Working Together
July 17th, 2021Now that we know that all things work together for good for those who love God, who are called according to His purpose.
Romans 8:28 TLV
Now that we know that all things work together for good for those who love God, who are called according to His purpose.
Romans 8:28 TLV
Darby Graham thinks she’s on a much-needed vacation in remote Idaho to relax. But before she even arrives at the ranch, an earthquake strikesâher first clue that something is amiss. Then when a cabin on the edge of town is engulfed in flames and problems at the ranch escalate, Darby finds herself immersed in a chilling mystery.
A serial arsonist sends taunting letters to the press after each fire. As a forensic linguist, this is Darbyâs area of expertise . . . but the scars itâs caused her also the reason sheâs trying to escape from her life.
As the shadows continue to move in, the pieces of the town around her come into sharper focus. Can she trust the one man who sees her clearly?
âUnique, witty, and hilarious, Carrie’s voice shines throughout Woman in Shadow. The perfect mix of intrigue, mystery and danger, this is most definitely a book for my keeper shelf.â
âDani Pettrey, bestselling author of the Coastal Guardians series
Book Details:
Genre: Mystery/Suspense
Published by: Thomas Nelson
Publication Date: July 13th 2021
Number of Pages: 336
ISBN: 0785239847 (ISBN13: 9780785239840)
Series: Woman in Shadow is not a part of a series.
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads
ISLAND BREEZES
This is another book that kept me guessing right up until the end. One puzzle never did get answered. Is Shadow Woman Bram’s sister? It seems possible.
It doesn’t take long before Darby’s vacation turns into a nightmare for the resort’s owner and eventually everyone else at Mule Shoe.
It becomes a convoluted mess as deaths multiply. How can anyone be trusted under the circumstances?
I can’t go into more detail as I’m afraid I will give away the plot. Suffice it to say, Shadow Woman plays a big part in unraveling the mysteries surrounding Mule Shoe.
Thank you, Ms Stuart Parks. I know this isn’t part of a series, but it could be. I’d like to see more of Darby Graham.
***Book provided without charge by PICT.***
Targhee Falls, Idaho
âWhy are those dogs barking?â I pointed across the wooden picnic table toward two obviously upset canines yelping nearby.
A man staring at a clipboard didnât look up. âTheyâre dogs. Thatâs what they do. Are you Darby Graham?â
âYes.â
The man checked something on his clipboard. âGood. Youâre all here.â He had to speak up to be heard over the commotion.
Before I could ask about the dogs again, he turned and strolled toward the nearby general store.
Although the man seemed unmoved by the dogsâ distress, the other people seated around me on Adirondack chairs or at picnic tables had stopped speaking to each other and were staring. The dogsâa black Lab cross with hound-length ears, and a huge Great Dane mixâboth had their tails tucked between their legs and were howling.
The picnic table trembled.
I lifted my hands off the rough pine surface but could still feel the movement under my body. A flock of birds burst from the treetops. Pinecones dropped to the ground from the towering ponderosas.
Earthquake.
I was seated near the general store, just below a plate-glass window. The glass rippled, then rattled.
Heart thudding, I dove under the table. The ground rolled under me like ocean waves. A low rumbling was followed by car alarms going off from the parking lot on the other side of the store.
The black Lab flew under the table and landed in my lap. I wrapped my arms around the quivering dog, feeling the prominent bones of her spine and rib cage. âItâs okay there, girl. Youâre safe. Your big buddy isnât so scaredââ
The second quaking dog joined us, his large body pressing against my back.
The earthquake ended.
âAll over.â I reached around and scratched the Daneâs chest, feeling more bones. Didnât anyone ever feed these dogs?
Both dogs seemed content to stay put, but the weight of the Labâeven though she was too thinâwas still more than my leg was used to and it was rapidly going to sleep. âCome on, sweet girl, time to get up,â I whispered.
Both dogs took the hint.
On the other hand, here under the table seemed a nice place to stay. Tucked into the shadows, I didnât need to worry about anyone staring at me. I had room to stretch out and could smell the cut grass. Iâd be prepared should another earthquake come. And my assignment was to maintain a low profile. Sitting on the ground under a table seemed to be as low profile as I could get.
Two legs appeared next to me. âMiss Graham?â
Flapperdoodle. Mr. Clipboard found me.
I crawled between the bench and table, sliding onto the seat, then glanced around. Several other people had taken similar action. Only Clipboard had noticed my reluctance to leave my hiding place.
One by one, the car alarms stopped. The slight breeze stirred the fragrance of fallen pine needles.
Mr. Clipboard stared at me for a moment, then turned toward the others. He was holding a number of fabric bags imprinted with Mule Shoe Ranch. âDonât be worried, folks. The town of Targhee Falls is less than fifteen miles from Yellowstone. The national park routinely has between one and three thousand quakes a yearââ
âExcuse me, but Iâve heard most of those quakes arenât noticeable,â a gray-haired woman in a denim shirt said.
âObviously some are.â The man gave her a rueful half smile and started handing out the bags after checking the attached name tags. âIâm Sam, owner of the general store over there.â He nodded toward the building featuring a two-story false front and wooden sidewalk. The peeling sign said Samâs Mercantile. âI provide Mule Shoe with transportation, supplies, and assistance during team-building exercises. Inside these bags youâll find a great deal of information about your stay at the ranch. The owner, Roy Zaring, wanted you to have these while youâre waiting for your transportationââ
âWhen will that be?â asked a handsome teen with flawless olive skin and a thick lock of black hair. âIâm not getting any cell service here.â He held up his phone. An impeccably dressed man and woman sitting at the same table gave each other sideways glances.
Sam finished handing out the bags, turned, and looked at the youth. âThose your folks?â His gaze flickered to the two people sitting with the young man.
âYeah.â
âAnd Iâm guessing your mom? Dad? Both? Told you they were here to take a team-buildingââ
âWatercolor workshop.â
âA five-day art class in the wilds of Idaho, right?â
âYeeeaah.â
âSon, the Mule Shoe Dude Ranch is a primitive facility. No Wi-Fi. No cell reception. No television, radio . . . no electricity. Youâll have a cabin with a fireplace, a composting toilet, and a lantern at night.â
The color drained from the young manâs face. âWhat?â he whispered.
âThat reminds me,â Sam said. âIâll collect your cell phones and will keep them here and charged for when you return.â
I reached into my purse, took out my phone, and placed it on the table for Sam to collect. Whose brilliant idea was it to send me on assignment to a primitive facility when they know I need my computer and electricity? And five days with all these strangers? I wouldnât even need to unpack.
âDonât worry.â An attractive older woman sitting on a wooden Adirondack chair grinned at the boy. âThereâs plenty of hot water for showers, courtesy of the natural geothermal environment. The waterâs gravity fed and the food is world-class.â She looked around at all of us. âIâve had an interest in the Mule Shoe and was here last summer, although I have to admit, I prefer to visit this time of year. Late September is perfect. You all are going to love it.â
The young manâs lips compressed into a thin line, and he seemed loath to let go of his cell. Sam kept tugging the phone until the youth relinquished it. âBut what is there to do?â he asked no one in particular.
âMost of us are here for the art lessons.â Denim Shirt reached into her bag, pulled out a piece of paper, and held it up. âListen.â She read from it. ââYouâll find trail rides, fishing, canoeing, gold panning, mineral collecting, archery, photography, hiking, campfires, swimmingâââ
âThatâs what I mean.â The young man ran his hand through his hair. âThereâs nothing to do.â
I tugged out the same brochure. Welcome, honored guests. We look forward to serving you during your stay with us. Your experiences here will be unforgettable for all the right reasons! You should bring to Mule Shoe your mindset for success.
Yeah, right. Iâd like to set my mind on getting in, getting done, and getting home. âSam, you mentioned transportation . . .â
âHorse and wagon.â
I was afraid of that. âDo you have a regular timetable?â
This time Sam actually focused on me. âNo. The horse and wagon are available on an as-needed basis, mostly to transport new groups and supplies.â
From bad to worse. I was stuck. Now would be a good time to find a bathroom. Riding a bumpy, horse-drawn wagon would be uncomfortable enough without a full bladder. Besides, if I left now, no one would notice my slight limp. I normally wanted to be invisible, to disappear into a crowd. When Scott Thomas, my counselor, told me not to stand out, to blend in, he didnât have to say it twice. Your final assignment before leaving us here in Clan Firinn is to check out Mule Shoe Ranch. Weâve heard rumblings that somethingâs not right. Youâll be registered as a guest. Iâll tell you more once you get there.
I was irritated at being sent out like this with no idea of what was expected. I now know why. Had I known I wouldnât be able to use my computer programs or the internet, I would have put my foot down. I was fortunate to have a good memory for words.
Iâd heard through the Clan Firinn grapevine that those getting ready to leaveââgraduateâ as they called itâwould have a project that would test their progress toward wholeness. I figured theyâd find out soon enough that I wasnât ready to leave.
I rose, picked up my purse, and made my way to the general store. A cowbell jangled as I entered. ââI got a fever,ââ I muttered. ââAnd the only prescription is more cowbell.ââ The line made me smile. Why worry about earthquakes, lack of electricity, and the inability to do my work when the world needed more cowbell?
âWhat?â A young, freckle-faced woman with a smear of dirt on her nose stopped replacing items on the shelf.
âIconic Saturday Night Live lineâmore cowbell?â
âHuh?â
âNever mind.â The interior had old oak floors, a tin ceiling, and a long counter with a glass display case. The sun through the window spotlighted twirling dust motes. Various cans still littered the floor, courtesy of the earthquake.
âJust let me know if ya need something.â
âPowder room?â
âHuh?â
âWC?â
âI think weâre sold out.â
âJohn? Head? Loo? Restroom?â
âToilet?â She nodded to her right.
Fortunately, the primitive conditions did not include the store bathroom. Returning to the store, I picked up a can of soup that had rolled near me. âDo you know anything about those two dogs?â I handed her the can.
âWhy are ya asking?â The woman placed it on the shelf.
âThey just seem thin, thatâs all.â
âYeah, well.â She adjusted the display. âSamâs been feeding âem, but thatâs gonna stop.â
My neck tingled. âI donât understand.â I gave her a steady gaze.
She paused her work and looked around. We were alone in the store, but she dropped her voice to just above a whisper. âHeâs just waitinâ for all of you to leave to the ranch.â
The tingling grew to an itch. My years of training as a forensic linguist kicked in, even though I was rusty. I grew very still and waited, listening for more clues in her language.
She gave up straightening the cans. âItâs like this: The dogs were owned by an old lady. I bet she was, like, at least forty.â
âPositively ancient. One foot in the grave.â I gave her a slight smile.
âRight. Her name was Shadow Woman. Thatâs what everyone called her. Well, thatâs the nice name anyway. She was, like, a hermit, but a pretty good artist.â She jerked her thumb at a drawing on the wall behind the cash register.
Were owned, was. Past tense. I widened my smile to encourage her. âWhy did everyone call her Shadow Woman?â
The clerk gnawed on a hangnail for a moment. âI guess âcause she was weird, ya know, like she lived in the shadows. Creepy. Always showed up here at the store at dusk or when it was dark. Sam said she could sneak right up next to you in the shadows and youâd never see her. And her face was weird.â
âWeird how?â
âLike, really weird.â
âAh, that clarifies it. Where did she come from?â
âSam said she ran away from a group home near Smelterville.â
âI canât imagine why.â
âRight, you know? No one wanted her. Anyway, she owned Hollyâthatâs the Lab mixâand Maverick, the Anna-toolian sheepdog.â
âAnatolian? From Anatolia in Asia Minor?â
âYeah, thatâs what I said.â
âOf course. I thought the big dog was half Great Dane, half mastiff.â
âNope. Sam looked it up. Anna-whatevers are super-expensive livestock guard dogs from Turkey or France, I forget which.â
âThey are such similar countries,â I murmured.
âRight. So anyway, Sam was surprised that Shadow Woman had one.â
Sam looked it up. Looking for value? Surprised that Shadow Woman had one. Not just a hermit but poor? Broke? âI see.â I leaned slightly against the shelving unit. âYou mentioned Shadow . . .â
âRight. Um . . . so Shadow Woman came to town like once a month with her mule, like I said, always after sunset, and bought stuff, like Spam. Sheâd usually pay her bill about every other month. The dogs always came with her. Six months ago, you know, she stopped coming.â
âLet me guess. She owed Sam a lot of money.â
âRight. Boy-howdy was he steamed about it. Then he, you know, got a check and note from the old woman to pay her bill, but the check bounced higher than a buckinâ bronco.â
âDid anyone follow up, call the police?â
âNot right away âcause the dogs moved in, first Holly, then Maverick. So, you know, Sam started to feed them. And . . . I think someone changed his mind on what to do with the dogs.â
Cluster of you knows. Sensitive topic. I kept my gaze on her and nodded again.
She glanced down and plucked a piece of lint from her sleeve. âSam always said heâd get his pound of flesh from her, whatever that means.â
âIâm sure it originated in Turkey or France.â
âRight. Foreign-like. Um . . . Sam finally got close enough to Maverick to see heâd been spayed.â
âNeutered?â
âWhat?â
âNever mind.â A neutered dog was of zero value, and Sam stopped feeding them. I made an effort to unclench my hands. âHow have the dogs survived?â
âYou know, folks around town feel sorry for them . . .â
The cowbell jangled.
The clerk straightened and glanced in that direction. Her cheeks flamed and her tongue flickered out to moisten her lips.
I turned.
A sheriffâs deputy charged to the bathroom, disappeared for a few moments, then reappeared and sauntered toward us, replacing fallen items on the shelves. His ordinary brown hair was the only average thing about him. He was otherwise a walking modern-day Adonis, his face chiseled by a master carver. He finally looked up and smiled at the clerk, exposing more teeth than the Osmond family, and seemed to enjoy her reaction to his arrival.
My hand automatically reached to fluff my hair. I stopped and squared my oversized glasses instead.
He looked at me, his eyes widening. âHello there. Iâm Bram White.â
âIâmââ
âLeaving,â the clerk said. âGoinâ to Mule Shoe. Sheâs a guest.â
âDarby Graham.â I glanced at his holstered pistol, then out the window at the two dogs lying under a tree. Check bounced. Samâs been feeding âem, but thatâs gonna stop. Pound of flesh.
Deputy Bram glanced at his watch.
My neck was crawling with reasons to scratch it.
âCan I get you a Coke or somethinâ?â she asked me. âIt shouldnât be long.â The clerk moved toward an ancient cooler. âIâd bet the wagon got slowed down by the earthquake.â
The two dogs began barking.
âSee? I told ya. Betcha thatâs the wagon now.â The clerk moved toward the front of the store, brushing past Bram. âExcuse me,â she said. At the window, she glanced out, then looked at the officer. âYep. The wagonâs here.â Without taking her eyes from Bram, she said to me, âYou can go now.â
Sam stuck his head in the door. âMiss Graham? Time to leave.â He spotted Bram and gave the man a quick nod.
I gave in and scratched my neck. This was none of my business. No need to get involved. No reason to draw attention to myself. Low profile. Right. I straightened. âI think Iâll wait here. Catch the next wagon.â The words came out without my thinking, but they seemed right.
Sam moved into the store. âIâm sorry, Miss Graham, there wonât be a next wagon. Itâs quite a distance to the ranch and itâs getting late. Youâll need to leave now.â He wiped his hands on his slacks, glanced at the clerk, then at the deputy.
The itch was now a full-scale conviction. âYour clerk hereââ
âJulia?â Sam glared at the clerk.
âWas telling me about Shadow Woman. And her dogs.â
Bram folded his arms.
Sam opened the door behind him and waved for me to exit. âMiss Graham, I really see that as none of your business.â
Go now. Run. You have nothing to offer. Well . . . almost nothing. I slowly walked over to the counter. âI know Shadow Womanâs check bounced. How much money did she owe you? And how much to cover all the dog food?â I opened my purse.
âHow many times have I warned you to keep your piehole shut!â Sam said to Julia.
âI didnât say nothinâ!â Julia crossed her arms. âShe figured it out on her own.â
Sam closed the door and approached me, both hands held out as if to show goodwill. âI donât know what it is that you figured out, Miss Graham, butââ
âPlease donât try lying to me, Sam.â I pulled out my checkbook. âYou figured the Anatolian dog would pay Shadow Womanâs bill, but when you saw he was neutered, he had no more value to you. The minute I leave, youâre going to have Deputy White here shoot both dogs. Your pound of flesh.â I stared into his eyes. âI intend to stop you.â
***
Excerpt from Woman in Shadow by Carrie Stuart Parks. Copyright 2021 by Carrie Stuart Parks. Reproduced with permission from Thomas Nelson. All rights reserved.
Carrie Stuart Parks is a Christy, multiple Carol, and Inspy Awardâwinning author. She was a 2019 finalist in the Daphne du Maurier Award for excellence in mainstream mystery/suspense and has won numerous awards for her fine art as well. An internationally known forensic artist, she travels with her husband, Rick, across the US and Canada teaching courses in forensic art to law-enforcement professionals. The author/illustrator of numerous books on drawing and painting, Carrie continues to create dramatic watercolors from her studio in the mountains of Idaho.
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Regency widow Lily Adler has finally settled into her new London life when her semi-estranged father arrives unexpectedly, intending to stay with her while he recovers from an illness. Hounded by his disapproval, Lily is drawn into spending time with Lady Wyatt, the new wife of an old family friend. Lily barely knows Lady Wyatt. But she and her husband, Sir Charles, seem as happy as any newly married couple until the morning Lily arrives to find the house in an uproar and Sir Charles dead.
All signs indicate that he tripped and struck his head late at night. But when Bow Street constable Simon Page is called to the scene, he suspects foul play. And it isn’t long before Lily stumbles on evidence that Sir Charles was, indeed, murdered.
Mr. Page was there when Lily caught her first murderer, and he trusts her insight into the world of London’s upper class. With the help of Captain Jack Hartley, they piece together the reasons that Sir Charles’s family might have wanted him dead. But anyone who might have profited from the old man’s death seems to have an alibi… until Lily receives a mysterious summons to speak with one of the Wyatts’ maids, only to find the young woman dead when she arrives.
Mr. Page believes the surviving family members are hiding the key to the death of both Sir Charles and the maid. To uncover the truth, Lily must convince the father who doesn’t trust or respect her to help catch his friend’s killer before anyone else in the Wyatt household dies.
âSchellmanâs gracefully written whodunit is equally a tale of 19th-century female empowerment and societal conventionsâŚMore than a clever murder puzzle, this is an immersion in a bygone era.â
âKirkus Reviews
âThe fast-paced, engrossing story has a climactic confrontation worthy of Rex Stout or Agatha Christie.â
âLibrary Journal, starred review
Book Details:
Genre: Historical Mystery
Published by: Crooked Lane Books
Publication Date: July 13th 2021
Number of Pages: 352
ISBN: 1643857045 (ISBN13: 9781643857046)
Series: Lily Adler Mystery #2 | The Lily Adler series are stand alone mysteries but even more fabulous if read in sequence
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop | Goodreads
ISLAND BREEZES
This book features Mrs. Lily Alder, a Regency era amateur sleuth. She had already aided Simon Page, a Bow Street constable, solve a murder. Now she’s jumped back in to help solve another even though Mr. Page wasn’t exactly excited to have her help.
A young autistic boy holds a crucial clue locked inside if only someone knew hold to unlock his secret.
I often am able to figure out the person who did the dastardly deed, but not this time. I was back and forth all over the place trying to figure this one out. As secrets are unlocked Lily and Mr. Page do a much better job than I at solving this one.
Thank you, Ms Schellman, for this Lily Adler mystery. I look forward to many more.
***Book provided without charge by PICT.***
Given the way she hadnât hesitated to interfere in the Wyatt familyâs affairs, Lily expected Lady Wyatt to politely rescind her invitation to ride the next morning. But she had insisted, saying her arm was sure to be better by morning. So after breakfast, Lily instructed Anna to lay out her riding habit.
Though she had forgone her usual routine of breakfasting in her own room and instructed Mrs. Carstairs to lay breakfast in the parlor, Lily hadnât seen any sign of her father. She didnât mind. If she couldnât be cozy while she dined, she was at least happy to be alone. And it gave her the opportunity to go over the weekâs menus with her housekeeper and offer several suggestions for managing her fatherâs requests while he was with them.
âAnd do you know how long might that be, Mrs. Adler?â Mrs. Carstairs asked carefully. âMr. Branson was unable to say when I spoke to him last night.â
Lily pursed her lips. âFor as long as he needs, Mrs. Carstairs. Or as long as I can bear his company. My record on that score is fifteen years, however, so let us hope it will not come to that.â
The housekeeper wisely didnât say anything else.
Lilyâs pleasant solitude lasted until she was making her way back upstairs to change, when she found her path blocked by her fatherâs belligerent frame. Unwell he might be, but George Pierce was still a solid, imposing man, and Lily had to remind herself to square her shoulders and meet his scowl with a smile as he did his best to tower over her from the step above.
âGood morning, Father.â
He didnât return the greeting. âI am going to breakfast,â he announced, eyebrows raised.
Lily waited for a moment and then, when no more information was forthcoming, nodded. âI hope you enjoy it. Mrs. Carstairs is an excellent cook.â
He sniffed. âAnd I assume your excessively early rising is an attempt to avoid my company?â
âIt is past nine oâclock, father,â Lily said. âHardly excessive. And I have an appointment this morning, so if you will excuse meââ
âWhat is your appointment?â
He couldnât curtail or dictate what she did with her time, Lily reminded herself. Even if having him in her home left her feeling as if her independence were being slowly stripped away once more, in practical terms he had no say in her life anymore. Answering his question was only polite. âAn engagement with a friendââ
âThat sailor again, I assume?â
Lily took a deep breath. âCaptain Hartley was also invited, but no, the engagement is to ride with Lady Wyatt this morning. Which I assume you would approve of?â Seeing that she had momentarily surprised him into silence, she took the opportunity to push past her father. âYou would like her, I think. She is charming and elegant.â
âAnd her husbandâs a fool for marrying again,â Mr. Pierce grumbled, but Lily was already heading down the hall and didnât answer.
Jack was coming just before ten to escort her to the Wyattsâ house, and Lily was in a hurry to dress and escape her father once again. Her room was empty when she walked in, but Anna had laid out her riding habit on the bed, pressed and ready, its military-style buttons glinting in the morning light amid folds of emerald-green fabric.
Lily stared at it without moving. She had forgotten that her habit wasnât suitable to wear when she was in mourning.
She was still staring when Anna returned, the freshly brushed riding hat in her hands. When she saw Lilyâs posture, Anna paused.
âYou donât have another, Iâm afraid,â she said gently.
Lily nodded, unable to speak. One hand reached out to brush the heavy fabric of the habit; the other clenched a fold of the gray dress she wore. She had stopped wearing colors even before Freddy diedâin those last months of his illness, she had traded all her pretty dresses for drab gowns more suited to nursing an invalid who would never recover. And even after full mourning was complete, she had lingered in the muted shades of half mourning long past when anyone would have required it of her, even Freddyâs own family. Laying aside the visual reminders of her grief felt too much like leaving behind her marriage.
But that had meant more than two years of sorrow. And in the last few months, since she had come to London and taken control of her life once more, something had shifted inside her.
âYes, thank you, Anna,â Lily said quietly, her voice catching a little. She cleared her throat and said, more firmly, âI will wear this one.â
***
She managed to leave the house without encountering her father again. When her butler, Carstairs, sent word that Captain Hartley was waiting in the front hall, Lily felt a pang of anxiety. Jack had loved Freddy like a brother. And he had never given any indication that he thought her mourning had gone on long enough.
Jack was in the middle of removing his hat, and his hand stilled at the brim as he caught sight of her. Even Carstairs fell still as they watched her come down the stairs, the heavy folds of her green skirts buttoned up on one side to allow her to walk freely and a single dyed- green feather curling over the brim of her hat and flirting with her brown curls.
Lily felt exposed as she descended the final few steps, though she was bolstered by the approval that softened Carstairsâs smile. She had never considered herself a shy person, but she could barely meet Jackâs eyes as she crossed the hall to give him her hand.
For a moment neither of them spoke, and when she raised her gaze at last, Lily thought she saw the captain blinking something from the corner of his eye. âThat was Freddyâs favorite color,â he said at last, his voice catching.
Lily nodded. âI know.â
Jackâs jaw tightened for a moment as he swallowed. But he smiled. âWell done, Lily,â he said quietly. âGood for you.â
***
There was a lightness between them as they made the quick journey to Wimpole Street. As Jack waved down a hack carriage and handed her in, Lily found herself laughing at all of his quips or droll pieces of gossip, even the ones she normally would have chastised him for repeating. And Jack kept glancing at her out of the corner of his eye.
âDo I look that dreadful?â Lily asked at last as he handed her down from the carriage in front of the Wyattsâ home.
âQuite the opposite,â he said, rubbing the back of his neck as he released her hand. âDid you know, you are actually quite pretty?â
âYou mean you did not find me pretty before?â
âI think I had forgotten to consider it one way or another,â Jack admitted, grinning. âWhat a shame everyone has left London already; you would cause quite a sensation.â
Lily shook her head. âI know full well I am not handsome enough for that.â
âSurprise can cause as much of a sensation as admiration,â Jack pointed out.
âCaptain!â Lily exclaimed in mock indignation. âYou were supposed to argue with me!â
They continued bantering as they mounted the steps to Sir Charlesâs townhouse, only to fall silent and exchange a puzzled glance as they realized that the door was half-open, the sounds of raised voices echoing from within.
Lily glanced at Jack, an uneasy sensation beginning to curl in the pit of her stomach. âShould we knock?â
He shrugged and did so, rapping firmly on the wood of the door. There was no response, but it swung open a little more. After hesitating a moment, Lily bit her lip and said, âWell, we ought to at least make sure Lady Wyatt knows weâve come. If it is no longer convenient to ride, she can certainly tell us to leave.â
âAnd you were already happy to interfere yesterday,â Jack pointed out, though she could hear the unease lurking beneath his playful tone. âWe might as well do it again.â
âVery true.â Lily pushed the door the rest of the way open and strode in, Jack following close behind.
The front hall was empty, but they could still hear voices not far away, now low and urgent, and the sound of quiet crying from somewhere just out of sight. The uneasy feeling began to spread through Lilyâs chest and arms, and she reached out her hand in blind anxiety. She was relieved to feel Jack take it and press it reassuringly into the crook of his arm.
She had just decided that they should leave after all when quick steps echoed down the stairs. A moment later Frank Wyatt came rushing down, checking himself at the bottom as he stared at them in surprise.
His face was pale and his eyes red as he gaped at them, his easy manner vanished. âLily? And Captain . . . Iâve quite forgot your name. You must excuse . . . what are you doing here?â
âThe door was open, and no one answered our knock,â Lily said, feeling a little ashamed of their hastiness in entering. âI apologize, Frank; we did not mean to intrude, but we had an appointment to ride with Lady Wyatt this morning. Is everyone well?â
âIs everyone . . . No. No.â Frank gripped the banister with one hand, his knuckles white. âI am afraid that Lady Wyatt will not be able to ride today. My father . . .â He swallowed. âMy father has died.â
Lily stared at him, unable to make sense of his words. They had seen Sir Charles just the day before. If he had seemed a little older and weaker than she remembered, he had still been utterly vital and alive. âDied? But . . . how?â
âIn point of fact,â a new voice said quietly from behind them. âIt seems Sir Charles Wyatt has been killed.â
***
Excerpt from Silence in the Library by Katharine Schellman. Copyright 2021 by Katharine Schellman. Reproduced with permission from Katharine Schellman. All rights reserved.
Katharine Schellman is a former actor, one-time political consultant, and currently the author of the Lily Adler Mysteries. A graduate of the College of William & Mary, Katharine currently lives and writes in the mountains of Virginia in the company of her family and the many houseplants she keeps accidentally murdering.
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Come now, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go to such and such a town and spend a year there and engage in business and make a profit.”
Yet you do not know what your life will be like tomorrow. What is your life? For you are a vapor that appears for a little while and then vanishes.
Instead you ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and also do this or that.”
Jacob (James) 4:13-15 TLV
Marriage? It can be absolute murder Superstar celebrity wedding planner, Felicity Philips has an event to run on a private island this weekend. With a stunning landscape as their backdrop and an architectural masterpiece for their venue, it’s the perfect setting … … for a murder. After the nightmare of last weekend ⌠oh, and the one before that, Felicity was hoping for things to run smoothly. However, an unpredicted storm cuts them off from the mainland before all the guests and staff can arrive. Thatâs a big enough problem for a person trying to impress a prince. But when a guest is found hanging from the rafters, it becomes clear there is a killer in their midst. Can Felicity employ Buster the bulldog and Amber the cat to help her again? Aided by her loyal assistant, AKA her ninja niece, Mindy, the team of four have no choice but to solve their way out of this one. |
ISLAND BREEZES
Felicity Philips (aka Patricia Fisher, Jr) can’t seem to get a wedding to go off smoothly. That’s not good for a wedding planner of high profile weddings.
It’s the day before the big wedding and she already has two murders on her hands. Talk about putting a kink in plans.
It doesn’t get much better, or even better at all. It’s a good thing she has her niece Mindy and her two pets, Amber and Buster to help her out. Much to Felicity’s dismay Vince, a PI, also puts in an appearance.
Thank you, Mr. Higgs, for another delightful series. I’m looking forward to another Felicity Philips book.
***Book provided without charge by the author. ***
When Steve Higgs wrote his debut novel, Paranormal Nonsense, he was a Captain in the British Army. He would love to pretend that he had one of those careers that has to be redacted and in general denied by the government and that he has had to change his name and continually move about because he is still on the watch list in several countries. In truth though, he started out as a mechanic, no not like Jason Statham, sneaking about as a contract killer, more like one of those greasy gits that charge you a fortune and keep your car for a week when all you went in for was a squeaky door hinge.
At school, he was mostly disinterested in every subject except creative writing, for which, at age ten, he won his first award. However, calling it his first award suggests that there have been more, which there have not. Accolades may come but, in the meantime, he is having a ball writing mystery stories and crime thrillers and claims to have more than a hundred books forming an unruly queue in his head as they clamor to get out.
Now retired from the military, he lives in the south-east corner of England with a trio of lazy sausage dogs. Surrounded by rolling hills, brooding castles and vineyards, he doubts he will ever leave, the beer is just too good.
Carraway (Carra) Quinn is a free-spirited English major confronting an unreceptive job market. Desperate for cash, she reluctantly agrees to her realtor stepmotherâs marketing scheme: infiltrate a local senior center as a recreational aide, ingratiate herself with the members, and convince them to sell their homes.
Jay Prentiss is a straitlaced, overprotective elder attorney whose beloved but mentally fragile Nana attends that center.
More creative than mercenary, Carra convinces Jay to finance innovations to the Centerâs antiquated programming. Her ingenuity injects new enthusiasm among the seniors, inspiring them to confront and reverse the regrets of their past. An unlikely romance develops.
But when Carraâs memoir-writing class prompts Jayâs Nana to skip town in search of a lost love, the two take off on a cross-country, soul-searching chase that will either deepen their relationship or tear them apart forever.
Charming, funny, and heartwarming, The Queen of Second Chances is not just a love story where two people discover each other, it is a story of self-discovery. Like all good romances, this one starts with the two main characters loathing each other before slowly realizing that they are perfect together. But before either Jay or Carra can come to that realization, they have to work through their personal shortcomings. Carra feels like a failure and is unable to get past her mother’s desertion of her as a child. Jay, while his helping people who desperately need rescuing demonstrates his fundamental goodness, puts a little too much emphasis on wealth and status. Helping a group of seniors find fulfillment is the catalyst that allows both the main characters to embrace changing their own lives and then ultimately embrace each other. A joy to read, The Queen of Second Chances is the perfect mood lifter in these stressful times.
The Queen of Second Chances by D.M. Barr is a beautifully written story of two lost souls brought together by fate. Carra was such a wonderful character, her warmth and kindness towards others were admirable. She also put others’ needs before her own safety and this was highlighted during the car scene outside the Garrison house. She was perfectly matched to Jay. Although he seemed to enjoy a materialistic lifestyle, I feel he had a really good heart and when he met Carra, he found the missing piece in his life. My absolute favorite character was Helen; she was extremely insightful and wise even though she was suffering from the onset of dementia. Her words of wisdom throughout were poignant and powerful, especially her views on looking back in life: “It’s more important to heed the present because that’s what it is, a gift. Nothing lasts long in this life, which is why every moment matters. You can’t take anything or anyone for granted.” I found the relationship between Jay and Carra developed gradually and the dialogue exchanges between them were very realistic. I loved the twist towards the end concerning Jay’s background and the nail-biting ending was brilliant. I feel there are so many underlying messages throughout too. For example, live for the moment, never be afraid to chase your dreams, and forgive yourself for mistakes you have made in your past. I highly recommend this novel.
The Queen of Second Chances by D.M. Barr is a lovely, deftly written romantic comedy that fans of the genre will love.
Genre: Contemporary Sweet Romance, Romcom, Chicklit
Published by: Champagne Book Group
Publication Date: June 7th 2021
Number of Pages: 204
ISBN: 2940165375545 (ASIN B094GFWG3K)
Purchase Links: Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Goodreads
ISLAND BREEZES
Carraway seems to need a second chance on a regular basis. BTW, who names their kid after a seed? Was it really so? Does that name start the need for all of Carra’s second chances?
Her mercenary stepmother pushes her into a job at a senior citizen center so she can sell their houses. Carra ends up loving her job as she gets creative with activities for them.
Jay Prentiss gets sucked into helping her as his grandmother is one of the ladies spending time at the center. He likes the things Carra is doing for the seniors.
But it isn’t all puppy kisses and roses between the two after Jay’s grandmother takes off to find her lost love. Blaming Carra, he drags her along in a race to get to his Nana before she totally disappears.
I enjoyed this book. I was a bit hesitant as I began reading it. I was afraid I would run into explicit sex scenes as the author had stated that she was an author of sex, suspense and satire. Thank you, D.M. Barr for providing an enjoyable read without messing it up with unnecessary sex.
***Book provided without charge by Providence Book Promotions.***
Chapter One
I couldnât take my eyes off the man. He came barreling into the recreational center at SALADâSeniors Awaiting Lunch and Dinner, Rock Canyonâs answer to Meals on Wheelsâas I sat in the outer office, awaiting my job interview. He was tall, but not too tall. His expensive suit barely concealed an athletic physique that fell just shy of a slavish devotion to muscle mass. Early thirties, I estimated, and monied. Honey-blond curly hair, blue eyes, high cheekbones, chiseled features, gold-rimmed glasses, and of course, dimples. Why did there always have to be dimples? They were my kryptonite, rendering me powerless to resist.
I nicknamed him Adonis, Donny for short, lest anyone accuse me of being pretentious. He was the stuff of every girlâs dreams, especially if that girl was as masochistic as yours truly. Men like that didnât fall for ordinary girls like me, gals more Cocoa Puff than Coco Chanel, more likely to run their pantyhose than strut the runway. I leaned back on the leather couch, laid down my half-completed application, and prepared to enjoy the view. Then he opened his mouth, and the attraction withered like a popped balloon.
âI want to speak to Judith. Now. Is she here?â The sharpness of his voice put Ginsu knives to shame. It was jagged enough to slash open memories of my motherâs own barely contained temper when refereeing sibling disputes between Nikki and me. Well, at least until she prematurely retired her whistle and skipped town for good.
The attendant working the main desk looked fresh out of nursing school and had obviously missed the lecture on dealing with difficult clients. She sputtered, held up both hands in surrender, and retreated into the administration office, reemerging with an older woman whose guff-be-gone demeanor softened as she got closer. Her name tag read, âJudith Ferester,â the woman scheduled to conduct my interview. She took one look at Donny, sighed as if to say, Here we go again, and plastered on her requisite customer service smile.
âMr. Prentiss, to what do we owe the honor of this visit?â she asked in a tone sweet enough to make my teeth hurt.
âJudith, I thought we had this discussion before. I trust you to take care of my nana, but day after day, I discover goings-on that are utterly unacceptable. Maybe we shouldnât have added the senior center, just limited SALAD to meal delivery. Last week you served chips and a roll at lunch? Thatâs too many carbs. This week, I find someone is duping her out of her pocket change. No one is going to take advantage of her good nature, not under my watch.â
I half-expected him to spit on the ground. Was such venom contagious? I didnât want my prospective employer in a foul mood when she reviewed my application. I really, really needed this job.
âMr. Prentiss,â Judith answered, her patronizing smile frozen in place, âI assure you that your championing of our senior center was well founded. The reason your nana isnât complaining is that she receives the utmost care. She is one of our dearest visitors. Everyone loves her.â
âTell me then, what is this?â Donnyâscratch that, Mr. Prentissâdrew a scrap of paper from his pocket and flung it onto the counter. I leaned forward to make out the object of his disdain. Then, thinking better of it, I relaxed and watched as this melodrama played itself out.
Judith glanced down at the paper. âThis? Itâs a scoresheet. They play gin for ten cents a hand. We monitor everything that goes on here; your grandmother is not being conned out of her life savings. You have my word.â
Prentiss shook his head so vigorously his gold-rimmed glasses worked their way down to the tip of his perfect nose. He pushed them back with obvious annoyance. Even when he was acting like a jerk, his dimples were captivating. Would they be even more alluring if he smiled? Did he smileâŚlike, ever?
âItâs not the amount that worries me. Itâs the act itself. Many seniors here are memory impaired. How can you condone gambling between people who arenât coherent? Could you please keep a closer eye on things? Otherwise, Iâm afraid Iâll have to take my nanaâand my supportâto the center Iâve heard about across the river.â
Without waiting for Judithâs response, Prentiss departed as brusquely as heâd arrived. Ah, the entitlement of the rich. Walk over everyone, then storm off. He never even noticed my presence. Just as well, considering my purpose for being there. Even if I wasnât sorry to see the back end of his temper, his rear end was pleasant enough to watch as he exited, I noted with a guilty shudder.
Judith shook her head, rolled her eyes, and let out a huff. Then she noticed me. âIâm so sorry you had to overhear that. Iâm the director here. How can I help you?â
âIâm Carraway Quinn. Everyone calls me Carra. I have an appointment for the recreational aide position.â
Judith typed a few keystrokes into the main deskâs computer. âAh yes, Ms. Quinn. Carraway, like the seed?â
âSomething like that,â I said with a smile.
They always guessed, but no one got it right. Some man would, one day. Thatâs what my mother said a million years ago, when she still lived within earshot. One man would figure it out, and thatâs how Iâd know he was the one for me. Not that it mattered right now. I had bigger problems than finding a new boyfriend.
âTell me, would I have to deal with people like that all day?â I tilted my head in the direction of Prentissâs contrail.
âWhat can I say? He loves his nana.â Judith shrugged, staring at the door. âThough Iâve never seen him lash out like that before. Heâs usually so calm.â She quickly shifted into public relations mode. âJay Prentiss is one of our biggest contributors. Itâs only because of his generosity that we have this senior center and can afford to hire a recreational aide.â She beckoned me into the inner office. âShall we proceed?â
I followed, but I had my doubts. I belonged in the editorial office of a magazine or on a book tour for my perennially unfinished novel, not at a senior center. This job was my stepmotherâs idea, not mine. Calling it an idea was being generous; it was more like a scheme, and the elderly deserved better than someone sent here to deceive them. I was the embodiment of what Jay Prentiss worried about most.
The interview lasted less than ten minutes, as if Judith was going through the formalities but had already decided to hire me. I was to start my orientation the following day. I shook her hand and thanked her, all the while wishing I were anywhere else.
Afterward, I wandered into the recreation area, where Iâd be spending most of my time. The room was dingy, teeming with doleful seniors watching television, playing cards, or staring off into space. A few complained among themselves about a jigsaw puzzle they were unable to finish because the last pieces were missing. I wondered how many had lost their spouses and came to the center out of loneliness, their children too busy with their own lives to visit. It was a heartbreaking thought.
Jay Prentiss was complaining about carbs and gambling when he should have been concentrating on ennui. The seniorsâ dismal expressions told me they were visiting SALAD more out of desperation than opportunity. It was clear they needed an injection of enthusiasm, not some aide looking to unsettle their lives. It came down to my conscience. Could it triumph against my stepmotherâs directives and my plummeting bank account?
—
Excerpt from The Queen of Second Chances by D.M. Barr. Copyright Š 2021 by D.M. Barr. Reproduced with permission from D.M. Barr. All rights reserved.
By day, a mild-mannered salesperson, wife, mother, rescuer of senior shelter dogs, competitive trivia player and author groupie, happily living just north of New York City. By night, an author of sex, suspense and satire.
My background includes stints in travel marketing, travel journalism, meeting planning, public relations and real estate. I was, for a long and happy time, an award-winning magazine writer and editor. Then kids happened. And I needed to actually make money. Now they’re off doing whatever it is they do (of which I have no idea since they won’t friend me on Facebook) and I can spend my spare time weaving tales of debauchery and whatever else tickles my fancy.
The main thing to remember about my work is that I am NOT one of my characters. For example, as a real estate broker, I’ve never played Bondage Bingo in one of my empty listings or offed anyone at my local diet clinic. And I haven’t run away from home in fear that my husband was planning to off me.
But that’s not to say that I haven’t wanted toâŚ
DMBarr.com
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Twitter – @AuthorDMBarr
Facebook – @AuthorDMBarr
Instagram – @AuthorDMBarr
Detective Sergeant Jack Lisbon travelled halfway round the world to escape his troubled past. Mutilated bodies were never part of the plan.
A body found in the mangroves at first appears to be evidence of a frenzied crocodile attack. But it soon becomes obvious this is a horrific murder.
And when a popular MMA fighter disappears, police now face a possible double homicide. The list of suspects grows longer, but no one in the closed fighting community is talking.
Can hard-nosed ex-boxer Detective Sergeant Jack Lisbon solve the mystery before the panicked town of Yorkville goes into total meltdown?
Join DS Lisbon and his partner Detective Claudia Taylor on a heart-thumping ride through the steamy tropics of Northern Australia as they hunt for a killer out of control.
“Head spinning twists and gritty crisp dialogue make Kill Shot a must read for the gruff mystery thriller crowd out there!”
– Goodreads reviewer
“I would overwhelmingly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a good crime fiction, thriller, who-done-it or the like.”
– Booksprout reviewer
“Denholm is a masterful story teller with realistic facts and hardcore action scenes throughout! Readers looking for a real page-turner have found it here!”
– Goodreads reviewer
“The story is so well written and full of action, that it is impossible to put down.”
– Voracious Readers reviewer
“With the heat, crocodiles, press speculation, and lack of progress, the pressure is on for a fast resolution. A cracking police procedural and a highly enjoyable read. I look forward to the subsequent adventures of the promising crime fighting duo.”
– Booksprout reviewer
“There are some surprising twists and turns along the way, one which I couldn’t even imagine which made this read a sheer delight. I struggled to keep this book down. I look forward to reading more of Denholm’s work.”
– Goodreads reviewer
Book Details:
Genre: Thriller
Published by: Indie
Publication Date: December 9th 2020
Number of Pages: 212
ISBN: 979-8733882802
Series: The Fighting Detective, Book 1
Purchase Links: Amazon | Goodreads
The searing heat prickled, nipped and stung. Beads of moisture dribbled from his forehead, infiltrated clenched eyelids and lashes. Fluids in his aching body were heating up. Humidity crushed like a ton of lead. Take shallow breaths; stay still to keep the core temperature down.
Bright tropical sunlight bore through the window, combined with the ambient swelter to turn Detective Sergeant Jack Lisbonâs bedroom into a torture chamber. Remember to close the venetian blinds next time, moron. And get the air conditioner serviced. Lying in bed now unbearable, he stood, wobbled a fraction. In his semi-delirium, he determined to take a cold shower before the Good Lord claimed him.
Lisbon tottered towards the bathroom. He rubbed his eyes softly as he went, wondered how red theyâd be after last nightâs binge. Heâd stayed more or less sober for three years with the odd gentle tumble off the wagon. Last nightâs call with his ex-wife had a bigger impact on him than he could have imagined. After heâd hung up the phone on Sarah, he cracked a bottle of Bundaberg Rum, intended as a gift for a colleague. Heâd demolished half of it in an under an hour and headed off into the balmy night to continue the party.
At least thatâs how he remembered it.
Bathroom reached, he turned the cold tap on full blast, splashed water on his face and neck, over his chest and under the armpits. The shock of the cold water took his breath away. He repeated the process two times. He must have looked like a tired elephant dousing itself.
Thoughts again turned to Sarah.
Why wouldnât she let me speak to Skye?
His daughter was seven now, she needed contact with her father. Jack loved and missed her achingly. Heâd turned his life around full circle. From alcoholic bent cop to paragon of virtue. Kept his ugly busted nose clean and earned rapid promotion, in a foreign country if you please.
What was the point of Sarahâs bloody-minded recalcitrance? She and the kid were a million miles away from him, far from his destructive influence, safely tucked away in their council flat in Peckham, South London. What harm would there have been in chatting with his daughter, for heavenâs sake? He was at his witâs end with the situation and had no idea how to get Sarah to see reason. Constantly contacting her on the phone or Internet could be deemed stalking if she made a complaint. The last thing he needed was trouble with the job. It took four years to settle into life in Australia, now at last he was starting to feel at home. Donât jeopardise it, Lisbon.
He pulled aside the mould-flecked plastic shower curtain, stepped over raised tiles into the small cubicle and reached for the cold tap. Relief would be like an orgasm.
Make that a delayed orgasm.
The mobile phone on his bedside table burst into life. The ring tone was The Clashâs driving punk anthem âLondon Callingâ. A reminder of the life he left behind, his beloved job, a copper with the world famous London Metropolitan Police. He retraced his steps to the bedroom, snatched at the mobile. Sweat beaded on his brow like condensation on a bottle. âYeah, wot?â
âIs that how a senior officer with the Queensland Police answers the phone? How long have you been in Yorkville?â Constable Ben Wilsonâs poorly disguised voice was chirpy as ever. Jack usually appreciated the cheeky geniality, this morning it merely aggravated his hangover.
âLong enough to know itâs you on the other end, Wilson.â Jack scratched an armpit, scrabbled in his coat jacket for nicotine lozenges. He popped one into his dry mouth and started sucking like a hungry baby. Headed back to the cool refuge of the bathroom. âAnd watch the familiar tone, sunshine.â
âSorry, sir.â
âApology accepted. Bear with me one moment, will you?â
Headache worsening, Jack sat the phone down and spat the lozenge into a tissue. He fussed about in the bathroom drawers, flung little cardboard boxes, disposable razors and condoms about to reach their use-by date out of the way until he found what he needed. He picked up the phone, cradled it between neck and chin as he tore aspirin from its foil packaging, dropped two white disks into a glass of water.
âGo ahead, Wilson. Why the hell are you disturbing me? Iâm not rostered on until this afternoon.â
A cough on the other end of the line followed by a gulping sound. âJust so you know, sir, youâre on loud speaker. Detective Constable Taylorâs listening.â
âUnderstood. Now answer my question. Whatâs going on?â
âA carâs been found abandoned.â
âWhere?â
âConnors Road, edge of the industrial estate near the mangroves. Five clicks heading west, just after the point where it turns into a gravel track.â
âAn abandoned vehicle heading bush is no reason to get excited. Probably joy riders got sick of it and dumped the car when it ran out of fuel.â
âNot likely. The keys were left dangling from the ignition, engine running, radio on and no one within cooee. Also, what the caller thought might be blood stains on one of the seats. Suspicious as all get out.â
Jack took a deep breath, pinched the bridge of his nose. âRight. Anything else?â
âNo, sir. DC Taylor and I are en route to the scene. The tip off came via the hotline.â
âHas forensics been despatched?â
âNo.â It was the voice of Detective Constable Claudia Taylor, sultry to match the weather. âWe havenât established a crimeâs been committed. Could be an innocent explanation for it.â
âThen why does it take three of us to check it out? Twoâs plenty for preliminary work.â
âIâm bringing Wilson along for the experience. Heâs been stuck on desk duty for weeks and things are a bit quiet in the old town. Besides, I think he could become a good detective later in his career.â
âShould I care?â A short uncomfortable silence after his sarcastic remark. Make amends, Lisbon. âSorry, Iâm not feeling a hundred percent today. Itâs great the lad wants to better himself. Most laudable.â
Thereâd been no baffling crimes in Yorkville for a while. The chance to investigate something unusual could be an interesting diversion. Even with the annoying Constable Wilson tagging along. âIâll get there as soon as I can.â
âBetter hurry,â said Taylor above the soft crackle of the two-way. âThereâs a thunderstorm forecast.â
âIf a cool change comes with it, I donât care if itâs a bloody cyclone.â The cruel weather in the far north enervated the body like nothing Jack had ever experienced. Three years pounding the pavement as a uniformed cop in sub-tropical Brisbane was bad enough. Then he got the promotion heâd worked like a dog for in the capital: plain clothes detective. Only trade off, it was up here in the sweltering furnace of hell. The humidity was a killer, but he was gradually acclimatising. At least the fishing was good.
âYou know how to get here, sir?â said Wilson.
âEver hear of GPS?â
âOf course. See you soon.â
The ritual morning home gym work out and run would have to wait. Lifting weights and punching the bag would have been painful anyway, so the early call out was an excuse to skip it, at least until the afternoon.
He guzzled a can of icy diet cola to accelerate the effect of the aspirin. On went a lightweight cotton suit. Locked doors. In the car. Gone.
âNice change you joining us in the pub last night, Jack. It was a huge surprise seeing you lumber through the door half an hour from closing.â Lisbonâs partner DI Claudia Taylor, crossed the road with a carboard tray containing two cups.
It was a surprise to Jack too. He didnât remember meeting colleagues at the pub. Fuck. âAh, yeahâŚâ
âDonât worry. You didnât do anything youâd regret.â
Thank God. Reputation intact.
âYou donât look anywhere near as jovial as you did last night.â She handed Jack a coffee. âGet this into you.â
âAre you kidding? Itâs too hot for coffee.â He grunted and waved it away.
âCome on. Donât be ungrateful. Itâll put a spring back in your step.â
Jack took a sip, spat it straight out. âJesus, I understand you have to sweeten service station coffee to make it drinkable, but seriously, how much effing sugar did you put in it?â He handed her back the cup. âIâd be a diabetic by the time I finished that.â The only spring caffeine induced in Jack was the desire to spark up a match and light a cigarette. The lozenges he consumed and the patches he wore under the suit helped; no tobacco for three weeks. He sucked in his guts, patted firming stomach muscles under his shirt. Donât go back to your bad habits, son.
âWhatever.â She frowned as she tossed the contents of the second cup on the grassy verge, replaced the empty cup in the tray. âHere, you canât refuse these.â She handed him a pair of sky-blue surgical gloves and donned a pair herself.
âWho called it in?â Jack tugged on the gloves, wiped sweat from his forehead with a shirt cuff.
âA truckie heading north to fetch a load of bananas.â Constable Ben Wilson appeared from behind the abandoned vehicle. âCalled the info line.â
âDid he leave his name?â
âYeah. Don Hawthorne. Gave us some basic info. Got his number if you want to follow up.â
Jack nodded, scuffed black leather shoes in the dirt. He looked up. Dark cumulonimbus clouds were gathering in the east, the promised storm was building nicely. Theyâd have to work the scene fast. âProbably wonât be needing him further. Letâs have a closer look at the vehicle. You,â he pointed at Wilson. âCheck the immediate area for anything odd.â
âSuch as?â
âUse your initiative, Constable. You want to be a detective, donât you?â
Wilson trudged off in a huff.
âHeâs keen,â said Taylor. âGive him a chance.â
âWhatever. He was rude to me on the phone this morning.â
âIâm sure he didnât mean it.â
The statement hung in the air without comment as Jack opened the driver side door of the late model maroon Mazda 6 sedan.
The first thing to catch his eye was a dark stain on the passenger seat. âWhat do you reckon?â he called over his shoulder. âBlood?â
Taylor peered inside the car. âCould be. Want me to get forensics down here? The whole scene looks dodgy.â
Jack shook his head. âSpidey senses tingling, are they Taylor? No, Iâd like to know who the owner is first before we run at this like a bull at a gate. Have you called in the registration and VIN number?â
âNot yet.â Jack sensed a trace of annoyance in her reply, but she could suck it up. âI was busy getting the coffee you didnât want.â
âDo it now.â Jack had learned to give commands like they were polite requests. If you stick the Australian rising inflection on any statement you can turn it into a kind of question. âIâll have a shoofty through the interior.â
âCan you pull the lever so I can find the VIN, please?â Taylorâs tone was now brusque and businesslike.
Jackâs answer was the sound of the bonnet popping.
âThanks.â She said something else Jack didnât catch. With her head under the hood, Taylor sounded like she was underwater.
The first thing Jack examined was the dashboard, littered with receipts, dockets and assorted papers. He pressed a button to open the glove box, more papers fluttered out like falling leaves. He scanned a few but nothing grabbed his attention. Itâd take hours to go through them all thoroughly; heâd leave them to the forensics team if he and Taylor decided it was worth calling them in. What else? On the floor, take-away wrappers, most from a famous fried chicken outlet, grease-stained white paper bags you get hot chips in. Maybe the mark on the seat was old tomato ketchup?
âGot the number, Jack.â Taylor dropped the bonnet with a thunk, walked around to the wound-down driver window and peered in over the top of a pair of designer glasses. âJust calling in now with the rego and VIN.â
âItâs a wonder the officer who took the call didnât ask the truckie for the number plate. We could have had the details before we even got here. Might have even spared us a trip.â And Iâd be lying on the couch watching classic title fights on YouTube.
âApparently the truck driver was already back on the road when he rang it in.â Taylor ran fine fingers through her hair. âDidnât bother to take note of the plates. Said he didnât have time to hang around âcos his boss was riding his arse about deadlines. Heâd seen the driver door wide open and no one inside or near the vehicle, so he stopped to check no one was sick or whatever.â
âHavenât there been attacks on women in this area lately?â Jack asked.
âYouâre right. Maybe the truckie knew that too and it spurred him to do his civic duty.â
âMaybe.â Jack looked up from the debris. âOr he was seeing if there was anything in the car worth stealing.â
âYouâre a bloody cynical bastard.â
âI grew up in South London, luv. Shaped my outlook somewhat.â
âIâve got a little more faith in people. According to the call transcript, the guy discovered keys hanging from the ignition and the engine idling. Had a quick look about, saw nothing else suspicious and thought the driver had headed into the scrub to ahâŚ, how can I put it, evacuate their bowels.â
A laugh escaped Jackâs lips. âFor Godâs sake, Claudia. Canât you just say take a shit?â
Taylor mumbled something.
âPardon?â A receipt lay among the junk food debris. Jack held it up and squinted to read the faded ink. A generic cash purchase, unknown vendor, not paid for by credit or debit card. Not helpful.
âI said no need to be crude.â
âYou think thatâs crude? You should hear me when I lose money on a boxing match. I lose my fucking rag.â Jack wrinkled his nose as he came up for air. The floor of the car gave off a mouldy smell to match the rubbish.
She ignored his remark. âAnyway, once the truckie was on the road again, he had second thoughts, wondered if the stain on the seat might be blood, and called it in. Hang on, Iâm about to get the name of the vehicleâs owner.â
âIâll keep digging in this mess.â Jack knew from long experience nine times out of ten a car left on the side of the road wasnât a big issue. Usually itâs been nicked and the thieves scarper when the petrol runs out or they get bored. A sticker gets slapped on the windscreen and the owners are notified to come and pick it up. After a specified amount of time if no one collects, itâs towed away, sold at auction if itâs in good condition or crushed at the wreckers if itâs unroadworthy. Something felt wrong about this car, though.
Jack grabbed the lever under the driver seat and tugged, slid the seat back and peered underneath. More rubbish. A rummage in the front and rear passenger seats and floor spaces rendered nothing but more detritus. He stepped out of the car, popped the boot. Inside, a broad blobby stain on a piece of old carpet that looked like a Rorschach test. Could be blood.
âGot a name.â Taylor ended the call. âTerrence Bartlett.â
âSay again?â Jackâs inner voice told him heâd heard that name before.
âBartlett. Terrence Brian Bartlett.â
Yes. Jack did remember the name.
***
Excerpt from Kill Shot by Blair Denholm. Copyright 2020 by Blair Denholm. Reproduced with permission from Blair Denholm. All rights reserved.
BLAIR DENHOLM is an Australian fiction writer and translator who has lived and worked in New York, Moscow, Munich, Abu Dhabi and Australia. He once voted in a foreign election despite having no eligibility to do so, was almost lost at sea on a Russian fishing boat, and was detained by machine-gun toting soldiers in the Middle East. Denholm’s new series, The Fighting Detective, starring ex-boxer Jack Lisbon, is now up and flying with the first two installments, Kill Shot and Shot Clock. The series is set in tropical North Queensland, Australia, and features heavy doses of noir crime with a vigilante justice twist. Expect at least six novels with Detective Lisbon, his fellow cops and a host of intriguing characters.
Denholm’s debut crime novel, SOLD, is the first in a thrilling noir trilogy, featuring the detestable yet lovable one-man wrecking ball Gary Braswell. The second exciting book in the series, SOLD to the Devil, was released in June 2020. The final episode, Sold Dirt Cheap, will see the light of day in 2022.
Finally, Denholm is working on a crime series set in Moscow just prior to the collapse of the Soviet Union. Captain Viktor Voloshin is a hard-boiled investigator who has to fight the establishment in order for justice to be served, in his own special way. The first in this series, Revolution Day, will be published in October 2021.
Blair currently resides in Hobart, Tasmania with his partner, Sandra, and two crazy canines, Max and Bruno.
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when My people, over whom My Name is called, humble themselves and pray and seek My face and turn from their evil ways, then I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land.
2 Chronicles 7:14 TLV
When two men are murdered one muggy September night in a New Orleans housing project, an eye witness identifies only one suspect – Louis Bishop- a homeless sixteen-year old. Louis is arrested the next day and thrown into Orleans Parish Prison. Emma Thornton, a law professor and director of the Homeless Law Clinic at St. Stanislaus Law School in the city agrees to represent him.
When they take on the case, Emma and her students discover a tangle of corruption, intrigue, and more violence than they would have thought possible, even in New Orleans. They uncover secrets about the night of the murders, and illegal dealings in the city, and within Louisâs family. As the case progresses, Emma and her family are thrown into a series of life-threating situations. But in the end, Emma gains Louisâs trust, which allows him to reveal his last, and most vital secret.
âWith The Redemption, Cynthia Tolbert delivers another beautifully written and compelling read in her Thornton Mystery series, as law professor Emma Thorntonâs fight to save a teen wrongly accused of murder endangers her own life in this gripping tale of corruption and crime in the 1990s Big Easy.â
Ellen Byron, Agatha Award Winning Author
of the Cajun Country Mysteries
Book Details:
Genre: Mystery
Published by: Level Best Books
Publication Date: February 9th 2021
Number of Pages: 286
ISBN: 978-1-947915-43-5
Series:Thornton Mysteries, Book 2 || Each is a Stand Alone Mystery
Purchase Links: Amazon | Goodreads
ISLAND BREEZES
Redemption. It sounds like a good thing, doesn’t it? Redemption in this book is an area of New Orleans. An area commonly known as the projects.
Is there anything redeeming about Redemption? Yes. Juanita, Mama Ruby and Alicia.
This story starts out with two murders and then progresses to more. Emma Thornton and her law students are defending Louis, the teen accused of those two murders. They have no idea of the danger this is to themselves.
Emma is particularly targeted and when she doesn’t back off, her life is at stake. She isn’t sure who she can trust as NOPD seems to be full of dirty cops.
Emma manages to clear the teen, but it’s a long and dangerous road filled with surprises.
Thank you, Ms Tolbert. for this very enjoyable book. I’m ready for more Thornton Mystery books.
***Book received from PICT without charge.***
September 9, 1994
8:05 p.m.
Just before dark on the night of his death, Brother Reginald Antoine stepped out of the cottage where he lived. He slammed the door shut to prevent the soggy heat of the late summer evening from invading the front room. Except for occasional river breezes, the New Orleans climate was swamp-like until late October. His exits had become swift and cat-like to avoid escalating power bills and a strain on the houseâs only window-unit air conditioner.
He stood on the front porch for a moment, staring at the entrance to the Redemption housing project. All was quiet. No one was in sight.
He was looking forward to the evening. Heâd promised to help Alicia Bishop complete forms for a scholarship to Our Lady of Fatima, the top girlsâ school in the city. He found himself singing under his breath as he locked the front door.
Most of the kids Brother Antoine worked with never finished school, and he was painfully aware that heâd failed far more than heâd helped. But Aliciaâs story would be different. Her graduation would be her familyâs first. Clear-headed and determined, much like her Aunt Juanita, the woman who had raised her, she was destined to earn far more than a high school diploma. He believed she was destined for great things.
Brother Antoine surveyed the street familiar to him from childhood. Alicia and her Aunt Juanita lived in an apartment was only a few blocks over, but well within the Redemption housing project. Driving such a short distance would be silly, plus he felt like a little exercise. It was a good evening for a walk, even though no one felt completely safe walking around any neighborhood in the city at night. At least one person had been killed in New Orleans every day that year, so far. Sometimes more. Too many drugs were on the streets. But he didnât worry about any of that.
He tucked the bundle of papers heâd pulled for the meeting under his arm and headed out. When he was a kid heâd found the Redemption overwhelming – so vast it couldnât be taken in, visually, from his porch or from any single location. A crowded jumble of russet brick, broken down porches, and peeling army-drab paint, it stretched across the lower garden district from Magazine Street to the Mississippi River. When he was about six he tried to count the buildings, but gave up when he got lost. Everything looked the same to him back then. When he returned to live at the mission house he realized heâd been wrong. Each place was unique. Every apartment, every stoop, every front door was distinct, because everything inside was different. Every place had its own family, its own problems, its own joys. Every place had its own family, its own problems, and joys. He didnât realize how much heâd missed it until his return.
He passed the community garden planted around the corner from the mission house with its patches of brave sprouts pushing out of the ground. He was proud of that little spot, and equally excited for the people who were involved, especially those few who returned week after week to dig, and prod, and encourage the seedlings to grow. Some of the plants even promised to bear fruit, which was reason enough to celebrate.
As he walked he could smell urine from the street gutters where drunken men or stoned boys had relieved themselves. A recent rain only added a steamy intensity to the mix, creating a cauldron of odors which would vanish only when the next dayâs sunlight parched the streets.
The Redemption was teeming with human spirit, poverty, and crime. It was home to many, but with rare exception, no one chose to live there. And everyone who did, even the very young, understood how fragile life could be.
He walked up the steps to Juanita Bishopâs apartment and rapped on the front door.
***
9:00 p.m.
Sam Maureau pulled his car into the Redemption and parked at a curb at the end of Felicity Street. He was alone. Jackson, his partner, couldnât come. But Sam wasnât worried. He checked his watch. He was right on time. Things were under control.
He turned off his lights and, except for the murky glow of the half-obscured moon, was surrounded by a blanket of darkness. It took several seconds for his eyes to adjust, but even after he waited, he still strained to see. Most of the streetlights on that block had been shot out, and several apartment windows had been boarded over. He peered in between the last two buildings on the corner for any sign of movement.
Sam kicked aside a beer can as he stepped out of his car. He didnât expect any trouble that night. Marcus, a dealer who ran the Gangsta Bâs, the largest gang in the city, had asked for a meeting to discuss âsome businessâ, but theyâd never had problems before. Their businesses had always co-existed, side-by-side. Sam had begun selling crack in small quantities ten years earlier, when he was twenty-five, and had remained one of the smaller distributers in the city. He figured that Marcus, who was younger by at least ten years, either wanted to bring him and his territory into the Gangsta Bâs, or he wanted to buy him out. He didnât see the need to change anything right now, unless the price was right. He was making pretty good money. His clients were happy with him. But he didnât mind talking with Marcus.
Sam patted his jacket pocket. The gun was still there. It never hurt to be careful. He locked his car, checking to make certain nothing was in the back seat. Marcus had asked him to meet around the corner.
Sam made his way across the grassy common area, dodging the few mud puddles he could see reflected in the wan moonlight, to an old iron bench across from Marcusâs grandmotherâs apartment where they had met once before. He sat down to wait. The bench hadnât quite cooled from the daytime heat. The faint breeze from the river ruffled what scant remnants remained of his once luxurious surfer-boy hair and sent greasy paper bags, discarded whiskey bottles, and random debris scurrying across the sidewalk. He absent-mindedly patted his bald spot to make certain it was covered.
He couldnât see them, but their chatter floated over to his bench. Even though the words were indecipherable, Sam heard three distinct voices. Then he heard Marcus speak.
âGo get Louis.â
Out of habit, Sam felt his jacket pocket again, reassuring himself that his piece was still there. Marcus and one other young man came into view. Sam nodded as they approached.
Marcus was a commanding presence. Tall, and athletic, intricate tattoos of black ink woe across his dark skin, tracing his biceps, and emphasizing his ropy, muscular arms and powerful shoulders. His long hair, pulled back into a pony-tail, flowed down his back. No one questioned his authority.
âWeâre gonna wait a minute for Louis,â Marcus pulled out a cigarette from his back pocket and lit it, blowing billowy clouds into the night air.
âYeah, sure. But whatâs this all about?â Marcus ignored Samâs question and pulled hungrily on his cigarette, blowing smoke rings, refusing to make eye contact with Sam.
Several minutes later a tall young man and a boy who couldnât have been over sixteen joined them.
âYou and your people gotta go. Youâre right in the middle of my territory. Iâm claiming it, and Iâm taking it â now. Ainât nothing you can do about it.â Marcus threw down his cigarette and stomped it into the grass.
Sam stood up to face Marcus. âFuck you, Marcus. You donât need my three blocks. Iâve had it for years, and its outside your territory anyway. You canât just take it.â Sam clenched the fist of his left hand and shoved his right hand in his jacket pocket where the gun was hidden.
âThatâs where youâre wrong, mother fucker.â Marcus grabbed another cigarette and rammed it three times against the pack. âI got business coming to me from uptown all the time now. Itâs time for you to give it up.â Marcus nodded to the three boys, who formed a circle around Sam and Marcus.
âNo way, broâ!â Samâs hand instinctively tightened around the gun.
Surrounded by the group of young men, Sam saw an opening, turned, and simultaneously pulled the gun from his jacket. As he stepped toward his escape, he saw something moving along the sidewalk next to the street. It appeared to be a man dressed in dark clothes, but it was impossible to be certain. Sam heard one shot, and felt it whizz by him. The distant figure dropped. Sam twisted around, and aimed his weapon toward the sound of the gun fire. Then he heard another shot.
Feeling something hot in his chest, he crumbled to the ground. The last thing he saw was the young kid, the one they called Louis, running toward the river.
***
Brother Antoine said good night to Alicia on the front porch of her auntâs apartment and started his walk back home. He was feeling good, lighthearted. He and Alicia had completed her application and she had nearly finished her essay. He was certain she was a shoo-in for the scholarship. Heâd only traveled a few feet down the sidewalk when he saw a group of men and a few boys gathered together in the grassy area next to one of the buildings. The cloud-covered moon offered enough reflection to allow him to make out the scant silhouette of the tallest member of the group. There was no doubt. His swagger and perpetual cigarette were unmistakable. Marcus Bishop. They had to be up to no good.
Brother Antoine followed the curve of the sidewalk, which brought him a little closer to the group. He noticed there was movement, perhaps a scuffle. He heard a shot, then felt a searing pain in his chest. He placed his hand on his shirt where he felt dampness, and, struggling to breathe, fell to the ground. He grabbed the scapular around his neck, praying, as he lay there, someone would come administer the last rites.
***
Excerpt from The Redemption by Cynthia Tolbert. Copyright 2021 by Cynthia Tolbert. Reproduced with permission from Cynthia Tolbert. All rights reserved.
In 2010, Cynthia Tolbert won the Georgia Bar Journalâs fiction contest for the short story version of OUT FROM SILENCE. Cynthia developed that story into the first full-length novel of the Thornton Mystery Series by the same name, which was published by Level Best Books in December of 2019. Her second book in this same series, entitled THE REDEMPTION, was released in February of 2021.
Cynthia has a Masterâs in Special Education and taught children with learning disabilities for ten years before moving on to law school. She spent most of her legal career working as defense counsel to large corporations and traveled throughout the country as regional and national counsel. She also had the unique opportunity of teaching third-year law students in a clinical program at a law school in New Orleans where she ran the Homeless Law Clinic and learned, first hand, about poverty in that city. She retired after more than thirty years of practicing law. The experiences and impressions she has collected from the past forty years contribute to the stories she writes today. Cynthia has four children, and three grandchildren, and lives in Atlanta with her husband and schnauzer.
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When Martha Dodson hires McGill Investigators to look into an odd neighbor, Molly feels optimistic about the case â right up until Martha reveals her theory that Kent Kirkland, the neighbor, is holding two boys hostage in his papered-over upstairs bedroom.
Marthaâs husband thinks she needs a hobby. Detective Art Judd, who Molly visits on her clientâs behalf, sees no evidence worthy of devoting police resources.
But Molly feels a kinship with the Yancy Park housewife and bone-deep concern for the missing boys.
She forges ahead with the investigation, navigating her own headstrong kids, an unlikely romance with Detective Judd, and a suspect in Kent Kirkland every bit as terrifying as the supervillains sheâs battled before alongside Quaid Rafferty and Durwood Oak Jones.
Book Details:
Genre: Mystery — Cozy/Romance
Published by: Jeff Bond Books
Publication Date: June 1, 2021
Number of Pages: 195
ISBN: 1734622520 (ISBN-13 : 978-1734622522)
Series: Third Chance Enterprises, #3
Purchase Links: Amazon | Goodreads
ISLAND BREEZES
The police think she’s nuts. Molly is beginning to wonder. Will Molly keep investigating or will she tell Martha there’s nothing left to investigate? But she does need the income from the case to keep the bills paid.
Martha manages to dig up some information that could be helpful. Molly keeps working at it, but she could be putting herself in danger. She and Martha have tried to get the police interested with no luck.
But Detective Judd does get interested in Molly. Will this eventually help Molly solve the case?
This book was not as intense as Anarchy of the Mice, but still kept me hooked. I didn’t really want this book to end. I’m looking forward to the next Molly book. I’d like to see more of the Durwood Oak Jones character.
You might also enjoy Dear Durwood, The Pinebox Vendetta and The Winner Maker by Jeff Bond.
***Book provided without charge by PICT.***
THE BEGONIA KILLER
By Jeff Bond
After twenty minutes on Martha Dodsonâs couch, listening to her suspicions about the neighbor, I respected the woman. She was no idle snoop. Sheâd noticed his compulsive begonia care out the window while making lavender sachets from burlap scraps. She hadnât even been aware of the papered-over bedroom above his garage until her postal carrier had commented.
I asked, âAnd the day he removed the begonias, how did you happen to see that?â
Martha set tea before me on a coaster, twisting the cup so its handle faced me. âZiggy and I were out for a walkâheâd just done his business. I stood up to knot the bagâŚâ
Her kindly face curdled, and I thought she might be remembering the product of Ziggyâs âbusinessâ until she finished, âThen we saw him start hacking, and scowling, and thrusting those clippers at his flowers.â
Her eyes, a pleasing hazel shade, darkened at the memory.
She added, âAt his own flowers.â
I shifted my skirt, giving her a moment. âThe begonias were in a mailbox planter?â
âRight by the street, yes. The whole incident happened just a few feet from passing cars, from the sidewalk where parents push babies in strollers.â
âDid he dispose of the mess afterward?â
âImmediately,â Martha said. âHe looked at his clippers for a secondâthe blades were streaked with green from all those leaves and stems heâd destroyedâthen he sort of recovered. He picked everything up and placed it in the yard-waste bin. Every last petal.â
âHe sounds meticulous.â
âExtremely.â
I jotted Cleaned up begonia mess in my notebook.
Maybe because of my psychology backgroundâIâm twelve credit-hours shy of a PhDâI like to start these introductory interviews by allowing clients time to just talk, open-ended. I want to know what they feel is important. Often this tells as much about them as it does about whatever theyâre asking me to/ investigate.
Martha Dodson had talked about children first. Hers were in college. Did I have little ones? Iâd waived my usual practice of withholding personal information and said yes, six and fourteen. Sheâd clapped and rubbed her hands. Wonderful! Where did they go to school?
Next weâd talked crafting. Martha liked to knit and make felt flowers for centerpieces, for vase arrangements, even to decorate shoesâthat type of crafter whose creativity spills beyond the available mediums and fills a house, infusing every shelf and surface.
Only with this groundwork lain had she told me about the case itself, describing the various oddities of her neighbor three doors down, Kent Kirkland.
I was still waiting to hear the crux of her problem, the reason she wanted to hire McGill Investigators. (Full disclosureâalthough the name is plural, thereâs only one investigator: Molly McGill. Me.)
âThat sounds like an intense, visceral moment,â I said, squaring myself to Martha on the couch. âSo has he done something to your flowers? Are you engaged in a dispute with him?â
Martha shook her head. Then, with perfect composure, she said, âI think heâs keeping a boy in the bedroom over his garage.â
I felt like somebody had blasted jets of freezing air into both my ears. The pen Iâd been taking notes with tumbled from my hand to the carpet.
âWait, keeping a boy?â I said.
âYes.â
âAgainst his will? As in, kidnapping?â
Martha nodded.
I was having trouble reconciling this woman in front of meâcardigan sweater, hair in a layered cropâwith the accusation sheâd just uttered. We were sitting in a nice New Jersey neighborhood. Nicer than mine. We were drinking tea.
She said, âThere might be two.â
Now my notebook dropped to the carpet.
âTwo?â I said. âYou think this man is holding two boys hostage?â
âI donât know for sure,â she said. âIf I knew for sure, Iâd be over there breaking down the door myself. But I suspect it.â
She explained that a ten-year-old boy from the next town over had gone missing six months ago. The parents had been quoted as saying they âlost track ofâ their son. They hadnât reported his disappearance until the evening after theyâd last seen him.
âThe mother told reporters he wanted a scooter for Christmas, one of those cute kick scooters.â Martha sniffled at the memory. âGuess what I saw the UPS driver drop off on Kent Kirklandâs porch two weeks ago?â
âA scooter,â I said.
Her eyes flashed. âA very large box from a company that makes scooters.â
Having retrieved my notebook, I jotted, box delivery (scooter?) . We talked a bit about this scooter companyâwhich also made bikes, dehumidifiers, and air fryers.
Scooter or not, there remained about a million dots to be connected from this boyâs case, which I vaguely remembered from news reports, to Kent Kirkland.
I left the dots aside for now. âHow do you get to two boys?â
âThere was another missing boy, about the same age. During the summer.â Marthaâs mouth moved in place like she was counting up how many jars of tomatoes sheâd canned yesterday. âHe lived close, too. That case was complicated because the parents had just divorced, and the dadâwho was a native Venezuelanâhad just moved back. People suspected him of taking the boy with him.â
âTo Venezuela?â
âYes. Apparently the State Department couldnât get any answers.â
I nodded, not because I accepted all that she was telling me, but because there was no other polite response available.
Neither of us spoke. Our eyes drifted together down the street to Kent Kirklandâs two-story saltbox home. Pale yellow vinyl siding. Tall privacy fence. Three separate posted notices to âPlease pick up after your pet.â Neighborhood Watch sign at the corner.
Finally, I said, âLook, Mrs. Dodson. Martha. Most of the cases we handle at McGill Investigators are domestic in nature. Straying husbands. Teenagers mixed up with the wrong crowd. Iâm a mother myself, and Iâve been a wife. Twice.â I softened this disclosure with a smirk. âI generally take cases where my own life experiences can be brought to bear.â
âBut thatâs why I chose you.â Martha worried her hands in her lap. âYour website says, âEvery case will be treated with dignity and discretion.â Thatâs all I ask.â
I looked into her eyes and said, âOkay.â
She seemed to sense my reluctance and started, rushing, âThose bedroom windows are papered-over twenty-four hours a day! And the begonias, you didnât see him destroy those begonias! I saw how he severed their stalks and shredded their root systems. You donât do that to flowers youâve tended for an entire season. Not if youâre a person of sound mind.â
âGardening is more challenging for some than others. I love rhododendrons, but I canât keep them alive. I over-water, I under-water. I plant them in the wrong spot.â
âHave you ever massacred them in a fit of rage?â
âNo.â I smiled. âBut Iâve wanted to.â
Martha couldnât help returning the smile. But her eyes stayed on Kent Kirklandâs house.
I said, âSome men arenât blessed with impulse control. Maybe he was a lousy gardener, heâd tried fertilizing and everything else, and the plants just refused toââ
âBut he wasnât a lousy gardener. He was excellent. I think he grew those begonias from seed. He wanted them to be perennials, is my theory, but weâre in zone sevenâtheyâre annuals here. He couldnât accept them dying off.â
Again, I was at a loss. I liked Martha Dodson. She had seemed like a reasonable person, right up until sheâd started talking about kidnappings and Venezuela.
She scooted closer on the couch. âYou didnât see the rage, Miss McGill. I saw it. I saw him that day. He walked out of the garage with hand pruners, but he took one look at those begoniasâleaves browning at the edges, stems tangled like green wormsâand flipped out. He turned right around, put away the hand pruners and came back with clippers.â
She mimed viciously snapping a pair of clippers closed.
âRage is one thing,â I said. âKidnapping is another.â
âOf course,â Martha said. âThatâs why Iâd like to hire you: to figure out what he might be capable of.â
Her pupils seemed to pulse in place.
âI want to help you out, honestly.â I took her hand. âI do.â
âIs it money? IâI could pay you more. A little.â
Saying this, she seemed to linger on my jacket. Iâd recently swapped out my boiled wool standby for this slightly flashier one, red leather with zippers. I had no great ambitions about an image upgrade; itâd just felt like time for a change.
âThe fee we discussed will be sufficient,â I said. Martha had mentioned she was paying out of her own pocket, not from her and her husbandâs joint account. âMy concern is more about the substance of the case. It feels a bit outside my expertise.â
She clasped her hands at her waist. âIs it a question of danger? Do you not handle dangerous jobs?â
I balked. In fact, Iâd done extremely dangerous jobs before, but only as part of Third Chance Enterprises, the freelance small-force, private arms team led by Quaid Rafferty and Durwood Oak Jones. Weâd stopped an art heist in Italy. Weâd saved the world from anarchist-hackers. Sometimes I can hardly believe our missions happened. They feel like half dream, half blockbuster movies starring me. Every couple years, just about the time I start thinking they really might be dreams, Quaid shows up again on my front porch.
âI donât mind facing danger on a clientâs behalf,â I said. âBut McGill Investigators isnât meant to replace the proper authorities. If you believe Mr. Kirkland is involved in these disappearances, your first stop should be the police.â
âMm.â Marthaâs face wilted, reminding me of those unlucky begonias. âActually, it was.â
âYou spoke with the police?â
She nodded. âYes. Well, more of a front desk person. I told him exactly what Iâve been telling you today.â
âHow did he respond?â
There was a floor loom beside the couch. Martha threaded her fingers through its empty spindles, seeming to need its feel.
âHe said the department would âgive the tip its due attention.â Then on my way out, he asked if Iâd ever read anything by J.D. Robb.â
âThe mystery writer?â I asked.
âRight. He told me J.D. Robb was really Nora Roberts, the romance novelist. He said I should try them. He had a hunch Iâd like them.â
My teeth were grinding.
I said, âSome men are idiots.â
Marthaâs face eased gratefully. âOh, my husband thinks the same. Iâm a Yancy Park housewife with too much time on her hands. He says Kirklandâs just an odd duck. When I told him about the begonias, he got this confused expression and said, âWhatâs a perennial?ââ
I could relate. My first husband had once handed me baking soda when I asked for cornstarch to thicken up an Italian beef sauce. The dish came out tasting like soap. After I traced back the mistake, he grumbled, âAh, relax. Theyâre both white powders.â
As much as I probably should have, I couldnât refuse Martha. Not after this conversation.
âI suppose I can do some poking around,â I said. âSee if he, I donât know, buys suspicious items at the grocery store. Or puts something in his garbage that might have come from a child.â
Martha lurched forward and clutched my hands like Iâd just solved the case of Jack the Ripper.
âThat would be amazing!â she cried. âThank you so much! I know this seems far-fetched, but my instincts tell me somethingâs wrong at that house. If I didnât follow through, if it turned out I was right and those little boysâŚâ
She didnât finish. I was glad.
The state of New Jersey offers private investigator licenses, but Iâve never gotten one. It doesnât entitle you to much, and you have to put up two hundred and fifty dollars, plus a three-thousand-dollar âsurety bond.â Besides the money, youâre supposed to have served five years as an investigator or police officer. Which I havenât.
For all these reasons, my first stop after taking any case involving possible crimes is the local police station. Sometimes the police are impressed enough by what I tell them to assign their own personnel, usually some rookie detective or beat cop.
Other times, not.
âBegonias, huh?â said Detective Art Judd, lacing his fingers behind a head of bushy brown hair. âThe ones with the thick, fluffy flower heads?â
âYouâre thinking of chrysanthemums,â I said.
âNnnno, I feel like it was begonias.â
âNot begonias. Maybe peonies?â
âDonât think so,â he said. âIâm pretty sure the gal in the garden center said begonias.â
I was annoyedâone, at his stubborn ignorance of flowers, and two, that heâd segued so breezily off the subject of Kent Kirkland.
âThe only other possibility with a thick, fluffy flower-head would be roses,â I said. âBut if you donât know what a rose looks like, youâre in trouble.â
Art Juddâs lips curled up below a mustache. âYou could be right.â
I waited for him to return to Kirkland, to stand and pace about his sparsely decorated office, to offer some comment on the bizarre behavior Iâd been describing for the last twenty minutes.
But he just looked at me.
Oh, I didnât mind terribly being looked at. He was handsome enough in a best-bowler-on-his-Tuesday-night-league-team way. Broad sloping shoulders, large hand gestures that made the physical distance between our chairs feel shorter than it was.
Iâd come for Martha Dodson, though.
âLeaving aside what is or isnât a begonia,â I said, âhow would you feel about checking into Kent Kirkland? Maybe sending an officer over to his house.â
He finally gave up his stare, kicking back from his metal desk with a sigh. âThe department barely has enough black-and-whites to service the parking meters downtown.â
âIâm talking about missing boys. Not parking meters.â
âPoint taken,â he said. âWhy didnât Mrs. Dodson come herself with this information?â
âShe did. Your front desk person brushed her off.â
The detective looked past me into the precinct lobby. âThey see a lot of nut jobs. You canât go calling in the calvary every time someone comes in saying their neighbor hung the wrong curtains.â
âThey arenât curtains,â I said. âThe windows are papered-over. Completely opaque.â
He rubbed his jaw. I thought he might be struggling to keep a straight face.
I continued with conviction I wasnât sure I actually felt, âI saw it. It isnât normal how he obscures that window. Martha thinks itâs weird, and it is weird.â
âWeird,â he said flatly. âTwo votes for weird.â
âYou put those Neighborhood Watch signs up, right?â In response to his slouch, I stood. âYou encourage citizens to report anything out of the ordinary. When a citizen does so, the proper response would seem to be gratitudeâor, at the very least, respect.â
This, either the words or my standing up, finally pierced the detectiveâs blithe manner.
âOkay, I give. You win.â His barrel chest rose and fell in a concessionary breath. âItâs true, with police work you never know which detail matters until it matters. Please apologize to Mrs. Dodson on behalf of the department. And Iâll be sure to have a word with Jimmie.â
He gestured to the lobby. âKidâs been getting too big for his britches for a while now.â
I thanked him, and he ducked his head in return.
Then he said, âI suppose she thinks one of those boys being held is Calvin Witt.â
The boy whose parents had lost track of him.
âYes,â I said. âThe timing does fit.â
I considered mentioning the scooter, Calvinâs Christmas wish, but decided not to. We didnât need to go down the rabbit hole of box shapes and labeling, and whether grown men rode scooters.
Detective Judd looked ponderously at the ceiling. I didnât expect him to divulge information about a live case, but I thought if he knew something exculpatoryâthat Calvin Witt had been spotted in Florida, sayâhe might pass it along and save me some trouble.
âI hate to say this, but I honestly doubt young Calvin is among the living.â Art Judd smeared a hand through his mustache. âThe father gambled online. Mom wanted out of the marriage, bad. She told anybody in her old sorority whoâd pick up her call. Both of them methheads.â
âThatâs disheartening,â I said. âSo you think the parentsâŚâ
He nodded, reluctance heavy on his brow. âItâll be a park, under some tree. Downstream on the banks of the Millstone. Pray to God Iâm wrong.â
I matched his glum expression, both a genuine reaction and a professional tactic to encourage more disclosure. âDoes the department have staff psychologists, people who study these dysfunctional family dynamics? Whoâre qualified to unpack the facts?â
âEh.â Art Judd flung out his arm. âYou do this job long enough, you start recognizing patterns.â
This was a common reaction to the field of psychology: that it was just everyday observation masquerading as science, than anyone with a little horse sense could practice it.
I said, âAntipathy between spouses doesnât predict antipathy toward the offspring, generally.â
The detectiveâs face glazed over like Iâd just recited Einsteinâs Theory of Relativity.
âPerhaps I could conduct an interview,â I said. âAs a private citizen, just to hear more background on Calvin?â
He chuckled out of his stupor. âGood try. Youâre free to call as you like, but I donât think the Witts are real receptive to interview requests nowâwith the exception of the paying sort.â
I crossed my legs, causing my skirt to shift higher up my knee. âIs there any further background youâd be able to share? You personally?â
His gaze did tick down, and he seemed to lose his first word under his tongue.
âUrb, IâI guess itâs all more or less leaked in the press anyway,â he said, and proceeded to give me the storyâas the police understood itâof Calvin Witt.
Calvin had a lot to overcome. His parents, besides their drug and money problems, were morbidly obese, and had passed this along to Calvin. A social workerâs report found inadequate supplies of fresh fruit and lean proteins at the home. Theyâd basically raised him on McDonaldâs and ice cream sandwiches. Calvin had learning and attention disorders. He started fights in school. His parents couldnât account for huge swaths of his day, of his week even.
âThey let him run like the junkyard dog,â Detective Judd said. âAll we know about the night he disappeared, we got off the kidâs bus pass. Thankfully itâd been registered. We know he boarded a bus downtown, late.â
I opened my mouth to ask a follow-up.
âBefore you get ideas,â he said, âno, the route didnât pass anywhere near Martha Dodsonâs neighborhood. We always crosscheck Yancy Park in these cases. Thatâs where the Ferguson place is.â
âFerguson?â
âYeah. Big rickety house, half falling over? Looks like the city dump. You shoulda passed it on the way.â
I shook my head.
âWell,â he continued, âthatâs where the Fergusons live, crusty old married couple. Them and whatever riffraff needs a room. Plenty of crime there. Squalor. The neighbors keep trying to get it condemned.â
I definitely didnât remember driving past a place like that. âWere there any witnesses who saw Calvin on the bus? Saw who he was with?â
âNobody whoâd talk.â
âCamera footage?â
The detective palmed his meaty elbow. âHave you seen the cityâs transportation budget?â
I incorporated the new information, thinking about Kent Kirkland. He was single according to Martha. Mid-thirties. He worked from homeâsomething to do with programming or web design, she thought.
Did he have a car? Iâd noticed a two-car garage, but I hadnât seen inside.
Did he go out socially? To bars? Or trivia nights?
Could he have ridden the bus downtown?
âMartha mentioned another case,â I said. âLast summer, I think it was. Another boy in the same vicinity?â
At first, Detective Judd only squinted.
I prompted, âThere was some connection to Venezuela. The father was born there, maybe heââ
âRight, that Ramos kid!â Judd smacked his forehead. âHow could I forget? Talk about red tape, my gosh. So heâs boy number two, is that it?â
I couldnât very well answer âyesâ to a question posed like that.
I simply repeated, âMartha mentioned the case.â
âYep. That was a doozy.â As he remembered, he walked to a file cabinet and pulled open a drawer. âReal exercise in frustration.â
âThere was trouble with the Venezuelan government?â
âAnd how.â He swelled his eyes, thumbing through manila folders, finally lifting out an overstuffed one. âI mustâve filled out fifty forms myself, no joke.â
He tossed the file on his desk. Documents slumped from the folder out across his computer keyboard.
I asked, âYou never located the boy?â
âNot definitively. We had a witness put him with the paternal grandparents, the day before Dad put the whole crew on a plane.â
âDid you interview him?â
âWho?â
âThe father.â
Detective Judd burbled his lips. âNope. The Venezuelans stonewalled usânever could get him, not even on the horn. He told some website he had no clue where the kid was, but come on. They took him.â
Iâd been following along with his account, understanding the logic and sequenceâuntil this. I thought about Zach, my fourteen-year-old, and what lengths I wouldâve gone to if heâd disappeared with his father.
âSo youâŚstopped?â I said.
He stiffened. âWe hit a brick wall, like I said.â
âYes, but a boy had been taken from his mother. What did she say? Was she satisfied with the investigation?â
âNo.â Juddâs mouth tightened under his mustache. His tone turned challenging. âNobodyâs satisfied when they donât like the outcome.â
I tugged my skirt lower, covering my knee.
He continued, âI get fifty-some cases across my desk every week, Miss McGill. I donât have the luxury of devoting my whole day to chasing crackpot theories just because somebody looks angry snipping their flowers.â
âOf course,â I said. âWhich makes me the crackpot.â
He closed his eyes, as though summoning patience. âYou seem like a nice lady. And look, I admit Iâm a Neanderthal when it comes to mattersââ
ââNice ladyâ puts you dangerously close to pre-Neanderthal territory.â
He smiled. In the pause, two buttons began blinking on his phone.
âPleasant as itâs been getting acquainted with you,â he said, âI canât commit resources to this begonia guy. Just canât. If you can pursue it without stepping over any legal boundaries, more power to you.â
I felt heat rising up my neck. I gathered my purse.
âI will pursue it. Two little boysâ welfare is on the line. Somebody needs to.â
He spread his arms wide, good-naturedly, stretching the collar of his shirt. âHey, who better than you?â
The contents of the folder labeled Ramos were still strewn over his keyboard. âI donât suppose I could borrow this fileâŚâ
âOfficial police documents?â
âJust for twenty minutes. TenâI could flip through in the lobby, jot a few notes.â
Heâd walked around his desk to show me out, and now he stopped, hands on hips, peering down at the file. The top paper had letterhead from the Venezuelan consulate.
I stepped closer to look with him, shoulder-to-shoulder. Our shoes bumped.
âOr even just this letter,â I said. âSo I have the case number and contact information for the consulate. Surely thereâs no harm in that?â
Detective Judd didnât move his shoe. He smelled like bagels and coffee.
He placed his fingertip on the letter and pushed it my way.
âI can live with that.â
âThanks,â I said, grinning, snatching the paper before he could reconsider.
I drove home through Yancy Park, thinking to get a second look at Kent Kirklandâs property. As I pulled into the subdivision, I noticed a dilapidated house up the hill, off to the west. It rose three stories and had bare-wood sides. Ragged blankets flapped over its attic windows.
The Ferguson place.
Somehow Iâd missed it driving in from the other direction. Art Judd had been right: the place was an eyesore. Gutters dangled off the roof like spaghetti off a toddlerâs abandoned plate. A refrigerator and TV were strewn about the dirt yard, both spilling their electronic guts.
I made a mental note to ask Martha Dodson about the property. I found it curious she suspected Kirkland instead of whoever lived in this ratsâ den. Art Judd had mentioned crosschecking Yancy Park. Maybe the police had already been out and investigated to Marthaâs satisfaction.
I kept driving to Martha and Kent Kirklandâs street. I slowed at the latterâs yard, peering over a rectangular yew hedge to a house that was the polar opposite of the Ferguson place. The paint job was immaculate. Gutters were not only fully affixed, but contained not a single leaf or twig. Trash bins were pulled around the side into a nook, out of sight.
***
Excerpt from The Begonia Killer by Jeff Bond. Copyright 2021 by Jeff Bond. Reproduced with permission from Jeff Bond. All rights reserved.
Jeff Bond is an American author of popular fiction. A Kansas native and Yale graduate, he now lives in Michigan with his wife and two daughters. The Pinebox Vendetta received the gold medal in the 2020 Independent Publisher Book Awards, and the first two entries in the Third Chance Enterprises series â Anarchy of the Mice, Dear Durwood â were named to Kirkus Reviews’ Best 100 Indie Books of 2020.
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