Friday, July 10, 2026

The Old Cranberry Ladies Garden Club: The Sparrow and the Crow by Bill Cusano Blog Tour Book Review

 The Old Cranberry Ladies Garden Club by Bill Cusano Banner

THE OLD CRANBERRY LADIES GARDEN CLUB

by Bill Cusano

June 1 - July 10, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

 

The Old Cranberry Ladies Garden Club: The Sparrow and the Crow

THE SPARROW AND THE CROW

The last time the crows circled the old farmhouse, her husband Chester was found dead and the town named her a murderess. Thirty years later, the truth she buried with him is stirring again, the country is splitting in two, and the family she fought so hard to hold together is being pulled apart by a war that hasn't yet been declared.

Her grandson Auggie wants to fight for the Union. His mother, born to a Virginia plantation family, will do anything to drag him south instead. Millie — the rector's daughter with golden hair and a satchel full of letters — waits at home for a boy who may never come back. And in the chapel behind the lilacs, Elcira and the women of her garden club continue the work no one is supposed to know about: sheltering freedom seekers as slave catchers tighten their grip on the Connecticut coast.

Then a telegram arrives. And another. And the war everyone said would never come has come for the Cranberry's all at once.

Perfect for readers of Kristin Hannah, Marie Benedict, Paulette Jiles, and Charles Frazier's Cold Mountain — a story about what families inherit, what they hide, and what they're willing to risk when the country they believed in begins to come apart.

 

My Review:

The action picks up in this third book in the series. The time is getting close to the onset of the Civil War. Travel is dangerous.  Life for Negroes is very dangerous, even in the North as freed Negroes are being kidnapped and transported south to be sold as slaves. Reading about those experiences was really hard. Henry is taken and suffers greatly. Felix's wife travels south to Virginia to see her family. That does not end well. Tensions increase between family members.

There is much going on in the extended Cranberry family. There is a large cast if characters included and they are listed and described at the beginning of the book. Cusano frequently moves from character to character, relating the action in different locations. I felt that made the plot progression a little choppy. But there is a great deal going on so overall the book kept my interest. And I finally found out who killed Chester!

This series has been a deep immersion in the years before the Civil War, exploring life for a very strong woman as she keeps her Connecticut farm going while raising her family and facing opposition. Everything is not cleared up in this novel and it appears there is at least one more book to come. These novels are good for readers who like historical fiction and a series that follows one family through life's changes. 

My rating: 4/5 stars.

You can read my reviews of the earlier novels in this series: The Ghost and the Key and The Widow Murderess.

Book Details:

Genre: Cozy Mystery, Historical Mystery
Published by: 4610 Publishing
Series: The Old Cranberry Ladies Garden Club
Links: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub

Read an excerpt:

Elcira

Cranberry Farm, Cranberry, CT 1861

The crows are back. Who are they here for this time?

They’re more intelligent than most other birds. That’s what people who know birds have said. Are they really? If so, what do they know? Elcira remembers seeing two crows perched on the roof of the old farmhouse back in ‘33, a year after the murder. She felt it might be an omen, a sign that more trouble would be headed her way. She was right. Being labeled the widow murderess by the town hasn’t made it easy to do business with those who admired her husband, Chester. He would turn sixty this year. How long can the truth stay buried? Does it wither like a leaf or decay like a body? Or does it wait patiently for everyone to stop looking for it so it can make its appearance like a ghost in the shadows, holding a candle to the darkness?

Some things anchor themselves in place, and they never leave. The birds know that. They can sense what’s coming, and Elcira fears they may be right.

The evenings are getting warmer, although a frost still sneaks in while the world sleeps and paints a crystal sheen on the tiny buds on her lilacs and on the first shoots struggling to break through the soil. This is an active world where the ears awaken before the eyes.

And the birds are the ones to call everyone to life. There is a rooster on the farm now. He likes to be the first to rouse the family to life. The men in the lodges pride themselves on being out the door before Doodle, as they call him, announces the day. Sometimes, though, he fools them and blasts his voice at the moon. Even the crows find that disturbing. They flutter and take flight, descending on the chapel bell tower to warn Doodle that there can be louder sounds across the fields and stables.

Evening is Elcira’s time. When the children were young, it was their time. Stories and games would fill the hours before bedtime, and by then, she would be too tired to do this, sit under the oak tree, and anticipate the return of the fragrances that remind her of each child, her seven varieties of lilacs. The first will not bloom for a few more months, but it will start the explosion of color and joy. That one, the violet one, was planted when Felix was born, thirty-eight years ago. It’s all his now: the lilacs, the pond, the stables, and the fields. He would inherit it all anyway, so why not let him make the decisions and command the respect of the men and women who keep the farm and its legacy alive? She almost lost it all when the town turned against her after the murder. They blamed her for that. Chester was the one they knew and loved. Not her. There are still many who haven’t changed their views.

“Mom?” Felix calls out from the house beyond the lilacs.

“In the garden,” she says. It is not much, but it is enough for the garden club ladies to tend to when they meet. The rose bushes have overrun much of the slope from the lilacs down to the wide patch of grassy dirt that leads to the cabin. Penelope, Colonel Townsend’s daughter, planted them when the colonel lived in the cottage Felix calls the carriage house.

She leans against the tree to stand, pulling the blanket from the ground to wrap around her just as Felix appears, followed by Auggie.

“You look worried,” she says. “What’s happened now?” “Grandma,” says Auggie. “Colonel Townsend and his men are getting ready for war. He says that the militias in New York, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania are stockpiling weapons and training their troops.”

“So, this Confederacy is a real threat?” she asks.

“I want to join the militia, Grandma,” says Auggie. He pushes his hair from his face, making him look even more like a child than before. Felix takes Auggie by the arm. “I can’t let you. I need you here.

Your mom needs you. Grandma needs you.”

Elcira stands before the boy, who is already taller than she is. “Why do you want to join?”

“There’s going to be a war, and I don’t want to miss out.”

“Miss out?” Elcira hugs him and kisses him on the neck. She whispers in his ear, “Don’t be in a hurry, child. The war will wait.”

“No, it won’t. I’m going to be seventeen on my next birthday. This may be the only chance to fight.”

“Henry has joined Townsend and his men,” says Felix. “The Army will accept Negroes?” she asks.

“Mom, he’s almost white. Times are changing.” “Fast enough for you to let Auggie go?”

“We’re talking about Henry. He’s a grown man. Sometimes, you act like we’re still children.”

“You will always be my children, Felix.”

“You can’t blame Henry for wanting to live free and vote. You know what it was like for him growing up.” Felix removes his hat and hits Auggie with it. “Come on, let’s all go back in the house. We need a family meeting. Your mother needs to hear this.”

Elcira watches her boy walk with his son up the hill to the house. How many times did she do the same thing, calling a family meeting with all the children on the floor in a circle, while Deborah nursed Henry? Later, when he was old enough to crawl, he would be in the center of the circle, and Agnes would serve the apple cider. They would all have an opinion to share. Then, they would vote.

“I can’t imagine that the colonel will be fighting. His men are Connecticut militia. They defend us here, not in the South.” Felix makes his case.

“It’s Lincoln’s fault this is happening,” says Felix’s wife, pouring apple cider into her glass. “He claims to be for states’ rights, letting states decide on slavery, but he refuses to allow slavery in new territo-ries. He should spend some time in the South and see what life is like on a plantation.” She sits beside Felix at the table.

“He hasn’t even been sworn in yet. Maybe he can avoid a war,” says Felix. “But if war breaks out, we will have to defend our home, not go off to fight in South Carolina or Mississippi. Five more states have joined them this past month.”

Elcira sips her cider while fixing her eyes on her grandson. The thought of Auggie fighting against his mother’s family in Virginia is frightening.

“I need to visit my parents,” says Lorraine.

“I can’t let you go,” says Felix. “It’s too dangerous.”

“I’ll go by train. It will be faster than by coach,” she says. “Auggie can go with me.”

“No,” says Felix. “I forbid it.”

“I want him to meet his grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins, and see what it’s like there. Virginia hasn’t seceded. It will be fine.” Lorraine reaches over to kiss her son on the cheek.

“You want to teach him to turn his back on his country and disre-spect his President?” asks Felix.

“I want him to see there are two sides to this argument.” Lorraine turns away. “Besides, he hasn’t taken office yet. He may not wind up our president.”

“What are you saying?”

Elcira, sitting on the other side of Auggie, places her hand on his. “How do you feel about that?”

“I don’t know,” he says. “How long would we be gone?”

“You’re not really considering this,” says Felix, turning to Lorraine. Lorraine sips her cider and puts the glass down on the table.

“I’ll go with you, Mom,” says Julie, hugging her mother around the neck. “I’d love to meet Grammy and Pappy.”

“Me, too,” says C.J. “Come on, Auggie. It’ll be fun. We’ve never been to a real plantation.”

“I can’t have my whole family go,” says Felix.

“We’ll go, and Auggie can stay with you,” says Lorraine.

Felix leans close to her. “I wish you had talked to me about this before mentioning it to the children.”

“I thought that is why we have family meetings, so everyone has a say,” she says. “Besides, Virginia is still part of the Union, and the politicians will sort all this out. Just you wait and see. Maybe we will have two separate countries. No need to worry.”

Lorraine places her hand on Auggie’s hand, and Elcira pulls hers away. “Who knows if we’ll be able to do this again?”

“Lorraine,” says Felix. “I have a bad feeling about this.” “It’s my family, Felix.”

“We’re your family,” he says. Felix pushes his chair away from the table and stands. “I can’t allow it.” He walks to the door.

Lorraine looks at Elcira and shakes her head. “Was he always like this?”

Elcira smiles and opens her arms. “Come, all of you, and give me a hug. I love you so much.”

The children run to her and hug her. Felix, standing in the doorway, bathed in moonlight, remains silent.

Auggie

oodle warbles his call to rise. It’s finally morning. Auggie tosses his jacket on the buckboard seat and wipes his brow with the bandana Uncle Wally, the youngest of the Cranberry

boys, gave him when he was only one year old. Later, after graduating from West Point as an officer, he told Auggie he had never washed it. So, Auggie has never washed it, either. At times, especially on hot days, it smells like feet. He would love to serve under Second Lieutenant Wallace Cranberry when they go to war against the Confederacy. He is certain war will come. He didn’t always have premonitions, but at times, images have come to him in dreams or while staring at the clouds in the sky, like now. They look white and fluffy, but one to the south has a dark center. Uncle Wally hasn’t visited in a while, a sign that something may be brewing. Auggie can almost taste it, like milk that has gone sour.

Living with Grandma is great, especially in the summer, when aunts and uncles come to visit. The cousins don’t all own horses, so they love it when their uncle Felix shows them how to rope and jump. But racing is what everyone loves to do. Auggie imagines galloping into battle on Lightning, his father’s horse. He’s not the original Lightning, the horse his father got when he was ten years old. Dad still rides him sometimes. Auggie calls him Old Lightning.

“You headin’ into town this mornin’?” asks Jones. He is using an awl to punch holes in a leather strap. “I’m almost done repairing these billets.”

“I’m taking the buckboard, so I won’t be needing a saddle.” Jones rights himself, casting a shadow on the sixteen-year-old. Auggie stands close to him and marks his height against Jones’

chest with his hand. “Almost,” he says.

Jones chuckles and grabs Auggie’s hand, pulling it up to his own head. “You’ve got a ways to go yet, mister.”

“I figure I won’t be growing much taller than this,” he says, climbing onto the buckboard. “Ma wants me to get myself a trunk for traveling.”

“Where will you be goin’?”

“Richmond,” he says. “To see my relatives on their plantation.”

Jones puts his hands on his hips. The muscles in his arms make his linen shirt lose all its wrinkles.

“Sorry,” says Auggie.

“What for?” asks Jones. He steps closer and leans on the seat of the buckboard so he can talk to Auggie face-to-face. “You know I used to be on one of those plantations, right?”

“You were? Were you a slave? I thought you were born free like Miss Townsend.”

“Deborah?” Jones smiles, showing he still has most of his teeth, which are yellow from tobacco. “I’ve always loved that woman.”

“Really?” Auggie grabs the reins to hold the horses steady. “Why didn’t you marry her?”

“Let me tell you somethin’,” he says, leaning close enough for Auggie to smell the tobacco on his breath. “When you’re sweet on someone, you have to let them know. Don’t go holdin’ it in and waitin’ for the right time cause somethin’ always comes up.”

“But what if she doesn’t feel the same way?” Auggie has someone in particular in mind.

“Better to know the truth than to keep the unknown inside.” “Is that what you did? Keep it inside?”

“You sweet on someone?” he asks, ignoring the question. “Who is it?”

“Millie,” he says.

“The preacher’s daughter? Wooeee!”

“You see why I have a problem? The preacher and Pa don’t like each other.”

Jones shakes his head. “That goes way back. You sure know how to pick ‘em. She’s a pretty one, I’ll admit that. Looks like her mama.”

“So, should I let her know?”

Jones taps him on the shoulder and points toward the house. Mom is headed this way, dressed like she’s about to receive dignitaries from afar. She always dresses up, even if she’s going nowhere. She says it’s the right proper way for a lady to look. Back home on the plantation where she was born and raised, one wouldn’t let the sun shine on them without having something bright and beautiful to see.

“August Cranberry, why are you lollygagging around? You ought’a been and come back by now.”

“I’m just going now, Ma,” he says, giving the horses a flick of the reins.

“Now, you wait here, young man. Since you haven’t left yet, you might as well take your siblings with you.”

“What?” Auggie’s plan to find Millie is now ruined.

Jones laughs. “See what delayin’ can do? Back to work.” He walks away whistling.

“We both can’t go with him, Mom,” says Julie, fastening the ribbon on her bonnet. “We’ll be too tight on that seat.”

“It wouldn’t be a problem if you weren’t-” “Watch it,” says Lorraine.

“I was just going to say her skirt is so big; it’ll look like we’re all wearing them.”

“It’s a short trip into town,” says Lorraine. “You can manage.” “What are you concerned about, Auggie?” asks C.J. “Afraid someone might see you wearing a skirt?” Julie laughs and climbs up onto the seat.

“For that,” says Auggie, “you sit in the back, little brother.”

“I’m not little. I’m almost as tall as you, and besides, we are only a year apart.”

“Now, remember, we need three large trunks for the trip.” Lorraine kisses C.J. before he climbs aboard.

“How large?” asks Auggie.

“Large enough for you to put your clothes in it. You should be able to get three across.”

“Then where will I sit?” asks C.J..

“You can sit on Julie’s lap,” says Auggie. Julie punches him in the arm.

“You’re acting like children,” says Lorraine. “We are children,” says C.J..

“Speak for yourself,” says Auggie. “I’m a man.”

Julie and C.J. look at each other and erupt into laughter. As they pull away, Julie turns to Auggie. “So, who is it?” “Who is what?” asks C.J..

“Never mind,” says Auggie.

“I know who it is,” says Julie. She flips her curls back and forth, her nose in the air. “It’s that highfalutin one.”

“She’s not highfalutin.”

“What’s that mean?” asks C.J. “Is it a teacher?”

“No, dunderhead,” says Julie. “Hoity toity. Nose in the air type.” “She’s not like that,” says Auggie.

“You know she’s our cousin, right?”

“Oh,” says C.J. “I know who you mean. You like Silly Millie?” “Stop it, both of you.” Auggie clicks the reins, and the horses

respond with a jolt, sending C.J. rolling in the back and Julie holding onto the back of the seat.

“Slow down,” Julie scolds. “You’re going to kill us.” “Then we won’t need as many trunks, will we?” he says.

They continue to tease each other the entire way into town, but Auggie’s thoughts are on Millie. He has to find a way to see her before they leave for Virginia.

“Hey, Auggie, keep your eyes on the road,” yells Julie. Auggie tugs at the reins, and the horses slow down to a trot.

“He’s got it bad, Julie,” says C.J.. “Maybe you should stay home, Auggie.”

Auggie wonders if it would be better if he did. He could be with Millie before enlisting. He needs to see her. Maybe it would be better if the whole family went. Millie, too? But Dad won’t come. Why?

Lorraine

he wraps herself in the shawl she crocheted for her mom. It is much warmer back home on the plantation, but there are always times when a shawl will do just right for that rock on the porch with a hot tea at night. Perhaps she will add lace at one end so

it can be worn around the neck.

“Cold?” asks Elcira, exiting the house onto the back porch. She has a blanket wrapped around her, secured by a large hatpin.

“It’s always cold here,” says Lorraine.

“It used to be much colder.” Elcira holds her cup with both hands and sits on one of the rockers. “The old farmhouse wasn’t much protection from the weather, especially in the winter and when the storms came.”

Lorraine sets up her writing implements on the wooden table beside her and opens her folio of papers to compose a letter. She could have spread out her papers on the table near the fire, but she wanted privacy. This is her house, and she has no place to be alone in it.

“I suppose you will let your mom know you’re coming to visit.” Lorraine fakes a smile.

“So, what brought your family to Virginia?” Elcira sips her tea. “I seem to recall that you were all from Pennsylvania. Is that not correct?”

“You’re talking about my father’s family. My family is from the South.” Lorraine is her mother’s daughter, through and through. It was her mother’s family that built the plantation and turned it into a major tobacco producer in Virginia. It was her father who brought his business sense and political contacts to the table, negotiating deals to take that business beyond its roots and fences.

Elcira sips some more tea and buries her head in a newspaper she has folded lengthwise to hold with one hand. “I see. If it wasn’t for the Mason-Dixon Line, we would never know where the North ends and the South begins, would we?”

Lorraine dips her quill pen in the ink bottle and starts writing, trying to ignore Elcira’s attack. It is an attack. With each passing minute, her thoughts drift from the paper and float back to Elcira. So focused on her is she that the sound of each sip aggravates her.

Elcira finishes her tea and stands. “Don’t get too warm, now,” she says. “Oh, I’ve asked Deborah to come by. Please keep an eye out for her. She should be along soon. She has some news about Henry.”

Lorraine grumbles. Her pen slips, spreading ink across the paper. “Damn it to hell,” she says.

She crumples the paper and starts again, this time resting the folio and paper on the table to steady her hand.

Dearest Father, I know how hard it has been for you without me, and I feel the same, but I have good news. The children and I will be coming to visit. They are excited about meeting you and Mother, and I cannot wait to introduce them to our beautiful family. I will be arriving in Richmond by rail on Sunday, the 17th of March, six days from now.

August, Julie, and Chester James will be with me. Please have one of the coloreds come pick us up in the coach. We are scheduled to arrive in the morning, but we have many changes along the way, so we could be later than that. Until I see you, love,

Lorie

As she folds the letter, she realizes she should have had the children post it in town. She will have to ask Elcira to send someone or, better yet, have Felix ask her.

She seals the ink bottle, wipes the quill with the crumpled paper, and neatly piles everything on the folio on the table. Of all the things she learned from Mother, being neat and clean is paramount, next to godliness, as they say. And a place for everything, she would say. It was a while before she realized the rest of that expression is “and everything in its place.”

Was that really something Ben Franklin said? He is given far too much credit for quotes these days. She glances at a newspaper folded on the chair Elcira vacated. This new president is going to be trouble. Why can’t he just let the states govern themselves? Maybe the South should be a separate country. She will take her family to meet their real family, their roots, and maybe they’ll want to stay.

The sun has lifted itself above the lilacs in the east, warming her a bit, but not enough to shed the shawl. It, too, gets folded and set aside neatly. A handsome young man on a black Morgan is approaching the road at a trot, sending splashes of mud to each side, making the roadway even more treacherous for a woman to maneuver. There is something odd about his appearance. His face is round with a squared-off jaw, like Felix’s, but his nose is a little flatter than most. From a distance, he could be Felix’s younger brother.

“Elcira?” Lorraine stands at the doorway and yells in.

“You must be Felix’s wife,” says the man, tipping his hat. His hair is wiry, not at all like Felix’s.

“I’m Lorraine Peters Cranberry, from Virginia,” she says, sounding intentionally formal.

“Well, it’s a pleasure to meet you, ma’am,” he says, copying her accent.

How disrespectful.

“Henry!” shouts Elcira, running past Lorraine to greet him. ”Get down here and give me a hug.”

“This is Deborah’s child?” asks Lorraine.

“Where is Deborah?” asks Elcira. She kisses Henry on the cheek. Lorraine turns her head.

“Mom stopped in at the Townsend house. She wanted to see the new room for carriages and horses at her old home.”

“That was your brother who did that.” “Brother?” asks Lorraine.

“It’s a joke from our childhood,” says Henry. “Where is Felix?” “He’s out and about,” says Elcira. “He’s getting more like his

father every day.”

“Do you have business with my husband?” asks Lorraine. She holds her head high when she speaks to Henry.

“I’ll wait for Mom to get here, but I want to give him the good news.”

“We heard that you’ve signed on with Colonel Townsend’s militia.” says Elcira, her eyes on Lorraine.

“That’s not the news I’m talking about.”

“Certainly the militia isn’t that desperate for recruits,” says Lorraine.

“Desperate?” Henry looks at Elcira and smiles. “I believe the correct response to that might be something like, Bless your heart.”

Lorraine grabs her folio and papers and stands. She spots Felix coming up the road, followed by another horse.

Henry steps onto the porch, and Lorraine backs away from him. He’s got more nerve than a bad tooth, that one. Back home, his kind know their place. Lorraine stomps her foot and turns to send a death stare at Elcira.

Henry steps around Lorraine to greet his mom as she dismounts from her horse. Deborah gives Elcira a hug and a kiss. “I’ve missed you.”

“I’ve missed you, too.”

Lorraine pivots on her heel, walks through the open doors, and drops her folio on the round pedestal table.

“So, what’s the big news?” asks Felix, tying his horse to the post and doing the same for Deborah’s.

“Our boy here is engaged,” says Deborah.

Elcira runs into Henry’s arms and hugs him. “Felix, come. Hug your brother.”

Lorraine closes the double doors and runs up the stairs to her bedroom.

“How appalling,” she says to the empty room.

Mabel

Cranberry, CT

Sitting under the porch roof, Mabel Crossan chews on the end of her imported Cuban cigar, a real treat, much smoother than the old Connecticut Shade wrappers of Rocky Patel or Brick

House. She leans on her ebony cane with a silver handle, using it to rock back and forth while she talks with passersby or an occasional visitor, such as Judge Richards.

“Cuban?” he asks as he slowly makes his way toward her, favoring his right leg.

“Still bothering you?” she asks. She pulls another cigar from the pocket of her jacket and hands it to him, along with a match.

He reaches into the small pocket of his overcoat for his silver cigar cutter and snips the end. “There’s a bit of a chill in the air today. I thought it was warming up.”

She waits for him to sit and light his cigar.

“Pleasant taste, right?” she asks. She coughs and spits. “Have you let the doctor look you over?” he asks.

“I haven’t been to the doctor since Doc Williams passed. I’m not sure about this new one. He’s got his wife working with him.”

“You got something against women? Or is it just the Cranberrys that you have a problem with?” He lets out a cloud of blue smoke. “That’s water under the bridge,” she says.

“Stagnant water? Or something fresh, good for fishing?”

Anabel sticks her head out of the store’s open doorway and looks around. “Have you seen Emily?” she asks Mabel.

“You lost her again?” Mabel laughs and coughs.

“I need to take a break, and she’s been gone a while.” “You go,” says Mabel. “I’ll handle it if someone comes.”

“It’s been quiet.” She ducks back in. Mabel can hear her scramble across the floor to the back door.

“I hear some of them city folk have public toilets. Maybe we can get one here.”

“By the Anchor Tavern, most likely,” she says. “That’s where most of the relieving is done.”

He chuckles and draws in the smoke again, letting it slip out of his mouth into the air.

“Maybe if I smoked the way you do, I wouldn’t have this cough of mine,” she says.

“I know why you don’t want to see Doc Cranberry.”

“They used to call him Tubby. When he was a child, he always had something in his mouth. I guess it could be worse. In Stamford, the doctor is a Negro.”

“If I had only had my way,” he says, pointing over his shoulder to the docks and steamships. “They all would have been sent back where they came from.”

“You need to be careful what you say, Judge. We’re surrounded by abolitionists.”

“Lincoln lovers, I call them,” he says.

“Oh, horse dung,” she says. “Look who’s coming this way.” She points to a buckboard pulled by two horses.

“That curly-haired one driving is one of the grandkids of our good friend Chester. Remember him?” she asks.

“Of course I do. That good-for-nothing constable couldn’t solve Chester’s murder the whole time he was on the job. Finally shot himself when his wife died. We’ve gone through three since then, and the latest one is the worst of the lot.”

“You don’t think he’ll bring anyone to justice, Judge?”

“Not the justice I’d like to see. Besides, these constables are always too busy running side businesses to do a decent job. More opportunities for the widow on the hill. Are you forgetting who took over Constable Tucker’s oyster farming business?”

“She seems to profit off the deaths of those around her, doesn’t she?” Mabel pushes down on her cane. “Now, let’s see what her brood needs today.”

“Have you gone back to extending credit to her?”

“She doesn’t need credit anymore, not since her firstborn married up. These are Lorraine’s children, and she sent them alone. With the threat of war, I may have to mark up my prices.”

Judge Richards releases a blue cloud and shakes his head. “I’m thinking you might want to have an ally in the enemy camp if you know what I mean.”

“You have a point, there, Judge.”

She turns to greet the arriving children and escorts them into the store.

“Now, let me see if I remember,” she says. “You are August, right?” “Auggie, ma’am.”

“That’s what we all call him,” says Julie.

“And you must be Julia, or do you prefer Julie?”

Julie nods. She drifts over to the shelves of women’s shoes, but a dress on a stand captures her attention.

“And the last time I saw you, young man, you were being pushed around in one of those prams by Agnes?”

“Yes, I’m C.J., ma’am.”

“Ah, Chester’s namesake, I believe.” “Did you know my grandpa?”

“Everyone in town knew Chester Cranberry,” she says, shifting her cigar from right to left in her mouth. “So, what can I interest you in today?”

“We need three traveling trunks,” says Auggie. “All the same size, I presume?”

Anabel returns and joins her mother.

“Maybe these two young men could accompany you upstairs to the attic and bring down three large wooden trunks.”

“Not too large,” says Julie. “Mom wants the three to fit side-by-side on our buckboard.”

Julie runs her hands down the front of her dress to keep it from billowing in the breeze from the waterfront behind the store.

Seagulls announce that the tide is high and ripe with fish.

Mabel taps her cane near Julie and leans on it, bringing herself close enough to whisper. “See anything you like?”

“What is holding this skirt up? Are there many petticoats under it?”

She walks around the dress and lifts the skirt to reveal hoops. “Oh, it’s much lighter than petticoats. There are steel hoops that

let the skirt flow outward. And the colors this year are much more exciting.”

“I wouldn’t know where to wear such a dress.”

Her brothers and Anabel return with the trunks, and the boys carry them to the buckboard. When they come back in, Mabel addresses them all.

“Before you leave for your trip, have your mother come in and see me. She can settle the payment then, and we can talk.”

“But my mother gave me money to give you for the trunks,” says Auggie, holding a purse.

“You tell her to come in. I would love to talk to her and see what else we can do for your trip.”

“Thank you,” says Auggie. “Come, Julie.”

Julie touches the satin on the hoop skirt before joining the boys on the buckboard. As they leave, Anabel turns to her mom. “What was all that about?”

“Did you see how Julie looked at the dress?” asks Mable. “I’m sure that Southern belle mother of hers would love to present her only daughter to the wealthiest and most influential young men around here.”

“You’re going to play matchmaker?”

“I wouldn’t think of such a thing,” she says. “I want to sell all the latest Paris fashions.”

“Well, I want my daughters in those fashions first, Mother.” “And they will be.”

“What are you two plotting in here?” asks Judge Richards, standing in the doorway. “I thought you didn’t want to have anything to do with that family.”

“Times have changed, Judge,” says Mabel. “And they’re going to change a hell of a lot more.”

Lorraine

Cranberry Farm

Boys are easier than girls. Actually, as she thinks it over, they are both bad, except for C.J., who is the easiest of the lot. And Julie can be madder’n a wet hen at times. Lorraine is sorry she

agreed to take all three children to Richmond. One more conniption fit and she will leave without them.

“Mom,” says Julie, with a whine that adds syllables to the word as it escapes her mouth. “I can’t fit my dresses in this trunk.”

“Why didn’t you think of that when you bought it?” “You said-”

“I said to pick out your trunks and see that they fit three across in the buckboard, right?”

“But, Mom,” she replays the last whine.

“Mom,” cries C.J. at the door to Julie’s room. “Auggie filled up his trunk, and now he is putting his things in mine.”

“Auggie!”

“Just teasing,” he yells back. “Thank you, Mom,” says C.J..

“Much obliged,” says Lorraine, longing to get back to her child-hood home, to be among the sound of mind and body.

She works on Julie’s dress problem for longer than she desires and then decides to give up. “We’re going back to the store.”

“We are?” Julie is suddenly excited.

“What’s cooking with you, Miss Water-Under-Both-Shoulders?” “What does that mean?”

“It means you have a hidden agenda. Why do you want to go back to the store?”

“To get a larger trunk?” Julie turns to look at her clothes overflowing the sides of the trunk.

“Unpack and carry it downstairs. I’ll meet you out front with the buckboard.”

For most of the trip back to town, Julie remains silent. What is she thinking? She’s never this quiet. She doesn’t look worried about the trip.

“Sweetheart,” says Lorraine. “I’ve mapped out our trip, and we’ll have to change trains several times.”

Julie whips her curls around and bites her lips.

“But the Lord has been good to us because we have first-class tickets all the way from New York to Baltimore.”

“Is that far?” she asks.

“It could take some time, maybe two days from when we leave Stamford to get to Baltimore, and then another day to Richmond.”

The trunk in the back of the buckboard rumbles as they ride over a stretch of bumpy road.

“Are there cousins my age?”

“Honey, you’ve got more cousins than you can count on your fingers and toes.”

Julie smiles. “I won’t be the youngest girl, will I?”

“No need to fret over that. My brother may be busy organizing the militia in support of the Confederacy, but he sure left a brood back home.”

Julie rolls her skirt in her fingers, signaling that she is working on a problem only she knows. Lorraine lets her be. Julie is not one to offer up an honest answer when prodded. That is a trait they share.

“Is that how you met Dad?” “What?”

“Did you snag him?”

“Well, almost,” says Lorraine. “Your Uncle Wally and my brother roomed together at West Point, so I got to meet Wally before I met your dad.”

“Oh? Then why didn’t you marry him?” Lorraine laughs.

“Didn’t you like Uncle Wally?” Julie’s eyes are wide open now. “Your Uncle Wally is a real looker, if you know what I mean. I

could have snagged him, but your dad was persistent. Must have been my accent.”

“Or your beauty?”

“You do know how to charm the skin off a snake. You’re going to be a real catch for somebody someday.”

As they ride into town, musicians and dancers parade down the street to attract everyone’s attention. A large crowd gathers at the fairgrounds.

“Looks like we may have a bit of a delay.” “Can we go and watch?” asks Julie.

“You saw them setting up when you came here earlier, didn’t you?

That’s why you made a fuss about the trunk.”

Julie pulls a clipping from the local paper out of her purse. “Maybe.”

“You little dickens,” says Lorraine. “I had better keep you on a short leash.”

“Can we stop for a little while? Please?” Julie leans over the side of the buckboard, craning her neck to see the juggler tossing balls in the air as he walks.

“I should just turn around and take you home.” The parade passes on both sides of her buggy, making it difficult to negotiate a turn. “All right, but just for a little bit. We have to get ready for our trip tomorrow.”

Julie jumps down and runs off.

“Julie, get back here!”

“Funnel cakes. I’ll get you one.”

Lorraine turns at the blacksmith’s shop and parks, handing the man a coin to watch over it. Lorraine dodges people and parasols in the crowd, along with two fiddle players and their jabbing bows.

“Julie!” She loses sight of her and panics.

“Something wrong, ma’am?” The man in a bowler hat and frock coat taps his hat with his silver-tipped cane. “Emerson,” he says. “Mark Emerson. I own the steamship where these folks perform.”

“I lost sight of my daughter, Julie. She went to get funnel cakes and disappeared.”

“Well, let’s see if we can find her.” He towers above many of the people by at least a head. He looks like a carnival barker, but with a significant paunch..

“Can you see the funnel cake stand?”

“You’re not from around here, are you?” He stops looking for Julie and turns his attention to Lorraine.

“My daughter, please.”

“If I thought she was in danger, I would rush to her side, but I believe she may be the one surrounded by those young men watching the juggler.”

“How do you know it’s her? I didn’t tell you what she looks like.” Lorraine starts to panic. She pushes her way through the crowd and heads toward the juggler.

“Julie!”

Julie turns, and Lorraine runs to her. White powdered sugar coats Julie’s mouth and chin.

“I got one for you, too.” Julie hands her a funnel cake.

“I’m taking you home,” she says, grabbing her wrist. “My heart near busted clean outta my chest, child. How am I gonna keep you safe all the way to Richmond?”

“I just wanted to see the juggler. He had more balls in the air than I have curls on my head.”

“Don’t go making up stories. You best not mistake silence for forgiveness. I’m not done being mad at you yet.” “What about the trunk?”

“Make it work.”

“But, we need to go to the store to pay for the trunks, and I want to show you a dress that I’m sure you would want me to wear when we see Grandma and Grandpa,” says Julie, batting her eyelashes and showing her dimples.

“You little minx,” says Lorraine, climbing up onto the buggy. “You’ve been stretchin’ my patience like a clothesline in a windstorm. Time to reel it in.”

Lorraine guides the buggy away from the store and back toward the farm, avoiding the crowd at the fairgrounds.

“But, Mother!” Julie crosses her arms. “I -” “Don’t say it. You will regret it if you do.” Julie mumbles the words she couldn’t swallow.

***

Excerpt from THE SPARROW AND THE CROW by Bill Cusano. Copyright 2026 by Bill Cusano. Reproduced with permission from Bill Cusano. All rights reserved.

 

Author Bio:

Bill Cusano

Bill Cusano is an author, a retired deacon in the Episcopal Church and a believer that it is the process rather than the outcomes that matter most in our lives. Retired from the corporate world and an eight-year stint running a non-profit feeding program, Bill attacks every project as a ministry, giving it his full commitment. Needing to readjust to life after losing the love of his life to leukemia in April of 2024, Bill returned to writing full-time, resulting in The Old Cranberry Ladies Garden Club series, the motivation and inspiration for which came from his wife’s voracious appetite for reading historical fiction. While this is Bill’s debut novel, he has always been a writer, publishing short stories and poems early on, and then beginning a daily spiritual blog in 2008. You can follow Bill’s Reflections From The Garden Bench along with other writings on his Substack account.

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Wednesday, July 8, 2026

The Old Cranberry Ladies Garden Club: The Widow Murderess by Bill Cusano Blog Tour

 The Old Cranberry Ladies Garden Club by Bill Cusano Banner

THE OLD CRANBERRY LADIES GARDEN CLUB

by Bill Cusano

June 1 - July 10, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

 

 

The Old Cranberry Ladies Garden Club: The Widow Murderess

THE WIDOW MURDERESS

Connecticut, 1833. A year after Chester Cranberry's unsolved murder, the town that he founded continues to suspect that his wife, Elcira, ended his life. With insufficient evidence to bring her to trial, and little effort to find another suspect, the town gossip labels her "The Widow Murderess." But Elcira has seven children to feed, ranging in age from three to nine, and her nanny, Deborah, a freed slave, is pregnant with her husband's illegitimate child.

All eyes are on these two women, expecting them to fail to keep the farm and the family together. When the general store cuts off Elcira's credit and refuses to sell anything her farm produces, the alliance between Elcira and Deborah grows stronger, and the women set out to do something unthinkable, something that can cause one to be whipped and the other thrown in jail. They opened their home to runaway slaves seeking freedom along a secret route north. Behind the facade of a ladies' garden club, the women run a clandestine school, teaching the formerly enslaved and runaways to read and write-a dangerous act that could destroy everything she's built.

When a mysterious murder during a violent storm brings old secrets to light, the truth about Chester's death threatens to surface. With the town's suspicions mounting and powerful enemies closing in, Elcira must decide how much she's willing to risk to protect those she loves and maintain the underground railroad that runs through her land.

A gripping historical novel about courage, family, and the price of freedom in pre-Civil War New England, The Widow Murderess explores how one woman's determination to survive becomes a beacon of hope for those seeking liberty.


My Review:

This series is deeply set in the pre-Civil War atmosphere of Connecticut. I had hoped the murder we experienced in the first book in this series would be solved in this one but it was not meant to be. We do get to see how Elcira works hard to maintain the farm on her own. She is a strong woman. She has to be as there are many who think she was the one who killed her husband. Some call he the Widow Murderess.

The strength of Cusano's writing is his captivating descriptions and attention to cultural detail. I felt like I was in the midst of what was happening. He does a good job of exploring the tensions between white people and Negroes. Elcira helps the free Negroes and escaped slaves in teaching them how to read under the cover of the ladies garden club. There are more murders in this novel but they are not central to the overall plot of the book. I look forward to reading the next book and I hope we finally get to find out who killed Chester. This is a good novel for readers who like one exploring relationships during a time of turmoil.

My rating: 4/5 stars. 

You can read my review of the first book in this series, The Ghost and the Key.

Book Details:

Genre: Cozy Mystery, Historical Mystery
Published by: 4610 Publishing
Series: The Old Cranberry Ladies Garden Club
Links: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub

Read an excerpt:

Elcira

The Cranberry Farm, Cranberry, CT 1833

Elcira closes the potting shed door and locks it with the key from the hook on the main house door. She taps on the door twice and then once. She waits for the response. One tap, a pause, and then two. Good. Now, they need to keep quiet. At least it won’t be too hot in there, with the late spring breezes from the North carrying the sweet aroma of fresh-cut hay from the stables and surrounding fields.

The birds know.

They are witnesses. From a distance, they call to one another to spread the word so that all know to stay away. She sees them circling the fields, respectfully keeping their distance from the barn, even now, months after the incident. The field mice were safe for a while, but no longer. The birds have mustered up the courage to return. Now that the hawks and vultures make their way homeward or off to their next meals, everything is returning to normal, or almost everything. Some secrets need to stay locked away, hopefully for good.

The sparrows come first. They like having no competition. Like the mice, they did not have to worry about what might be hanging around in rafters or on rooftops.

Elcira steps into the lilacs, letting the pillows of fragrance slip over her face like a veil. She closes her eyes for a quick respite to reflect on the day Chester planted this yellow variety, one of the seven hues along this border, protecting the shed from the prying eyes of neigh-boring farmers and others who chance to come by to transact business or lodge a complaint. More of the latter these days than the former since the incident. But those visitors are not the ones she is concerned about today. She takes a deep breath, inhaling the refreshing aroma of life for her and the bees rushing to carry the first buckets of nectar back to their hives near the pond.

The snort of her neighbor’s Morgan startles her. The riderless horse, still bearing its bridle but no saddle, nestles up to her.

“What are you doing here, Charlie? Did the colonel send you?” she asks, rubbing her hand on his snout. She grabs the reins of the chestnut-colored beauty and walks him to the well. “Want some water?”

She lets the bucket down with a splash and pulls it up using the crank. She places it before him. While the horse drinks, she pulls on the reins to position him closer to the well, lifts her skirt, and places her boot on the stone wall to boost herself onto Charlie’s back.

“Good boy,” she says, patting his neck. “Let’s take you home now.” It’s not a long ride. The colonel’s home used to be part of the farm,

closer to the road than the main farmhouse.

When Colonel Daniel Townsend returned to Connecticut after the war with Britain, known as the Second War for Independence, in 1815, he was a lieutenant, already married and with a child. Elcira remembers her mother talking about these eligible militiamen in his charge.

Go with your father, Ellie. You are the one who can ride like the wind. Your sisters cannot impress a young militiaman like you can. Besides, you are like me. You need to feel the breeze in your hair.

Her mom was especially fond of the looks of this dashing young man who would come to the horse farm to do business with her husband. Mom always dressed to attract the eyes of men and women alike. Elcira remembers the way men looked at her, even married men, like Townsend. Elcira’s father provided the U.S. Army and the Connecticut Militia with Morgan horses, one of which was Charlie’s father. Elcira learned to ride at an early age, but Mother taught her to ride bareback, like a man, not like a lady. It’s all about keeping your skirt between you and him. Good advice for more than horses.

The ride to the cottage at the edge of the property is not long, nor is it difficult to negotiate, so long as the ground is hard and not awash in mud like it is today. A gallop would not be advised if one wants to keep from looking like a pig in its pen.

At the house, Elcira dismounts and ties Charlie to the post near the back door. She hears men talking inside. Sneaking around to the screen and peering in, she sees Deborah, nanny to her children and daughter of the colonel’s freed slave, standing with her hands folded in front of her.

“Can you present evidence of birth, Colonel?” asks a husky-voiced male, out of sight.

“Of course, I can,” says Townsend, his voice polite but with a hint of authority only the colonel could convey. “I find this visit most disturbing, gentlemen and lady.”

“The likes of her need to follow the rules, or they’d be subjected to a fine whipping, and a fine, that’s right, isn’t it, Constable?”

One doesn’t need to get too close, nor would one want to, to recognize the lisp and slurred speech of the country store owner, Mabel Crossan. What is she up to now? Deborah has been working here since Elcira’s first child was born, and she has lived with the colonel since birth. Why would they be questioning her legitimacy now, when she is about to give birth to her child, Chester’s child? Maybe that’s it. Mabel wants to know who the father is. If she knew what Chester had done to Deborah, maybe she would accuse Deborah of killing him, instead of Elcira.

Mabel has tried to keep her away from her store for years since Deborah was able to take her first steps. But Deborah’s mom was one to be reckoned with, even though she was born a slave. Those who

didn’t love her feared her, and she was good friends with the colonel’s wife. That was the kind of friendship Mabel despised.

“Perhaps if you just show us what proof of age you have, Colonel, we can get on our way. A birth certificate, perhaps?” A second male voice, higher in pitch than the first, sounds like the pastor.

“You all have known Deborah all her life. Why question this now? You must realize how odd this is, given the Gradual Emanci-pation Act grants freedom to women who turn twenty-one after March first of 1784. God grant you wisdom. Forgive me, Pastor. But this is 1833. As you can easily see, Deborah is pregnant with her first child. If she was forty-eight years old, would she be in that state?”

“I see your point, Colonel, but there have been reports of slaves coming North without having been freed, and we do have to abide by the law, which requires a pass when traveling.” The Pastor steps into the light. A halo of red hair makes the top of his head glow like the moon in the slightest light.

“So, that’s what this is about? A pass is required when traveling from town to town, not for transport within one’s own jurisdic-tion. Have you forgotten what my role is, Pastor? Admit it. You’re conducting a witch hunt.”

“Can’t you do something, Constable?” asks Mabel of Tucker. “You’re the law here, not the colonel. Maybe we should come back when he’s not here.”

Elcira opens the door and enters. “Deborah, I need you to mind the children. Their lessons are just about completed.”

“Oh, lookie here,” says Mabel, standing at the front door with her arms folded and her black, ankle-length dress looking like death personified, “The Widow Murderess herself.”

Elcira holds the door open for Deborah. “I believe you can accept the sworn testimony of two respectable individuals who can attest to her age. Isn’t that correct, Constable Tucker? I’m one, and Colonel Townsend is the other. Now, if you don’t mind, we have work to do. This is a big farm that we manage here.”

“We?” asks Mabel, “Listen to her. I will not rest until this town is rid of the likes of you.”

“And just who do you mean, Mabel?” asks Townsend. “Surely you don’t mean the negroes. Once they all have their freedom, they will no longer be restricted to where they can go.”

Mabel looks at Elcira, then Deborah. “Stay out of my store.” “Come on, Mabel,” says the constable. “There is nothing we can do here.”

As they leave, Colonel Townsend nods, pulling on his beard. “They are going to be trouble.”

“Yes,” says Deborah, her right hand on her extended belly. “What got her started?”

Townsend places his hand on Deborah’s hand. “They are convinced this little one is mine. They would love to have me relocated elsewhere in the state.”

“We’re not going to let that happen,” says Deborah. “Thanks for letting Charlie come and get me,” says Elcira. “He loves you. He always has,” says the colonel.

“I had better let our guests out of the shed before it gets too hot in there.”

Elcira walks up the road to the house and stops at the potting shed, clutching the brass key in her hand, wishing she had the second one they found on Chester’s body. She could have another key made or have the lock changed, but that would raise eyebrows and create suspicion. It is bad enough that witch Mabel has given her the moniker Widow Murderess. The fact that this key was found on the hook in the house should have eliminated all doubt of her innocence, but some just won’t let sleeping dogs lie.

Elcira

Mommy, Deborah’s sick!” Susie runs barefoot from the house, shouting.

Elcira drops the basket of provisions for the kitchen back in the cart. “Is Mrs. Ryan there? She can help her.”

“She won’t,” says Susie.

“Stay there,” says Elcira. “I’m coming.” She won’t help her? What’s all this about?

The children are all on the floor surrounding Deborah. The older ones know what is happening, while the three youngest, Sally, Wally, and Tubby, have no memory of Mommy giving birth. Sally was old enough, but Mrs. Ryan managed the whole process while she took her nap, so she missed all the excitement and beauty.

“Mrs. Ryan?” Elcira runs to the center of the house to find her cook, cleaning woman, and occasional midwife stirring a pot hanging from the tripod in the fireplace. “Did I hear correctly? You won’t help Deborah.”

“I’m sorry, Mrs. Cranberry. I can’t.” She puts the ladle on the tiled table and wipes her hands on her apron. “It’s bad enough she’s in this house all day with those children. I can’t be seen helping her give birth.”

“And who is going to see you?” Elcira looks around. “Where’s Agnes?”

“She can’t do what I can do for her,” says Mrs. Ryan. “She’s just learning how to cook.”

“She could get Colonel Townsend.” Elcira runs to Deborah’s side and wipes her brow with her skirt. “Felix, go run down and fetch Colonel Townsend.”

The oldest, a scrappy nine-year-old with curly brown hair and pants too short for his legs, jumps up and runs, also barefoot.

“Will someone go find Agnes?” asks Elcira. Susie points out the door to the outhouse.

“Go get her. Make sure she’s cleaned up, and you two will help me with Deborah.”

“Is she gonna die, Mommy?” asks her second-oldest son, a lanky seven-year-old with longer hair than his brothers.

“No, Marty. We are going to bring a new life into this world, Deborah’s very own child.” Elcira feels the mixture of fear and anger rise up to fill her eyes, making everything look dreadful and watery. Damn you, Chester.

Deborah lifts her head and reaches for Elcira’s hand. She mouths the word, Sorry.

After all these months, wishing this day would not come, Elcira needs to face the fact that Deborah is giving birth to Chester’s child. If the child looks like Deborah, with dark skin and similar features, they will be able to adjust. It will be just like any other Negro child born on the farm, and all will be fine. But, if the child has his father’s features?

She can’t let herself think of anything else. This will go well, and all will be well.

“You boys are going to help prepare this room for the arrival of Deborah’s baby. Marty, go get two clean sheets out of the closet. Sally, grab a broom and sweep all this dirt out the door, and don’t make a cloud of dust.”

“I’ll help,” says Tootsie, scratching her leg where she was stung by a bee.

“Don’t scratch that, Tootsie. I told you what could happen,” says Elcira. “Grab a sheet and follow behind your brother to keep the dust from returning to the room.”

Standing in the doorway to the kitchen is Mrs. Ryan.

“Is it against your religion or whatever is keeping you from being human to tell us what to do so we don’t lose this child?” Elcira’s cheeks feel like they’re on fire.

Mrs. Ryan turns around and goes back into the kitchen.

“Fine,” says Elcira. Dear Lord, find it in your gracious heart to slap some sense into that woman.

The boys return with the clean sheets and spread them alongside Deborah, where their brother and sister swept the floor.

“Deborah,” says Elcira, “you must help us now. We’ll get you onto the sheets, but we will do it by lifting your legs and turning you around.” Elcira angles Deborah so that the back of her head is all Mrs. Ryan will see from the kitchen. Elcira will be able to quickly wrap the baby in a sheet and keep it out of sight, if she has to. Mrs. Ryan has refused to help, so she will not be the first to see the baby. Will Elcira be able to keep her from seeing it at all? She will if she has to. The longer she can keep the gossip hounds at bay, the better.

Susie returns with Agnes in tow. Agnes, a stocky girl with blond hair and bright blue eyes, looks like an angel in her cream-colored dress and white apron. But instead of an angelic voice, no sounds come out when she opens her mouth. Agnes has not spoken since the bandits killed her parents. That was three years ago. The schoolteacher, Mrs. Crane, adopted her, but it is far from the best of all possible arrangements for Agnes who needs to be around children and needs to have responsibilities. The Cranes treat her like a child, protecting her from life itself. When Agnes completed her studies at the end of last summer, Elcira gave her a job as Mrs. Ryan’s assistant. Now, Elcira wonders if Mrs. Ryan has neglected that job as well. The murder of Agnes’ parents has gone unsolved. Sometimes, it can be a blessing, like the unsolved murder of Chester, but even then, the situation comes at a price. The Widow Murderess. People seem content to let old wounds fester around here.

“Agnes, honey,” says Elcira, “sit here and hold Deborah’s head in your lap. When she lifts her hands over her head, hold on to them with all your might. You’re a strong girl. You can do this.”

Agnes nods and smiles. She will be too busy to notice much. She is good at concentrating on one thing at a time, and her body will shield Deborah and the baby from Mrs. Ryan, who most likely will avoid getting too close.

Felix returns. “Well?” asks Elcira.

“He isn’t there. His horse is gone, too.” Felix squeezes himself between his sisters.

“He had to go into town,” says Deborah, straining to talk. “Move over, I want to see,” says Elcira to Felix.

“Mom!” Suzie bends forward, staring between Deborah’s legs. Deborah lets out a moan, raises her hands, and Agnes grabs them, holding tight.

“Stop fussing behind me. Boys on the right, girls on the left. Now.

Felix, keep them in line.”

They line up and kneel, legs tucked under them, sitting on their heels.

Elcira lifts Deborah’s legs, bends them at the knee, and holds them. “Susie, you hold this foot here and don’t let it slip. Tootsie, you do

the same on this side. Now, we’re ready.”

As they count out the minutes between contractions, stomachs growl, and tongues run across their lips. The aroma of garlic, onions, beef, and allspice makes its way from the pot on the hearth to their noses.

Deborah’s moans and pushes are more frequent now, and every-one’s brows, including Agnes’, are wet. She looks into Elcira’s eyes, making a connection she will never forget. Elcira wonders if the girl keeps a journal. She knows she can read and write.

The hours pass quickly as each one includes more frequent moans and pushes until something starts to appear. The boys lend their hands to their sisters to keep Deborah’s legs planted so Deborah won’t slip.

“I see the head,” says Elcira, trying not to get too excited, but unable to contain her emotions.

“Ooooh,” says Deborah, taking a breath after the last big push. “Work twice as hard,” says Elcira, placing her hands on either side of the emerging head. “Now. Push!”

One long, painfully loud moan fills every corner of the room. Mrs. Ryan sticks her head out of the kitchen and watches. Elcira can feel her eyes on her, but she needs to focus.

“Agnes, push against Deborah to help her push.”

Another moan, even louder and longer, suddenly ends in panting as the baby’s body emerges, slowly at first, and then in a swoosh once the shoulders appear.

Elcira quickly wraps the baby entirely in the sheet and cradles it close.

“You need to cut the cord,” says Mrs. Ryan. “I can do that.” “No,” says Elcira, “you focus on dinner. I have this.” Deborah looks worried, and then the baby cries.

Everyone sighs.

“It’s a boy,” says Elcira.

All the children stare at the red-stained newborn, wanting to see his face. Elcira cleans him off and takes him away.

“Mom? What are you doing?” asks Susie, jumping up to follow her to a table in the corner of the room.

“Go get some fresh water from the well and bring it here.” Elcira turns around. “Agnes, continue to hold Deborah. Tootsie, cover Deborah’s legs. Boys, just stay where you are.”

Elcira stands between the baby and the rest of the people in the room and stares into the big brown eyes of the newest member of the Cranberry family, Chester’s son.

“Mom,” whispers Susie as she returns with the water. “He’s white.” “He’s your brother.” Now, everything changes.

Felix

The second floor of the Cranberry farmhouse bursts into activity before the rising of the sun, while the downstairs has been busy for hours. The smell of baked bread drifts up the

stairs to tickle the noses of the children, drawing them out of their slumber and drawing them down the stairs as if in a trance. Felix, the oldest, is the last to venture down, for it’s his turn to gather up the chamber pots. Being the strongest, he transfers the contents to a large bin, which he carries down and to the outhouse in two trips. With seven children, one’s turn should only come once a week, but the younger ones must pair off with someone older.

Felix waits at the top of the stairs, holding the large bucket with both hands on the handle. He keeps the top closed until the last minute, and then when Tootsie and Sally head for the stairs, he pops the top open and shoves it close to them.

Screaming, they race down with Felix bounding after them, laughing. “Felix,” shouts Mom from her room at the end of the hall, “I

know what you’re doing. Stop teasing your siblings.”

After emptying the bucket, Felix climbs the stairs. All of them have come down, and he can hear them chattering at the table.

The door to Mom’s room is closed, as it used to be when Father was alive. He wouldn’t dare knock but would wait patiently until the door opened.

“Are you spying on us?” Father would growl at him. “No, sir. I’m just waiting to empty the pots.”

Felix would feel his knees weaken when his father spoke to him. Even now, almost a year after his murder, Felix shakes at the closed door. He knows it’s because Deborah is in the other bed with Henry in the basket near her, but the memories are hard to forget.

The door opens.

“Good morning, darling,” says Mom, kissing him on the forehead. “Can I see him?” Felix asks.

Deborah is dressed and standing before the mirror, combing her hair. Her skin glistens in the light of the oil lamp.

Felix walks around the bed, stepping carefully as if a sound would cause the little one to cry.

“He’s getting big,” says Felix. “They grow fast, don’t they?” Deborah chuckles.

“You were once that size,” says Mom, tying a scarf around her neck. “All of you were in that very basket.”

“Really?”

Felix kneels next to the basket and peels back the blanket from Henry’s chin. Big eyes study Felix’s face, and little pink hands grab the air between them. Felix looks closely at Henry’s skin and then back at Deborah.

“Are they always this light when they’re born?” he asks.

Deborah turns and kneels beside him. “Not always,” she says. “He’s special that way.”

“Special?” Felix looks into her eyes. “What makes him special?” “He has all of you as his family.”

Felix looks at his mom and then back at Deborah. “Are you going to be living here now?”

“Let’s go down to breakfast, and we can all talk about that,” says Mom. “Deborah and Henry will join us in a little while. Henry needs his breakfast first.”

“Oh,” says Felix, remembering how mom fed the little ones. As he leaves the room, he hears Deborah singing softly.

None of the other children understand except Susie. She was the one who saw Dad with Deborah in the barn. Felix was the only one she told. At first, he didn’t know what to make of it all.

Now, Mom is explaining how much better it will be to have Deborah live here in the house rather than be alone in the Colonel’s house when he’s away.

“Can’t she stay there when he’s home and here when he’s away?” asks Sally, wiping snot from her nose with his sleeve.

“It’s just easier this way,” says Mom. “Besides, we love Deborah, don’t we?”

Everyone cheers.

“Good,” she says, “it’s settled, then.”

Deborah comes down the stairs alone. “Agnes is with him,” she says, taking her seat at the table with a family member.

Felix spots Mrs. Ryan staring at Deborah from the kitchen. He looks over at Mom and sees that she sees her as well.

Deborah reaches for the plate of eggs. “Does anyone want some more?”

“Me, me,” says Wally, holding his plate up.

She scrapes the last of it onto his plate and holds the empty plate out for Mrs. Ryan. “Could we have some more eggs, please, Mrs. Ryan?”

Mrs. Ryan looks at Elcira and walks into the kitchen without taking the plate.

Felix can hear her say, “That’s all there is.”

“Mrs. Ryan,” says Elcira, “did you not hear Deborah?” “There’s nothing wrong with my hearing, ma’am.”

Elcira stands and walks to the kitchen door while Felix clears the empty plates from the table. “There’s something wrong with your manners.”

“I’m not the one who lets Negroes sit with family at table.”

“I suppose you don’t. Deborah is family. And you will serve her the way you serve me, or you can leave.”

Pots and lids bang, followed by Mrs. Ryan exiting the kitchen, tossing her apron on the floor.

“I’m sorry,” says Deborah.

“There’s nothing for you to be sorry about.” Elcira picks up the apron and puts it on. “Felix, run to the hen house and get some fresh eggs. Susie, slice some bread and toast it on the grill in the fireplace. Deborah, sit back and relax. Welcome to the Cranberry household.” After breakfast, it’s time for chores. Mom takes one of their school slates and writes down what each child is responsible for. Instead of writing out their names, she lists the days of the week. Each child knows which day of the week they represent. Sunday is Susie, Monday is Marty, Tuesday is Tootsie, Wednesday is Wally, Thursday is Tubby,

Friday is Felix, Saturday is Sally.

Felix helps the younger ones read the chart, and he recalls the song Deborah taught them about the days of the week. The actual chores change day by day and week by week. The seedlings turn to plants, the colts learn to be led, the chicks become hens, and the apple blossoms become fruit.

Ushering them off, he turns to watch his mom and Deborah clear the table.

“I can do that,” he says.

Deborah reaches for him and hugs him. “You are becoming a man.”

“Why do you say that?” Felix looks at his mom, confused. Deborah walks up the stairs. “Time to check on Henry and

Agnes.”

Elcira comes over to him and rubs his head. “What?”

“I’m going to need your help with this place.”

“But Mom.” He lets her pull him close. “I’m only nine.”

Deborah

Deborah gathers the muslin cloths she uses to wrap Henry and soaks them in the boiling water in the large copper kettle hanging from the iron tripod in the hearth. After they boil

for a while, she uses a long wooden stick to lift them out of the water and place them in a smaller pot to soak overnight. Using a knife, she shaves the bar of lilac soap into the water. Tomorrow, she will scrub, boil, rinse multiple times and wring them out before hanging them to dry in the sun.

The younger children watch with wide eyes, taking turns stirring the water with the stick to make the soap dissolve.

“It smells nice,” says Sally, sniffing the bar of soap.

“Yes, we’ll need to make more soap soon. Keeping all of you in clean clothes is hard work.” Deborah takes the pot and sets it out of the way in a corner of the main room, so it won’t be disturbed with the normal bustle of the kitchen.

“Can I empty the kettle?” asks Felix.

“It’s too hot and too heavy for you,” says Elcira, entering with Henry in her arms. She hands him to Deborah. “I cleaned him up and wrapped him in fresh muslin.”

“Thank you.” Deborah takes her son into the other room to nurse him. “You don’t have to care for him. That’s my job.”

“And you helped me with my job for all seven of mine,” says Elcira. “Mommy, was I that small?” asks Tootsie, leaning over Henry as

he suckles.

“You were all that small, even smaller. He’s growing fast. By the Fall, he’ll be following you around.”

“I remember you crawling after me everywhere I went.” Felix says to Tootsie. “I had to run upstairs to get away from you.”

“And you would cry,” says Deborah. “What a loud cry that was, too.” “Me?” asks Tootsie. “How come Henry doesn’t cry?”

“He does,” says Deborah, “but not like you. He’s a very happy baby.” “Mom, wasn’t I a happy baby?” asks Tootsie.

“You were all happy babies.”

“Not so much now,” says Felix, poking his sister in the side. “Come on, we have chores to do. We need to cut up some turnips and bring them to the horses.”

“Can I go too?” asks Marty.

“What does it say on the slate?” asks Felix.

Marty picks up the slate from the desk against the wall and reads, “Hay for the horses.”

“Come with us to the root cellar, and we’ll go with you to the silo.” “Take the pushcart,” says Elcira.

Deborah stares at her baby’s lips. They seem larger as he suckles her breast, big, pink lips around her near-black nipple. She puts her head in her hand. “He looks more like yours than mine,” she says to Elcira when the children are all out and about.

“You are safe here.”

“That’s not what I mean. Will it help him or hurt him?” A tear forms, and she lets it fall onto her cheek. “If we want to pass him, now would be the time.”

“Pass him? You mean say he’s mine and not yours?” “It would go better for him, wouldn’t it?”

“This was Chester’s doing, so he’s already part of this family through him. I will never turn my back on Henry or you. If the truth comes out, we will both be in jeopardy.” Elcira pulls a chair over and sits beside Deborah. She touches Henry’s cheek.

“Some think the Colonel is his father. He hasn’t denied it because he cares about me, but it can hurt him.” Deborah bites her lip. “I don’t know what to do.”

“When is he coming back?” asks Elcira. “We can talk to him.” “His regiment is on some mission throughout the state. He may

not be back for weeks.”

“A lot can happen in that time. We’ll think of something.” Felix, Marty and Tootsie run in, gasping for breath.

“The lock is broke,” says Tootsie.

“Someone broke into the root cellar,” says Felix.

“It’s all gone,” says Marty. “And the hay, too. The silo is empty.” “The only hay we have is what’s in the barn,” says Felix.

Elcira jumps out of the chair and grabs her rifle. “Watch them,” she says to Deborah.

“What are you going to do?” asks Deborah.

“I’m going to take two of the men and go see the constable.” “You know he would love an excuse to come back here and look

around,” says Deborah.

“I know. But they need to know I’m serious and not afraid of them.” Elcira heads toward the stable to get her horse and the men.

Deborah lifts Henry up and covers herself. “Agnes, please come and take Henry.”

“What are you going to do?” asks Felix.

“We’re going to take the wagon and visit a friend.” Deborah hands Henry to Agnes and turns to Felix. “Find your brothers and sisters and meet me at the barn.”

The ride into town to find the constable and return with him will take Elcira at least two hours, plenty of time to get to Shady Farm, on the New York side of the border between the states.

“Where are we going?” asks Susie, sitting beside Deborah in the wagon.

“I have family nearby. They own a small farm in New York.” “New York? Is that far?” asks Wally.

“Not far,” says Felix. “We learned that it’s the next state over from Connecticut.”

“That’s right,” says Deborah, talking loudly so the children in the back can hear. “My dad moved us here when I was your age.”

“Is it like our farm?” asks Tubby.

“Not nearly as big, but it has a stream flowing through it, and I remember catching fish in it. There’s also a big hole in the ground that we called a cave.”

All the way, Deborah keeps them occupied with stories of her childhood. She avoids the toll roads, keeping to the dirt roads, making the trip longer.

As they approach the farm, the children pile up close to each other to look.

“Hello!” shouts a tall, thin negro man in overalls. “Who are all these beautiful children? And what can I do for you?”

“I’m Deborah Townsend from Old Cranberry, Connecticut, and we need some root vegetables and hay for our horses and pigs.”

“I’m sure we can help with that. I don’t believe we have an account set up with you. Will that be cash or credit? Or maybe we can negotiate a trade?”

“A trade would be perfect. We have some lovely Morgan horses, as well as some hogs,” says Deborah.

“And we have chickens,” says Sally. “Lots of chickens, hens with eggs.”

“Well, why don’t you all come down to the barn? We can work this out,” he says, smiling as though they have known each other their whole lives. “You said, Townsend? That wouldn’t be Colonel Townsend, would it?”

“Yes, it would,” says Felix.

“Well, well, he’s an old friend. In fact, my cousin and his family went to work for him years back.”

“That would be me,” says Deborah.

“Well, why didn’t you say you’re family?” He wraps his arms around her and pats Tubby on the belly. “Let’s get some food in you folks and do some business.”

After a relatively long and pleasant visit, they return with a wagon full of turnips, potatoes, carrots, squash, and hay. Sitting in the back with the hay makes all the children itchy. But they couldn’t be happier to pull up and see their mom and two of the farm hands talking with Constable Tucker.

“Your mom doesn’t look so happy, Susie. You all better jump off and run into the house. I’ll take this to the root cellar and barn.”

“I can help,” says Felix.

“Then you stay. The rest of you go inside and stay there.” Deborah directs the horse around to the barn and steps down.

As long as she stays here, Constable Tucker will stay away. He doesn’t need to investigate this barn again. That incident is history.

She has been in the barn many times with the children over several months. She often needed their help since her growing belly kept her from bending. While watching Felix unload the hay today, she senses something is bothering him. He keeps his head low when he is near her, and occasionally, he turns quickly as if someone is behind him.

“What’s wrong, Felix?” she asks, carrying a basket of onions from the wagon to a smaller handcart.

“I’m fine,” he says, but he is not convincing.

She walks over to the bales of hay he just stacked and leans against them. “Come,” she says, patting the hay, “sit here and talk to me.”

He hesitates, taking each step slowly and cautiously. She pats the hay bale again, but he doesn’t sit. “Does it bother you?” he asks.

“Does what bother me, Felix?” She thinks he knows what he is asking, but she wants to hear him say it.

“Is this where Dad-? Does it bother you to be here?” “I’ve been here with you many times, Felix.”

He turns his head and steps away, his hands in his pockets. “Come here,” she says, opening her arms to him. She doesn’t wait for him to come but goes to him instead, wrapping her arms around him.”

“How is Henry our brother?” he asks.

She slips behind him and folds her arms around him, clasping them across his chest to whisper into his ear. His hair is soft and curly, and it smells of lilacs. He has washed up. She can feel his chest rise and fall with an occasional spasm, as though he is holding back tears. “Henry is your dad’s son, just like you and your brothers are his

sons, and your sisters are his daughters.”

“Why did he want another son?” Felix bows his head. “Didn’t he love the ones he had?”

“Of course he did,” says Deborah. “He loved you very much.” She can feel her chest tighten as she recalls the day he died. What can she tell Felix? What will he understand?

“But Henry is your son.”

“Yes, he is.” Deborah presses her face into the soft curls of Felix’s hair. “Your father didn’t know he would have another son.”

“He didn’t?” Felix turns and looks at Deborah. “You’re crying.” “I’m sorry, Felix,” she says. “I’m sorry you don’t have your father

to hold you like this and answer your questions.”

Felix places his hand on her shoulder. “He wasn’t that kind of dad, not like Mom. He would place his hand on my shoulder and squeeze tight. He made promises, but he didn’t keep them.”

She places both hands on his shoulders.

Felix pulls himself away and goes back to his work. “Next time he grabs my shoulder, I am going to make him tell me he loved me. That’s what I’ll do.”

Deborah feels him slip out of her grasp.

He looks at her and nods. “Thank you, Deborah.”

***

Excerpt from THE WIDOW MURDERESS by Bill Cusano. Copyright 2025 by Bill Cusano. Reproduced with permission from Bill Cusano. All rights reserved.

 

Author Bio:

Bill Cusano

Bill Cusano is an author, a retired deacon in the Episcopal Church and a believer that it is the process rather than the outcomes that matter most in our lives. Retired from the corporate world and an eight-year stint running a non-profit feeding program, Bill attacks every project as a ministry, giving it his full commitment. Needing to readjust to life after losing the love of his life to leukemia in April of 2024, Bill returned to writing full-time, resulting in The Old Cranberry Ladies Garden Club series, the motivation and inspiration for which came from his wife’s voracious appetite for reading historical fiction. While this is Bill’s debut novel, he has always been a writer, publishing short stories and poems early on, and then beginning a daily spiritual blog in 2008. You can follow Bill’s Reflections From The Garden Bench along with other writings on his Substack account.

Catch Up With Bill Cusano:

BillCusano.com
Bill's Substack
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads - @billcusano
Instagram - @billcusano
X - @CusanoBill
Facebook - @bill.cusano

 

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I received a complimentary egalley of this book through Partners in Crime Book Tours. My Comments are an independent review.

(My star ratings: 5-An exceptional book, 4-Better than average, relevant and liked by me, 3-It is average, 2-It is below average and not liked by me, 1-It is practically unreadable.)

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

You Can Tell Me by Melinda Leigh Book Review

About the Book:

On the three-year anniversary of true crime writer Olivia Cruz’s horrific kidnapping, she’s scheduled to walk her podcaster friend Zoe March through the crime scene, but Zoe fails to show. Olivia knows Zoe would never stand her up―not today.

Zoe’s husband, who claims she never came home the night before, has reported her missing. But marital conflicts make the police suspect she has left him. Olivia thinks otherwise. The police aren’t looking for Zoe, so Olivia begins her own investigation. Retracing her friend’s last steps, she finds Zoe’s phone and a text with one chilling word: Run.

It soon becomes apparent that Zoe has been keeping secrets, and with her true crime podcast, there’s no telling what she has unearthed. To find her, Olivia must dig into her friend’s past. Did Zoe vanish to escape a killer, and is Olivia walking into a deadly trap?

 

My Review:

A good murder mystery with plenty of suspense. The pace is well done and it was good to see some characters from previous novels. I did not appreciate the crude language as it was not necessary and did not improve the story.

My rating: 4/5 stars.

 

About the Author:

#1 Amazon Charts and #1 Wall Street Journal bestselling author Melinda Leigh has sold over 16 million books. As a fully recovered banker and a life-long lover of books, she started writing as a way to preserve her sanity while raising her kids. Melinda's debut novel, SHE CAN RUN, was an International Thriller Award finalist. Since then, she has garnered numerous writing accolades, including two RITA® Award nominations and an induction into the NJ Romance Writers Hall of Fame.

Melinda holds a 2nd degree belt in Kenpo Karate. She's dabbled in Arnis stick fighting, studied Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, and taught women's self-defense. She lives near the beach with her family and two spoiled rescue dogs. With such a pleasant life, she has no explanation for the sometimes dark nature of her imagination.

Montlake, 300 pages.

I received a complimentary egalley of this book from the publisher. My comments are an independent review.

(My star ratings: 5-An exceptional book, 4-Better than average, relevant and liked by me, 3-It is average, 2-It is below average and not liked by me, 1-It is practically unreadable.)

Monday, July 6, 2026

Get Gribnitz by Howard Gimple Blog Tour Book Review

 Get Gribnitz by Howard Gimple Banner

GET GRIBNITZ

by Howard Gimple

June 29 - July 24, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

Get Gribnitz by Howard Gimple

Howard Gimple, master of the comedy thriller, takes on the world of advertising in his funniest, snarkiest, most entertainingly irreverent book yet.

Stew Gribnitz is a brilliant advertising copywriter with impulse control issues, an utter disdain for authority, and an unresolved demi-Oedipal complex (he’d like to murder his father but has no sexual designs on his mother). When the first act of his new creative director is to dump our hero’s best work into a garbage bin, Stew’s immediate impulse (which, of course, he can’t control) is to do unspeakable things to his new boss’s necktie while he’s still wearing it.

The next day, when the necktie guy is found brutally murdered, Stew is brought in for questioning by the NYPD. He’s released thanks to an air-tight alibi, but not before his face is emblazoned on the cover of the New York tabloids, declaring him to be a cross between Son of Sam and Jack the Ripper. Stew becomes a Madison Avenue untouchable and a New York City pariah, except to his father who declares that seeing his son on the front page of his favorite paper is the first time that Stew has ever done anything to make him proud.

Stew gets a gig as a part-time advertising consultant to a billionaire publisher running for Governor of Connecticut who’s twenty points behind in the polls. When the publisher’s private plane does a nosedive into Long Island Sound, Stew is the only one who knows that his deceased client had been receiving death threats from his opponent, a former FBI agent whose brother is a mob enforcer.

Stew is convinced he’ll be the next victim and the authorities are convinced he’s a multiple murderer. The only way to clear his name is to find the real killer or killers, a task, well beyond his skill set, made even more difficult because the FBI, the NYPD, several suburban police jurisdictions and a homicidal hitwoman are all out to GET GRIBNITZ.

Praise for Get Gribnitz:

"...the perfect mystery novel"
~ Readers' Favorite

"…a deliciously entertaining, fun, and exciting read from cover to cover."
~ The Mystery Review Crew


My Review:

This is one gritty novel. Gribnitz is a very untypical hero. He is good at his job but his character is something else. His temper is over the top and there is a great deal of yelling and screaming going on. Gribnitz does become the amateur sleuth in this novel and he completes somewhat of a bumbling investigation. He always seems to be in the wrong spot at the right time and is suspected of murder frequently. Thankfully, he has a couple friends who stick by his side, often helping him out of hopeless situations. He survives them all, right down to the surprising and nearly unbelievable twist near the end. There is lots of humor in this novel, much of it going right over my head while what I did recognize was frequently crude. I did learn some about pool and the many ways to play the game as well as about the advertising world.

This is a novel for readers who like a gritty one, don't mind crude humor, and are up for cheering on a well intentioned but bumbling amateur sleuth.

My rating: 4/5 stars.

 

Book Details:

Genre: Mystromedy
Published by: Mystromedy Books
Publication Date: July 1, 2024
Number of Pages: 348
ISBN: 9798990761575
Book Links: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub

Read an excerpt:

On my way to the house I’m hoping Moish isn’t home. But as soon as I walk in there he is, standing in the living room, holding the Post in one hand and the News in the other.

I gird myself for what’s coming. “So I guess you read about me in the paper.”

His smile gets broader. “You bet I did.”

“It was all a huge misunderstanding. Believe it or not, you’re my alibi. I was here with you last night when it happened.”

He sticks his thumb in the air. “Of course you were. I’ll back you up a hundred percent. Just tell me what time I was supposed to be here and I’ll swear on a pile of Bibles.” He winks at me. “Old Testament, of course.”

“No, really.”

He shakes his head. “This is better. We were here together all night, playing pinochle. Wait a minute, you never learned to play pinochle. How about gin rummy? You know how to play gin rummy. Of course you do. Any moron can play gin rummy.”

“Pop, listen to me. We don’t have to make up a story. If it ever comes up, just tell the truth.”

“Okay, son,” he says, still grinning. “Whatever you say. But I still think the gin rummy routine is the way to go.”

Son? He never calls me son. Putz, schmendrick or shmuck with earlaps, which for my father is the absolute worst thing you can be, are his usual terms of endearment for me, but son? Never.

Since my mother died, giving me a hard time has become my father’s favorite pastime. Even more than playing cards or going to the track. After forty-five years of arguing with her, he needed someone else to yell at. Not that he didn’t yell at me when she was alive, it’s just that she was his number-one target. She told me that he never means anything by it. She used to say, “When he gets quiet, that’s when you have to worry. As long as he’s yelling, everything’s fine.”

That’s why I’m so confused. Here’s the perfect chance for him to tell me what a shmuck I am for getting myself into this mess, instead he’s kvelling like I just won the Nobel Prize.

“You did see the paper, didn’t you?”

“Of course. I bought extra copies. I’m gonna hand them out to everyone at the track.”

“And you’re not upset?”

“Upset?” He puffs out his chest. “I’ve never been prouder.”

“But everyone thinks I’m a cold-blooded murderer.”

“I know.” There’s that grin again. “It’s terrific.”

“I don’t get it.”

“What’s to get? You finally made a name for yourself. Made it to the front page. The page that’s usually reserved for presidents, governors and generals. And now my boy is right up there with them.”

“They made me look like a homicidal maniac. It’s not the same.”

“You’re right. It’s better.”

At this point I don’t know what to say, so I just stand there with my mouth open.

“You know where I grew up, right?”

I nod. “Yeah. Brownsville. Chester Street, right?”

“You know my mother had a chicken market around the corner on Dumont Avenue?”

“Of course. You told me that story a hundred times. They called her the Chicken Lady. She made you get up at five in the morning to pluck chickens before you went to school. Made you come back before you went to bed to sweep up.”

“She was a hard woman, my mother. She had to be. After that goddamn flu killed my father, she had three babies to feed. But that doesn’t matter now.” His eyes start to twinkle. And Moish wasn’t usually a twinkler. “Do you know what was down the street from my mother’s store?”

I shrug.

“Rosie Gold’s candy store.”

“Okaaaaay?”

“You know who hung around Rosie’s?”

“Not a clue.”

He puffs out his chest. I’m thinking it’s gonna be some old-time Jewish sports hero like Kingfish Levinsky or Slapsie Maxie Rosenbloom.

“Murder, Incorporated. That’s who. The toughest SOBs in the country. And they were all Jews. Louis Lepke, Abe Reles, Buggsy Goldstein. Killers, every one of them. Everybody feared them. The Italians, the Irish, the coloreds. They had class too. Money, women, fancy cars, you name it. When I was a kid, twelve or thirteen, I’d sneak out of my mother’s shop and hang around outside Rosie’s. Those guys loved me. They treated me like I was their little mascot. Their good-luck charm. I’d run errands for them. Bring them cigarettes, drinks, the paper. Whatever they wanted. And they’d throw me a twenty-dollar tip like it was a nickel. You know what that’s worth today? Five hundred dollars. I was a snot-nosed pisher with more money in my pocket than most of the grown men in the neighborhood. In a couple of years I coulda been one of them.”

I don’t know whether to be impressed or aghast. “So what happened?”

He shrugs. “This and that. Reles turned rat. Then he fell out of a hotel window. Pretty soon they were all dead or in jail. The Depression hit. The war happened. I spent five years in the Philippines shooting Japs. And when I came home I married your mother.”

I’m a little taken aback that he puts marrying my mother in the same category as the Second World War and the Great Depression.

“Besides, when your grandmother found out what I was doing, she beat the living crap outta me. Told me if she ever caught me hanging around with those bums again she’d pluck me like one of her chickens.”

“Let me get this straight, your childhood dream was to be a gangster?”

“It was different then, not like the scum-bums you see now. Back then, if you were in the rackets you were somebody, a big shot, a mensch.”

“So seeing my commercials on TV and the awards I won, that all means nothing to you, but having everybody in New York think I’m the Jewish Dillinger, that you’re proud of?”

“It’s not like you’re a senator or governor, but it’s something.”

“I’m sorry to disappoint you but I really didn’t do it.”

“Whatever you say.” He pauses for a second. “Listen, do you know Shifty, the bookie from back in our old neighborhood?”

“Yeah, sure.”

“He’s been giving me a hard time. He says I owe him some money but he’s fulla shit.”

“How much money?”

“I dunno, two . . . three hundred.”

“Dollars?”

“No, kishkes. Of course dollars.”

“And you’re sure you don’t owe him the money?”

“Of course I’m sure. You think I wouldn’t remember something like that?”

I don’t say anything.

“He says he’s gonna come over here with some leg breakers and take it if I don’t give it to him. How about you pay him a little visit and convince him to lay off?” He holds up the paper and grins. “He’ll listen to you.”

“Listen, Pop. I’m not a thug. I don’t even play one on TV. There’s no way I’m gonna threaten your bookie or anybody else.”

He shoots me a scornful smirk. “I shoulda known you didn’t have the guts.” He walks to the bathroom. Before he shuts the door he looks at me with disgust and shouts, “Putz!”

***

Excerpt from GET GRIBNITZ by Howard Gimple. Copyright 2026 by Howard Gimple. Reproduced with permission from Howard Gimple. All rights reserved.

 

 

Author Bio:

Howard Gimple

I’ve been writing for my supper for most of my adult life. First as a copywriter and creative director for several ad agencies. After I aged out of the advertising business (you’re a dinosaur at 35), I wrote English dialogue for the American releases of Japanese anime cartoons, reviewed movies for a pay-per-view television network, and was the editor of a newsletter for the New York Giants football team. I wrote the lyrics for a song used in the soundtrack of the horror film THE REJUVENATOR as well as the fight song for Stony Brook University, where I was a writer and sports editor for their alumni magazine and taught two classes, Rock and Relevance, about the influence of classic rock on politics and Filthy Shakespeare about the sexy bits of the Bard’s plays and poems that they don’t usually teach. Several of my stories have been featured in Akashic Books’ Mondays are Murder online noir series. I recently finished work on The Garbageman, a documentary about a trash hauler who saved the lives of 50,000 children in underprivileged countries with congenital heart disease. And if you’ve gotten this far on the website, you know about my novels.

After living in Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Long Island, I headed west to Glendora, California, with my wife and Goldendoodle.

Catch Up With Howard Gimple:

HowardGimple.com
Amazon Author Profile
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BookBub - @howardgimple
Facebook - @authorhowardgimple

 

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I received a complimentary egalley of this book through Partners in Crime Book Tours. My comments are an independent review.

(My star ratings: 5-An exceptional book, 4-Better than average, relevant and liked by me, 3-It is average, 2-It is below average and not liked by me, 1-It is practically unreadable.)