Revelations Book Three of the Requiem of Heaven and Hell Series
In Canaan's Rest, Alabama, seven Black founding families have guarded ancient seals for generations, bound by blood rituals older than America itself. Now those seals are cracking, and Pastor Isaiah Brooks must lead the desperate fight to keep something unspeakable from breaking through.
The Unwritten are waking.
Entities that existed before language, before light, before the first word was spoken. They whisper through the cracks between worlds, wearing the voices of the dead, promising things humanity was never meant to hear. And somewhere among the living, Lucien walks with ancient eyes in a young face, turning keys no one knows they carry.
Isaiah's sister Layla sees futures that terrify her. Dr. Maya Thorne arrives carrying a three-hundred-year-old book of binding rituals brought to this land by enslaved ancestors who knew how to fight demons. Miss Darlene struggles to breathe as the Fourth Seal presses against her lungs. Malcolm's memories burn away piece by piece. And in the church basement where the original covenant was written in blood, something older than Heaven or Hell is paying attention.
Seven families. Seven seals. Seven ways for everything to fall apart.
The Morning Star watches from his throne of ash, patient as stone, waiting for the door to open. His son has spent forty years preparing the way. The binding that held for a century is unraveling faster than anyone can stop it.
Some will survive. Most will not. And survival looks like losing someone they cannot afford to lose.
In this world, faith is a weapon. Blood is currency. And the Black church stands as the last line of defense against forces that want to unmake creation itself.
The seals hold. For now.
Revelations continues the Requiem of Heaven and Hell series with Southern Gothic horror rooted in Black spiritual traditions, ancestral power, and the terrifying weight of a covenant written in sacrifice. For readers who love Tananarive Due, Victor LaValle, and horror that honors the deep, complicated faith of the Black South.