Date Published: 12-01-2021
A genre-bending breakout novel from a bold, fresh voice in contemporary fiction, think Highlander.
Debilitated in Afghanistan, Angus MacDonald struggles to find peace and escape his nightmares. He visits Culloden Battlefield, Scotland, the pitiless field where his ancestors were butchered and the MacDonald clan lost its power. Ancient voices traumatize him and reveal a shocking connection to his relatives who died there in 1746, where he now stands. The voices compel him to fight again, but this time against an unworldly enemy.
To protect humankind from slavery Angus must face the past, but more troubling, his future while unraveling the mystery of his heritage. He strives to discover millennia-old truths from Olympus, Greece, and the violent history that produced them. The truth of who bred him to die saving humanity. The most crucial battle of Angus’s story begins on the same infamous field of his clan’s decimation, but worse, when he returns to Washington, D.C., war follows.
Rob James’ WHEN GODS CLASH includes a fascinating take on Greek mythology through vivid world-building. This novel is a searing, unique makeover of loved themes.
Angus kicked at the sodden soil of Culloden Battlefield, navigating the
tangles of heather and lush grasses. I
can visualize them. The moor’s thistles scraping their bare legs beneath
MacDonald plaids, furling as they charged. Afghanistan had been sand-seasoned rations
and heatstroke in shades of tan and khaki. This green field delighted his
senses under a leaden sky so moody it threatened to ruin the adventure. His
father had told tales of the Highlanders’ heroic
charge, but he saw recklessness. Tartans, snagged by briars, covering
his ancestors’ bloodied chests as they lay dying.
Head raised and facing
west, Angus closed his eyes and sucked a lungful of air dragged from the
Highlands by the gusting wind. The MacDonald Clan had made their desperate
fight for freedom here. They died upon this peaceful moor, which back then was
hell’s gate. The thought of their heroism tempered his mood, forcing a frown.
They say
battlefields hold souls; mine feels at home here. I wasn’t expecting that.
His
father had called last evening and said he craved to join him, rather than
working in Washington, D.C. Instead, it was Angus’s godfather, Tony, trudging
along next to him, and Bruce—Tony’s best student,
carrying the metal detector.
“Not
quite as romantic as Dad told it,” Angus said. “I can’t believe those crazy
Scots fought through all this crap.”
“Bloody
stupid if you ask me,” Tony said. “Too far, and easy targets for the withering
British cannon and musket fire. Come on, let’s get to it.”
“Bloody?”
He chuckled. “What’s that, Brit talk? You’ve been working in the U.K. too long,
me old chum,” Angus said, spruiking an English accent and ribbing his father’s
closest friend. “I expect you’ll wanna retire for tea and scones soon? Time to
come home to the States and remember how to speak proper English.”
A
gust tore through their conversation as Tony snarled. Angus grinned. Touchdown!
He harnessed the craving to score more points.
Bruce
leaned in, smirking. “Get this! When he’s lecturing, he even wears a tweed
jacket with elbow pads. For real, man—elbow pads! Went out with Noah’s Ark,
didn’t they? Might find a few buried here…”
They
laughed as Tony mumbled, face tight.
“If
the detector beeps, how are we supposed to dig with these tiny trowels?” Angus
asked.
“We
don’t dig; we scratch, scrape away the surface and take our time.” The retort
was swift, and Tony’s voice a touch firmer than usual. “Historic Environment
Scotland wouldn’t thank me for bringing you here with spades. Or with bloody
shovels, to stay on the British theme.”
Bruce set off, a spring in his step,
sweeping with the detector and listening for signs. Tony fiddled with his GPS tracker
and scribbled notes, while Angus’s military mind overlaid the maps he had
studied onto the landscape before him.
Confident he stood near the position
his clan fought, Angus faced the enemy line. The British waited over there,
making them difficult to flank with the rock-strewn bordering fences. They
would have ruled with their cannons and muskets, and Clan MacDonald attacked
through here, right into the killing zone.
Wind slithered under his collar when
he looked down. What if underfoot lie the bones of his great ancestors?
Goosebumps, unrelated to the cold prickled his neck. This battlefield instilled
shudders, brewing a foreboding sense.
Ping-Ping-Ping! Bruce spun to the others, smiling.
“Guys, I’ve found something!” Bruce
steadied the detector over an innocuous patch of dirt, scanning left to right.
Tony pointed to the ground. “Why are
you waiting?”
After a quarter-hour of scraping, a
musket ball emerged from the soil.
“It’s English, larger than those used
in Scottish muskets,” Tony said, turning it over in his palms, and brushing it
clean.
Angus squinted, wandering four
hundred yards to where Clan MacDonald assembled that miserable day, his eyes
watering from the gusting wind over the bleak moor. Its wail carried the tone
of mournful, distant pipes as it blustered along the ancient Highland paths.
Rugged tracks wound where desperate Scottish clansmen had fled in terror,
British troops pursuing, butchering them.
Through epitaphs chiseled in stone,
it swirled, angry, imbued with sadness, and desolate. So many clans. Their
spirits were captured and blown to places unknown, scattered from bodies caught
up in the endless, merciless bloody battle. The tears stung.
The sky was darker as Angus returned
an hour later.
“What’s the news, Bruce? Found any rusted
swords or stuff?”
“Nah, damn it. Three more musket
balls and a buckle pin.”
With a scratch of his chin, Tony
looked around, then down to his notes.
“I’m confident the MacDonald charge
ended within this circle. Come see,” Tony said, tracing his finger over a
notebook sketch.
An uncertain grin broke as Angus
joined the walk. The site of his clan’s destruction was only a few yards away,
and his father’s stories of valor were now less idealized.
This was no place of glory. Tartans,
bagpipes, and colorful Highlanders filling a tale of heroes and the immortal
charge. No! Death lurked here—and its memory still reeks.
Three steps in, his left foot
snagged.
“Whooo—”
Angus pitched forward, arms flailing.
He fought to step, to regain his footing, but the damned boot held fast. Were
they bogged? Nope, the mud was no higher than the soles. A weird blue mist
snaked around his ankles as shackles chaining him to the slush. Sweat beads
scurried down his furrowed brow, stinging as they ran into the corner of an
eye. He winced, rubbing with a finger while listening out for the others. Their
voices were distant, distorted, faded into the blue mist and smoke.
Queasiness overcame, and his eyes
closed as the world set off spinning as stars darted, sparkling across his
eyelids. He swayed to the barrage of pounding cannons, and a single breath drew
in the caustic scent of gunpowder and fear. The ground shuddered as groups of
Highlanders massed around him, screams ripped from warriors in a fury, like
nothing he had heard.
Here, on these red-soaked fields,
they fought the battle close up, often hand to hand. Each warrior glared into
the irises of he who may kill him, unlike in Afghanistan where bullets fired
from a distance. Angus’s mind flashed back to the horror that almost killed
him. Over there in the dust pit, the constant stress of waiting for the
inevitable attack drained the strongest. Crazy Dave, relentless, singing to
drown out the noise, and Johnson spitting while Angus stared through the Humvee
windows. Eyes wide, scanning for signs of disturbed soil by the roadside—for a
color change that betrayed the upturned earth where an IED may lie waiting for
blood.
A voice roared across the moor,
drawing his thoughts back.
“Forward, Stuart! Take it to the
bastards!” the commander in the red tartan of Clan Macdonald yelled, pointing
with his broadsword.
“My Lord, they are too many, use it!
We must use it now!” A young man, familiar somehow, pointed to a silver box
hanging from a chain around the commander’s neck.
“No, Stuart!” The Lord tucked it
beneath his tunic. “It’s the devil’s tool, and I won’t release his evil.”
“But
Father—”
“Enough!”
the Lord yelled, panting as he charged forward. “Will you lead, or must I find
another to crush these English dogs? Forward, I say!”
Angus? Angus!
Familiar
faint cries snapped him back to the present, an array of black dots dominating
his swimming vision. He cast around for something real to brace against. An
object to feel, to set him in the now. A thistle at his feet—he hoped it was
from his Culloden, not the one he had just been a part of. If it
pricked, would he wake up, much like pinching himself after a bad dream?
Angus!
Shivers
tingled his spine. “Toooony,” he managed, leaning toward a familiar-shaped
outline, rubbing his head to massage the warring clans from his brain.
More
calls from Tony and Bruce pierced the din of combat. A moan, cloudiness. He
tottered.
“Tony!”
He reached out as his lanky, six-feet-three-inch frame tumbled, the side of his
head thumping down on the frigid, matted grass. A gray beetle scurried across
his sleeve above the Marine Corps insignia tattoo pride gifted him to wear. He
flicked a finger along his sleeve, above the scar underneath. It tingled, even
though it was a battle prize earned nine months prior.
Disorientated,
he lay shivering, engulfed by a conflict from centuries past raging in his
mind. A sharp pain assaulted his cheek as if a fresh strike. He gawked up at
Tony’s creased brow.
“Easy
with the slaps!”
“What
happened, Angus?” Tony said, frowning. “It was awful seeing you twitch.”
He
scanned around, refocusing on the present as Tony eased him into a sitting
position.
“I
just need a minute. Don’t—don’t worry.”
He
wafted an arm, signaling Tony for distance. Too much fuss when disoriented
wouldn’t help.
“Stay
there, and take your time,” Tony said.
The
scenes delivered to Angus as he sat on the grass didn’t change, no matter how
he struggled to discard them as dreams—nightmares even. They were vivid, and he
was there amongst the sounds, the smells, and the sights. The iron in blood
running through these heathered fields assailed his nostrils, so potent he
fought to contain vomit. And the screams and cries still filled his ears. He
sought to play it down, placing a palm flat over each ear, then scratching his
scalp as if to free demons from his hair.
“Unreal.
MacDonald Highlanders charged right through here.” Angus’s usual drawl vanished
as his voice quickened. “I watched them, poor bastards!”
“We’re
on Culloden Battlefield, so that’s reasonable, but let’s leave it here,” Tony
said.
“Pig’s
ass. No piddling dream or dizziness compares with the stench of death in
Afghanistan. I’m a U.S. Marine lieutenant for Christ’s sake. In my prime at
twenty-six.”
“You
were in your prime,” Tony said, grasping Angus’s elbow, “but not since
the events of Kandahar and your injuries. Come on, let’s go! We’ll return in
the morning if things are fine.”
Tony
tugged at Angus’s sleeve as the wind stiffened and a wispy rain floated,
further sinking his spirits. What have I just seen, been a part of?
He
relented and slunk along after Bruce, who hurried toward the parking lot.
“Young
Lord.” A voice came from behind.
Angus
twisted, pointing. Nothing. Only Tony, who prodded his back to keep walking.
“What
did you call me?”
“It
wasn’t me.” Irritation etched Tony’s face. “Come on, please.”
Bruce
neared the van. He called over his shoulder, signaling them to hurry, pointing
upward. Angus waved him off, dismissing the probable drenching.
“Young
Lord!” The voice came, again. This time more urgent. He spun, fists clenched,
glaring at the spot where the moor had earlier trapped his boots, where he’d…
“Angus?
You okay, pal?” Tony asked, and grabbed his arm.
“Young
Lord MacDonald, here!” The Voice.
His
eyes darted, then he whirled to face Tony, and shook his head when he saw him
gazing back, unquestioning.
“You
can’t hear that?” His brow furrowed.
Tony
shook his head, knitted his brows, and eyed Angus with a concerned expression.
“It’s
just the wind. Come on, let’s drink hot coffee.”
He
reached out a hand to Angus, who withdrew. The field of Culloden was silent. He
sneered, believing a practical joke in play. Still, he beat at his ears as if
clapping the noises from his eardrums. Tony stared.
“What
did you hear? It’s the damn wind.”
“No!
Not the wind. A voice! A voice.” Angus scanned the flat field. “It called me,
‘young Lord MacDonald.’”
“I
don’t care if it calls you the Lord Almighty; we’re not staying here. When you
tumbled, you frightened the hell out of us. Enough already! It’ll be dark soon,
rains coming, and we must get off this moor.”
He
tried to hustle Angus forward, but his godson didn’t budge.
“Something’s
happening out here, Tony. You might not believe me, but it is. Look, I’ll
stay.”
“What
do you mean by happening? You’re not making any sense, kiddo.”
“Yes.
How can I explain it?” Angus drew in a deep breath. “After I fell, it was so
distinct. My clan, Tony, a third wearing MacDonald of Keppoch tartans and
brandishing damn huge broadswords. They charged into the English muskets, back
where we stood earlier. A young guy, Stuart, led them. An older man called his
name. And I was there.”
“British
muskets, Angus.” Tony, the historian corrected before Tony the godfather added,
“Sorry, a force of habit.”
Angus
sneered at his godfather’s off-hand remark.
“Well,
to the Scots, they’re English bastards.” A slight smirk breached Tony’s serious
facade.
On
cue, a flash of lightning lit the blackening moor. Thunder bellowed, but Angus
didn’t care. His disorientation had burned off, leaving behind the ash of smoldering
questions.
“What
does it mean, Tony? Why these images, these voices? Lord MacDonald, I assume it
was him, screamed orders to the clan and his son, Stuart. I saw them through
the smoke of the guns, heard the words above the cannon fire! Why?”
“I…
well… let’s just go, okay? We’ll discuss it later.” Tony stressed at him like
he was a skittish horse, likely to bolt. “We can find a good Scottish pub, with
a roaring fire, dry out your…”
But
he didn’t get far.
“And
now, voices!” Angus’s mind was running away with him. His brow furrowed, and on
and on he talked. “Look, if I get disorientated, just roll with it unless I
froth from the mouth or pull some other crap.”
Tony
raised a finger, but Angus scowled. He was not for stopping. Not yet.
“Goddamnit!
We came here for history! So, let’s take it! We can’t just pretend it’s all
normal, cos’ it’s not, Tony, and this is our chance to… Let’s search that spot
where my boots got stuck, where I toppled.”
The
two stood facing off, as if ready for battle themselves. Meanwhile, young Bruce
strode the backdrop, swinging the detector near the van, oblivious, as if
nothing occurred.
“Angus!”
Tony’s voice came loud and clear. “Now listen. We’re on this moor and far from
help if you collapse again. Don’t forget I’m your godfather and have at least
an element of duty of care toward you.”
Shoulders
slumped, and Angus gazed at him. He loved this guy and had since he was a kid
and old enough to trust.
“Can’t
you understand that I must learn what it means? Why it’s happening…”
“It’s
happening because you had a collapse, a funny turn, your brain was…
Oh, I’m not a psychologist or a doctor.”
“For
Christ’s sake!”
“Right.
Well, whatever, Angus. You passed out and we don’t need that again. Get going!”
Tony
shoved Angus, hoping to move him toward the van. He stood firm.
“Stuart
pleaded with his father to use the power within a silver box. The Lord refused,
saying the gift from the devil was evil, and they’d crush the English with
their mettle. No way my brain could create such bullshit. It’s so explicit—I
was there. And everything, their language was so right. Why would I imagine a
silver box?”
Why isn’t Tony listening?
“Hmm.
Okay, well, you’ll relax back in the hotel.”
Once
again, Tony jerked at Angus’s jacket. This time he moved toward their van.
“And
then there’s Stuart; he struggled as well! Right there, near where I bogged,”
he said, turning to point. “You tell me how I’d know this stuff, how I’d
picture the battle and the words, the emotions? And the silver box?”
A
loud sigh emanated from Tony. His face scrunched.
“You’re
repeating yourself, and we’re not sticking around to get soaked or to watch you
have another fit. Now get your ass in the van.”
He
raised his chin to Tony, eyeing him with stubborn resolve, but his feet slithered
when Tony shoved again, then he relented, shuffling toward the vehicle and
cursing a stream of expletives under his breath. The rain poured as they
reached the lot, huge droplets spattering on the paintwork, torrential. The
only one still looking tidy, Bruce, had stopped waving the detector near the
parking lot’s edge and rushed to the van. He sat in the rear, earbuds in,
fiddling with his iPhone.
Pebbles
crackled beneath the van’s tires. They drove from the parking lot, windshield
wipers screeching, flashing side to side as the essence of the storm broke with
a vengeance. Angus scowled at Tony, and then Tony scowled at the road. Bruce
still fidgeted with his phone, taking little breaths, looking like he wanted to
speak, but didn’t. It remained quiet for three long miles.
Outside,
inky blackness, except for the giant cracks of lightning that burst forth to
illuminate the van’s cabin, sudden flashes cast a glow on irritated faces.
“Spit
it out, will ya!” Angus said, snapping, as Bruce stifled another thought. He
regretted it straight away. “Sorry, buddy. My emotions are screwed.”
Bruce
held out his phone. An image on the screen bathed the cabin in light.
“Yeah,
I’ve seen that portrait,” Angus said, squinting at the sudden brightness. Bruce
swiped.
“Hmm,
seen that, too. Swipe again.”
After
swiping, Bruce stretched his fingers, enlarging the new image, then glared.
“What?!”
Angus said, his emotions running riot.
He
handed over his phone. The hairs on Angus’s neck stood. A group of men,
standing proud, dressed fine as nobles in clan plaids: McIntosh, Cameron,
Fraser. One, a younger man in a MacDonald tartan, familiar. Angus’s eyes and
his met across the centuries.
“Where’d
you find this?” Angus asked.
“The
professor said you’re related to Lord MacDonald, who died in that horror, so I
searched all the neighboring clan records. That group image was in Cameron’s
history. There are no Lords’ names, but comparisons were easy to find online.”
Clever. Angus hadn’t thought of that. He had restricted searches to his clan. A
stretch of the screen further enlarged the image of the young man wearing the
MacDonald of Keppoch tartan. Auburn hair and square jaw. A fine hero’s cleft.
Bright blue eyes. He was tall, wide-shouldered, and looked like he could kill
bare-handed.
“Shit!
It’s me,” Angus said, peering at Bruce.
“Yeah,
a spitting image and they painted it long before the battle. He looks just
older than you.”
The
old Lord MacDonald Angus had met on the moor had aged. His once handsome face
lined and hardened by ordering men—friends—away to their deaths, but this
image?
I know how that looks. It stares at me from the mirror every morning.
“What?”
Tony asked, peeking over his shoulder from the driver’s seat.
“The
face there. It’s the old Lord, but also Stuart from my battle vision, and then,
me.”
“I’ll
check it out back at the hotel.”
“Check
all you want, Mr. Logical Professor. There’s no doubt like you have with my
stories from the moor. I tell ya! The old Lord when he was younger, his son,
Stuart, and me, we look the same!”
About the Author
Rob James is a student of history and geopolitics and writing novels with historical themes is his passion. Dramatic events and tales from history help to create thrills and suspense. They also color flawed but compelling protagonists.
Since childhood, stories of Rob Roy MacGregor, and the ancient Greek heroes heightened Rob’s passion for reading. He knows them and the history of their times intimately, lighting the richly layered backstory of his novels.
When referencing ancient characters, tradition can become repetitive so Rob takes care to provide unique takes on the often-repeated tales. As his plots are set in the present day, intertwining the old with the new demands respect for the old, while giving them a modern punch; a lift to provide relevance and resonate with readers.
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