Do you enjoy solving puzzles, mysteries and treasure hunts?
Want to win a special edition of Treasure Island or a signed copy of Greenwood Tree?
Grey Cells Press has put together a
light-hearted vintage murder mystery tour, featuring detective novelist
Julia Warren, as she tries to track down some very elusive treasure, and
to prevent any more murders being committed as well!
Follow the Tale of the Mad Gorgon, from the High Seas in the days of 18th century
piracy to a not so innocent countryside manor house in the 1920s, in a
mad hunt for buried treasure – but can Julia find the treasure before
any more murders are committed? Can you?
Previous episodes: Greenwood Tree Mystery Tour
Click here for rules and prizes.
And now for episode 6 . . .
‘Had she followers? A fiancĂ©? Jealousy perhaps ….’ Abigail had had any number of men chasing after her; ‘whether any of them would have the energy to be actually jealous enough to kill her though, is quite another matter,’ commented Roderick, ever with cousinly concern.
Dinner was a sober affair; Laetitia had soup and sandwiches made, and left the table early. Abigail had hardly been a favourite of hers, but even so – two deaths in less than a week was a little more than she felt entirely comfortable with. She locked her door and advised Julia to do the same.
Julia moved away from the portrait, still puzzling. As she passed one of the windows overlooking the grounds, a movement caught the corner of her eye – it looked like James, and unusually for him, he had a suspicious air about him; this was not alleviated by the fact he was evidently trying to hide something under his coat. Where was he going ? She watched him cross the lawn; he was walking in the hesitant fashion of one unused to subterfuge, while not wanting to be seen; he darted behind some bushes and was soon out of sight. She stood on tiptoe. She couldn’t be sure, but wasn’t he going in the direction of the family vaults? What else could lie there? Or a secret tryst, or perhaps even a gambling debt – after all, what did anyone know about him, aside from the façade he chose to put on in public? The same could be applied to most of them; she only really knew Laetitia, and that through Aunt Isobel. Roderick for instance, came across as a complete wastrel – yet perhaps there was cunning beneath that never-do-well charm of his; then there was William; not apparently over endowed with intelligence, but desperation could drive such characters to wild risks…
You can discover more about author, B. Lloyd, and her books here.