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"A KNOCKOUT STORY!"
From New York Times
Bestselling Cleo Coyle


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To keep his legacy, he must keep his wife. But she's about to change the game.


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A haunting past. A heartbreaking secret. A love that still echoes across time.


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A city slicker. A country cowboy. A love they didn�t plan for.


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The mission is clear. The attraction? Completely out of control.


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A string of fires. A growing attraction. And a danger neither of them saw coming.


Excerpt of The Three Locks by Bonnie MacBird

Purchase


Sherlock Holmes Adventure #4
Collins Crime Club
April 2021
On Sale: April 13, 2021
Featuring: Sherlock Holmes; Watson
432 pages
ISBN: 000838083X
EAN: 9780008380830
Kindle: B08G76LV2R
Hardcover / e-Book
Add to Wish List

Mystery Historical

Also by Bonnie MacBird:

The Serpent Under, January 2025
Hardcover / e-Book
What Child is This?, November 2022
Hardcover / e-Book
The Three Locks, February 2022
Paperback / e-Book
The Three Locks, April 2021
Hardcover / e-Book
The Devil's Due, October 2019
Paperback / e-Book
Unquiet Spirits, October 2017
Hardcover / e-Book
Art in the Blood, October 2015
Hardcover / e-Book

Excerpt of The Three Locks by Bonnie MacBird

Excerpted from The Three Locks © Bonnie MacBird 2021, published by Collins Crime Club. All rights reserved.

We were escorted upstairs by the young servant. Holmes paused in the hallway at the entrance to the missing girl’s sitting-room, and beyond it, her bedroom. He glanced across the hall to what looked like a similar suite, but this one with a closed door leading into the bedroom. ‘Her sister’s rooms?’ Holmes asked the girl.

‘Yes. Miss Atalanta.’

‘Older?’

‘By two years. Atalanta is twenty.’

We next entered Dillie’s sitting-room, and we passed through to her bedroom. It was a large, airy room, with windows on two walls, the leaves of a large plane tree next to the window providing a lacy screen through which another grove of trees was visible at some distance. Behind that, the beautiful Cam glittered in the bright morning sun. The furniture including the canopy bed was all in white, and the bed was made up. On it sat several dolls, with a vacancy where the drowned doll must have resided. Holmes’s magnifying glass was out, and he began his typically minute examination of the room. He  started with the windows, opening each in turn and examining the sills. As I waited for him to do this, I perused the bookshelves. In addition to Greek and Roman history volumes, which I assumed had been influenced by her famous father, there were the usual Jane Austen, George Eliot and Dickens. But there were also two colourful rows of novels and poetry I did not recognize, presumably aimed at young ladies. They had titles such as Penelope’s Terrible Surprise, The Tragedy of Annie La Monte and Faded Blossoms.

I looked idly at Dillie’s dressing table. It was impeccably neat. In fact, the entire room was.

Holmes asked the maid for a glass of water, then as soon as she was gone he went through the bookshelves like an automaton, stopping to study the colourful collection of girls’ novels. He examined one or two, opened one, lingered upon it briefly, then pocketed it. From another pocket he retrieved a small notebook and silver pencil and made some notes.

He then looked under the bed, examined the carpet, and inside the closet. He was looking through the lady’s shoes when the maid returned.

‘Holmes,’ I signalled.

He looked up and smiled at the nervous girl. ‘Ah, my water. Please come in and tell us your name,’ said he.

‘Polly,’ said the maid with a slight curtsy. She served him a glass from a silver tray. She was a fresh-faced girl of perhaps sixteen, with red hair tucked away in a neat knot under her maid’s cap, freckled hands clenched nervously before her.

‘I am Sherlock Holmes, and this is Dr Watson. You  are   a ladies’ maid, then?’

‘Yes, sir. For Miss Odelia and Miss Atalanta.’

I noticed the girl’s distinct discomfort. ‘You may be wondering why we are here,’ I said. ‘Miss Odelia’s doll was found in the Jesus Lock, Polly. We are concerned for her safety, and we hope to discover something that will help  us find her.’

The girl nodded.

Holmes, in his usual manner, leapt in. ‘I understand that your Dillie, er, Miss Odelia, disappears on a regular basis?’ said he.

‘I wouldn’t say “regular”, sir, but yes, she has done so before.’

Holmes moved to Miss Wyndham’s dressing table. ‘Where is her hairbrush? Something to clean her teeth? Pomade? Powder? A number of personal items one expects to see  are missing from this table, are they not?’

The maid remained silent.

Holmes scanned the room. ‘There is no sign of violence here. She was not abducted; she packed to go somewhere,’ said Holmes. ‘That is a good sign. Might she have taken the doll with her?’

‘No, sir. She never liked that doll, sir.’

Holmes looked up sharply at her. ‘Then the doll was still here on Monday?’

The girl nodded.

‘When did you notice it gone?’

‘Er . . . Tuesday, sir.’

‘When  exactly?’

‘Night. Nine-thirty, sir.’

‘What were you doing in her room on Tuesday night?’ The girl shifted uncomfortably. ‘I often checks all the rooms, sir, afore I goes to bed. To make sure no lights are left lit. Close the windows.’

‘What did you do when you discovered the doll missing?’

‘I felt sick. Somebody were in the room. Secret, like. I was scared.’

‘Perhaps Dillie herself returned for her doll?’

‘No, sir. Like I said.’ A shy smile. ‘It’s her mother likes dolls, not Miss Odelia.’

Holmes shrugged.‘But anyone could come in. What about her sister? Or Mrs Wyndham? Why did you not first think of a family member?’

The girl hesitated. ‘That window.’ She pointed to the largest, adjacent to the tree.

‘It was open?’

‘Yes, a little.’

‘But not when you tidied the room earlier?’

‘No, sir.’

Holmes moved to the window, examined the lock, opened, shut it. He stood motionless for a few seconds, then turned back to the girl with that piercing stare that intimidated all who encountered it.

‘And what of yesterday? When Deacon Buttons arrived at this house with the drowned and dismembered doll. What time was that, I forget?’

Of course, Holmes forgot nothing. The girl hesitated. He did not take his eyes from her.

‘Nine, or so,’ said she.

‘Mrs Wyndham did not hear of the doll until ten-thirty,’ he said. ‘Where were you in the hour and a half between Deacon Buttons arriving with it, and when her parents were informed?’

The girl froze, eyes wide.

Holmes sighed, then made an effort to soften his approach. His voice took on a gentler tone. ‘You were not worried about Dillie before this, Polly?’

‘N-not really, sir.’

‘Young lady, I believe you know more than you are telling us. This doll is disturbing. Your mistress may now be in danger.’

 

Excerpted from The Three Locks © Bonnie MacBird 2021, published by Collins Crime Club. All rights reserved.

Excerpt from The Three Locks by Bonnie MacBird
All rights reserved by publisher and author

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