Slave Graves - a novel by Thomas Hollyday
Book Description
A mysterious shipwreck is discovered under a Maryland marsh. An expensive real
estate project is held up while the site is evaluated for historical
significance. Local researchers fend off impatient contractors who are losing
money for failing to meet deadlines. Enter Dr. Frank Light, famous archeologist,
sent to this backwater marsh to referee, hand picked by Jake Terment, popular
national figure, real estate tycoon, and head financier of the construction, who
wants his project back on track and fast. When Frank arrives at the marsh, he
meets Maggie, an outspoken state archeologist, and Pastor Allingham, a black
preacher who claims the shipwreck site hides a long lost slave graveyard that
also needs to be preserved from the construction. Frank comes to the site
anxious to please Jake, but he begins to have doubts as the dig yields more and
more secrets of a past crime, a horror that occurred on the old ship. The
revelations of evil and the tension with Jake cause Frank, at one time an
idealistic historian in the days before he fought in Vietnam, to have flashbacks
to the war and to question Jake’s lack of interest in what they are uncovering.
As they lose their investment, Jake and his associates become increasingly angry
and insist Frank declare the dig of no significance, threatening that his career
will suffer if he does not comply. The more resistance and attempts at
compromise Frank tries, the more Jake turns to violence to persuade him.
Hollyday’s always present and eclectic universe of Maryland characters living
and dead, including a mysterious waterman of Mexican heritage, Native Americans,
farmers, birdwatchers, Confederates and ghosts, converge on and add color to the
site. Finally, Frank, after attempts are made by Jake’s men on his and Maggie’s
lives as well as on that of the Pastor, is forced to draw on his Vietnam prowess
and, in a stirring climax, decide whether to risk his life again for what he
believes in.