Join Marty Weiss, author of the thriller novel, The Alchemist Agenda, as he tours the blogosphere July 1 - September 27, 2013 on his first virtual book tour with Pump Up Your Book!
ABOUT THE ALCHEMIST AGENDA
When
Charlie Rocklin and his company Gold Diggers Exploration set out to
recover a 17th century shipwreck, they discover an undocumented Nazi
submarine with enigmatic symbols. Ariel Ellis, a femme fatale historian
with a mysterious past, proves that the U-boat contains the key to a
formula more valuable than any sunken treasure, and more deadly than any
weapon that has ever existed. In this globetrotting international
adventure, Charlie and Ariel uncover an accelerating tempest of secrecy,
lies, and agendas, fighting not only for the truth, but for their
lives. Weiss's debut novel is a lightning-paced story with surprises at
every turn, and shows us that our personal legends may be more real
than we ever could have imagined.
Just
as Charlie turned off the shower, he heard the fall on the stairs, even
though his bathroom door had been closed and his office was set apart
from the others. Then everything went silent, unusually so. He
haphazardly dried, quickly put on his street clothes, made sure he
stuffed his wallet and his black book in his back pockets, the two
personal effects he only left behind when he was training, and then
secured the necklace with the crest around his neck, now the third item
he would no longer leave without.
He peered out into the hallway.
It was too quiet. Something was not right.
He walked into the lower level offices. Nothing out of place. Then he looked behind a table and saw:
Two dead bodies.
Horrified,
he moved through the offices, searching every turn and crevice until he
approached the staircase where the oceanographer’s body was sprawled on
the steps.
Charlie
shifted into stealth survival mode, quietly made his way to one of the
gear lockers, grabbed a dive knife, and crept to the next room.
Wade
and Luke hunted maniacally through the banks of computers and
equipment. But it was Ray who found the U-2008 bell up in Charlie’s
office, and moments later, the locked case beside the desk. He smiled
instantly because he had worked for a custom locksmith all through high
school, a job he had loved because it taught him how to crack similar
safe designs built to keep children from their parent’s firearms. It
didn’t take him sixty seconds to open this lock.
The Shackers’ orders were specific. They were told to find a nautical GPS and not to come back without it.
And there it was.
Ray moved into the computer room where Luke and Wade were searching and excitedly waved the nautical GPS. “I got it!”
Luke grabbed the device and looked it over. “You’re shitting me.”
“Let me see.” Wade tossed aside a computer he was searching through and went to join the other two, but a voice stopped him.
“Don’t move.”
The three Shackers turned to see Charlie pointing an air-powered speargun. “Set it down on the table and drop your guns.”
Wade
almost laughed. He had been jumped, fired at, and held up by insurgents
with much more firepower, and hatred. He wasn’t about to allow this
freakin’ frogman get in his way. As Luke and Ray dropped their weapons,
Wade drew and fired.
Charlie dove for cover behind the shelving unit and crawled into the gear room to hide behind a rack of wet suits.
Ray
grabbed the bell and the GPS from Wade and packed them into the empty
pack he had strapped over his shoulder. “Fuck’m, we got what we came
for.”
“Orders were to leave nobody alive,” Wade objected. “Move it.”
Wade and Luke stormed into the gear room with their guns poised; Ray took his time, but trailed right behind.
They saw no one, but heard Charlie’s voice: “What the hell do you want?”
Wade
put his finger to his lips so that Luke and Wade wouldn’t open their
traps, then stalked slowly toward the direction of the voice. “Same
thing as you.”
There
was a long silence as Wade searched behind the racks of wetsuits, and
then Charlie dropped down from the storage shelves, knocked the gun out
of Wade’s hand and slammed him to the floor.
Wade
loved close combat—it was his forté—but Charlie didn’t give him the
chance to show it. He dropped a heavy steel dive tank on Wade’s face,
breaking his nose on impact and knocking him unconscious.
Luke
and Ray couldn’t fire their guns with Wade so close, so they charged
Charlie. He met them with a rapid flurry, shoving his elbow into Ray’s
gut and an upper cut into Luke’s chin, and then he tucked and rolled as
Luke’s gun fired, a shot that hit the back wall. Charlie reached for a
dive knife, sprung to his feet and threw it. It flew past Ray’s ear.
Charlie took cover on the floor and crawled toward an exit as Ray popped
off more shots.
Charlie
burst outside into the alley. Someone was already there. Through the
sun in his eyes he could only make out a silhouetted figure approaching…
It was Wade, his face covered in blood from the dive tank, his gun in his hand.
There was nothing to duck behind. Everything went still.
And then came a shot.
When Charlie realized he hadn’t been hit, he turned and saw Ariel leaning on the hood of her car, just-fired gun in hand.
Wade
collapsed on the alley pavement, a bullet through his heart. He barely
had a moment to realize that this was his final battle, or to agonize
over the possibility that his father would learn that he had been
brought down by a woman, his final humiliation.
“I told you there wouldn’t be much time,” she said. “We have to get out of here!”
The
exit door swung open, but before Ray and Luke could scope the
perimeter, Ariel fired one more shot, which hit the steel door, and
forced them back inside.
“Gimme your keys.” Charlie approached with an open hand. “They’ll try to leave through the front entrance. We’ll cut them off—”
Ariel
closed the keys in her fist and gestured to the passenger seat.
“There’s a lot more than those two to worry about. Get in.”
Charlie
got inside the car, weighing his options, trying to think like a diver,
remaining calm and breathing steadily as Ariel sped the car out of the
alley.
“They got the nautical GPS,” Charlie said. “They can find the site.”
“You still have the crest?”
Charlie held the necklace under his shirt. “Yeah.”
“And you can find the sub without the GPS, right?”
“Right... Watch out!”
A
car tore out of another alley in front of them. Ariel skillfully
maneuvered and skid, missing them by inches, then took off in the other
direction.
The other car spun around and came after them. Ray was driving. Luke was riding shotgun as he fired a few useless rounds.
“Drive straight, would you?” Luke ordered.
“Your aim is for shit,” was all Ray could come back with.
The
chase sent them weaving through the office park and into a residential
area. Ariel remained cool as a cucumber as she turned onto a lawn and
through several backyards, like an obstacle course she knew well. She
picked up their conversation where she left off, just like she did with
her bi-weekly lectures: “Just because they can get to the U-boat doesn’t
mean they can get inside. The key isn’t easy to find and it’s not in
America.”
“The key? I thought you said there was a code,” Charlie said. “Is it a key or a code?”
“I’ll
explain everything, as long as we’re partners in this.” She turned onto
another street, and then glanced back to be sure she’d lost their
pursuers. “Are we partners?”
“I haven’t had the best luck with partners.”
“Maybe you should move on to something else then. Without the key, you’ll never get inside.”
“I don’t give up until I have all the answers.”
“That’s why we’re a perfect fit.”
She knew she had him; he knew he didn’t have a choice. “Where are we going?” he asked.
She turned onto the entrance ramp to the Turnpike. “Prague.”
“Just like that, without any tickets, passports, or luggage?”
“Just like that.”
She stepped on the gas and headed for John F. Kennedy International Airport.
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ABOUT MARTY WEISS
Marty Weiss was born and raised in Chicago and decided that he wanted to make movies after spending a summer working on the set of John Hughes' movie "Sixteen Candles." After earning a B.S. in Journalism from the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, and an M.F.A. in film and television from New York University, he directed national and international TV commercials for major Blue Chip brands as well as TV movies. He helmed his first feature film, "Vampires: The Turning," for Sony/Screen Gems Entertainment - an action/horror movie that evolved out of John Carpenter's "Vampires." It was filmed in Chiang Mai, Thailand and released worldwide in 2005. Weiss has filmed throughout North and South America, Eastern and Western Europe, and Southeast Asia, and has garnered numerous industry awards. His screen adaption of his debut novel, "The Alchemist Agenda," was the honored with the Best Screenplay award from Amazon Studios and is currently on their development slate for production. Weiss lives in Los Angeles with his wife Elisabeth and children Jasmine and Jake.
Visit his blog at http://www.martinishotfilms.tv
The Alchemist Agenda Virtual Book Publicity Tour Schedule
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Monday, July 1 - Book featured at Inside BJ's Head
Monday, July 1 - 1st chapter reveal at Rainy Day Reviews
Tuesday, July 2 - Book reviewed and guest blogging at Rainy Day Reviews
Tuesday, July 2 - 1st chapter reveal at Bibliophila, Please
Wednesday, July 3 - Book featured at Book Journey
Friday, July 5 - 1st chapter reveal at Mom with a Kindle
Monday, July 8 - Book reviewed at Miki's Hope
Tuesday, July 9 - Book featured at Tales of a Book Addict
Thursday, July 11 - 1st chapter reveal at Read 2 Review
Tuesday, July 16 - Book featured at My Cozie Corner
Thursday, July 18 - Interviewed at Review From Here
Tuesday, July 23 - Book reviewed at My Devotional Thoughts
Tuesday, July 23 - Guest blogging at Rural Mom
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