BLACK GOLD, RED DEATH


 

SYNOPSIS

“. . . Martin is soon on the run, scrambling across the border . . .”

As a newspaper reporter in San Antonio, Martin Gallagher’s life has been predictable and mundane. But his routine existence suddenly explodes when his half sister Stella reveals that she is the secret leader of a Mexican revolutionary movement, and she desperately needs his help. Stella begs Martin to take a briefcase of secret documents to a certain destination in Mexico. Martin’s loyalty to his sister overrides his better judgment: he agrees to make the delivery.

Plunged into a maelstrom of revolutionary conspiracies, Martin is soon on the run, scrambling across the border as he tries to out-maneuver competing intelligence agencies and shadowy figures who seem to have no loyalties at all. Just when he thinks he is safe, Martin discovers he is being stalked by a brutal and clever assassin known as Tony Sleep. Martin knows he won’t be able to survive alone. Unfortunately, Stella may be the only one he can turn to–and she’s in no position to help.

AUTHOR’S COMMENTS

“. . . people on both sides of the border were drawn into a violent struggle . . .”

In this first novel I took my characters into a country that had fascinated me since I was a boy living near Rio Grande City on the Mexican border. In the early 1980’s when I began this book, Mexico had just been through yet another turbulent period of revolutionary activity that had scattered bodies up and down the length of the country. The political and social environment was complex, and it wasn’t the first time, nor would it prove to be the last, that people on both sides of the border were drawn into a violent struggle that divided families and made strange bedfellows.

I’ve continued to write about Mexico in several subsequent novels. I still love the country and the people, and regret the sad circumstances that have continued to plague their lives and prevent them from realizing so many generations of dreams.