Lost at Sea, Part 1: The Island of Mysteries
Lost at Sea, Part 1: The Island of Mysteries | |
Produced for: | Fantomen 4/2017 |
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# of pgs: | 22 |
Writer: | Claes Reimerthi |
Artist: | César Spadari |
Original colorist: | Reprostugan |
Producer: | Egmont Publishing AB |
"Lost at Sea, Part 1: The Island of Mysteries" is a 2017 Team Fantomen story, written by Claes Reimerthi, with art by César Spadari.
Plot synopsis
In three weeks time, three commercial ships have disappered without a trace off the coast of Bengali. Shipping owners in Morristown have been ransomed for 100 million Bengali pound or more ships will disappear. It is not known which organization is making ships disappear and when nervous shipping owners pay ransom, the secret police is unable to investigate where the money went.
The Phantom gets involved when seven Mori fishers are killed by crew from an unmarked submarine near the island of Tarawu, an island that the Mori consider to be off limits. For the sake of the long friendship between the Mori and the Phantom, five Moris put him ashore on the taboo island. He discovers the submarine and that the island holds an underground base. Finally captured by guards, he is taken to the person in charge, Sandal Singh, leader of the Singh brotherhood.
Appearances
Recurring characters
- The 21st Phantom
- Sandal Singh
- Mori chief
- Guran
One-time characters
- Johnston, ship's mate
Locations
- Bengali
- Morristown
- Deep Woods
- Tarawu island
Organizations
Tribes
Vehicles
- Cargo ship Mojave
- Sing Brotherhood submarine
Newspapers
- Express.co.uk
Related stories
Refers to
- "The Bengali Triangle" by Mats Jönsson and Don Perlin
Referenced in
Followed by
- "Lost at Sea, Part 2: The Singing Statues" by Claes Reimerthi and César Spadari
Reprints
This story has been published in the following publications:
Australia
- "Lost at Sea, Part 1: The Island of Mysteries", The Phantom #1813 (2018)
Norway
- "Forsvunnet på havet, del 1: Den mystiske øya", Fantomet 5/2017
Sweden
- "Förlorade till havs, del 1: Mysteriernas ö", Fantomen 4/2017