Watch out for those guys with the gray eyes: Their ashen orbs mark them as pagan eco-terrorists--and as the villains of this...

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THE COVENANT OF THE FLAME

Watch out for those guys with the gray eyes: Their ashen orbs mark them as pagan eco-terrorists--and as the villains of this achingly silly but super-swift addition to Morrell's popular conspiracy-thriller series (The Fifth Profession, etc.). Tess Drake--a reporter late of Washington, D.C., high society--is smitten when she meets gray-eyed hunk ""Joseph"" outside her office at N.Y.C.'s Earth Mother magazine. Her infatuation deepens on their first date as she learns that Joseph is a nature-loving vegetarian like herself: so what if he glances furtively around him and swears by platonic love alone? So when he stands her up their next date, Tess turns to burly cop William Craig, who wraps his arms around her after she identifies Joseph's charred body in the morgue. Who set Joseph on fire? Was it the group of gray-eyes who begin to chase Tess after she and Craig locate Joseph's secret apartment and its grisly altar? Or was it the equally grim men also tracking Tess, who speak of their ""mission"" to eradicate the gray-eyed ""vermin""? And is one of these groups responsible for the recent global rash of eco-terrorism? Flying to D.C. for answers, Tess visits her ancestral home, only to see it set aflame by the gray-eyes, who kill her mom. Rescued by the hunters of the gray-eyes from a subsequent attack, she learns that the hunters are priest/assassins, remnants of the Inquisition, while the gray-eyes are chaste, blood-related worshippers of the ancient sun-god Mithras, dedicated to ecology through violence: Joseph was a Mithran defector, appalled by the sect's bloody acts. But who can save Tess from the gray-eyes? Her old pal the Vice-President? With Craig in tow, she flies with the V.P. on Air Force Two to Spain--but unbeknownst to her, the V.P. It's hard to believe that the author of the brooding thrillers First Blood and The Totem fashioned this literary vacuum, devoid of most anything except windy action but at such a high velocity as to perhaps justify the 100,000 first printing.

Pub Date: May 13, 1991

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: -

Publisher: Warner

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 1991

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