natives.

One fateful summer night, young William Estes and his lover, Elizabeth Eustis, witness a fierce naval battle from atop the highest peak of their island sanctuary. After two vessels maul each other with withering cannon fire, one emerges victorious before running aground—while the other is sunk, killing all aboard.

After journeying to the site of the wrecked ship, William and Elizabeth come across a single survivor. The injured stranger, after being taken into care, reveals intriguing details about his identity, his past, and a magnificent treasure supposedly aboard the disabled ship.

A hasty pact is made to recover the riches, but time is of the essence as brazen natives, the harsh weather, a lack of resources, and greedy, divergent self-interests threaten to tear asunder all that remains of the fledgling community and its potential future.

Intrigue, betrayal, lies, and death abound as each person’s moral character is put to the test in search of rogue plunder.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Christopher Morin was born, raised, and currently resides in Portland, Maine. He received a
BA in Journalism from the University of Maine at Orono. He is a history enthusiast and has
enjoyed creative writing ever since penning his first short story back in second grade. Along with this work of fiction, he is also the author of three additional fictitious tales titled A Tale of Life & War, The Besieged, and The Rebel’s Wrath. He has also penned a memoir about the three family dogs he grew up with in Portland. It is titled Three Labs a Lifetime.

For more on the author, visit www.christophermorinauthor.com.

Back To Top