Healing
July 3rd, 2021when 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 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 bagâŠâ
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 boysâŠâ
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 parentsâŠâ
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 youâŠstopped?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 fileâŠâ
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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My God will fulfill every need of yours according to the riches of His glory in Messiah Yeshua.
Philippians 4:19 TLV
Yeshua – Hebrew for Lord
Set in Charleston, SC, and the surrounding islands, police are called to investigate the poisoning of a much-loved 1000-year-old tree, only to find evidence of a more brutal crime. From there, the story explodes into a fast-paced, multi-character thriller unlike any you\’ve ever read. Not for the faint of heart…
âDead Tree Tales by Rush Leaming is about a lot more than a dead tree. Itâs a mystery. Itâs a crime story. Itâs a thriller. Itâs a powerful comment on todayâs society and politics⊠fast-paced, full of action and intrigue⊠Itâs a real page-turner and just a fantastic read.â â Lorraine Cobcroft, Readerâs Favorite
Book Details:
Genre: Crime Thriller
Published by: Bridgewood
Publication Date: June 8th 2021
Number of Pages: 488
ISBN: 0999745654 (ISBN13: 9780999745656)
Purchase Links: Amazon | Goodreads
CHAPTER ONE
It was known simply as The Tree; that is what the locals on Johns Island, South Carolina, called it. A Southern live oak born a thousand years ago (some even said fifteen hundred), its gargantuan limbs swirled and stretched as much as two hundred feet in all directions. The lower arms, heavy with age, sometimes sank into the earth only to reemerge. Other branches flailed recklessly in the sky, like some sort of once-screaming kraken turned to wood by an ancient curse.
Generation after generation had protected it. Rising from the center of a former indigo plantation, and now officially known as Addisonâs Oak, The Tree had long been a source of pride, even fear, in the surrounding community, as well as James Island, Wadmalaw Island, and the nearby city of Charleston.
But now, The Tree was dying. It was not from natural causes either, not from time, nor gravity, nor the weather.
Someone had killed it.
âIs that a thing?â Detective Charlie Harper asked as he turned his head to look at his partner, Detective Elena Vasquez.
âI think so.â Elena squinted her eyes toward the top of the canopy, the leafy summit shadowed and backlit by the noon sun.
âArborcide? That’s a thing?â Charlie asked again.
An Asian-American man in his mid-twenties wearing wraparound sunglasses stood next to the two detectives. âYep. You remember that incident a few years ago in Auburn? Toomer’s Corner. Crazy Alabama fan poisoned the tree there.â
âYeah,â Charlie said. âBut I mean legally. Is it legally a crime to do this?â
âCops were involved there,â the man said. âThe guy went to jail. Has to be something. Why donât you call them? See what they did.â He pulled a pack of spearmint gum from the front pocket of his jeans and stuffed five pieces in his mouth, noticing Charlie watching him. âQuitting smoking. Nicotine gum makes me dizzy.â
Charlie nodded. âBeen there.â Six feet tall, with a closely trimmed beard under bright-blue eyes, he walked around the perimeter of the field.
Salt air swirled around himâthey were only a couple of miles from the beachâand Charlie realized it was the first time he had been away from the city and out on the islands in months, maybe even over a year.
Elena Vasquez, an athletic five-ten with shoulder-length black hair bobby-pinned over her ears, stood in front of the young man and opened a new page in the Notes app on her iPhone. âSo, youâre the one who called about this?â
âYes. It took some digging to figure out who to contact. I didnât know there werenât any police stations out here.â
âThatâs correct.â She typed the date 5/19/2015 at the top of the page. âClosest station is the Island Sheriffâs Patrol on James Island, but they donât handle things like this. Thatâs why you got us from the city. And who are you again?â
âDaniel Lee.â
She looked up from her iPhone. âDaniel is a nice name. Itâs my sonâs name, though we call him Danny. Where are you from, Mr. Lee?â
âIâm originally from MarylandâChesapeake Bay areaâbut now I live in Charleston. West Ashley. Iâm a Ph.D. candidate at the college.â
âCollege of Charleston?â Elena asked and continued typing.
âYes. Environmental science. Teach a couple of undergrad classes as well. And Iâm president of the local Sierra Club chapter. Our service project for this year has been public park maintenance and cleanup. I came here a week ago and saw that broken limbââ
âThis one?â Charlie pointed at a fat twisted branch about the length of a Greyhound bus lying near the base of the tree.
âYes.â
âWell . . .â Charlie said. âHow do you know it wasnât lightning or something?â
Daniel went over to Charlie and squatted next to the fallen limb. âThere are no burn marks. Lightning would leave those.â
âMaybe itâs just old age. Isnât this thing like a thousand years old or something?â
âPossibly more. It is rotting,â Daniel said. âBut not from old age. See this discoloration? The rust-colored saturation of the stump where it broke?â
Charlie leaned in a little closer. âYes.â
âThatâs from poison, from a lot of poison. And you can see spots like this forming and spreading all around the trunk and on other branches.â
Elena stood beneath The Tree, placing her hand on a dark-orange splotch on the trunk. The gray bark surrounding the stain felt tough and firm, but inside the color spot, it was soft and crumbling. âI see it.â
âItâs like cancer,â Daniel said. âThe Tree is not dead yet, but it will be soon. I had the soil tested as well as samples from the broken limb. They came back positive for massive levels of DS190.â
âAnd that is?â Charlie said.
âA variant of tebuthiuron. A very powerful herbicide. Similar to what was used at Toomerâs Corner. Somebody has been injecting the tree as well as dumping it into the ground. Probably for a few months to reach these levels.â
âInjecting the tree?â Elena said.
Daniel pulled them over to the base of the trunk where a ring of jagged holes stretched just above the ground. âYes. See these gashes? Somebody has been boring into the trunk, then filling it with DS190.â
Charlie took out a pair of latex gloves and put them on before touching the holes in the trunk. âYouâre sure this is intentional?â
âHas to be. This stuff doesnât just appear on its own. Itâs man-made. Someone has been doing this.â
âBut why?â Charlie asked.
Daniel held out a hand, palm up. âThus, the reason the two of you are here.â
Charlie shook his head. âI donât know about this. We usually work homicide.â
Daniel gestured towards the gashes in the trunk. âYou have a murder victim. Or soon will. Right in front of you.â
âBut itâs a tree!â Charlie said.
Elena looked up from her phone. âOkay, Mr. Harper. Easy.â
Daniel motioned for them to follow as he walked to the backside of the trunk. âThereâs something else.â He came to a stop in a patch of grass ringed with dandelion sprouts and pointed to dark-red streaks spread across the blades. âThatâs blood, isnât it?â
Charlie bent down and touched his gloved hand to one of the blades. âMaybe.â He took out a plastic bag and a Leatherman multitool from his jacket. He pulled apart the hinged scissors, then clipped away about a dozen pieces of grass and dropped them into the bag.
âAnd another thing,â Daniel said and led Elena to a spot about ten feet away. He pointed to a white card lying in the grass. âI didnât touch any of this, by the way. I didnât want to disturb the crime scene . . . I watch a lot of cop shows. I know how that goes.â
âDoesn’t everyone.â Elena squatted down, taking a plastic bag from her jacket. She used tweezers to pick up the card, muddy and frayed at the edges and turned it over to reveal a yellow cat emoji, just the head, whiskers, and a faint smile, printed on the opposite side. There were no words, just the image.
A strong breeze moved through the leaves of the great tree, a sound like rain showers mixed with groaning as the heavy limbs bent in the wind.
Charlie Harper removed his glove and rubbed the edge of his dark-brown beard. Looking at the massive branches, which did seem like the arms of giants, he began to understand why The Tree was such a big deal. âHave to say, it is beautiful here. Can’t believe I’ve been in Charleston four years and never been here. I should bring Amy. She’d love it.â
Daniel looked at Elena for an explanation.
âHis daughter,â she said, then turned to Charlie. âYou should. My dad brought me here a few times when I was a kid.â
âWell, you better hurry,â Daniel said.
âThere’s nothing to stop it?â Elena asked.
âProbably not. I contacted a team of forestry researchers I know from Virginia Tech. They are going to send a team down to look at it, see if anything can be done. I sent a request to the Parks Department to pay for it. If they donât, Sierra Club will hold a fundraiser.â
Charlie sighed. âOkay. While we decide what to do about this, Iâll call and have some signs and barriers put up to keep the tourists away.â
Elena turned to Daniel. âThank you for meeting us here. Could you come to our station in the city today or tomorrow to give a formal statement?â
âSure.â
âBring copies of the lab work. We gonna find anything when we do a background check on you?â
Daniel shook his head. âNo. Just some parking tickets . . . a lot of tickets actually. Parking at the college is a bitch.â
âThat it is,â Elena said. âHere is my card if you think of anything else.â
âThanks,â Daniel said. He stopped a moment as if to say something, then continued toward a white Chevy Volt parked near the road.
Elena looked at Charlie and raised her eyebrows. âSo, Mr. Harper, what do you think?â
âEhh . . . I mean I understand itâs old and rare and special and all that, but itâs a fucking tree. I donât know anything about trees, do you?â
âNo, but . . .â
âBut what?â
âI don’t know,â Elena said and looked around the field. âMy Spidey-sense tells me thereâs more to it than just some weird vandalism.â She took a step forward and winced.
âBack acting up?â Charlie asked.
âA bit,â she said.
âLunchtime anyway. Letâs take a break. Iâm starving. June and I got into it again this morning. Skipped breakfast.â
âSorry to hear that.â Elena swept a strand of black hair behind her ear. She pointed with her chin down a two-lane road to a crooked sign with a faded image of a pagoda: The Formosa Grill. âChinese?â
âSure,â Charlie said.
The two of them began to walk toward their gray Ford Explorer when Charlie saw a flash of white out of the corner of his eye. He stopped and knelt in the grass. He used his Leatherman tool to again pry away several blades.
âWhat is it?â Elena asked.
Charlieâs head bolted upright, his blue eyes narrowing. âMr. Lee!â he shouted. He pulled another latex glove from his pocket.
In the parking lot, Daniel climbed out of his car and made his way back to the field. âYes?â
âMr. Lee, when was the last time you were here before meeting us today?â
âYesterday morning,â Daniel said.
Elena knelt next to Charlie, looked into the grass, and let a low whistle escape her lips. She used her phone to take a photo.
Charlie used tweezers to pick up a severed finger. Sliced just below the knuckle, the stump crusted in blood, the flesh covered with red ants, it ended with a sharp green fingernail. He looked at Daniel. âDid you happen to notice this?â
Daniel swallowed hard, turning his face to the side. âNo. I did not.â
Charlie put the finger in a plastic bag.
Elena looked at him, her wide brown eyes giving him a knowing shimmer. âYou interested in this case now, Mr. Harper?â
Charlie didnât flinch. He stared at The Tree.
***
Excerpt from Dead Tree Tales by Rush Leaming. Copyright 2021 by Rush Leaming. Reproduced with permission from Rush Leaming. All rights reserved.
RUSH LEAMING has done many things including spending 15+ years in film/video production working on such projects as The Lord of the Rings films. His first novel, Donât Go, Ramanya, a political thriller set in Thailand, was self-published in the fall of 2016 and reached number one on Amazon. His equally successful second novel, entitled The Whole of the Moon, a coming-of-age tale set in the Congo at the end of the Cold War, was published in 2018. His short stories have appeared in Notations, 67 Press, Lightwave, Green Apple, 5k Fiction, and The Electric Eclectic. He has lived in New York City, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Zaire, Thailand, Spain, Greece, England, and Kenya. He currently lives in South Carolina.
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Part 1 of an Interview with Jodie Niznik, Author of Crossroads Q: Your new Bible study, Crossroads, examines the lives of Esther and Jonah, which seems to be an unlikely pairing. What did these two have in common? Esther and Jonah were very different people with very different callings. Esther was called by God to save a people she loved, her people. And Jonah was called by God to save a group of people that he most likely loathed. To say the Ninevites were enemies is putting it kindly. While Esther and Jonah were very different, they also had much in common. They were both providentially placed in their time and space in history and given gifts and skills that made them the perfect peopleâreally the only peopleâthat could fulfill the task God was asking of them. They were invited by God to follow him on a journey of obedience. Neither knew what the outcome would be. I love studying Esther and Jonah together because they responded to God so differently. Esther walked forward in brave, bold obedience, while Jonah literally ran the other way. Itâs easy to applaud Esther and shake our heads at Jonah. But the truth is, we have a little Esther and Jonah in each of us. There are moments we feel brave and bold, and moments we turn away. Studying them together not only helps us see how to choose faithful obedience but also helps us to know God better and understand his lavish grace for usâeven when we run away. Q: What makes Esther different from any other book in the Bible? How does this âabsenceâ point to one of the main themes of the book? A quick read of the book of Esther reveals something very interesting: there is no mention of God in the entire text. In fact, Esther is the only book of Scripture that doesnât explicitly mention God. The absence is glaring. How can an entire book of Scripture not mention God? Where is he? As we discover in this study, he is actually everywhere. He is the unseen main character who orchestrates every moment, every twist, and every âcoincidence.â This truth points to another main theme of the book: the providential care of God. Providence simply means that God is working in our normal lives, providing care and provision even when we canât see him. He is in control; he always is. Many believe the purposeful lack of mentioning God is part of the genius behind the book of Esther, because even when he isnât named, he is still there. He is unseen but holding everything together. What I love about this seeming absence is how it mimics our lives. God is also the unseen main character in our story. He is providentially overseeing every aspect of our journeyâoffering care and provision for every moment. What a gift and what a relief. Q: In one lesson, you also compare Esther to Danielâboth were called before a king while in captivity, but they displayed their faith and background differently. How does that apply to us today and our own calling? Jews in both Estherâs and Danielâs time adhered to strict dietary laws. When Daniel was in captivity, he felt led to refuse the food that wasnât in compliance with Jewish dietary regulations. Esther, on the other hand, did eat the food that was offered to her and thereby broke the dietary laws. The Lord blessed both Esther and Daniel in these very different circumstances. I think this provides necessary instruction for us that there isnât always one right answerâand an answer provided for one person may be different than the answer for another. This emphasizes the importance of staying in an active and intimate relationship with God. We need to continually seek him and whatâs best in every situation we find ourselves in. God asked Daniel to refrain from eating the rich foods offered to him, and God asked Esther to blend in by eating the food offered to her. Both were following Godâs best in their specific situations. Q: What can we learn from Esther about how to approach our own âfor such a time as thisâ moments? How can we prepare for those crossroads moments? The most inspirational part of the book of Esther is when she stands at her crossroads and confesses that she knows what must be done and that perhaps she has come to her royal position âfor such a time as this.â She also knows it could cost her life but boldly declares, âIf I perish, I perishâ (Esther 4:16). And then, she actually followed through. She did exactly what she knew she needed to do. How did she remain brave and not talk herself out of this risky but necessary next step? There are a few things she did that helped her stay strong. First, she invited others to be on the journey with her by declaring her intentions to them. Second, she sought God through fasting and prayerâas did those around her. And then finally, she took the brave and scary step and went. As we prepare for our own crossroads moments, we should do just what Esther did. First, share the next step with trusted Jesus-loving people. Then start praying and ask them to do the same. Iâd also recommend that you try fastingâfrom food or something elseâto help you seek Jesus with more intention. Finally, when you sense it is time, go. Be brave and bold and walk into your âfor such a time as thisâ moment. Q: Patience and timing are a significant part of Estherâs story. What can we learn from Esther about Godâs plan for us? Esther, at great risk to herself, went before the king without being summoned. As we see in other places in the book, he was a man prone to making rash decisions and could have had her executed on the spot for coming to him without being called. Once she finally did go to him, he extended his scepter to her as a sign that she was welcomed. Then oddly, she decided not to tell him what she needed but invited him to a meal. At that meal, she still did not disclose what she intended and invited him to a second meal. For one reason or another she felt led to wait, and itâs a good thing she did because the king learned some very needed information from an unlikely source between these two meals. Waiting seems counterintuitive for us. We live in a hyper-fast and immediate world, yet Godâs timing, while often slower than we want, is always the perfect timing. Had Esther jumped ahead, the king wouldnât have had all the information. How did she know to wait? The text doesnât tell us, but I imagine that as she fasted and prayed, she was listening to God, and he was instructing her. This is just one more reason why itâs important to slow down and listen to the Lord. He will guide us, and when he does, the timing will be perfect. Q: Fasting is an activity you suggest more than once. What are some examples of fasting we can do today in order to hear Godâs calling for us? Fasting is simply a way to help us become more attuned to what God is doing. We donât fast to get anything from God but to become more attentive to him. There are many things we can fast from. The most obvious and common fast is from food. Fasting from food creates physical pangs and longings in our bodies that are hard to ignore. These physical cues help us remember to seek God with more intention in those moments. However, not everyone can or should fast entirely from food, and thatâs OK. We can still have an effective fast as long as we choose something that we do with regularity and, when we take this thing out of our lives, it would be noticed. So, for example, you could fast from a specific food or drink, social media, the news, or even listening to anything while driving in your car. The ideas are endless. If you are wanting to do a fast to help you seek the Lord and discern your next steps, take a few minutes to ask him in prayer what some good fasting ideas could be. Choose something, decide on a time frame, and then try it out. Every time you want to engage with or have the thing you are fasting from, turn to God in prayer instead. Q: What are the elements in each lesson of this Bible study? How is Crossroads designed to be used? Each lesson starts with a short practice section. Many people use the term spiritual disciplines to describe these activities. And while I do like that phrase, Iâve settled on practices because it feels more like an invitation to practice something in our relationship with the Lord, often something new. These practices donât take a lot of time, but they often require planningâwhich is why I start each lesson with them. My hope is that readers will find something that brings new life to their relationship with the Lord as they try these things out. Crossroads is broken into five daily sections for each lesson. Each day shouldnât take more than thirty minutes to do. The study can be used in a group or individually. |
To learn more about Jodie Niznik, visit www.jodieniznik.com. She can also be found on Facebook (@JodieGNiznik) and Instagram (@jodieniznik).
When attorney Samuel Wong goes missing. wildlife magazine reporter Kristy Farrell believes the disappearance is tied into her latest story concerning twenty acres of prime beachfront property that the Clam Shell Cove Aquarium hopes to purchase. Sam works for multi-millionaire land developer Lucien Moray who wants to buy the property for an upscale condominium. The waterfront community is divided on this issue like the Hatfields and McCoys with environmentalists siding with the aquarium and local business owners lining up behind Moray.
Meanwhile, a body is found in the bay. Kristy, aided by her veterinarian daughter, investigates and discovers deep secrets among the aquarium staff–secrets that point to one of them as a killer. Soon the aquarium is plagued with accidents, Kristy has a near death encounter with a nine foot bull shark, and a second murder occurs.
But ferreting out the murderer and discovering the story behind Sam’s disappearance aren’t Kristy’s only challenges. When her widowed septuagenarian mother announces her engagement, Kristy suspects her mom’s soon to be husband is not all he appears to be. As Kristy tries to find the truth before her mother ties the knot, she also races the clock to find the aquarium killer before this killer strikes again.
Book Details:
Genre: Cozy Mystery
Published by: Encircle Publications
Publication Date: July 15th 2019
Number of Pages: 244
ISBN: 1948338793 (ISBN13: 9781948338790)
Series: A Kristy Farrell Mystery #2 || Each is a Stand-Alone Novel
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Encircle Publications | Goodreads
ISLAND BREEZES
There’s more than one something fishy in Clam Shell Cove. And it’s not all at the aquarium.
Much to Detective Wolfe’s dismay, Kristy Farrell is in the midst of it all.
She and her daughter Abby have their hands full trying to figure out why friends keep dying. Also, they need to prove Kristy’s mother’s boyfriend is a scam artist before the two up and marry.
I was able to figure out who the murderer is, but went back and forth a bit before settling on my first choice. The why and even the how was hidden until nearly the end of the book.
Thank you, Ms Schmitt, for this cozy mystery. I’m looking forward to more Kristy Farrell books.
***Book provided without charge by PICT.***
âSomething bad happened to Sam. I know it.â
Katie Chandlerâs sea green eyes filled with tears. A sea lion trainer at the Clam Shell Cove Aquarium, Katie had been my daughterâs college roommate.
âMaybe Sam worked late and forgot to call,â I said.
Katie shook her head, her chestnut hair flying in the bay breeze. âNo. He hasnât answered my texts or phone calls. I stopped by his house twice too. No oneâs home.â
Silence. I tried thinking of something helpful, or at least hopeful, to say.
âI called the police, Mrs. Farrell. The officer said being stood up for a dinner date isnât enough for a missing persons caseâthat maybe it was Samâs way of breaking up.â
I shifted my gaze to the whitecaps on the bay while Katieâs statement sank into my brain. Perhaps the officer was right. I knew from my daughter Abby that the relationship between Katie Chandler and Samuel Wong had hit a rough patch.
The conflict: Katie, who served as executor of her late grandmotherâs charitable trust, was donating six million dollars of this money to the aquariumâs expansion project, which included the acquisition of twenty acres of adjacent land. Sam worked as executive assistant to multi-millionaire developer Lucien Moray who wanted to buy the bay front property for luxury condominiums. What started off as friendly bantering between Katie and Sam had escalated into explosive arguments that had become increasingly personal.
But Katie and Sam werenât the only ones embroiled in this controversy. The community at large had become like the Hatfields and McCoys. Environmentalists wanted the property to go to the aquarium where it would be used for breeding grounds for endangered species, an aquatic animal rehabilitation center, and a research camp for marine scientists. Local business owners sided with Moray, hoping high end condo owners would bolster the areaâs economy. I was writing an article on this for Animal Advocate Magazine. Thatâs why I was at the aquarium today.
Katie continued, âNo matter what happened between us, Sam would never stand me up. Heâs my fiancĂ© not someone I picked up a few hours ago at a bar. Besides, Sam came around to my point of view. He had it with Lucien Moray. He hadnât told anyone but me yet, but he was quitting his job at the end of the year.â
âIâve an interview later this morning with Moray,â I said. âIâll check around and see what I can find out. Someone in Morayâs office may know Samâs whereabouts.â
âWhat if no one does?â
âLetâs take it one step at a time.â I glanced at my watch, then pushed myself off the rock where Iâd been sitting, a task that would have been easier if I were ten years younger and twenty pounds lighter. âSpeaking of interviews, my appointment with your aquarium director is in five minutes, so I better head inside. Iâll call you tonight.â
Katie sighed. âThanks. I should get back to my sea lions too. Weâve a show at eleven.â She rose and stretched her small wiry body. âAfter the show, Iâll stop at Samâs house again.â
Katie, shoulders slumped, wandered off in the direction of the outdoor sea lion amphitheater. I stood for a moment, inhaling the salt air while watching a seagull dive into the bay and zoom back to the sky with a fish in its mouth. As the autumn wind sent a sudden chill down my spine, I wrapped my arms around my body, thinking back to when Katie and my Abby attended college. Abby often acted impulsively, out of emotion, but Katie had always been levelheaded, never someone to jump to conclusions. What if Sam is really in trouble? The thought nagged at me as I trekked up the sandy beach and stepped into the building that housed the indoor exhibits.
I made my way down a long corridor, surrounded by floor to ceiling glass tanks housing ocean life from around the world. I paused at the shark tank and marveled at the grace and beauty of these fearsome predators gliding silently through the water, causing hardly a ripple. I would be back here soon. In addition to my article on the land expansion, I was writing a story on ocean predators.
I veered down the administration wing. When I came to a door marked DIRECTOR, I glanced again at my watch. Ten-thirty. Right on time. I knocked.
âEnter,â a booming voice responded. I pulled open the door and stepped inside.
Standing in front of me was a man who appeared to be in his mid-fifties. Noting his polished wingtips, sharply creased trousers, navy blazer, crisp white shirt, and perfectly knotted tie, I wished Iâd dusted the sand off my shoes.
We stood face to face. Actually, it was more like face to chest. I was only five feet tall and this man towered over me by at least a foot and a half.
âCommander Conrad West,â he said, extending his arm. His handshake was firm and strong. âYou must be Kristy Farrell, the reporter from Animal Advocate Magazine.â
Conrad West stood ramrod straight, probably a throw-back from his military training. A former naval commanderâthe youngest African American to be appointed a commander in the navyâs historyâhe had started his career as a medical corpsman. He had been director of the Clam Shell Cove Aquarium since his retirement from the navy last year.
He walked behind his desk and positioned himself in a large swivel chair.
âYou may sit,â he said, pointing to a straight back chair facing him.
I slid into the chair, suppressing the urge to playfully salute.
He went straight to the point. âI understand youâre writing about the land acquisition. Have you seen our expansion plans?â
âYes, and they are impressive. But how will the aquarium come up with the money to buy this land?â I asked, fumbling through my bag for my pad and pen. âYouâre competing with the bottomless pockets of Lucien Moray.â
Commander West leaned forward, his hands clasped in front, as if praying that what he was about to say would come true. âThe current property owner, Stuart Holland, is a business man whoâs not about to forgo a profit. But heâs also an active conservationist and a lifelong resident of this area who would like to see the land used in an environmentally friendly manner. Heâs kept it vacant until recent financial loses forced him to put it up for sale.â
The Commander leaned back. âThereâll be no bidding war. He set a priceâten million dollars. The land is worth more, but Stuart wants it to go to us, so he set a price he feels we can reach. If we can raise the money by next summer, the land is ours.â
âTen million is a high goal.â
He nodded. âMore than half of the funding will come from a trust set up by Alicia Wilcox Chandler. We also have one million in reserve that we accumulated during the past few years. Of course, weâre still three million short, but our new development officer is planning an aggressive fundraising campaign withââ
A loud knock on the door interrupted the conversation.
Commander West scowled. âEnter.â
A plump woman with a bad case of acne barged into the room. She wore jeans and a light blue shirt with an aquarium patch on the upper left pocket identifying her as Madge.
âCommander,â she said, slightly out of breath. âWe have a problem. The sea lion show is in ten minutes, and Katie just ran out.â
âWhat do you mean she ran out?â
The woman shrugged. âShe took a call on her cell phone, then flew out of the amphitheater.
âDidnât she say anything?â The scowl hadnât left his face.
The woman paused, furrowing her eyebrows as if deep in thought. âOh, yeah. But I donât know if it had to do with why she left.â
âWhat did she say?â He appeared to be talking through gritted teeth.
âShe said two fishermen found a body floating in the inlet.â
***
Excerpt from Something Fishy by Lois Schmitt. Copyright 2021 by Lois Schmitt. Reproduced with permission from Lois Schmitt. All rights reserved.
A mystery fan since she read her first Nancy Drew, Lois Schmitt combined a love of mysteries with a love of animals in her series featuring wildlife reporter Kristy Farrell. She is a member of several wildlife and humane organizations as well as Mystery Writers of America. Lois worked for many years as a freelance writer and is the author of Smart Spending, a consumer education book for young people. She previously worked as media spokesperson for a local consumer affairs agency and currently teaches at Nassau Community College on Long Island. Lois lives in Massapequa with her family which includes a 120 pound Bernese Mountain Dog. This dog bears a striking resemblance to Archie, a dog of many breeds who looks like a small bear, featured in her Kristy Farrell Mystery Series. Lois was 2nd runner up for the Killer Nashville Claymore Award for Something Fishy.
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Let us examine and test our ways, and let us return to Adonai.
Lamentations 3:40 TLV
Adonai – Hebrew for Lord
Memorial Day is about the ones who didn’t come home to become veterans.
For God did not destine us for wrath but for obtaining salvation through our Lord Yeshua the Messiah.
He died for us so that, whether we may be awake or asleep, we may live together with Him.
Therefore encourage one another and build each other up
1 Thessalonians 5:9-11 TLV
Yeshua – Hebrew for Jesus