A professor ponders the possibility of an ancient Viking curse while
investigating a death by quicklime, in a novel by the Edgar
Award-nominated author. When 105-year-old Hilda Horsefall tells young
reporter Cronkite Swope of a stone carved with Norse runes that once sat
in the nearby woods, the writer starts salivating at the thought of
breaking the news that Vikings once marauded through their sleepy
Massachusetts countryside. But while he's jotting down notes, a scream
rings out, and Cronkite finds an even bigger story. A farmhand has been
burned to death by quicklime, and Cronkite gets an exclusive scoop. In
this neck of New England, strange deaths are invariably referred to
Prof. Peter Shandy, the only local with the know-how to connect fearsome
quicklime to the Vikings of old. But as he digs into the ancient
mystery, the professor finds the forgotten Norse gods aren't above
demanding a modern sacrifice.