Thursday, December 23, 2021

Message from the Grave - Excerpt from The Deadly Ring

 


The Deadly Ring

from the Alexander Steele Murder Mystery Series

Chapter 2 

Message from the Grave


 

Alexander Steele took the Schuylkill Expressway and headed uptown to Chelten Hills Cemetery.

It was a quiet spring afternoon at the cemetery where bodies of the dearly departed rested.  

The one thing you could always count on at cemeteries was peace.  On this day, that peace would

soon erupt into a deadly encounter, an encounter loud enough to almost wake up the dead.


Steele felt uneasy.  Something was off.  The birds were singing and the sky was blue but there

was a chill in the air,  a sense that something was not quite right, a feeling that has kept him

alive through dozens of fatal cases.  He scanned the gravesite for anything that looked out of place

Steele couldn’t help notice how nervous the caretaker was as he watched the three gravediggers

milling around the new gravesite, waiting for the backhoe operator to maneuver the big yellow

machine into place. Steele caught a glimpse of flashing light from behind a tree on the north

mound about four hundred feet away for a brief moment. The reflection of the sun bouncing

off a watch or maybe eyeglasses from the uninvited guest in the distance.





Steele began making his way toward where he had seen the light flash.  When he reached the halfway

point, a short man in dark clothing bolted from behind a weeping willow and began running away up

the grassy mound as fast as he could. Steele was in hot pursuit. When the man with the glasses

realized he couldn’t outrun Steele, he turned suddenly, pulled out his gun. He fired three shots

in Steele’s direction. Steele dove and rolled behind an old gray, four-foot-high headstone in

one fluid motion and quickly drew his weapon. He crouched down behind the small granite

wall and carefully peered around the side. He noticed the gunman was still running further

up the mound. When the gun-toting attacker stopped at the top of the hill and turned to fire again,

Steele was ready


Alexander Steele Mystery Trilogy


Philly Murder Mysteries



Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Blackout excerpt - The Badlands

 



Chestnut Hill is located at the upper end of Philadelphia.  Its tree-lined streets and quaint little shops were far removed from the gritty mean streets of North Philly.  It’s a pretty safe bet that well-heeled Philadelphians who resided behind the walls of sprawling Chestnut Hill mansions have never heard of the Badlands.

 There are no tree-lined streets, specialty shops, or fancy cars, only a sense of disillusionment and reminders of abandonment.  Abandoned cars, abandoned homes but most of all abandoned dreams.  It was the perfect environment for drug dealers to set up shop.  Steele turned the corner and parked his midnight blue jag in front of an old, rundown restaurant that looked like it had been closed for years.   The trash-littered street in the heart of the badlands was deserted except for three guys on the corner.  Steele checked his watch, 12:50 a.m. He was early.  As soon as he got out of the car, the three rough-looking dudes approached him.  Steele backed up against the car so they couldn't surround him. 


“Gimme, your watch and your wallet,” said the biggest of the three men.  Without warning, he grabbed Steele by his coat collar.  Steele grabbed the attacker's arm, quickly spun him to the side and slammed his head onto the hood of the car.  Before the others could figure out what happened, Steele kicked the second guy in the balls and punched him in the face.  The two men hit the ground like sacks of potatoes.  Although Steele had been out of the detective business for a while his reflexes were still as sharp as ever.  The last man standing looked down on the ground at his dazed friends; when he looked up, he found himself staring down the barrel of Steele's gun.  

Alexander Steele was angry.  “Look, I don't have time for this shit.  I didn't come all the way down here to take out the trash, but what the hell, I'm early.  So, what's it gonna be? You gentleman can step off right now, or your folks can read about you in tomorrow's newspaper, in the obituaries.”  Before the guy could answer, a man came out from one of the abandoned storefronts.  “Mr. Steele, you okay?”  Steele glanced over at the two men slowly getting up from the ground.  “Yeah, I'm fine.”  He reached for his wallet and slapped a fifty-dollar bill on top of his car.  “You want my money; well, earn it -watch my car.  When I get back, it's still better to be here and it better be in pristine condition.”  The thugs looked confused; Steele sighed, “Just watch the damned car, and tomorrow go buy a dictionary!”  


Alexander Steele Series on Audio Books

Saturday, December 11, 2021

Excerpt from Return of the Deadly Trio

 Excerpt from Return of the Deadly Trio

Brenda was eavesdropping on the conversation.  “It’s okay, Steele. She can stay with me.  As a matter of fact Tina, you can stay too.  These jokers don’t know me or where I live and besides, I got the Judge and a forty-five to protect us.  Don’t underestimate Shakia; she has asked me to hold her handbag a time or two.  That extra weight she’s caring ain’t no curling iron.”  Steele smiled as he turned to Shakia, “Is that okay with you, baby?”  Shakia managed a brief smile and kissed Steele on the cheek.  “It’s better than DC.”

Duce was not a patient man.  He wanted to get down to business.  “Okay, you love birds,  now that your domestic affairs have been sorted out, does somebody want to tell me what’s going on?  What’s the deal with the suitcase, and who is the Judge?”  Brenda laughed, I can’t tell you about the suitcase sugar, but the Judge is my rock wilder.  He decides who gets in or out of my place.  Nobody gets past him.”


Alexander Steele Murder Mysteries, Volume 2 


Thursday, December 2, 2021

The Deadly Gamble

 The Deadly Gamble

Suspects
There's been a double murder on the grounds of Amber Hill Manor. Kevin Matthew's wife Melissa and pool boy Sam were found dead inside a locked shed.
Follow the clues and catch the killer(s) in The Deadly Gamble. A short story from the Alexander Steele murder mystery series.
Husband – Kevin Matthews
Doubled wife’s life insurance policy to six million dollars shortly after catching his wife having an affair with the last pool boy.
Sister in law – Daniela Matthews was also known as Kitty.
Professional high stakes poker player. Disliked her brother’s wife. Rumored to have had an affair with the pool boy who Mr. Matthews thinks is gay.
Maid – Audrey
Likes to play the Power Ball lottery. Would lose her job if the Matthews move to Florida.
Butler/cook – Antonio
Would also be out of a job.
Groundskeeper – Pablo
likes to bet on the horses. Owed Mrs. Mathews a large sum of money she threatens to withhold his pay until the debt was paid.
The Chauffeur – Chris
Will bet on anything Once placed a wager on how long it would take a bead of sweat to drop from a man's face. Had joked with the staff about killing the pool boy

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Excerpt from Alexander Steele and the Legacy of Death

 Excerpt from Alexander Steele and the Legacy of Death

The dimly lit hallways in the rundown apartment building were painted blood red. It was clear from the stains, cracks, and writing along the walls that the apartment building was way overdue for a fresh coat of paint. Even though the rain had cooled things off outside, the hallway was hot and muggy.
Odors of cheap wine and urine permeated throughout the dilapidated three-story walkup.
Steele ignored the police sirens wailing in the distance. He walked by an old black payphone with a dozen or so phone numbers scribbled on the wall before climbing the rickety stairs.
Apartment 12 was at the end of the hall on the right. Not knowing what to expect he cautiously approached the apartment. As he drew his weapon Steele noticed the door was slightly opened.
An open door especially in this neighborhood was always a bad sign.
As if that wasn’t enough the foul smell coming from the hallway was suddenly replaced by the stench of a rotting corpse. As the sound of the sirens grew louder Steele considered the possibility that they may be headed his way. He had to move fast. The floorboards creaked as he crept into the small apartment. An old porcelain lamp with painted pink roses topped with a battered cream-colored lamp shade gave Steele enough light to navigate around the room. A small picture frame had been tossed into the small black wastebasket next to an old raggedy lounge chair. The toxic smell of death grew stronger as he moved towards the kitchen. Out of the corner of his eye, Steele caught a glimpse of flashing red lights from the window facing Germantown Avenue.
Moments later Steele’s suspicions were confirmed. After making a quick sweep of the ransacked efficiency apartment he holstered his Glock and stood over the lifeless body sprawled out on the kitchen floor. The victim had apparently been shot from behind.
Philadelphia’s finest were just outside the door. The corpse lay face down on the cold, dirty, gray tiled kitchen floor. Just as Steele was about to turn him over he heard a voice yell.
“Stop where you are and put both your hands up now!”

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Saturday, August 21, 2021

Excerpt from Alexander Steele and the Legacy of Death

 Excerpt from Alexander Steele and the Legacy of Death


Steele Clashes with Detective Audrey Washington after North Philly Shootout

 

Excerpt from Alexander Steele and the Case of the Missing Men

Steele glanced down at the headline, 

NORTH PHILLY SHOOTOUT LEAVES ONE DEAD TWO WOUNDED.  

“I’ve known you what;” 

Audrey put one hand on her hip and held the other in the air as if she were searching for an answer, 

“24 hours.”  

She held up her index finger,” 

you managed to drag me into your drama and I have only known you for one single day.  I left you several messages, why haven’t you returned my calls?”

“Calm down baby, if you keep this up you might bust a vessel of something.” 

Detective Washington took a deep breath then exhaled.  After composing herself Audrey calmly sat across from Steele.  

“Okay Steele, let me lay this out for you.” 

Before she could get another word out Sugar Bear appeared with a cup of coffee for the detective.  Audrey appreciated the gesture. She looked up at Sugar Bear and smiled. 

“Oh, thank you Honey Bear, but I don’t drink coffee.  You wouldn't happen to have any Jasmine tea back there would you?” 

Steele smiled as he shook his head. 

“It’s Sugar Bear and I thought Jasmine tea was something you bathed in.”

Realizing that Steele was having fun at her expense Washington replied. 

“It helps calm my nerves. And now that I’m stuck with you I may have to order it by the case. Sugar Bear chuckled as he left with the coffee. 

“Okay Steele, now that you’ve had your fun, it’s time for a little quiz.  In the last three days there have been three dead bodies.” 


Audrey pointed to the entrance of the club. 


“One on your doorstep. One outside of Laura's Lounge and the third after a car chase that ended at Broad & Olney. What do they all have in common?”


 Steele knew exactly what she was referring to.  


“Don’t strain your brain, Steele. The answer is you.  Don’t even try and BS your way out of this one.  We have several eyewitnesses that place you and your car at the scene.  Since the captain is short-staffed he has decided to saddle me with all three cases which means I’m gonna have to give up my bowling night to clean up your mess.  Okay Steele, tell me about the car chase.” 


Alexander Steele Murder Mystery Books can be found here.


Sunday, February 7, 2021

Motown The Soundtrack to My Early Years

 


Motown The Soundtrack to My Early Years 


Back in the sixties and seventies, we didn’t have MP3 players, cable television or Youtube but we did have Motown. If I had to use one word to describe Motown it would be ‘original’. My parents' generation swayed to the tunes of Nat King Cole, Jackie Wilson, The Dells, Chuck Berry, and The Platters. I grew up in a house with two brothers and our Cousin Herb. 


The record players back then were called Hi-fi’s back then. Our high-fidelity stereo sat on a stand in the living room and under no circumstances were we allowed to touch it. The fastest way for my parents to clear the room was to play Fats Domino’s “Blueberry Hill” or “Tutti Frutti” by Little Richard, before half the song was over we were out. One day seemingly out of the ether came this company named Motown. 


I knew that cars came from Detroit but until I looked at a map I had no idea where Detroit was located in relation to Philly. Growing up we listened to three radio stations, two played R&B/Soul primarily from black artists and the third was KYW a news and weather station because we needed to know if there was going to be enough snow to close the schools. 


One day Little Richard and Jackie Wilson were gone, suddenly we were inundated with brand new music that kept coming. Hits like, “My Girl”, “Get Ready”, “Shop Around”, “Stubborn Kind of Fellow” and “Quicksand”. Suddenly all of these songs were flooding the airways of these two small stations. 


Two Music Worlds 


When I was 13 my parents moved us to what was considered a nicer neighborhood but there was one big drawback. The two black radio stations were considered daytime-only stations by the FCC which meant they had to cut their power at dusk. By moving further away from the signals we were only able to get white stations after around 5 in the winter and 7 in the summer. For me, it was a damn near traumatic experience. Try going from “My Girl” and “Ain't Too Proud to Beg” to The Beach Boys’ “I Get Around” and “Surfer Girl”, yep, see what I mean? 


For some reason, during that time, white guys loved singing about their cars. “Little Deuce Coupe”, “Fun Fun Fun” (‘till daddy takes the T Bird away), and “409” a song about a Chevy, yes I had to look it up. There were also lots of songs about beaches and beach parties. The closest beach to us was Atlantic City roughly 90 miles away. There was no T-Bird for my daddy to take away. His mode of transportation was the 79 trolly which took him to work at 5:30 every morning. 


Our outdoor family fun activities consisted mostly of cookouts where there were lots of trees and grass but not one grain of sand. 


The Friends I Never Met 


As a pre-teen, teen and young adult the music of Motown became an intricate part of my life, it was always there. Block parties, house parties, graduation parties, birthday parties, club socials, picnics (we call them cookouts now) weddings, wakes, I think you get the picture. I had no idea of who Berry Gordy was until I began reading stories about him and his company in Jet magazine. I was intrigued. He was an anomaly, a black man starting and running a successful business with black talent back in the sixties was rare. Our faces were on pancakes and rice boxes but we didn’t own the companies. 


I have never met Berry Gordy, Smokey Robinson, Norman Whitfield, Lamont Dozier, Brian, and Eddie Holland but I know them through the hundreds of songs they wrote and produced. I could and did relate to them growing up. “Ask the Lonely” was an early hit by the Four Tops. Levi didn’t just sing the song, at some point in his life those lyrics must have had real meaning to him. Not only did he go to that cold dark place he drew from that pain when he sang the song. If you were not careful you could find yourself being pulled into that sad period of your life whenever you listened to that song while sitting alone. 


House Parties 


There was nothing quite like going to a house party in the hood back in the ’60s and ’70s. The three main components were (not in any particular order) a blue light, a basement full of excited teenagers, and music which was usually at least 50 percent Motown songs and half of those were slow drag records. The Miracles’ “Ooo Baby Baby” or The Temptations’ “What Love Has Joined Together” were two of the many favorite slow dance records back then. 

Fortunately for the attendees there was little ventilation and lots of heat in the basement which meant less clothing. House parties - a place where relationships were made, shot down, and sometimes broken. Money was scarce so having a collection of recent Motown hits was rare. 

Friends were reluctant to lend out those little black 45 rpm disks for fear they would be left accidentally on a radiator to melt, sat-on or scratched. 


If you had the right songs you were guaranteed an invite to whoever was having a party just make sure you brought your recent record collection. Here are a few of the lyrics from “What Love Has Joined Together”

'Cause I love you (I love you), oh I love you from the bottom of my heart
What love has joined together, what love has joined together
Can nobody take it apart
It would be easier to take the cold from the snow or the heat from fire
Then for anyone to take my love from you 'cause you're my heart's desire
I really love you (I love you), oh I love you from the bottom of my heart
What love has joined together, what love has joined together
Can nobody take it apart



Summer Hits 

Berry Gordy not only knew how to make hit records, but part of his strategy was also to know when to release songs. Every spring you could be sure that a slew of new songs would hit the airwaves. My friends and I would get summer jobs. When we got paid we headed for the record store to buy the newest hits. While Frankie Avalon fans were dancing to Beach Blanket Bingo we were literally dancing in the streets. 


Year after year Martha and the Vandellas cranked out the hits. Quicksand and Heatwave 1963, Dancing in the Street 1964, Nowhere to Run 1965 and Jimmy Mack 1966 all hit dance records. Elvis can have his clambake give me a good old fashion block party with some kool-aid and fried chicken. 


We weren't just dancing in the streets we were also dancing in the park. On the 4th of July weekend and Labor Day you would find our family along with thousands more across the country in the park. Back then we didn’t have the technology to bring a record player or a sound system to the park but there was always at least one radio and it was always set to WDAS one of the two black stations. 


On warm summer nights back on the block we listen to music, mostly Motown songs. “Sugar Pie Honey Bunch”, “Same Old Song”, “Baby Love”, “Come See About Me”, “Hitchhike”, “Ain’t Too Proud to Beg” and “Do You Love Me” by the Contours. A lot of the songs were relatable, “Can You Love a Poorboy” written by Ivy Jo Hunter and Stevie Wonder, and “There Will Come a Day” both sung by the Miracles come to mind. “(Love Makes Me Do Foolish Things)”  Full Stop! The title of this song by Martha and the Vandellas says it all. Every teenager who didn’t grow up in a monastery understood that song without having to hear the lyrics. No Radio, No Problem 


When I was a child everybody sang, the old women sang or hummed gospel tunes, mothers would sing lullabies to get the babies to go to sleep and the winos in the alley would harmonize or at least try to after downing a bottle or two of Tiger Rose or Thunderbird. My generation was no exception minus the Thunderbird, we did have a challenge. While the older folks pretty much stuck to the old standards, songs that had been around for decades Motown and later other companies like Philly International came out with new songs on a regular basis. 


In the ’50s and ’60s if you could afford it you brought a little, cheap, portable radio called a transistor. They came from China, the quality was poor and the sound was sub-par. In most cases, if you were lucky they would last a year. The point is that if you wanted music and you didn’t have access to a radio or record player you sang. 


In order to sing you needed to know the words. Sometimes we would spend hours crouched over a speaker with pencil and paper trying to copy the words to our favorite artist records. Getting the words right to a song was no easy task especially with cheap speakers and a band like the Funk Brothers playing in the background. Eventually like the winos at the corner alley we were able to sing our favorites. 


The Secret is Out 


Gordy’s music territory was expanding before Stevie Wonder sang Happy Birthday Motown released a slew of Christmas albums. Thank God! I don’t think I could have survived another Christmas of hearing Clyde McPhatter and the Drifters version of White Christmas. 

Don’t get me wrong, it sounded cool for the first 10 times but by the time Christmas was over I was hearing it in my sleep. 


Seemingly from out of nowhere, Motown artists were everywhere. Late-night talk shows, Dick Clark’s American Bandstand and I will never forget Soul Train on Saturday mornings. The Supremes appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show more than a dozen times. In the late 60’s I remember watching a special with the Supremes and Temptations called TBC in prime time. 

Motown had gone from a handful of black radio stations to England and beyond. When I got my first car and went to the drive-in, they would show like three B movies before you got to the main feature. Partway through this poorly shot grainy motorcycle movie imagine my surprise to see Marvin Gaye.

 

The next day, I told my friends who promptly burst into laughter and told me I must have been mistaken. There was no internet back then but you guessed it, I later looked it up. The movie was “Chrome and Hot Leather” and Marvin did have a role in the picture. Through all of those mostly fun years growing up you heard or read tidbits about the singers and the songs that got you through both the good times and the bad but there was always that missing element. The how?


How did Berry Gordy find these people? How did they make all of those hits in such a short period of time and who were they? I love a good mystery, in fact, I like them so much that I created the Alexander Steele Murder Mystery Series but that’s a story for another time. 


My Sixty Year Journey 


People have bucket lists. A few years ago after watching the documentary, “Standing in the Shadow of Motown”, I wrote on my Facebook page that I didn’t have a list, all I wanted to do was to go to Studio A. I wanted to walk up those steps and through those doors, to see and stand in the same room where it all happened. Two years later for my birthday my wife, daughter, son and son-in-law and I made the trip to Detroit. 


We were told that a week earlier Jay Z and Beyonce had been there. People from all over the world have visited the house that Berry built. It was as if I had come full circle. You are given a guided tour but you are also shown a short movie about Motown’s early years. 

This was it, after all these years I finally got to go to the place where all of those hits were created. So many record companies had failed but Motown was different. Gladys Knight and the Pips made “I Heard it Through the Grapevine”, a hit then Marvin Gaye sang the same song in the same studio and made it an even bigger hit. 

“Who’s Lovin’ You” written by Smokey Robinson and sung by the Miracles back in 1961 was one of their first hits, sorry Michael Jackson fans, the Jackson 5 did not record it until much later. 


Motown became an empire, a juggernaut. I started my story by describing Motown as original. If I were to choose a word to describe Mr. Gordy’s stable of exceptional artists and writers, that word would be ‘determination’. 


As far as I am cornered one of the biggest reasons for the success of the individuals in the company was their work ethic. Martha Reeves from Martha and the Vandellas had been singing in nightclubs but took a secretary job in order to get her foot in the door at Motown. Songwriter Norman Whitfield also started at Motown as a secretary. The Supremes had 5 flops before finally having a hit. Berry Gordy had a failed record store. 


The biggest mystery was solved when I learned that Motown was always open. It all made sense now. Keeping the studio open 24/7 was the only way all of that music could come from one place. Mr. Gordy not only worked there he lived upstairs. I recently watched a special with Berry Gordy and Smokey called “The Making of Motown”. It along with the book my son brought me as a birthday gift filled in more of the missing parts. The Soundtrack to my Early Years now has an ending. 


Thank you, Mr. Berry Gordy 



Lawrence Johnson Sr. 



“Just because a man lacks the use of his eyes doesn't mean he lacks vision.” 

Stevie Wonder


https://www.motownmuseum.org