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The Mysterious Death of Mr. Darcy Blitz

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A Pride and Prejudice Vagary

Historical Mystery

Date Published: August 2020

 

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Fitzwilliam Darcy is devastated. The joy of his recent wedding has been cut
short by the news of the sudden death of his father’s beloved cousin,
Samuel Darcy. Elizabeth and Darcy travel to Dorset, a popular Regency resort
area, to pay their respects to the well-traveled and eccentric Samuel. But
this is no summer holiday. Danger bubbles beneath Dorset’s peaceful
surface as strange and foreboding events begin to occur. Several of
Samuel’s ancient treasures go missing, and then his body itself
disappears. As Darcy and Elizabeth investigate this mystery and unravel its
tangled ties to the haunting legends of Dark Dorset, the legendary
couple’s love is put to the test when sinister forces strike close to
home. Some secrets should remain secrets, but Darcy will do all he can to
find answers—even if it means meeting his own end in the damp depths
of a newly dug grave.

With malicious villains, dramatic revelations and heroic gestures, The
Mysterious Death of Mr. Darcy will keep Austen fans turning the pages right
up until its dramatic conclusion.

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Excerpt

 

She had left the pages resting on the small desk to stand and stare out the
window. Heavily, she leaned against the frame. Elizabeth’s cheek
rested against the cool pane. “Protect him, God,” she whispered
to the night sky. She said no more. God would know her sentiments regarding
the probability of Darcy’s demise.

There she had stood from three to five of the clock, staring out the
window, gazing at the road: She had kept an anxious vigil awaiting
Darcy’s return, but saw nothing. As dawn’s fingers broke through
the blackness, her anxiety increased.

“Where is he?” she whispered as she searched the outline of
trees and shrubbery on the horizon. Elizabeth reasoned, “If he were
injured, Mr. Holbrook would have brought word.” For a brief moment,
she felt the satisfaction of Darcy’s continued health, but the dread
Elizabeth had forcibly placed aside returned. “But if Fitzwilliam were
dead …” She stared intently at the narrow path leading to the main
road, the same road her husband would ride upon his return. Hot tears
pricked her eyes, and Elizabeth could not catch her breath. “Would
they not inform me?” she sobbed. “Would they not permit me to
comfort my husband in his last hours? His last minutes?”

A figure appeared at the far end of the path, and for the pause of three
heartbeats, hope swelled in Elizabeth’s chest. She clung to the sash
and watched as the figure moved closer. Her heart lurched. “Not
Darcy,” she whispered. The figure belonged to a woman. “Too spry
for Mrs. Jacobs,” she speculated.

Whoever it was, Woodvine was the woman’s destination. Elizabeth
turned from the window. She quickly gathered Samuel’s journals and
shoved them from view between the mattresses of her bed. She would hide them
more carefully upon her return. Elizabeth shed the satin robe she had worn
over a simple chocolate- brown day dress to ward off the night’s
chill. She had chosen the brown dress for its warmth when she had hoped to
accompany Darcy to the field. When her husband had refused, Elizabeth had
remained dressed for an impending emergency.

Now, she caught up a heavy wool shawl before rushing toward the
servants’ stairs. Elizabeth meant to meet their visitor and learn news
of her husband. Surely, a woman would not be on the road at this hour
without words of pressing importance.

She burst into the kitchen just as the door opened quietly upon the room.
Few servants were about at this hour, and, other than a scullery maid
filling a kettle with water at the well, no one stirred. The familiarity of
the visitor’s countenance subtracted from the surprise Elizabeth might
have felt otherwise.

“Mrs. Ridgeway?” Elizabeth hissed. “What has brought you
to Woodvine at this hour?”

The woman glanced to where the door to Mrs. Holbrook’s small room was
propped open with a broom. She stilled, her features, initially, proving
unreadable. However, with a grimace, the housekeeper caught
Elizabeth’s arm and tugged her in the direction of an alcove, which
served as a stillroom. “I came to fetch you, Mrs. Darcy,” she
whispered.

“Why all the secrecy?” Elizabeth asked.

“Mr. Stowbridge did not want the others to know what happened in Mr.
Rupp’s field.”

Elizabeth’s breath caught in her throat. She let out a long exhale.
It was her impatience showing, but Mrs. Ridgeway appeared to ignore
Elizabeth’s exigency. “You have word of my husband.” The
housekeeper nodded curtly. “Is Mr. Darcy in health?” Elizabeth
asked through trembling lips.

Mrs. Ridgeway tugged Elizabeth along a passage to a side entrance. “I
cannot say for certain,” she said seriously. “For I have not
seen Mr. Darcy personally. Mr. Stowbridge thinks such matters are not in the
realm of a lady’s disposition.”

Elizabeth could hear the strained words, a sound of contention between the
housekeeper and the woman’s new employer, but she had more pressing
concerns. “Speak to me of Mr. Darcy.” She rushed to keep pace
with the housekeeper. They had exited Woodvine and had set off across the
well-tended lawns.

Mrs. Ridgeway spoke over her shoulder at the trailing Elizabeth. “I
possess only the knowledge of a second tongue in what I overheard Mr.
Holbrook tell Mr. Stowbridge.”

Elizabeth caught the housekeeper’s arm and dragged the woman to a
halt. For a discomfiting moment, neither of them moved. “I
understand,” she said with more calm than she possessed, “that
Mr. Stowbridge did not confide in you. Yet, if you possess any knowledge of
Mr. Darcy, I demand you speak of it immediately.”

Mrs. Ridgeway’s eyes appeared distant, and Elizabeth could not read
the woman’s true intentions; yet, she would let nothing stand between
her and her husband. The lady paused for what seemed forever, but was likely
only a handful of seconds. Finally, Mrs. Ridgeway said, “If you will
accompany me, I shall explain what I have learned. I think it best if we
speak while we walk. It will save time, and, as I am certain you will wish
to reach Mr. Darcy’s side as quickly as possible, we should hurry our
steps.”

Elizabeth offered, “Should I have someone saddle horses or bring
around a gig?”

Mrs. Ridgeway tutted her disapproval. “In the time it would take to
rouse one of Captain Tregonwell’s men to assist us, and then have the
gentleman locate us appropriate transportation, you could be reunited with
your husband. That is assuming you do not mind a walk across a country
lane.”

Elizabeth despised the challenging tone in the woman’s voice, but she
hesitated only a moment to glance toward the house before making her
decision. “Lead on, Mrs. Ridgeway,” she said with
determination.

The housekeeper strode toward the line of trees, and Elizabeth quickened
her step to keep abreast of the woman. They entered the shadowy overhang
before the woman spoke again. “This is what I overheard when Mr.
Holbrook came to Stowe Hall in the early hours.” Their pace slowed
when they reached the rough terrain of the wooded area. “Mr.
Samuel’s groom called at the squire’s house at a little past
four of the clock. He told Mr. Stowbridge a most astounding
tale.”

They climbed a stile and descended the other side. Mrs. Ridgeway set a
diagonal path across the field. “Mr. Holbrook spoke of discovering a
coven celebrating Beltane under the stars where the old monoliths are found.
Do you know the area, Mrs. Darcy?”

Elizabeth wished the woman would speak of Darcy’s condition, but she
understood the housekeeper’s perverseness. Mrs. Ridgeway held all the
high cards, and Elizabeth was a mere player. She said encouragingly,
“I am familiar with Mr. Rupp’s land.”

The housekeeper continued her tale and the punishing exercise. When they
exited the field over a like stile, Elizabeth realized this was a part of
the Darcy estate with which she was unfamiliar, but she brushed the thought
aside as she hiked her skirt to maintain her gait. If Mrs. Ridgeway thought
her a pampered lady of the ton, the housekeeper was in for a surprise.
Elizabeth was not afraid of a long walk or a steady stride.

“Apparently, Mr. Barriton had taken Mrs. Jacobs prisoner and
threatened to kill the woman.”

Elizabeth heard the derision in Mrs. Ridgeway’s voice. She supposed
the housekeeper thought Mrs. Jacobs deserved part of her punishment.
Elizabeth said cautiously, “Mr. Darcy and Mr. McKye journeyed to Mr.
Rupp’s land to put a stop to Mr. Barriton’s plans.”

“Well, they certainly managed to accomplish their task,” the
housekeeper declared. “One of Mr. Tregonwell’s men shot Mr.
Barriton after the man shoved Mrs. Jacobs into the fire the coven had built
in Mr. Rupp’s field.”

Fear skated along Elizabeth’s spine. She offered up a silent prayer
that it had not been Darcy who had dispatched Mr. Barriton. She thought such
an act would lie heavily on her husband’s conscience. “Was Mrs.
Jacobs badly injured?”

The housekeeper led Elizabeth deeper into the woods. Elizabeth supposed
this was the shortcut to Stowe Hall, which Samuel Darcy had traversed the
night he died. The thought of how easily someone had overcome the trusting
archaeologist sent a shiver of dread down Elizabeth’s spine. She
glanced around to learn her bearings.

“According to Mr. Holbrook, he was to seek the services of the junior
surgeon Mr. Glover had once trained,” Mrs. Ridgeway shared.

“Mr. Newby.” Elizabeth provided the name.

Mrs. Ridgeway confided, “If Geoffrey Glover trained the man, Mr.
Newby will serve this community well. Mr. Glover was a man of
science.”

Elizabeth’s patience had worn thin. She had thought to permit Mrs.
Ridgeway her moment. In some ways, she supposed she owed the housekeeper
that much, for Mrs. Ridgeway’s forced exit from Woodvine had placed
the woman in an untenable position. In truth, Elizabeth harbored a bit of
guilt for having dismissed the woman, but she could no longer tolerate the
lack of news of her husband. “Please,” she said as she came to a
halt. “I beg of you; speak to me of Mr. Darcy. I cannot bear not
knowing.”

The housekeeper came to an abrupt standstill. She turned to Elizabeth, and
with a smile of what appeared to be satisfaction, she said, “Mr.
Holbrook was to fetch the surgeon to tend your husband. It appears Mr. Darcy
fought with the butler. Your husband was stabbed with some sort of
ceremonial knife. Mr. Holbrook says Mr. Darcy has lost a sizeable quantity
of blood.”

Elizabeth felt her legs buckle, and she could do little to prevent herself
from sinking to her knees. Darcy had been seriously injured. While she slept
at her small desk, her husband had lain in a field, possibly bleeding to
death. “Dear God,” her trembling lips offered in supplication.
“Do not take him from me.” She swayed in place as the darkness
rushed in.

“Mrs. Darcy,” the housekeeper said brusquely. “We have no
time for histrionics.”

Despite wishing to rock herself for comfort, Elizabeth gave herself a sound
mental shake. She bit her lip to prevent the cry of anguish on the tip of
her tongue. She looked up into the disapproving countenance of the
housekeeper. However, Elizabeth did not apologize; instead she managed to
stagger to her feet. “What else should I know?” Elizabeth asked
fearfully.

“Mr. Stowbridge sent word of his late return to Stowe Hall. In the
message, he indicated the surgeon had seen to your husband and had advised
Mr. Darcy to permit Mrs. Rupp to nurse him until a coach could be sent from
Woodvine. However, Mr. Darcy insisted on returning to your
side.”

Elizabeth thought how like Darcy it was to recognize her concern and,
therefore, place himself in danger in order to relieve Elizabeth’s
anxiety. “Where is my husband now? At Stowe Hall?”

“They found him on the road after he could not sit his horse. Mr.
Newby is treating Mr. Darcy in a small tenants’ cottage while Mr.
Holbrook escorts Mrs. Jacobs to Woodvine and returns with a wagon.
Tregonwell’s men assist Mr. Stowbridge with the investigation and the
prisoners.” The woman turned back to the path, and Elizabeth fell in
step beside her. “It was thought Mr. Darcy would prove a better
patient with you in attendance.”

Despite the seriousness of the situation, a smile shaped Elizabeth’s
lips. She could easily imagine an aristocratic Darcy barking orders to the
young surgeon. That is if he were able, Elizabeth cautioned the knot lodged
firmly in her chest. “Where is this cottage?” she asked in
concern.

“One more field to cross,” Mrs. Ridgeway said confidently.
“See.” The woman pointed to where a thatched roof could be seen
behind an overgrown hedgerow.

Elizabeth quickened her stride. “Why in the world would they have
taken shelter in such a deserted area?”

The housekeeper shrugged her shoulders. “It is the way of men to make
women’s lives complicated.”

Elizabeth rushed across the field, which now stood fallow. Her heart
pounded in her ears from the speed of their journey and from the
all-encompassing fear that surrounded her. Would she be in time? Mr.
Holbrook had said Mr. Darcy had lost a sizeable quantity of blood. Men did
not normally worry so unless danger existed. Was Mr. Newby skilled enough to
stop the bleeding? What of infection? She lifted her skirts higher and
quickened her pace. Soon she was running, needing to reach Darcy before it
was too late.

Gasping for air, Elizabeth burst into the small cottage, nothing more than
a one-room sanctuary from the cold, to discover a profound silence. Nothing
moved within. Her chest heaved from her run and from the heart-stopping
realization that Mrs. Ridgeway had erred somehow. She caught at the stitch
of pain in her side. “Where is he? Where is my husband?” she
croaked.

An arm caught her across the neck while another hand placed a large damp
handkerchief over her mouth and nose. From behind her, Mrs. Ridgeway’s
harsh words stung her ear. “Dead. Mr. Darcy is dead.”

About the Author

Regina Jeffers, an award-winning author of historical cozy mysteries,
Austenesque sequels and retellings, as well as Regency era romances, has
worn many hats over her lifetime: daughter, student, military brat, wife,
mother, grandmother, teacher, tax preparer, journalist, choreographer,
Broadway dancer, theatre director, history buff, grant writer, media
literacy consultant, and author. Living outside of Charlotte, NC, Jeffers
writes novels that take the ordinary and adds a bit of mayhem, while
mastering tension in her own life with a bit of gardening and the exuberance
of her “grand joys.”

 

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The Girl on the Roof Release Blitz

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Historical Mystery
Release Date: March 3, 2020
Publisher: Divinely Inspired Books

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As the people of Annecy in the French Alps meet the Gestapo’s brutality with surprising resistance, a teen-aged girl cannot rest until she solves the mystery of a death in her family. Aurelie watches as her father places a shrouded body on the North side of the roof of the family home. It’s winter, under a Nazi-declared state of siege, and they must wait until the spring thaw for the burial. But who died? And why is no one speaking to her anymore? Aurelie cannot rest until she discovers the truth and fights to prevent the same terrible fate from happening to her best friend.
Debra Moffitt’s rare psychic abilities open up a world of unexpected insight into the French Resistance, life beyond death, and reincarnation. She was working on another book in a French farmhouse, when the girl who became Aurelie showed up and opened a world that bridged time and dimensions.
Praise for The Girl on the Roof:
 
“A haunting, beautiful book.”” – Mary Alice Monroe, New York Times Bestselling Author
 
 
 
“A dreamlike tale unfolding amidst the nightmare of war, The Girl on the Roof will transport you into another world—and beyond. Debra Moffitt pierces the thin veil that separates life from the afterlife, the hunted from the haunted, the ghost story from the love story. Through her eyes, we are offered a glimpse of the eternal energetic bonds that connect us throughout time and space. An evocative, transcendent, and truly unforgettable book.” – Amy Weiss, Author of the Hay House Novel, Crescendo
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About the Author

Debra Moffitt is an author who leads workshops and retreats on writing, creativity, and spirituality, in the United States and Europe. Her popular French Alps retreats attract participants from around the world. She has taught at the Sophia Institute in Charleston, SC and the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California. Her writing appears regularly in Unity Magazine in the US with interviews of Lynne McTaggart and Dr. Joe Dispenza; in Swiss Entrepreneur Magazine, and in many luxury and consumer magazines world wide. Debra is also Editor in Chief for a Swiss luxury magazine. She is the author of the award-winning books, Awake in the World, Garden of Bliss, and Riviera Stories. Her blogs have appeared on Beliefnet.com and Intentblog.com. Debra worked in international business until she felt a deeper calling to write. She speaks and writes in French and Italian as well as English. Her writing is deeply influenced by her travels.
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The Other Side of Him – Blitz

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Historical
Fiction, Historical Mystery
Publisher: California Country Press
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A
smart, successful girl finds herself trapped in dangerous relationship with a
stalker.
It’s
the middle of the twentieth century, World War II is finally over, and Claire
Wagner is on the brink of an exciting new life. With a well-deserved
scholarship in hand, and much to her immigrant mother’s dismay, Claire flees
the Chicago tenements for a prestigious graduate school program in California.
At
first Claire keeps her nose tucked firmly into her books, but when her brother
asks for a favor, she reluctantly agrees to a blind date. Greg turns out to be
handsome, successful, and rich—and he’s definitely smitten with Claire. He
introduces her to a sophisticated world she thought only existed in the movies,
and before she knows it she’s trading her bobby socks and German home cooking
for black silk and caviar.
When
Greg starts to show signs that he’s not as perfect as he appeared, Claire’s
friends urge her to overlook his occasional short temper and controlling
behavior. But the warning signs pile up, building to a crisis that will test
even Claire’s power to persevere.
Inspired
by true events and steeped in the details of the 1950s, when vulnerable women
weren’t protected by the law or society, The Other Side of Him is a provocative
look at how darkness can lie under the most polished exteriors.
About
the Author

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Alice
Rene wrote her award-winning memoir, Becoming Alice, after a grandson
interviewed her about her early life when Hitler marched into Vienna,
foreshadowing in WWII. She followed this work with a historical fiction/ romantic a thriller inspired by true events, The Other Side of Him. The working title of
her next book at this time is The Lieutenant from Podolia.
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The Golden Hour – Blitz

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The Lady Evelyn Mystery Series, Book 4
Mystery, Historical Mystery
Date Published: March 26, 2019
Publisher: BookBaby
 
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Lady Evelyn Carlisle has barely arrived in London when familial duty calls her away again. Her cousin Gemma is desperate for help with her ailing mother before her imminent wedding, which Evelyn knew nothing about! Aunt Agnes in tow, she journeys to Scotland, expecting to find Malmo Manor in turmoil. To her surprise, her Scottish family has been keeping far more secrets than the troubled state of their matriarch. Adding to the tension in the house a neighbor has opened his home, Elderbrooke Park, as a retreat for artistic veterans of the Great War. This development does not sit well with everyone in the community. Is the suspicion towards the residents a catalyst for murder? A tragedy at Elderbrooke Park’s May Day celebration awakens Evelyn’s sleuthing instinct, which is strengthened when the story of another unsolved death emerges, connected to her own family. What she uncovers on her quest to expose the truth will change several lives forever, including her own.
With the shadow of history looming over her, Evelyn must trust in her instinct and ability to comb through the past to understand the present, before the murderer can stop her and tragedy strikes again.
Other Books in the The Lady Evelyn Mystery Series
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A Poisonous Journey
The Lady Evelyn Mystery Series, Book 1
Publisher: BookBaby
Published: August 2015
The year is 1925, a time that hovers between two catastrophic wars, a time of jazz and sparkle, and a time of peace and reflection. For Lady Evelyn, struggling to outrun the ghosts of her tragic past, it is a time of transformation.
Left orphaned after a fire when she was only four, Lady Evelyn Carlisle was raised in London by her stern aunt and uncle. Now, twenty years later she has grown restless and is keen to escape her chaperone’s grasp. A letter from her cousin, Briony, living with her husband on Crete, comes at just the right time. Packing what she can, Lady Evelyn makes off for foreign shores.
Welcoming her are not only Briony and her husband, Jeffrey, but also his handsome and mysterious friends, Caspar Ballantine and Daniel Harper. Though the latter carries with him tragic memories of the Great War, Evelyn is glad to be in their company. With the sun warming her back and the dazzling sea in her sights, this fresh start seems destined for happy days ahead. Little does she know . . .
What starts off as a sunny holiday quickly turns into a sinister nightmare, when Evelyn stumbles across the corpse of one of her cousin’s houseguests. Drawn into the mystery surrounding the murder, Evelyn embarks on a mission to discover the truth, forcing her to face her own past as well as a cold-hearted killer. With the help of her cousin, the handsome local police detective, and the mysterious Daniel Harper, will she uncover the truth, before another life is claimed?
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A Darker Shore
The Lady Evelyn Mystery Series, Book 2
Publisher: BookBaby
Published: December 2016
1926: A year has passed since the events of “A Poisonous Journey” and Lady Evelyn has made a home for herself in Greece, living with her cousin, Briony, her husband, Jeffrey and Daniel Harper. Disturbing this island idyll is a letter, which arrives from France with troubling information about the Daniel’s long-believed-dead brother, Henry. A new journey awaits! With the shadows of the Great War reaching out, Lady Evelyn and Daniel voyage to Amiens in Northern France with the aim of discovering the truth behind the ominous letter. Upon their arrival, they are met not with clarity but rather with crime. Murder, to be precise. Is it linked to their presence in France, or even worse, to Henry himself? Evelyn and Daniel must confront their history as they try to make sense of the present before the killer can strike again, and the secrets of the past are lost forever.
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The Study of Silence
The Lady Evelyn Mystery Series, Book 3
Publisher: BookBaby
Published: February 2018
Lady Evelyn Carlisle has returned home to England, where she is completing her degree at St. Hugh’s, a women’s college in Oxford. Her days are spent poring over ancient texts and rushing to tutorials. All is well until a fateful morning when her peaceful student life is turned on its head. Stumbling upon the gruesome killing of someone she thought she knew, Evelyn is plunged into a murder investigation once more, much to the chagrin of her friends and family, as well as the intriguing Detective Lucas Stanton. The dreaming spires of Oxford begin to appear decidedly less romantic as she gathers clues, and learns far more than she ever wished to know about the darkness lurking beyond the polished veneer. Can she solve the crime before the killer strikes once more, this time to Evelyn’s own detriment?
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 Excerpt
Prologue
 
 
 
“The water is wide, I can’t cross o’er.
 
And neither have I the wings to fly.
 
Build me a boat that can carry two,
 
And both shall row, my love and I.
 
 
 
There is a ship and she sails the seas.
 
She’s loaded deep, as deep can be;
 
But not as deep as the love I’m in
 
And I know not if I sink or swim.
 
 
 
I leaned my back up against a young oak
 
Thinking it were a trusty tree
 
But first it bent and then it broke
 
Thus did my love prove false to me.
 
 
 
O love is sweet and love is kind
 
The sweetest flow’r when first it’s new
 
But love grows old and waxes cold
 
And fades away like the morning dew.”
 
A song dances through the valley, bouncing from crag to crag, across the placid surface of the loch. Emerald hills caress the edge of the water as it laps gently against time-worn stones. The day is drawing to a close, the sky a hazy purple where it meets the peaks. The sun’s reflection, an orange orb dipping into a western descent sets the water aflame. A sudden burst of ripples, spreading a fire. The tell-tale plop of a sinking stone. A satisfied chuckle. The crunch of feet flattening the dewy grass.
         It is the way of the young to walk and laugh and stomp about, beauty taken for granted. But youth is not forever, and the performer of the lilting melody, the thrower of the stone, cheerily, blindly trampling across the green, is not immortal.
            A sudden change in the atmosphere, almost imperceptible, the mere beating of a butterfly’s wings.
            Four feet now move along the path; two leisurely and two slowly, furtively, unrhythmic in their gait, stalking, preying. The rustle of a bush to hide behind, the quick dart towards a tree might tell of this new arrival. However, those who are happy rarely fear. Those who are good, rarely anticipate the evil lurking within another.
            The sun touches the lowest peak, resting, it seems, upon that precarious perch.
            A sudden start.
            Silence.
            Two voices.
            A Scream.
            Only two feet leave the glen. Two feet and their owner with blood dripping from trembling hands.
Malia Zaidi
About the author:

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Malia Zaidi is the author of The Lady Evelyn Mysteries. She studied at the University of Pittsburgh and at the University of Oxford. Having grown up in Germany, she currently lives in Washington DC, though through her love of reading, she resides vicariously (if temporarily) in countries around the world.
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The Deadliest Fever – BLITZ

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A Miriam Bat Isaac Mystery in Ancient Alexandria
Historical Mystery
Date Published: April 2018
Publisher: Black Opal Books
 
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Miriam bat Isaac, a budding alchemist and amateur sleuth in first-century CE Alexandria, is concerned when she learns that the threads of gold in the Great Synagogue’s Torah mantle have been damaged. She takes the mantle to Judah, a renowned jeweler and the unrequited love of her life. He repairs the threads and assures her that the stones in the mantle are still genuine. Like Miriam, he is astonished that someone would damage the threads but leave the gems behind.
Shortly before, the Jewish community of Alexandria welcomed their visiting sage and his family, who had just arrived from Ephesus on the Thalia. Also on the ship were the perpetrators of an audacious jewelry heist. And shortly after, the captain of the Thalia is found dead in a sleazy waterfront inn.
Can Miriam discover the connections among the jewel heist, the death of the sea captain, and the desecration of the Torah mantle before the deadliest fever claims its victim? Not without help from the bite of a rabid bat.
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Other Books in the Miriam bat Isaac Mysteries in Ancient Alexandria Mystery Series:
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The Deadliest Lie
A Miriam bat Isaac Mysteries in Ancient Alexandria, Book One
Publisher: Bell Bridge Books
Published: October 2013
She’s a brilliant alchemist-with a talent for solving mysteries.
Miriam bat Isaac is a budding scholar in first-century CE Alexandria, though her dreams seem doomed. Who in her household or among her father’s Shabbat guests stole the scrolls containing the Alchemical League’s valuable formulas? Perhaps the thief was even her frantic father, on the cusp of financial ruin, eager for Miriam to end her dalliance with a handsome jeweler and marry into an honorable and wealthy family. Or her rebellious brother, intent on raising money to travel to Capua so he can enroll in the Roman Empire’s most renowned gladiator school. Or her faint-hearted fiancé, who begrudges her preoccupation with alchemy and yearns for their forthcoming marriage?
And how did the thief manage to steal them? Miriam is not only faced with a baffling puzzle, but, to recover the scrolls, she must stalk the culprit through the sinister alleys of Alexandria’s claustrophobic underbelly. The Romans who keep a harsh watch over her Jewish community are trouble enough.
Miriam is based on the true personage of Maria Hebrea, the legendary founder of Western alchemy, who developed the concepts and apparatus alchemists and chemists would use for 1500 years.
June Trop (Zuckerman) has had over forty years of experience as an award-winning teacher and educator. Now associate professor emerita at the State University of New York at New Paltz, she spends her time breathlessly following her intrepid protagonist, Miriam bat Isaac, who is back in the underbelly of Alexandria, once again searching for a murderer in The Deadliest Sport while worrying about her brother.
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The Deadliest Hate
A Miriam bat Isaac Mysteries in Ancient Alexandria, Book Two
Publisher: Bell Bridge Books
Published: October 2015
The Roman Empire may be the least of her enemies.
A secret alchemical recipe to transmute copper into gold surfaces in first-century CE Caesarea. As soon as Miriam sets out to trace the leak, Judean terrorists target her for assassination. Eluding the assassins while protecting a secret of her own, she discovers that she, herself, is responsible for the leak. Moreover she is powerless to stop its spread throughout the Empire and beyond.
But who is really trying to kill Miriam? Is it a case of mistaken identity, or is her late-fiancé’s ex-scribe, now an assistant to the Procurator of Judea, seeking to avenge an old grudge? Or is her heartthrob’s half-brother, a Judean patriot who inherited his mother’s mania, afraid Miriam knows too much?
And how did the recipe find its way from Alexandria to Caesarea anyway?
June Trop (Zuckerman) has had over forty years of experience as an award-winning teacher and educator. Now associate professor emerita at the State University of New York at New Paltz, she spends her time breathlessly following her intrepid protagonist, Miriam bat Isaac, who is back in the underbelly of Alexandria, once again searching for a murderer in The Deadliest Sport while worrying about her brother.
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The Deadliest Sport
A Miriam bat Isaac Mysteries in Ancient Alexandria, Book Three
Publisher: Black Opal Books
Published: October 2017
Miriam bat Isaac, a budding alchemist in first-century CE Alexandria, welcomes her twin brother Binyamin home to fight his last gladiatorial bout in Alexandria. But when he demands his share of the family money so he can build a school for gladiators in Alexandria, Miriam explains that he forsook his share when he took the gladiatorial oath. When she refuses to loan him the money for what she feels is a shady, and dangerous, enterprise, Binyamin becomes furious. Soon after, the will of Amram, Miriam’s elderly charge, turns up missing, Amram becomes seriously ill, and the clerk of the public records house is murdered. Could Binyamin really be behind this monstrous scheme? If not he, who could be responsible? And is Miriam slated to be the next victim?
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 Excerpt
May 1, Thursday, Almost Midnight:
He waited, listening to the darkness flow into the sanctuary. With the thick drapes blocking the flare of torches lining the Canopic Way, the only light scratching the air was the meager glow of the eternal flame, the ner tamid of Alexandria’s Great Synagogue.
The coolness of the night had already begun to assert itself. Just a little longer, he told himself as his fist closed around the open edges of his long black robe. A few minutes later, as his other hand pulled back the hood over his head, he emerged from his hiding place, his body taut, his legs tingling from having stood in place for so long.
Stretching his cramped muscles, he approached the front of the Torah Ark. His fingers trembled with excitement, his eyes shining with greed as he drew open the parokhet, the curtain that screened the Ark.
“Like a bride’s veil,” he said to himself, amused by the analogy.
With a self-congratulatory nod and a tight satisfied smile, he pulled open the ornate bronze doors and carried the Torah to the Reader’s Table. For a few moments, he gazed at the coveted prize adorning the Torah mantle, three peerless jewels, each set into the bowl of one of the three vessels embroidered in gold on the mantle.
He didn’t need much light. His eyes were already accustomed to the darkness, and his hands had performed this procedure many times before. Taking a few deep breaths to calm the twitch at the corner of his mouth, he removed a slim wooden box from the goatskin pouch attached to his belt, took out his tools, and lined them up on the table: his silver pick, plyers, tweezers, snips, and a double-handled vial of olive oil. Then he undressed the Torah and positioned the mantle so the jewels caught the narrow strip of light from the ner tamid.
Oh, Lord! Even in the thinnest light, they spew out their fire!
Half-frightened, worried that he’d uttered the words aloud, he released only a feather of breath.
But hearing no echo, his jaw softened.
He was safe.
Then, hunching over the table, balancing his forearms against the edge, he took hold of the pick and laid his hands on the mantle.
He tried to loosen the center stone, the emerald. The setting was tight. Very tight. He tried again, this time after placing a droplet of oil on each prong.
This is going to take a while.
He shifted his weight and continued.
The silence was absolute save for the occasional sputter of the ner tamid and the distant rumble of hooves on the Canopic Way’s granite pavement.
Until he heard loudening footfalls ringing out against the tessellated floor, waking the echoes in the corridor’s coffered ceiling.
A crease of light swept under the sanctuary’s ceiling-high, bejeweled double doors.
He froze and held his breath, as fear prickled down his spine, until the clicking heels receded into the silence. He blinked slowly and released an unbidden sigh. Just the watchman on his rounds. He won’t come in here. He locked the doors to the sanctuary and all the outside doors to the Synagogue hours ago and won’t open them again until dawn.
His fingers worked through the night. Despite the chill, rivulets of sweat trickled down his back and collected under his belt. He straightened up now and then, rolled his shoulders back, and cocked his head as he admired his work.
His mouth curved into a triumphant smile.
Beads of saliva clung to his lips.
By now a pearly grayness was seeping under the doors. He could see the darkness dissolving. Objects in the sanctuary were reclaiming their color and shape.
He mentally ticked off the remaining tasks: Dress the Torah. Put it back in the Ark. Tuck my prize and the tools into the box. Slide it back into my pouch. Slip out as soon as the watchman unlocks the doors but before what’s-his-name…Gershon, that’s it, Gershon ben Israel…comes in to check the sacred—
Oh, Lord, what on Earth is that squeaking sound? Surely not a bird.
A sharp-toothed, leathery-winged bat shot out of nowhere, swooped across the sanctuary, and, wheeling around the bemah, took a dive, and nipped the crown of the man’s head before disappearing with a shrill screech behind the Ark.
His thin howl—part gasp, scream, and strangled sob—tore through the sanctuary.
Then he heard a pair of boots smacking the tiles.
I gotta get out of here! Where’s the—
Dressing it quickly, he shoved the Torah into the Ark, throwing everything else into his pouch.
Except the vial.
The vial. Oops!
Oil everywhere.
Oh, Lord! Not now.
A hasty wipe with the sleeve of his robe.
The rising volume of hammering footsteps.
Now two sets—one close, the other farther away but catching up. Their volume swelled as they turned a corner.
Must be Gershon trailing the watchman.
The jangle of keys. The ping of the latch as the watchman unlocked the doors.
No place to hide. And, Lord, all this blood gushing from my head.
“No, Daniel, no!” Gershon shouted. “The other way. Hurry! The scream came from the library.”
About the Author

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June Trop and her twin sister Gail wrote their first story, “The Steam Shavel [sic],” when they were six years old growing up in rural New Jersey. They sold it to their brother Everett for two cents.
“I don’t remember how I spent my share,” June says. “You could buy a fistful of candy for a penny in those days, but ever since then, I wanted to be a writer.”
As an award-winning middle school science teacher, June used storytelling to capture her students’ imagination and interest in scientific concepts. Years later as a professor of teacher education, she focused her research on the practical knowledge teachers construct and communicate through storytelling. Her first book, From Lesson Plans to Power Struggles (Corwin Press, 2009), is based on the stories new teachers told about their first classroom experiences.
Now associate professor emerita at the State University of New York at New Paltz, she devotes her time to writing The Miriam bat Isaac Mystery Series. Her heroine is based on the personage of Maria Hebrea, the legendary founder of Western alchemy, who developed the concepts and apparatus alchemists and chemists would use for 1500 years.
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