The Admiral's Mark (Short Story)
โ Scribed by Columbus, Christopher;Berry, Steve
- Book ID
- 101025909
- Publisher
- Random House, Inc.; Ballantine Books
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 73 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- City
- New York
- ISBN
- 0345534409
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Cotton Malone never cared for the shady dealings of his brother-in-law, Scott Brown. But when Scott dies while scuba diving, Cotton's wife and her grieving sister demand more than just a secondhand police report. So Malone heads to Haiti. There, beneath crystal clear waters, he learns that Scott found the sunken wreckage of the Santa Maria, the fabled flagship of Christopher Columbus, and he paid for the discovery with his life. Setting out to piece together what happened, Malone quickly realizes that he's not the only man there with questions.
โฆ Subjects
FICTION -- Thrillers -- General
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Eight years ago Cotton Malone was an agent for the Justice Department, handling the toughest and most sensitive international investigations. But sometimes things became intensely personal. In his latest eBook original short story, New York Times bestselling author Steve Berry lays out just such a t
Eight years ago Cotton Malone was an agent for the Justice Department, handling the toughest and most sensitive international investigations. But sometimes things became intensely personal. In his latest eBook original short story, New York Times bestselling author Steve Berry lays out just such a t
Eight years ago Cotton Malone was an agent for the Justice Department, handling the toughest and most sensitive international investigations. But sometimes things became intensely personal. In his latest eBook original short story, New York Times bestselling author Steve Berry lays out just such a t
**A familys secret, a ruthless fanatic, and a covert arm of the American governmentall are linked by a single puzzling possibility:** ***What if everything we know about the discovery of America was a lie? What if that lie was designed to hide the secret of why Columbus sailed in 1492? And what