When Sid and Minnie hear a loud noise from the back of their van, they think it’s the engine stalling. Hours later, Sid discovers a corpse… The body is of Halberd Corsair, one of London’s finest tycoons and entrepreneurs, whose home and work is the grand Termini building.
The official report suggests it was an accident – that he slipped and fell out the window.
But gossip is rife and rumours spread that Mrs. Corsair might have done him – it was an unhappy marriage and she profited handsomely from her husband’s death.
Not only that, but her opera glasses are found broken outside, just below the ill-fated window.
As her health declines over these vile slanders, her nephew and heir to Corsair’s ‘empire’, Keith Antrim, enlists Sir Otto’s help to clear her name.
And so, Inspector Borges is brought in. Alongside Sir Otto’s niece, the headstrong Anthea, the pair realise that Corsair’s death might not have an accident after all.
It seems on the night his ‘accident’, someone was in the Corsair’s home.
However, as Inspector Borges discovers, there are several people with the means and the motive to kill.
Could it have been Colonel Summersby, whom was denied an immediate loan that he desperately needed from Corsair to pay off his gambling debts?
Or the Colonel’s controlling and cold wife, Claire, who, as always, might’ve took her husband’s problems into her own hands?
Maybe it was Julian Killigrew whose unprofitable literary magazine was going to be shut down by Corsair?
Or even Keith Antrim himself – who stood to gain his uncle’s business, standing and naturally, the profits?
And then, it appears that Mr Corsair might have had a mistress…
As the list of suspects grows, it’s up to Borges and Anthea to track down the killer before it’s too late.
Filled with intrigue and suspense,
The Sound of Murder is a cleverly-plotted, engrossing murder mystery.
Praise for John Bonett
‘Top recommendation for lovers of that clever, urbane detection which is becoming such a rarity’ - Birmingham Mail
‘Amusing puzzles that entertain and beguile’ – Books and Bookman
‘Neatly devised plot…Borges is a good creation in the tradition of the best fictional detectives’ – Nottingham Guardian Journal
‘…claims attention as a crime novel depending on pains-taking police work and careful deduction’ – Aberdeen Press and Journal
‘A real masterpiece of detective in fiction form takes shape under the cloudless skies of the Costa Brava’ – British Books Writing under the name of John Bonett, husband and wife duo
John and Emery Bonett have collaboratively written numerous successful murder mystery and detective novels including
Dead Lion and
No Time to Kill.