
Archaeologist Zahra Kane finds herself on the hunt for a fabled Amazonian kingdom, the Lost City of Z.A similar expedition took the life of renowned explorer Percy Fawcett a century earlier. Will Zahra confirm the existence of Z, or will she share Fawcett's fate and succumb to the perils of the rainforest?With this thrilling novelette, readers get an edge-of-your-seat introduction into who exactly Zahra Kane is and what she's capable of accomplishing. Sit back and enjoy!Fans of Indiana Jones, Uncharted, and Tomb Raider love Zahra Kane!EMPIRE LOST is an action-packed introduction to bestselling authors Nick Thacker and Matt James' Zahra Kane archaeological thriller series.
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The abusive humidity hung to her strong frame, drenching her clothing in sweat. If she didn’t know any better, she would have thought she had just emerged from a body of rank pond water. It had become increasingly harder to catch her breath due to the hard-to-breathe air, and the distance she had covered.
She stopped at the peak of a modest incline and peeled a loose strand of dark hair away from her forehead. Slipping out of her backpack, she knelt and focused on the surrounding area and not what her hands were doing. Before her, in a remote slice of the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso, was a narrow waterfall. At its base was a perfectly round plunge pool. No outlet was visible. The water didn’t drain in a conventional manner. There was no river. The never-ending flow of water had to have emptied by some other means. The primal demonstration of power forced a steady spray into the air, coating every square inch of the terrain in additional moisture. It was a serene sight, one that relaxed her rising anxiety. The only time she took her eyes off the picturesque wonder was to check her position on her palm-sized GPS unit.
Zahra Kane read off her position, ticking off the latitude and longitude as she did. “Eleven degrees, forty-three minutes South. Check. And fifty-four degrees, thirty-five minutes West. Check, again.” Looking up, she took in the scene with new eyes. She had finally arrived. Zahra produced a camera from her pack, looked through its powerful zoom lens, and snapped a half-dozen pictures. Pulling the camera away from her face, she sighed. “So, this is the
The area was treacherous from what she had heard. The stories were old and sounded quite outlandish. Still, Zahra understood that there were always nuggets of truth within the most absurd tales.
Few had stepped foot here in the last hundred years. Locals — people like her guide, Joe — were terrified of this place. It was said to consume anyone who entered.
Zahra could see why a man like Percy Fawcett had set up camp here in the past. It was the perfect spot to do so. It contained a never-ending freshwater source that would also yield food in the forms of fish and whatever thirsty terrestrial animal sauntered by. She was hungry, but it could wait. Zahra needed to use what little light she had left to her advantage before calling it a night and setting up camp in the egg-shaped depression.
“Camping at ‘Dead Horse Camp,’” she said. “How charming.”
The sound of crunching earth picked up behind her as Joe joined her at the crest. He knelt next to her and squinted, wiping the sweat from his brow with a yellowed handkerchief. He grumbled under his breath, not liking what he saw.
“Is something the matter?” Zahra asked, speaking fluent Spanish. It was one of many languages the American-born adventurer had mastered over the years while serving as a British Army Intelligence Linguist for nearly a decade.
Joe nodded. “Yes. Death surrounds this place.”
“Well,” she said, standing, “it is called ‘Dead Horse Camp’ for a reason.”
Zahra’s history was a complicated one. Her New Yorker father had moved Zahra and her brother to England after accepting a teaching job at Oxford following the death of Zahra’s mother. Professor George Kane had been behind the wheel that night. While Zahra understood that it wasn’t her father’s fault, her brother, Baahir, still, to this day, held their dad responsible. Baahir had even gone as far as legally changing his last name to their mom’s maiden name, Hassan, at eighteen and moving to Egypt. The Kane men had not spoken to one another since then.
That broke Zahra’s heart.
She didn’t bother wiping the muck from her slim, black
Without looking at her guide, Zahra sighed and said, “Eyes on the prize, Joe, not me.”