“I can’t speak for the police, but I believe that’s the case.”
“And all for the sake of some old paperwork? That’s why my brother died?”
The rabbi’s pain was palpable.
“He was pursuing the truth,” I said gently. “And we know that’s always a dangerous path to take.”
“When Joel would disappear for months on end, I’d have these nightmares where the police would contact me, that he was dead. Who knew he would die so close to me?”
Lili put her hand on the rabbi’s arm. “What matters is that he came to you,” she said. “Your bond as brothers was still strong right up to the end.”
He smiled. “Yes, that’s a comfort.”
We left the synagogue a few minutes later. “There’s something I’ve been meaning to ask you,” Lili said as we walked to the car. A cold wind swept through the parking lot, shaking the dying leaves from the trees around us. “How would you feel about taking a trip to Florida at Christmas? We’ll both have a couple of weeks off when the college is closed. We could drive down to Miami with Rochester and spend some time with my mother.”
I thought of my own parents, and how much I wished I had time to spend with them again. “Of course,” I said, and kissed her cheek, her skin cold, but warming at my touch.
Author’s Note
Those who are familiar with Trenton’s Jewish heritage may note that I’ve changed a few details to suit my plot. Shomrei Torah is obviously based on Har Sinai, the synagogue where my family belonged and where I was consecrated, attended Sunday and Hebrew school, celebrated my bar mitzvah, and was confirmed. However, I don’t know the current congregation or its leadership, and I don’t wish to cast aspersions in that direction.
The “old shul” is based on the Orthodox congregation my grandparents attended—but to simplify for the reader I made it a Reform shul and the early home of Shomrei Torah.
As I’m sure many people do, I regret not asking for more details of my parents’ and grandparents’ early lives while I could. So I’ve recreated old Trenton, and its Jewtown neighborhood, from my few memories and the details and photos I’ve found online. Like Steve’s mother, my mother belonged to a social club sponsored by Har Sinai, called the Twenty-Thirty Club, though I don’t believe she did any of the things that Sylvia Gordon did.
Steve shares his last name with my great-grandmother, Celia Levitan Kobrin, so I’ve always been conscious of his Jewish heritage, and I was eager to fit out this plot as a way for him to explore both his religion and his connection to Trenton. He’s a good bit younger than I am, though, so I couldn’t give him any of my early memories of that neighborhood by the river before it fell prey to urban renewal. My great-uncle, Louis Kobrin, did own a junkyard like the one in the book, though to my knowledge no murders occurred there or in its environs.
As always, thanks go to my critique group members: Christine Jackson, Kris Montee and Sharon Potts, whose help has been invaluable. My editor, Ramona de Felice Long, does a terrific job of helping me flesh out the characters and pointing out my errors – though any that remain are of course my own fault.
My golden retrievers, Brody and Griffin, are blessings to me every day – even when they get into trouble!
The Golden Retriever Mysteries, in order, are:
1: In Dog We Trust
2: The Kingdom of Dog
3: Dog Helps Those
4: Dog Bless You
5: Whom Dog Hath Joined
6: Dog Have Mercy
7: Honest to Dog
8: Dog is in the Details
All are available in print and e-book format, wherever books are sold.
Several short stories have also been published in the following anthologies:
"Dog Forbid," is featured in Happy Homicides. Interesting fact: the story in the ebook edition is set at Thanksgiving, but the editors wanted only Christmas stories for the paperback, so voila! the holiday was changed. Steve, Lili and Rochester accompany Mark, Joey and Brody to Pennsylvania Dutch Country, and suddenly Brody disappears. Can Rochester find him in time for a happy holiday?
Happy Homicides 2 is set at Valentine's Day and includes my story "For the Love of Dog." While Gail's cafe, The Chocolate Ear, is being expanded into the space next door, a young woman's body is discovered there. It's up to Steve and Rochester to keep the opening on schedule and find out whodunnit.
The stories in Happy Homicides 5 involve cats and crime—so a feline leads Rochester into an investigation of kidnapping and bitcoin fraud in “Riding the Tiger.”
1 – Handsome Boy
2 – Difficult Decisions
3 – Close the Door
4 – Ethnic Enclaves
5 – Family Connections
6 – Fog
7 – Bad Times
8 – Death Dog
9 – Tough Day
10 – Days of Awe
11 – Rescue Mission
12 – Se Habla Yiddish
13 – Agitation
14 – Man of Honor
15 – Call Me Al
16 – First Fruits
17 – Relevant Information
18 – Unusual Agency
19 – Big Questions
20 – Duty and Family
21 – Who is Sylvia
22 – Hardy Boys
23 – A Place to Rest
24 – Good Men
25 – What’s in a Name
26 – Everything Lost
27 – Urban Myth
28 – Three Shots
29 – Dangerous Path
Don't miss out!
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Also by Neil S. Plakcy
Angus Green
The Next One Will Kill You
Nobody Rides for Free
Survival is a Dying Art
Fun, Sexy Erotica
Mr. Surfer and Other Gay Erotica
Golden Retriever Mysteries
In Dog We Trust
The Kingdom of Dog
Dog Helps Those
Dog Bless You
Whom Dog Hath Joined
Dog Have Mercy
Honest to Dog
Dog is in the Details
Dog Knows
Have Body, Will Guard
Three Wrong Turns in the Desert
Dancing with the Tide
Teach Me Tonight
Olives for the Stranger
Under the Waterfall
Finding Freddie Venus
Standalone
Pledge Class and Other College Boy Erotica
Photo Booth
Creeling the Bridegrooom
The Outhouse Gang
Watch for more at Neil S. Plakcy’s site.
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