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Get a Taste of Coffee with Forge

Since we’ve all been at home much more this past year, we decided to give you an insider scoop on the lives of our Forge authors through our Instagram story series, Coffee with Forge!

In case you didn’t get the chance to tune in, we’re recapping our favorite moments from each author’s take over!

Follow us on Instagram to see more Coffee with Forge next year, and click on the screenshots below to watch each author’s take over from this year.


Heather Webber made us cookies…

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…while Hank Phillipi Ryan showed off her Emmy’s and gave us the scoop on going undercover as an investigative reporter!

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We met Matt Goldman’s very helpful and cute assistants, Clara and Maisie…

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…and Rachel Howzell Hall showed us her step by step writing process!

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Nathan Makaryk brought along on his busy day, showed us his favorite snack (it’s whiskey), and showed us his beautiful rendition of the Lionhearts cover.

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Alex Gilly joined us from Australia, showed us his beautiful office space, and shared some helpful apps for writers!

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Rita Woods channeled all of us by pouring her morning bowl of coffee. We’ve all been there!

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We had a special visitor from Tor Books join us: Alaya Dawn Johnson, author of Trouble the Saints! She showed us her favorite morning cookie, and introduced us to her dog Kisaantom!

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Finally, Shelley Noble showed us her many desks, and showed us her color-coded storyboard!

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And that’s all, folks! To watch all the past Coffee with Forge takeovers, opens in a new windowhead to our Instagram profile (@ForgeReads)!

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Matt Goldman on the Differences Between Writing TV and Books

Did you know that in addition to writing his Nils Shapiro series, author Matt Goldman is also an Emmy Award-winning TV writer? He’s joined us on the blog today to talk about the differences between writing for TV and writing novels. Read his insight below, and pre-order a copy of his upcoming book opens in a new windowDead West, the next book in the Nils Shapiro series!


By Matt Goldman

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I’m often asked how I went from writing TV comedy to murder mysteries. Well, if you’re as introverted as I am and spend twenty-five years in rooms full writers pitching jokes at you all day, murder comes to mind. That is not a joke. But it’s not the whole story either. I love writing TV, and I love TV writers. I have spent tens of thousands of hours in rooms full of brilliant imaginations. They have taught me character, dialogue, story, arcing relationships, and series architecture. All those aspects of writing TV apply to writing novels. It’s a lot—let’s say seventy percent of the skills one needs to write a book. But the other thirty percent differentiates the two.

The biggest difference is working alone versus working in a group. How TV is written differs from show to show, but most shows rely on a room of writers. I experienced a room as small as four and as large as fourteen, but most were between eight and ten. As a group we would identify story ideas and choose the ones we thought would make good episodes, then one writer would leave the room to write a one-page description of the story. The room would go over that page and suggest changes, the process directed by the showrunner, also called the head writer who is often the creator of the show. It’s their vision and final say that directs the creative process.

When the showrunner approves the one-page, it goes to the studio and/or network executives for their approval. Some stories don’t survive this process. The ones that do go to the next step.

When the powers that be approve the one-page, the story goes back into the writers’ room. There, we break the story, which means work it out from beginning to end by conceiving the basics of each scene and writing it on a white board. That can take anywhere from a day to a week or more. When that’s done, usually the showrunner assigns the outline to a writer or team of writers, and they go off and write an outline. Then the process starts all over again. The outline goes to the writers’ room where it’s reworked, to the studio and/or network executives for approval, and after changes are suggested and made, the new version of the outline goes back to the writer(s) and they leave the room to write the script.

That can take anywhere from a weekend to a couple of weeks. (Larry David wrote my favorite Seinfeld episode “The Contest” over a weekend). When the writer(s) finish a first draft, it goes through the same process as the one-page and outline, but often two or three or more times.  When the writers, studio and/or network, and sometimes the stars and/or director, all sign off on the script, then it goes into production. There’s a whole other process of rewriting/rehearsing/rewriting that happens there, some for content, some for production logistics and costs, but I’ll skip that now. When the show is finally shot, it goes into editing. Editing is the same as writing, but working with shot footage instead of words.

Now for novel writing. A writer sits down and writes a book. The End.

That’s an oversimplification, but not by much. The vast majority of novelists I know, even in the plot-heavy genres of mysteries and thrillers, do not outline. That surprises most readers, but it’s true. What we do is get an idea (don’t ask from where—I don’t know), mull it around in our heads for a week or six months or ten years, then sit down and write. For me, no one sees the book or even part of it until I’m happy with it, which usually takes three or four drafts.

Then my wife reads it. She’s smart. She gives me her thoughts and I incorporate most of them. Then I send it to a few beta readers and my agent, all smart, too. I address most of their thoughts. Then it goes to my super smart editor, and her suggestions make the book better.

A huge difference between writing books and writing TV is the input I receive on a manuscript versus the input I receive on a teleplay. It’s for this reason: a script is a blueprint. It’s not a house. It’s a plan to build a house. The house you envision from the blueprint will differ from how someone else envisions the house from the same blueprint. Yes, there’s the kitchen with equal dimensions, but the cabinetry, countertops, appliances, flooring, and lighting vary greatly. When screenwriters write scripts, different people picture different things. The chasm is even greater with outlines. When executives read scripts, they often feel disappointed because they expected something different based on what they envisioned from the outline. The process is messy, and the showrunner often has to fight for their vision—also referred to as voice. Sometimes they compromise to make the conflict go away. When voice gets watered down, shows get bad. Real fast. That’s another blog post.

A book, however, is the house. The author shows the reader exactly what the kitchen looks like, if it’s important to the story. If it’s not, no one cares about the kitchen because the author communicates their voice unimpeded by external input. This can be good or bad, depending on the author. But when my agent reads my manuscript she can suggest improvements from within the voice. It’s already there. That’s why people who like a book are usually disappointed in the movie—the voice was compromised somewhere in the process.

There are other differences between writing TV and books. But the ability to communicate voice and vision through a manuscript versus a teleplay is the biggest. Oh, and no production assistants bring you snacks when you write books. Maybe book writing isn’t as great as I thought.

Pre-Order Your Copy:

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$2.99 eBook Sale: Broken Ice by Matt Goldman

The ebook edition of opens in a new windowBroken Ice by Matt Goldman is on sale now for only $2.99! Get your copy today before the release of the next book in the Nils Shapiro series, Dead West, coming August 4th, 2020!

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Nils Shapiro has been hired to find missing Linnea Engstrom, a teenager from the small northern hockey town of Warroad, MN. Most of Warroad is in Minneapolis for the state high school hockey tournament, and Linnea never returned from last night’s game. Linnea’s friend Haley Housch is also missing—and soon found dead.

Shot through the arm with an arrow at the Haley Housch crime scene, only the quick work of medical examiner Char Northagen saves Nil’s life.

Nils should be in the hospital recovering from his near fatal injury, but he knows that the clock is ticking. Linnea could be anywhere, and someone doesn’t want her found. Is Linnea a victim, or is she playing a dangerous game? As bodies start piling up, the clues lead Nils and Ellegaard north to Warroad, a small, quiet town with many secrets to hide.

Order Your Copy

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This sale ends 5/31/2020 at 11:59 pm.

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Excerpt: Dead West by Matt Goldman

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In the words of Lee Child on Gone to Dust, “I want more of Nils Shapiro.” New York Times-bestselling and Emmy Award-winning author Matt Goldman happily obliges by bringing the Minneapolis private detective back for another thrilling, standalone adventure in  opens in a new windowDead West.

Nils Shapiro accepts what appears to be an easy, lucrative job: find out if Beverly Mayer’s grandson is foolishly throwing away his trust fund in Hollywood, especially now, in the wake of his fiancée’s tragic death. However, that easy job becomes much more complicated once Nils arrives in Los Angeles, a disorienting place where the sunshine hides dark secrets.

Nils quickly suspects that Ebben Mayer’s fiancée was murdered, and that Ebben himself may have been the target. As Nils moves into Ebben’s inner circle, he discovers that everyone in Ebben’s professional life—his agent, manager, a screenwriter, a producer—seem to have dubious motives at best.

With Nil’s friend Jameson White, who has come to Los Angeles to deal with demons of his own, acting as Ebben’s bodyguard, Nils sets out to find a killer before it’s too late.

opens in a new windowDead West will be available on June 2, 2020. Please enjoy the following excerpt.


Chapter 1

Beverly Mayer sat tall, strong, and upright. Her blue eyes sparkled. A pair of reading glasses hung around her neck from a gold chain. Her gray hair appeared long but was twisted and folded on top of her head like a challah. She wore a soft pink suit of thick wool. It looked European and expensive. She sat next to her husband of sixty-seven years. I know because that’s how she introduced him. “This is Arthur, my husband of sixty-seven years.”

Arthur Mayer did not speak. He rode shotgun in a vehicle called marriage. He slumped shrunken in his suit made of brown herringbone tweed. His neck was too small for his white dress shirt—the shirt didn’t touch his neck the way Saturn’s rings don’t touch Saturn. His lower jaw jutted forward. Heavy black-framed spectacles crept down his nose. A fingerprint marred the left lens. Arthur Mayer’s eyes had shrunk, too, small and green like lima beans. A Band-Aid covered something on his forehead, as if his skin had worn thin in one spot and needed reinforcement. He clutched a black metal cane in his right hand and made no eye contact. But Arthur Mayer had great hair. Thick and silver and combed meticulously. It appeared he hadn’t lost a strand since the Great Depression. I couldn’t take my eyes off it.

“Are you listening to me, Mr. Shapiro?” said Beverly Mayer. She put a smile under her nose and said, “Mr. Shapiro?”

“Yes,” I said. “I’m listening. Go ahead.”

Beverly Mayer said, “Our grandson’s fiancée died last week. Heart failure, they say. Imagine that. A twenty-eight-year-old who hadn’t been sick a day in her life. Poor Ebben is devastated. We’re already concerned about what he’s doing with his trust fund out there in Hollywood. And now this girl, Juliana, goes and dies. It’s bound to lead to imprudent decision making. For heaven’s sake, the principal from which Ebben’s trust fund grew was earned over 150 years ago. We will not sit idly and watch him squander a fortune like his father did.”

“Any foul play suspected in his fiancée’s death?”

We sat in the Mayers’ cavernous living room on St. Paul’s Summit Avenue. The mansion was built by Frederick C. Fallhauser, lumber baron and grandfather of Beverly Mayer. It had 33,000 square feet of mahogany floors, oak-paneled walls, carved wooden ceiling beams, and leaded glass windows. It’s the kind of place that, after the Mayers die, will have a gift shop and velvet ropes steering people to a box office that sells tickets for tours.

Beverly said, “The police didn’t suspect foul play. Apparently, the girl had one of those eating disorders. I suppose they all do out there in Hollywood. Maybe she starved herself to death. But why she died is not really the point. The point is we’d like to know what business dealings Ebben has got himself into. He’s having an open house tonight to celebrate Juliana’s life. I asked if Ebben meant a funeral. He said no, a celebration. I don’t know what that is. Regardless, Arthur and I would like you to be there.”

“In Los Angeles? Tonight?”

“Yes. It’s only 7:00 A.M. there. You have plenty of time to make it.”

I looked at Arthur to see if he agreed but got nothing. He might have been sleeping with his eyes open. I said, “All right, well, I suppose I can get on a plane to Los Angeles and find out how Ebben is spending his money. But you do realize once he received the trust fund, it’s his. He can do whatever he wants with it. You have no recourse against your grandson.”

“We have no legal recourse,” said Beverly Mayer. “That I understand. But Arthur and I are still the heads of this family, and families are like small countries with their own rules and penalties when a member steps out of line. The good news for Ebben is he’s our only grandchild. That makes him a wealthy man. The bad news for Ebben is he’s our only grandchild. Our eyes are on him alone. Do you have children, Mr. Shapiro?”

The house smelled of wax and varnish. A radiator knocked and clanged. The old wooden floors creaked. I felt my early childhood in the air but had no idea why.

I said, “Yes. I have a daughter.”

“And how old is she?”

“She’s ten months old.”

“Oh my,” said Beverly Mayer. “You started late. Young wife?”

“No.” That was true on two counts: the baby’s mother was my age and she wasn’t my wife. To explain how Evelyn Stahl-Shapiro came into this world would take too many minutes and looks of disapproval from the woman who thought families are like nation-states.

“Well, good for you,” said Beverly Mayer. “You’re in for quite a ride.”

“I’m enjoying it already.”

“Now,” said Beverly Mayer, “what I’m about to tell you I’ve already told to Mr. Ellegaard, but since you’re the one going to Los Angeles, he advised I repeat it to you. He said you might pick up on something he missed.”

Ellegaard was my business partner at Stone Arch Investigations. My tall, stoic, morally upright Scandinavian—a mandatory fixture in any Minnesota enterprise.

“Ebben received $50 million on his thirtieth birthday. Before that he behaved quite respectably. Brown University then an MBA at Wharton. He worked two years as an investment banker for Piper in New York City then returned home to work in private equity. He did everything he could to educate himself about money. But six months before his thirtieth birthday, he quit his job, let his hair grow, and stopped wearing suits and ties. Somehow he met a girl named Juliana Marquez, fell in love, and got engaged. They flew all over the world, taking meetings in Los Angeles and New York and London and Beijing of all places. When I ask what he’s up to, he says some nonsense about exploring new opportunities.”

“You think he’s lying?”

“Only by omission,” said Beverly Mayer. She straightened her long spine. “What I fear Ebben’s not telling us is he’s getting involved in the motion picture business. And I happen to know something about that business and how they prey on good people with money. My older sister, Grace, may she rest in peace, was quite beautiful and married a powerful agent at the William Morris Agency in New York. It was his job to find funding for films, and I heard him boast several times, quite coarsely, about getting fools to open their wallets because they so badly wanted to participate in show business. He used to say, ‘The key is to get them spending. Invite them to parties with beautiful people. They’ll feel lucky to be there even though they paid every dime for that party.’ Then he would laugh and puff on his cigar. It’s that cigar smoke that killed my sister. Vulgar habit. Vulgar man.”

I looked to Arthur Mayer who had yet to make eye contact with me. He moved, so I knew he wasn’t stuffed. I said, “I can go to Los Angeles, Mrs. Mayer, but you might get better results hiring a private detective there.”

“No,” she said without hesitation. “I trust you. I trust Mr. Ellegaard. I’ve spoken to half a dozen people who sing your praises. People I’ve known for over half a century. People I trust. If you’re smart enough to solve the Duluth Murders, you’re smart enough to figure out Los Angeles. If you need help when you’re there, then hire away. We will spare no expense.”

“Just to make sure I understand: you will spare no expense to confirm your grandson, Ebben, is investing in show business? Because that’s easy to find out. You could probably pick up the phone and ask him. I bet he tells you the truth.”

“I have asked him, Mr. Shapiro. And he has denied it.”

“I thought you said he lied by omission.”

“Well, it’s not a direct denial. He just keeps saying something about new opportunities.”

“Maybe because it’s too hard to explain. Maybe he’s investing in virtual reality, augmented reality, or artificial intelligence.” Beverly Mayer responded with the same blank expression as her husband’s. I said, “Or maybe Ebben’s new opportunity isn’t about business. Maybe it’s about love.”

“Oh, dear,” said Beverly Mayer. “Young people no longer need love. The world today offers love’s advantages à la carte. No need to buy the whole shebang to get the few things you want.”

That got a response from Arthur Mayer. His eyes swung toward his wife then he exhaled what sounded close to, “Huh?”

Beverly Mayer ignored her husband of sixty-seven years. She reached to the side table, grabbed an envelope, and handed it to me. On it, she had typed MR. SHAPIRO with an actual typewriter. “Here is Ebben’s address in Los Angeles. He’s rented a house for the winter. We’ve also included a check for $25,000. That should cover your travel expenses and fee.”

“That’s quite generous. Thank you.”

“Arthur and I won’t live forever, and the money will eventually go to Ebben anyway. We are more than willing to leave him a little less to straighten out that boy.”

Arthur Mayer sighed, either to communicate he agreed or to remind me he was alive.

I stepped out of the Mayer mansion and into mid-January. A perfect winter day. Three degrees, no wind, and bright sunshine in a sky so blue it’d make the ocean green with envy. I put sunglasses on my face and walked down to Summit Avenue where I’d parked my hockey mom mobile. I had planned on replacing the Volvo station wagon with something less maternal, but since Evelyn was born, it had become too damn practical.

A large man sat in my passenger seat. He wore a 5-XL parka, fur-lined aviator hat, sunglasses, and scarf wrapped around his face. The rest of him was in there somewhere. I sat behind the wheel and said, “Why’d you turn off the car? Get a little heat in here and you wouldn’t have to wear everything you own from the big and tall man’s shop.”

“I like being bundled up,” said Jameson White, his voice muffled under his scarf. “Can’t do that when the heat’s on. Get too sweaty.”

“All right if I turn the heat on while we’re driving?”

The big man nodded. I started the car. He pulled the aviator hat from his head. His big Afro hit the car’s ceiling. Jameson White was six foot seven inches tall—his hair didn’t have much room. He unwrapped his scarf, revealing a beard he’d grown since leaving his job. A temporary leave, I hoped. I pulled onto Summit Avenue.

Jameson said, “What took you so long in there?” I handed Jameson the envelope from Beverly Mayer. He read, “Mr. Shapiro. We going to visit your dad?”

“No. We’re going to Los Angeles.”

 

Chapter 2

A couple years ago, I took a hunting arrow in the shoulder and would have bled out if a medical examiner hadn’t been on-site and had the good sense to cauterize my wound. Still, I needed surgery and a week in the hospital. But I was working the case of a missing seventeen-year-old girl and couldn’t take a week. So my ex-wife hired a private nurse to tend to me twenty-four seven to clean my wound, change my bandages, and make sure I didn’t miss a dose of antibiotics.

That nurse’s name was Jameson White. The best trauma nurse—correction: nurse practitioner—in Minnesota.

When I met Jameson, he had a booming laugh and all the charm and twinkle his six – foot – seven – inch frame could hold. He’s a great talker—I’m a decent listener. We became friends. He was fascinated by my work and offered to help if we needed him. Once in a while, we did. Private investigators sometimes hire distractors to divert the attention of their subjects. It’s usually a pretty man or woman, but in certain situations a six – foot – seven – inch – tall black man with a giant Afro worked beautifully. Especially a man full of charm, social grace, and intelligence. You couldn’t take your eyes off Jameson. His physical immensity drew you to him and his charisma kept you there.

I didn’t know anything about Jameson’s private life other than what he’d told me. He was single. He followed a woman to Minnesota. It didn’t work out but I never asked why.

Jameson played offensive line in the Canadian Football League for the Montreal Alouettes. Played his college ball at UCLA and knew Los Angeles. Knew it well because he spent his summers driving a cab after football practice. I’d never been to that town and needed local expertise I could trust. That was one reason I invited Jameson White to join me in Los Angeles.

The second reason—the big reason—was because a year earlier, a gunman entered a middle school, killed fourteen students, three teachers, and wounded ten others. All because one of the teachers refused him a second Tinder date. The first victims were rushed to Jameson White’s ER. He worked until every child and teacher who could be saved had been saved. He saw too many of them die. Thirty-some hours of saving and losing people, mostly children. Then he went home. Next day he returned to work and did so the day after that. For five months Jameson White worked his shifts without complaint. Then he fell apart.

Now, he sat in my passenger seat as I drove away from the Mayer mansion and headed west on Summit Avenue. Car exhaust condensed out of tailpipes like clouds, swirled in the automobiles’ wakes then vanished. The January sun bounced off yesterday’s three fresh inches of snow. The town lay frozen white and clean.

Jameson said, “Los Angeles? Why would we go to Los Angeles?”

I told Jameson about Beverly Mayer and her grandson, Ebben, and Ebben’s dead fiancée, Juliana, and said, “You want to go see Ellegaard with me or should I drop you off so you can pack?”

“I don’t know. I haven’t decided if I’m going.” Jameson folded his arms and looked out the passenger window.

Leaving Jameson behind wasn’t an option. Not since his breakdown. An old teammate of his was an assistant coach at UCLA. The two of them had remained close friends. I called the guy last night and told him I might be coming out for a job. If I brought Jameson, would he be able to spend some time with the former giant of joviality? He said he’d take Jameson the whole visit. He’d bring him to work. Have Jameson teach those kids how to use their hands and feet. I thought that might do Jameson some good, although I wasn’t ready to part with him the whole visit.

I also wanted to get Jameson out of town on the anniversary of the school shooting. He didn’t need to relive that. It’s bad enough every subsequent mass shooting in the country dragged him back down. That’s something he’d have to manage for the rest of his life.

We stopped at the Mississippi River. Evaporate froze above the open water—it looked like steam. I turned right then jogged northeast, on and off East River Parkway. The big man still stared out his window, arms folded.

I said, “I called your buddy August last night. Told him we might be coming out to L.A. He sounded pretty excited.”

Jameson said, “You told August I might be coming out?”

“He wants to take you to practice to learn the young’un linemen a thing or two.”

“I get it. You want to hand me off so you don’t have to babysit me anymore.”

Seven months ago, I got a call from a doctor in Jameson’s ER. The doctor said Jameson hadn’t showed up to work in two days, and the ER staff had discovered Seconal missing from the lock-up. I drove straight to Jameson’s place and knocked on the front door. No answer. I picked the lock and found him wearing his usual gray sweatpants and sweatshirt, drinking Redbreast, eating Pop-Tarts, and watching The Price Is Right. The bottle of Seconal was on the coffee table.

“I see my Irish whiskey habit has rubbed off on you.” He turned his head and showed me his glassy eyes. “How many of those did you take?”

Jameson White said, “Not enough.”

I have kept him close ever since.

I pulled into the parking structure at Riverplace and said, “Guess you’re coming with me to see Ellegaard.”

“I like Ellegaard,” said Jameson. “More than you.”

“You know that’s not true. You like us the same.”

Jameson sighed. “Yeah, I do.”

I drove down a level toward my parking spot, though I hardly needed a reserved space. The Saint Anthony Main area boomed in the eighties and nineties, but now it had more vacancies than tenants. I said, “I’m not babysitting you, Jameson. If you want to kill yourself, I sure as hell can’t stop you. But sometimes a guy needs a friend. I’m honored to be that friend. And I thought you could use some warm weather and a walk on the beach and to visit your old campus and football buddy. That wouldn’t be so painful, would it?”

Jameson shook his head.

“Plus, I don’t know that town. Traffic’s supposed to be a nightmare. Thought maybe you could help me find my way around town.”

Jameson White turned his big face toward me. “I got to fly first class. I don’t fit in coach.”

“I’ll ride up there with you. I heard you can eat all the peanuts you want. Come on. Let’s go see Ellegaard. After that, I’ll drop you at home to pack and we’ll head to the airport.”

“Heh,” said Jameson, a hint of a smile in his voice, “pack. You don’t got to pack for L.A. All you need is a T-shirt, pair of shorts, and flip-flops. Pack. Such a Minnesota boy.”

“No shit. That’s why I need you.”

 

Chapter 3

Kenji Thao greeted us at the reception desk. He first came to Stone Arch Investigations as an intern from Harding High School. A handsome kid with kind eyes, broad nose, and big smile. He combed his thick black hair like young Elvis Presley and wore a wisp of unripe facial hair. He’d carved out a personal style of white shirts under suit vests. A pocket watch rested in one of the vest’s pockets fastened to a chain that ran across to the other pocket. I’d seen the actual watch once. Kenji’s only defect was he stood five feet ten inches tall, defying the Hmong stereotype of being short. I don’t care for it when people who are supposed to be short are taller than me. I blame hormone-infused milk of which I drank none because I’m lactose-intolerant.

“Hey boss,” said Kenji. “You going to California?”

“We are.” I handed him the envelope minus the check.

“What up, Jameson?”

Jameson nodded. “Kenji.”

“Please book us a flight leaving this afternoon, a nice rental car but not a convertible because I have delicate skin, and a good hotel near the address in here.”

Jameson said, “And I got to fly first class. I don’t fit in coach.”

Kenji looked at me for approval. I gave it.

We walked toward Ellegaard’s office. Kenji said, “You want a seat in first class, Nils, or are you small enough to ride on Jameson’s lap?”

Anders Ellegaard sat at his desk reviewing a document, a highlighter in hand. Sunlight poured in through the window in the stone wall. Ellegaard squinted in the bright light. He kept his eyes on his work and said, “How did Beverly Mayer behave?”

“Her face smiled but the rest of her didn’t. You should come to Los Angeles with us.”

“Wish I could. Maisy and Olivia both have hockey tournaments this weekend. Molly and I have to divide and conquer. I’d send Annika with you if she wasn’t on vacation.” Annika Brydolf was our junior investigator. She’d taken her two kids to Florida—her first vacation in over ten years. Ellegaard looked up. He and Jameson exchanged nods. Ellegaard had approved paying Jameson’s way in return for him playing tour guide. Truth is, Ellegaard would have approved it even if Jameson had never been to Los Angeles. He loved the big guy just as much as I did.

Ellegaard smiled an easy smile. He had crow’s-feet around his eyes. I met him when we were both cadets at the Minneapolis Police Academy. Nineteen years later, he looked the same other than those crow’s-feet. And lines in his forehead. He looked like a boy with a man’s markings. I wondered if I’d always see him like that—if I were incapable of seeing him as a forty-one-year-old.

I placed the check on his desk. “Seems like a lot of money for almost no work. How well do you know Beverly Mayer?”

Ellegaard looked up and said, “Not well. But my parents know Beverly and Arthur’s son and his wife. Not that they run in the same social circle. My mother decorated their lake home, and they became friends. My parents spend weekends up in Brainerd with them.”

“Beverly said something about Ebben’s father squandering his trust fund.”

“He didn’t squander it. He started a foundation to narrow the achievement gap in Minnesota schools.”

“Wow. Beverly Mayer is a piece of work.”

“Not a nice woman by all accounts. Her son doesn’t talk to her.”

“What’s her grandson, Ebben, like?”

“I asked around before I sent you to the Mayers. I haven’t heard a bad thing about Ebben. Not from business associates. Not from family. Not from ex-girlfriends. He’s respected and well-liked. And if he’s investing in entertainment projects, no one cares other than Beverly Mayer. This job should be a paid vacation. Might as well enjoy it.”

Paid vacations, like free lunches, exist in the land of unicorns and once-in-a-lifetime investment opportunities. I said, “Did you hear Ebben’s fiancée died last week?”

“Yeah,” said Ellegaard. “His parents are concerned about him. I think Beverly’s just concerned about the money.”

Kenji Thao stuck his head into Ellegaard’s office. “Do you want to fly at 1:21 or 3:10?”

I turned to Jameson, “What do you think, boss?”

Jameson said, “1:21. The 3:10 would put us on the ground around 5:00 Pacific time. Los Angeles is a parking lot at 5:00.”

“Local knowledge. Can’t beat it.”

“Kind of just common sense, but whatever.”

I dropped Jameson at home to pack his T-shirts, shorts, and flip-flops and went home to do the same.

 

She had put the DO NOT DISTURB sign on the condo door to let me know the baby was napping. We had stolen the DO NOT DISTURB sign from the Fairmont Hotel in the Canadian Rockies. I asked her to marry me during that trip while hiking a trail high above the emerald-colored Lake Louise. It was mid-July, sunny, and warm. We trekked over what remained of an avalanche flow, which, the previous winter, had taken out thousands of pine trees. The avalanche had ripped the trees out by their roots and snapped them into bits. But the ice and snow captured and preserved the trees, keeping them fresh and green and fragrant like Christmas, even months after they’d been torn from the soil. I had planned on proposing at dinner, but the avalanche flow proved too picturesque and smelled like what I’d want heaven to smell like. So much beauty in the aftermath of destruction. It was just too damn symbolic of our romance. I had the ring with me because I didn’t feel safe leaving it in the hotel room. She said yes, and we continued up the trail, me with one wet knee.

I removed my shoes in the hall, turned the door handle like a safecracker, then tiptoed into the foyer. My fiancée sat on the couch, half under a wool throw, typing away on her laptop. She’d left work early to spend the afternoon with Evelyn Stahl-Shapiro. She had never wanted a baby, but in March we’d marry and that would officially make Gabriella Nuñez Evelyn’s stepmother. That thrilled Gabriella.

I looked at the baby monitor on the end table. Evelyn slept under her quilt. I wanted to go get her, but Gabriella thought we should let her sleep because Evelyn had a cold and needed the rest. She sucked a pacifier in her mouth and held one in each hand. I didn’t think it was a big deal that Evelyn still used a pacifier at ten months old, but Micaela and Gabriella wanted it gone. That was another beautiful gem in the aftermath of destruction. Micaela Stahl, my ex-wife, Evelyn’s mother, had embraced Gabriella Nuñez, not only as my fiancée, but as Evelyn’s soon-to-be stepmother.

The aftermath of my failed marriage had spent its energy like a tsunami after an earthquake. It destroyed everything in its path. But it was over, and the seas had grown calm. Gabriella had to fight through insecurity and convention to trust that I had let go of Micaela. She’d succeeded. It’s what happens when you fall in love with a skilled cop—she knows when you’re lying and she knows when you’re telling the truth. Gabriella, even though she sometimes doubted it, understood I was emotionally free and clear to love her. And with each passing month, Gabriella’s trust grew to match what she knew. I loved her. Only her.

We all lug around baggage. Mine was I had been married to Micaela. Years after our divorce, we’d fall in and out of bed together. The physical part of our relationship lived while the emotional part died. We held onto it like Evelyn held onto her pacifiers. We didn’t think Micaela could get pregnant so we did nothing to prevent the possibility. Then without telling me, Micaela took clomiphene and got pregnant at forty years old. The baby certified the death of our romantic relationship. It was as if Micaela and I were meant to have a baby together. Nothing more.

I’d met Gabriella when we were in our early twenties, both cadets at the Minneapolis Police Academy with Ellegaard. Micaela had known her for years—the two had always liked each other. That made for an unconventional but functional family. Micaela and Gabriella read the same parenting books and bored me with the same conversations about sleep training and diet and waiting lists for preschools.

I sat on the couch next to Gabriella, wriggled my way under the blanket, and kissed her.

Her dark eyes shined. Her black hair fell straight to the middle of her back. She said, “Thank you.”

“Come to Los Angeles with us.”

“The job is on?”

I nodded. “You can drive down to San Diego to see your family. Or maybe they’ll come up for a few days.”

Gabriella said, “Wish I could. But you’ll be back soon.”

“Yes, I will. With a perfect farmer’s tan.”

“Ooh. I can’t wait.”

We stared at the baby monitor and watched Evelyn sleep. It was weekday winter quiet. Windows shut and we were probably the only souls in the building. We just sat there staring at and listening to Evelyn breathe. Little moments. Take ’em when they come.

 

Copyright © Matt Goldman

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$2.99 eBook Sale: Gone to Dust by Matt Goldman

The ebook edition of opens in a new windowGone to Dust by Matt Goldman is on sale now for only $2.99! Get your copy today!

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 42About opens in a new windowGone to Dust:

A brutal crime. The ultimate cover-up. How do you solve a murder with no useable evidence?

Private detective Nils Shapiro is focused on forgetting his ex-wife and keeping warm during another Minneapolis winter when a former colleague, neighboring Edina Police Detective Anders Ellegaard, calls with the impossible.

Suburban divorcee Maggie Somerville was found murdered in her bedroom, her body covered with the dust from hundreds of emptied vacuum cleaner bags, all potential DNA evidence obscured by the calculating killer.

Digging into Maggie’s cell phone records, Nils finds that the most frequently called number belongs to a mysterious young woman whose true identity could shatter the Somerville family–but could she be guilty of murder?

After the FBI demands that Nils drop the case, Nils and Ellegaard are forced to take their investigation underground, where the case grows as murky as the contents of the vacuum cleaner bags. Is this a strange case of domestic violence or something with far reaching, sinister implications?

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This sale ends 1/31/2020.

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Eight Mysteries We Can’t Wait to Solve This Year

Eight Mysteries We Can’t Wait to Solve This Year

By Alison Bunis

The new year is finally here. Take a deep breath and savor the clean slate. But what’s that scent drifting in? Is that…new book smell?? Of course it is! Forge has a whole new lineup of fantastic mysteries for 2020, and they’ll be bringing you all the new book smell, mysterious thrills, and page-turning plot twists your heart could ever desire. To get you excited, here are just a few of the books you can look forward to this year from Forge. On your marks…get set…read!

 

opens in a new windowBlame the Dead by Ed Ruggero (3/3/20)

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 71The nurses of the US Army’s Field Hospitals contend with heat, dirt, German counterattacks,  and a flood of horribly wounded GIs. At the 11th Field Hospital near Palermo, Sicily, in the summer of 1943, they also live with the constant threat of violent assault by one of their own—until someone shoots Dr. Myers Stephenson in the head. Former Philadelphia beat cop turned Military Police lieutenant Eddie Harkins is assigned the case, and he has no idea how to investigate a murder. But Eddie is determined to get to the truth. As his investigation gets more complicated and more dangerous, it becomes clear that this hospital unit is rotten to its core, that the nurses are not safe, and that the patients who have survived Nazi bullets are still at risk in this place that is supposed to save them.

opens in a new windowGone By Midnight by Candice Fox (3/10/20)

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 41It’s every parent’s nightmare. Four young boys are left alone in a hotel room while their parents dine downstairs. When Sara Farrow checks on the children at midnight, her son has disappeared. Distrustful of the police, Sara turns to Crimson Lake’s unlikeliest private investigators: disgraced cop Ted Conkaffey and convicted killer Amanda Pharrell. For Ted, the case couldn’t have come at a worse time. Two years ago a false accusation robbed him of his career, his reputation, and most importantly, his family. But now Lillian, the daughter he barely knows, is coming to stay in his ramshackle cottage by the lake. With Lillian at his side, Ted must dredge up the area’s worst characters to find the missing boy. The clock is ticking, and the danger he uncovers could put his own child in deadly peril.

opens in a new windowDo No Harm by Max Allan Collins (3/10/20)

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 19The latest book in the Nathan Heller series picks up in 1954, with Heller taking on the Sam Sheppard case: a young doctor is startled from sleep and discovers his wife brutally murdered. He claims that a mysterious intruder killed his wife. But all the evidence points to a disturbed husband who has grown tired of married life and yearned to be free at all costs. Sheppard is swiftly convicted and sent to rot in prison. But just how firm was the evidence…and was it tampered with to fit a convenient narrative that settled scores and pushed political agendas?

opens in a new windowDead West by Matt Goldman (6/2/20)

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -94In Matt Goldman’s fourth standalone entry in the Nils Shapiro series, Nils accepts what appears to be an easy, lucrative job: find out if Beverly Mayer’s grandson is throwing away his trust fund in Hollywood after his fiancée’s tragic death. But nothing is what it seems in Los Angeles. Nils quickly suspects that Ebben Mayer’s fiancée was murdered, and that Ebben himself may have been the target. As Nils moves into Ebben’s inner circle, he discovers that everyone in Ebben’s professional life—his agent, manager, a screenwriter, a producer—seem to have dubious motives at best. With Nil’s friend Jameson White, who has come to Los Angeles to deal with demons of his own, acting as Ebben’s bodyguard, Nils sets out to find a killer before it’s too late.

opens in a new windowOf Mutts & Men by Spencer Quinn (7/7/20)

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 34Get ready for another canine crime caper, narrated by the world’s fluffiest PI: Chet the dog. When Chet and his human, Bernie Little of the Little Detective Agency. arrive to a meeting with hydrologist Wendell Nero, they’re greeted by a shocking sight—Wendell has been killed. What did the hydrologist want to see them about? Is his death a random robbery, or something more? Chet and Bernie, working for nothing more than an eight-pack of Slim Jims, are on the case. As Chet and Bernie look into Wendell’s work, their search leads to a struggling winemaker who has received an offer he can’t refuse. Meanwhile, Chet is smelling water where there is no water, and soon Chet and Bernie are in danger like never before…

opens in a new windowThe First to Lie by Hank Phillippi Ryan (8/4/20)

opens in a new windowWe all have our reasons for being who we are—but what if being someone else could get you what you want? After a devastating betrayal, a young woman sets off on an obsessive path to justice, no matter what dark family secrets are revealed. What she doesn’t know—she isn’t the only one plotting her revenge. 

An affluent daughter of privilege. A glamorous manipulative wannabe. A determined reporter, in too deep. A grieving widow who has to choose her own reality. Who will be the first to lie? And when the stakes are life and death, do a few lies really matter?

opens in a new windowAnd Now She’s Gone by Rachel Howzell Hall (9/22/20)

opens in a new windowIsabel Lincoln is gone.

But is she missing?

It’s up to Grayson Sykes to find her. Although she is reluctant to track down a woman who may not want to be found, Gray’s search for Isabel Lincoln becomes more complicated and dangerous with every new revelation about the woman’s secrets and the truth she’s hidden from her friends and family—even as Grayson is forced to confront secrets from the past she thought she’d finally left behind.

opens in a new windowA Resolution at Midnight by Shelley Noble (10/13/20)

opens in a new windowIt’s Christmas in Gilded Age Manhattan. For the first time ever an amazing, giant ball will drop along a rod on the roof of the New York Times building to ring in the New Year. Everyone plans to attend the event. But the murder of a prominent newsman puts something of a damper on the festivities. And when a young newspaperwoman is the target of a similar attack, it’s clear this is not just a single act of violence but a conspiracy of malicious proportions. Really, you’d think murderers would take a holiday. Something absolutely must be done. And Lady Dunbridge is happy to oblige.

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Excerpt: The Shallows by Matt Goldman

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opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 33A prominent lawyer is found dead, tied to his own dock by a fishing stringer through his jaw, and everyone wants private detective Nils Shapiro to protect them from suspicion: The unfaithful widow. Her artist boyfriend. The lawyer’s firm. A polarizing congressional candidate. A rudderless suburban police department. Even the FBI.

Nils and his investigative partners illuminate a sticky web of secrets and deceit that draws national attention. But finding the web doesn’t prevent Nils from getting caught in it. Just when his safety is most in peril, his personal life takes an unexpected twist, facing its own snarl of surprise and deception.

In The Shallows, Goldman delves into the threat of dark history repeating itself while delivering another page-turner with his signature pace, humor, and richly drawn characters.

Please enjoy the following excerpt; opens in a new windowThe Shallows by Matt Goldman is on sale June 4!

1

Police floodlights lit the backyard, insects flew crazy squiggles in the faux daylight, and I followed a lackluster cop down to Christmas Lake.

We stepped onto a dock of fiberglass planks. It jiggled under­ foot. A red rowing shell lay at the end, overturned and chained to a galvanized post. It was 4:30 a.m. The eastern sky had light­ened to gray with a breath of purple. I looked down. Todd Rabinowitz’s body lay on the sandy lake bottom under a couple feet of water. It wore khaki pants and a white T­-shirt. He looked like he’d lived to about fifty. Fish nibbled on dead Todd’s face and fingertips.

I said, “You’re leaving him in the water?”

Detective Mike Norton said, “There’s a complication.” Norton was mid-fifties, tall, white, and doughy. He had light brown hair and a forehead so big he could rent it out as a billboard. Dress pants and a dress shirt but without jacket and tie. A badge hung on his belt. He said, “When Mrs. Rabinowitz found her husband, she wasn’t sure he was dead. She was using her phone as a flashlight. That’s how she spotted him. So she ran into the water and tried to pull him up on shore. She moved him a couple of feet then the body stopped. It was hung up on something. She was freaking out, which hey, you can’t blame her for. She wanted to see what he was caught on but didn’t want to look too close. Most people don’t spend a lot of time around dead bodies.”

“I thought you said she didn’t know if her husband was dead.”

“Yeah, well. I’m just telling you what she told me. So, Mrs. Rabinowitz walks out closer to the body and sees there’s a cord underwater that leads to the dock.”

I looked at the dock. A red nylon cord was tied to a post. Norton said, “Only it’s not exactly a cord.”

“Looks like a fish stringer.”

“Yep. But instead of the spike running into a fish’s mouth and out its gill, it runs it into the vic’s mouth, under his tongue, and out his lower jaw. The killer then ran the spike through the ring­ end and tied the cord to the dock.”

“Like a caught fish.”

“Yep.”

“But Mrs. Rabinowitz didn’t untie him?”

“Nope,” said Norton. “She said she was too upset. And by then she was pretty sure her husband was dead. That’s when she called nine­-one-­one.”

I wiped the back of my hand across my face. The August air was so humid I couldn’t tell if I was sweating or moisture had condensed on my skin like I was a hunk of cheese. I said, “Get him out of the lake.”

“We’re holding off, Mr. Shapiro. CSU is unloading now. We’re waiting for them so it’s done right. We don’t want to mess up any evidence.”

I watched the fish feeding on Todd Rabinowitz’s body. Sun­ fish, crappies, perch, and pike. Might have been a few small trout in there. Then the body rolled face-up.

“Shit!” said Norton. He jumped back. “Sorry. Just surprised me.”

“Like you said: most people don’t spend a lot of time around dead bodies.” I glanced without favor at the country club cop. Then I returned my attention to the water. Todd Rabinowitz stared at the starry sky. The fish had eaten away his eyelids.

________

My day started at 3:27 a.m. with Anders Ellegaard’s phone call. He was my best friend and business partner, although “partner” is a misleading term. Ellegaard ran our private inves­tigative firm. He assumed the important responsibilities like paying bills, bringing in new business, and purchasing our health insurance. I assumed other tasks like, during one of our slower weeks, making a catapult out of coffee stir sticks and a rubber band.

Ellegaard told me his wife, Molly, had just received a call from a friend named Robin Rabinowitz. Robin found her husband dead in their lake, and she requested I go out to see her. Not anyone from the firm. Me. Robin insisted it be me.

When Ellegaard called, I was sleeping next to my ex­-wife.

We had a bad habit of falling into bed together. For her, it seemed just that. Bed. But for me, Micaela was a spring trap—I’d have to chew my heart out to get away. I’d tried cutting off all contact. That lasted a year and did nothing to help me move on. So, for the past six months, I woke in her bed as often as my own. We had both just turned forty. I’d heard women hit their sexual peak in their forties. Based on our recent frequency, that appeared to be true. Happy birthday to us.

Everything you need to know about Micaela Stahl you could tell by looking at her side of the bed. It looked more sat-­on than slept-­in. No strewn sheets. No twisted duvet. No mangled pil­lows. Micaela slept rock-­still, her dreams and worries never creating enough turmoil to toss or turn her. When she told me about a dream, even a bad one, even right after waking, she’d already analyzed it. It was as if she’d not experienced the dream but had seen it like a movie and had written the review before it ended.

Her low stress level helped Micaela succeed at whatever she set her mind to. Or maybe it was the other way around. The companies she ran. Her foundation providing apartments for homeless women and children. And she was a black belt in yoga, or whatever the hell they call a person who’s really good at yoga.

Micaela’s one failure was her marriage to me, but perhaps failure was my definition. To her the marriage was a house she never quite felt comfortable in or a pair of eyeglasses her eyes never adjusted to. It made perfect sense to move on. Except we didn’t move on, not at night, anyway.

I put on my jeans, entered Micaela’s master bathroom, brushed my teeth, and pushed my hair around. The face in the mirror did not care for what it saw. Forty Minnesota summers and win­ters had taken their toll. On my way back through the bed­ room, I stopped to look at my ex­-wife. She’d get up soon for an early flight to New York. Meetings with money people, she said. I did not kiss her good­bye. There was no point.

Christmas Lake sits across the road from St. Alban’s Bay. One of dozens of bays that make up Lake Minnetonka. Unlike its gigantic neighbor, Christmas Lake is small and cold. Trout breathe in its oxygen-­rich depths. Wealthy people live around it and commute half an hour to work. Or their money works for them, and they commute nowhere at all.

The Greater Lake Minnetonka Police Department protected and served a handful of municipalities near the lake. They had secured the area. Yellow police tape crossed the narrow street. A GLMPD uniform stood next to it with a clipboard.

I rolled down my window. “Nils Shapiro. I’m a private.”

“Got you at the top of my list, Mr. Shapiro. Mrs. Rabinowitz and the detectives are expecting you.”

No argument. No attitude. Just welcome aboard. Once in a lifetime it goes like that. She moved the yellow tape, and I drove the half mile to the Rabinowitz house. It was low, long, modern, and sided with white stucco. Big windows revealed an interior of wooden antiques and overstuffed white couches and artsy chandeliers, the kind with a lot of glass balls filled with vintage­ style filament bulbs. It looked homey and happy, but if that were true, I wouldn’t be there. A flashlight with an orange cone told me where to park. I did, and walked around back to the lake side of the house. That’s where I met Detective Norton, who led me down to the dock and showed me the body.

________

Detective Norton and I left Todd Rabinowitz underwater. I fol­lowed him up from the lake and toward the house on a path of crushed limestone. The white-­blue LED floods revealed a lawn of deep green. Hydrangeas and lilies grew in planting beds topped with mulched cedar. It smelled fresh and good. The frogs and crickets couldn’t stop singing about it.

Norton led me to a screened-­in porch attached to the back of the house. Inside, a man and woman sat on big furniture made of more white cushions. A dozen single­-filament bulbs hung from individual cords and illuminated the porch in a soft yellowish­ gold. The people inside looked hazy through the screens, like in an old photograph.

Detective Norton opened the porch door and said, “Mrs. Rabinowitz, Nils Shapiro is here.”

A woman’s voice said, “Please send him in.” A man stood. Another Greater Lake Minnetonka PD detective.

Detective Dale Irving said, “Thank you for driving out, Mr. Shapiro.” Mid-thirties, dressed like his partner, and had or­ange hair. Why do they call it red hair? It’s orange. Get the big box of Crayola crayons and find the one that matches. It’ll have the word “orange” on it. Not red. Red is for punk rockers and baristas and kids who are pissed at their parents. “Please let us know what we can do to help. Anything at all.”

Weird. The cops acted like they were working for me.

I turned my attention toward the woman, who had remained seated. Norton the Forehead said, “Nils, this is Robin Rabi­nowitz.”

Robin Rabinowitz looked up at me and said, “Hello, Nils. Thanks for coming out here so quickly.” Her brown eyes met mine then looked away. She said nothing more, as if it had taken great effort just to greet me. She swallowed, and I wondered if she was in shock.

I said, “It wasn’t any trouble. I understand you’re a friend of Molly Ellegaard.”

She brought a hand to her cheek and felt it, as if she’d just been to the dentist and her face was still numb. “Yes,” she said. “I know Molly. I called her to ask for you.” Robin turned toward me again then stood. Thin and tan with short hair and long, lithe fingers.

Ellegaard would have brought a contract and insisted on re­ceiving a retainer before getting further involved. I didn’t have his business skills. I said, “How and when did you find him?”

She looked at me again. High cheekbones seemed to push up the bottoms of her eyes, elongating them into something Asian. But she wasn’t Asian. Just a dark-­haired Jewish woman who’d received a perfect complement of Semitic genes. If anything, she looked like a model who was supposed to pass for Native Amer­ican while wearing something made of calfskin and fringe by Ralph Lauren.

“Todd was home last night,” said Robin. “We ate dinner, then he worked in his study for a couple hours. I went into the bed­ room to read. I fell asleep early, but I woke when he came in.”

“Do you know what time that was?”

“A little after ten thirty. Then I woke up again around two, and Todd was gone. I didn’t think anything of it. But I heard a motorboat on the lake, which is unusual after midnight. Then I heard a bang, like a gunshot. I told myself the motor just back­ fired, but something felt wrong. So I left the bedroom to look for Todd. He wasn’t anywhere in the house.”

Robin walked over to the screen, and looked out on the lake.

She wore old jeans and a white gauze top. “Sometimes when Todd can’t sleep, he takes out his rowing shell . . .” She paused. “. . . took out his rowing shell.” She walked back toward me. Her neck looked longer than her head. She didn’t wear a neck­ lace. A necklace would have wrecked everything. She said, “Todd liked to row when the water was glass. So I walked down to the dock to see if his shell was there.” Robin spoke evenly and in a matter­-of-­fact tone. “That’s when I found him.” She shook her head as if discovering her husband dead was more of an inconvenience than a tragedy.

I said, “What were you wearing when you tried to get your husband out of the water?”

“Excuse me?” said Robin.

“Detective Norton said you told him you tried to drag your husband out of the water but were stopped by the stringer. What were you wearing when that happened?”

“Oh,” said Robin. “Just a T-shirt. That’s what I sleep in.”

“Where is it?”

“It’s in the laundry room sink. Why?”

“Irving, have CSU check it for blood and pay attention to whether it’s a smear or a splatter or nothing. If there’s no blood, I want to know if just the bottom of the shirt is wet or if it’s all wet. You know, like she washed it.”

Irving nodded.

Robin said, “What?”

“Why didn’t you untie the stringer from the dock, then pull your husband up on shore? Oh, and, Mrs. Rabinowitz, I’m going to need a five­-thousand-­dollar retainer if you want me to work for you.” I guess Ellegaard had rubbed off on me more than I realized.

Robin Rabinowitz sat down and said, “Did you just imply that I killed my husband then ask me for five thousand dollars?”

“I didn’t imply anything. I’m trying to clear you as a suspect. Not that you couldn’t have hired someone to kill your husband, but I assume you asked Molly Ellegaard to send me here because you want this solved sooner than later.”

Robin squeezed her knees together with her hands then took a deep breath. I’d made her uncomfortable so I continued. “You could want the case closed because you have a keen sense of jus­tice or you loved your husband or you want suicide ruled out ASAP so you can collect the life insurance. Or it could be because you know you’ll be a suspect.”

She stared at me without expression. Detective Irving fidg­eted with his watch. Voices carried from the dock to the house the way voices do around lakes before daybreak. CSU officers pulled Todd Rabinowitz out of the water, barking instructions to be careful with each other’s end as if they were moving a couch.

Robin said, “Huh. Molly said you were nice.”

“I am nice. But I’m a private detective, not your lawyer. If I were your lawyer I would have told you the police will look hard at you and not to lie about anything because you’ve left a trail whether you realize it or not. Lawyers give good advice like that, so if you have one, you may want to give him or her a call. You know, after you settle down and aren’t crying so hard about your dead husband.”

Officer Irving scratched the back of his orange­-haired head and looked at Robin Rabinowitz with expectation. He’d become my toady and had that yeah what he said look. I was a bit hard on the new widow—the bizarre crime scene stirred up something in me. The only reason to tie a dead man to his dock by a fish­ ing stringer through his jaw is you have something to say. I guess I was trying to ferret out if Robin had something to say.

She stood, stared something cold at me, and walked into the house.

Copyright © 2019 by Matt Goldman

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On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events in October

opens in a new windowYour favorite Tor/Forge authors are hitting the road in October! See who’s coming to a city near you this month.

Mary Robinette Kowal, opens in a new windowThe Fated Sky

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Tuesday, October 2
opens in a new windowMurder by the Book
Houston, TX
6:30 PM

V. E. Schwab, opens in a new windowShades of Magic Trilogy / opens in a new window Vengeful

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Friday, October 5

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center Booth #2136
New York, NY
3: 00 PM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center Room 1A18
New York, NY
5:15 PM

Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center Room 1B03
New York, NY
12:15 PM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center Room 1B03
New York, NY
4:00 – 5:00 PM

V. E. Schwab, opens in a new windowVengeful

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Monday, October 1
opens in a new windowAnderson’s Bookshop
La Grange, IL
7:00 PM

Tuesday, October 2
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Roseville, MN
7:00 PM

Wednesday, October 3
opens in a new windowCoolidge Corner Theater
Brookline, MA
6:00 PM

Sunday, October 7
opens in a new windowArlington Central Library
Arlington, VA
4:00 PM

Monday, October 8
opens in a new windowStrand Books
New York, NY
7:00 PM

Marie Miranda Cruz,  opens in a new windowEverlasting Nora

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Tuesday, October 2
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:00 PM

Thursday, October 4
opens in a new windowBooks of Wonder
New York, NY
6:30 PM

Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowRJ Julia Booksellers
Madison, CT
6:30 PM

Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowJoseph-Beth Booksellers
Cincinnati, OH
2:00 PM

Sunday, October 7
opens in a new windowKids Ink
Indianapolis, IN
2:00 PM

Wednesday, October 10
opens in a new windowAnderson’s Bookshop
La Grange, IL
7:00 PM

Thursday, October 11
opens in a new windowLemuria Books
Jackson, MS
5:00 PM

Thursday, October 18
opens in a new windowVroman’s Bookstore
Pasadena, CA
7:00 PM

David Hagberg, opens in a new windowFace Off

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Thursday, October 11
opens in a new windowBookstore 1
Sarasota, FL
6:00 PM

Mark Oshiro, opens in a new windowAnger Is a Gift

opens in a new window

Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
11:00 AM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center Room 1B03
New York, NY
2:45 PM

Malka Older, opens in a new windowState Tectonics

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Thursday, October 18
opens in a new windowFountain Bookstore
Richmond, VA
6:30 PM

Matt Goldman, opens in a new windowBroken Ice

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Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowThe Bookstore at Fitger’s 
Duluth, MN
7:00 PM

Saturday, October 20
opens in a new windowCorona Public Library
Corona, CA
12:00 PM

Paddy Hirsch, opens in a new windowThe Devil’s Half Mile

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Saturday, October 20
opens in a new windowCorona Public Library
Corona, CA
12:00 PM

William Martin, opens in a new windowBound for Gold

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Wednesday, October 24
opens in a new windowBurlington Public Library
Burlington, MA
7:00 PM

John Scalzi, T opens in a new windowhe Consuming Fire

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Tuesday, October 16
opens in a new windowUniversity Bookstore
Seattle, WA
7:00 PM

Wednesday, October 17
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Portland, OR
7:00 PM

Thursday, October 18
opens in a new windowThe Last Bookstore
Los Angeles, CA
7:00 PM

Friday, October 19
opens in a new windowBorderlands Books
San Francisco, CA
6:00 PM

Saturday, October 20
opens in a new windowWeller Book Works
Salt Lake City, UT
2:00 PM

Monday, October 22
opens in a new windowAmerican Writers Museum
Chicago, IL
6:30 PM

Tuesday, October 23
opens in a new windowFlyleaf Books
Chapel Hill, NC
7:00 PM

Wednesday, October 24
opens in a new windowQuail Ridge Books & Music
Raleigh, NC
7:00 PM

Thursday, October 25
opens in a new windowAvid Bookshop
Athens, GA
6:00 PM

Charlie Jane Anders, opens in a new windowThe City in the Middle of the Night

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Thursday, October 4
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Room 1A18
New York, NY
12:15 – 1:15 PM

Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
1:00 PM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Room 1A18
New York, NY
5:15 PM

Sunday, October 7
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Room 1A18
New York, NY
12:15 – 1:15 PM

S.L. Huang, opens in a new windowZero Sum Game

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Thursday, October 4
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
2:00 PM

K Arsenault Rivera, opens in a new windowThe Phoenix Empress

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Thursday, October 4
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
4:00 PM

Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Room 1A18
New York, NY
5:15 – 6:15 PM

Mark A. Altman & Edward Gross,  opens in a new windowSo Say We All

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Thursday, October 4
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Shop Studies
New York, NY
8:30 – 10:00 PM

Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Shop Studies
New York, NY
3:30 – 5:00 PM

Sherrilyn Kenyon, opens in a new windowStygian

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Friday, October 5
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
5:00 PM

Arkady Martine, opens in a new windowA Memory Called Empire

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Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
11:00 AM

Annalee Newitz, opens in a new windowAutonomous

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Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
2:00 PM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Hall 1A Author Autographing Area
New York, NY
5:15 PM

opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Room 1B03
New York, NY
6:30 PM

Seanan McGuire, opens in a new windowWayward Children Series

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Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
5:00 PM

Myke Cole, opens in a new window The Queen of Crows

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Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
12:00 PM

David Mack, opens in a new windowThe Iron Codex

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Saturday, October 6
opens in a new windowNew York Comic Con, Javits Center, Booth #2136
New York, NY
12:00 PM

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New Releases: 6/12/18

Happy New Release Day! Here’s what went on sale today.

opens in a new windowBroken Ice by Matt Goldman

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -44 Nils Shapiro has been hired to find missing Linnea Engstrom, a teenager from the small northern hockey town of Warroad, MN. Most of Warroad is in Minneapolis for the state high school hockey tournament, and Linnea never returned from last night’s game. Linnea’s friend Haley Housch is also missing—and soon found dead.

As bodies start piling up, the clues lead Nils and Ellegaard north to Warroad, a small, quiet town with many secrets to hide.

opens in a new windowGuardian by A. J. Hartley

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 8 This is what Ang knows: a dear friend is accused of murdering the Prime Minister of Bar-Selehm. A mysterious but fatal illness is infecting the poor. A fanatical politician seizes power, unleashing a wave of violent repression over the city.

This is what Ang must do: protect her family. Solve a murder. RESIST, no matter what, before it’s too late.

opens in a new windowLow Chicago by George R.R. Martin

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 1 The stakes were already high enough at Giovanni Galante’s poker table that night in Chicago. Poker. Dealer’s choice. Seven players. A million-dollar cash buy-in.

But after a superpowered mishap, the most high-profile criminals in the city are scattered throughout the past and their schemes across time threaten the stability of the world.

opens in a new windowStarless by Jacqueline Carey

Poster Placeholder of - 72 Destined from birth to serve as protector of the princess Zariya, Khai is trained in the arts of killing and stealth by a warrior sect in the deep desert; yet there is one profound truth that has been withheld from him.

In the court of the Sun-Blessed, Khai must learn to navigate deadly intrigue and his own conflicted identity…but in the far reaches of the western seas, the dark god Miasmus is rising, intent on nothing less than wholesale destruction.

NEW IN PAPERBACK:

opens in a new windowFirebrand by A. J. Hartley

Image Placeholder of - 96 Anglet Sutonga is moving up in the world, helping politician Josiah Willinghouse track down a thief who stole plans for a covert government weapon.

Finding him won’t be easy, not when the thief has connections to Elitus, the city’s most powerful and super-exclusive social club.

When someone gets murdered there, things definitely do not get any easier.

opens in a new windowKilling Is My Business by Adam Christopher

opens in a new window Another golden morning in a seedy town, and a new memory tape and assignment for intrepid PI-turned-hitman—and last robot left in working order—Raymond Electromatic. But his skills may be rustier than he remembered in Killing Is My Business, the latest in Christopher’s robot noir oeuvre, hot on the heels of the acclaimed Made to Kill.

opens in a new windowSpymaster by Margaret Weis & Robert Krammes

opens in a new window Captain Kate Fitzmaurice was born to sail. She has made a life of her own as a privateer and smuggler. Hired by the notorious Henry Wallace, spymaster for the queen of Freya, to find a young man who claims to be the true heir to the Freyan, she begins to believe that her ship has finally come in.

But no fair wind lasts forever. Soon Kate’s checkered past will catch up to her. It will take more than just quick wits and her considerable luck if she hopes to bring herself—and her crew—through intact.

opens in a new windowWinter Tide by Ruthanna Emrys

opens in a new window After attacking Devil’s Reef in 1928, the U.S. government rounded up the people of Innsmouth and took them to the desert, far from their ocean, their Deep One ancestors, and their sleeping god Cthulhu. Only Aphra and Caleb Marsh survived the camps, and they emerged without a past or a future.

The government that stole Aphra’s life now needs her help. FBI agent Ron Spector believes that Communist spies have stolen dangerous magical secrets from Miskatonic University, secrets that could turn the Cold War hot in an instant, and hasten the end of the human race.

NEW IN MANGA:

opens in a new windowDidn’t I Say to Make My Abilities Average in the Next Life?! (Light Novel) Vol. 1 Story by FUNA; Art by Itsuki Akata

opens in a new windowDNA Doesn’t Tell Us Vol. 2 Story and art by Mintarou

opens in a new windowGiant Spider & Me: A Post-Apocalyptic Tale Vol. 2 Story and art by Kikori Morino

opens in a new windowMononoke Sharing Vol. 2 Story and art by coolkyousinnjya

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On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events in June

opens in a new windowTor/Forge authors are on the road in June! See who is coming to a city near you this month.

Demetra Brodsky,  opens in a new windowDive Smack

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 23

Saturday, June 23rd
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
2:00 PM

Sue Burke,  opens in a new windowSemiosis

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 52

Saturday, June 16th
opens in a new windowMilwaukee Public Library
Milwaukee, WI
2:00 PM

W. Bruce Cameron,  opens in a new windowA Dog’s Way Home

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 11

Saturday, June 9th
Barnes & Noble
Honolulu, HI
1:00 PM

Jacqueline Carey,  opens in a new windowStarless

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 13

Tuesday, June 12th
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM

Wednesday, June 13th
opens in a new windowBorderlands Books
San Francisco, CA
6:00 PM

Thursday, June 14th
opens in a new windowThe Printed Garden
Sandy, UT
7:00 PM

Saturday, June 30th
opens in a new windowKazoo Books
Kalamazoo, MI
2:00 PM

Spencer Ellsworth,  opens in a new windowStarfire: Memory’s Blade

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Saturday, June 16th
opens in a new windowUniversity Bookstore
Seattle, WA
5:30 PM
Also with Joseph Brassey.

Candice Fox,  opens in a new windowCrimson Lake

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Friday, June 8th
opens in a new windowHuntington Beach Library
Huntington Beach, CA
12:00 PM

Matt Goldman,  opens in a new windowBroken Ice

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Tuesday, June 12th
opens in a new windowOnce Upon A Crime
Minneapolis, MN
7:00 PM

Sunday, June 24th
opens in a new windowPoisoned Pen
Scottsdale, AZ
2:00 PM

Tuesday, June 26th
opens in a new windowBook Carnival
Orange, CA
7:30 PM
Also with Paddy Hirsch.

Wednesday, June 27th
opens in a new windowBook Soup
West Hollywood, CA
7:00 PM

Thursday, June 28th
opens in a new windowBookshop West Portal
San Francisco, CA
7:00 PM

Tessa Gratton,  opens in a new windowThe Queens of Innis Lear

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Friday, June 15th
opens in a new windowBlue Valley Library
Overland Park, KS
5:30 PM
Also with Dhonielle Clayton, Zoraida Cordova, and Justina Ireland.

Paddy Hirsch,  opens in a new windowThe Devil’s Half Mile

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Tuesday, June 6th
Solid State Books
Washington, D.C.
7:00 PM

Wednesday, June 6th
opens in a new windowMysterious Bookshop
New York, NY
6:30 PM

Thursday, June 7th
opens in a new windowThe Harvard Coop
Cambridge, MA
7:00 PM

Wednesday, June 13th
opens in a new windowSouthshore Center
Excelsior, MN
7:00 PM
Literature Lovers’ Night Out – also with Liam Callahan, J. Courtney Sullivan, and Sarah Healy, hosted by Excelsior Bay Books.

Thursday, June 14th
opens in a new windowThe Grand Banquet Center
Stillwater, MN
7:00 PM
Literature Lovers’ Night Out – also with Liam Callahan, J. Courtney Sullivan, and Sarah Healy, hosted by Valley Bookseller.

Thursday, June 21st
Copperfield’s Books
Heraldsburg, CA
6:00 PM

Tuesday, June 26th
Book Carnival
Orange, CA

Friday, June 29th
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM

Saturday, June 30th
opens in a new windowSkylight Books
Los Angeles, CA
5:00 PM

Michael Moreci,  opens in a new windowThe Throwaway

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Wednesday, June 20th
opens in a new windowThe Book Cellar
Chicago, IL
7:00 PM
Also with Greg Hickey, Paula Carter, and Kirk Landers.

C. L. Polk,  opens in a new windowWitchmark

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Tuesday, June 26th
opens in a new windowMagers & Quinn
Minneapolis, MN
7:00 PM

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