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Title: Trials Of the Tomb Turns a Class Field Trip into a Collision with Ancient Egyptian Gods
United States, 29th Jan 2026 – In Trials Of the Tomb, a shattered museum case, a blackout, and a stolen stone sphinx mark the moment high school stops feeling ordinary. The novel opens on the last day of school, with a routine class trip to a modest Montana museum. By sunrise, glass lies on the floor, a mysterious sphinx weighs down a backpack, and by midnight, a god who belongs in legend speaks from a hospital window.The story follows Connor and Jane, reluctant project partners who share a school assignment but not a worldview. Connor cares about the museum, the exhibits, and the long history behind them. Jane cares about getting through the day with minimal effort and maximum distance from responsibility. When the bus leaves without them, the quiet halls of the museum become their problem, and then their gateway to something far older and far less patient than a teacher with a gradebook.A Museum, a Missed Bus, and a Door That Never Should Have OpenedFrom the first chapter, Trials Of the Tomb treats the museum not as a backdrop but as a fuse. The exhibits feel slightly off, the silence stretches a little too long, and small details matter: gold wristbands Connor sculpted himself, an ibis etched into a talisman, a jackal-headed ring that should not fit as perfectly as it does.When the lights go out and the teachers vanish from the page, the book pushes Connor and Jane into a Montana that no longer behaves like a familiar map. Forests hide things that move wrong. The walk back toward town turns into a run from creatures that should not exist. A hospital that should symbolize safety instead becomes the place where a god appears at a window and calls Connor by name.From there, geography keeps widening. Whitefish and Helena give way to Cairo and Luxor. Airports, t...
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