Monday, March 16, 2009


The Case:

Millionaire Whitney Astorbilt is found dead, bleeding from the neck, in his Park Avenue penthouse. His killer is arrested, based on evidence involving a star.

The Mystery:

Who killed him, how, and why? How was the killer caught?

The Clues:


1. Blood is thicker than water.
2. Every Thursday, after dinner, he signed his checks.

The Answer:

Think you know the answer? Fill in the comment box to submit your guess. Winner receives a free book!

Related Posts:

  • At a Loss for Words. . .What's a writer to do when the words just won't come?I've been struggling with this for a couple of days now--scenes that don't flow, characters that don't speak, words that won't come. Deep down, I sense it springs from a we… Read More
  • Meet the Christian Authors Night You're invited to attend!! Coffee, cheesecake, and conversation with 40 Christian authors.Friday, August 1, 2008 6:30-9:00 pmWoodsEdge Community Church3333 South Panther Creek CircleThe Woodlands, Texas 77381 Contact: Linda … Read More
  • An Interview with Debbie Fuller Thomas Your story is about a mother whose daughter was switched at birth. How does Marty find out that her child was switched?Marty's daughter, Ginger, is the victim of a fatal genetic disease, Neimann Pick Type C, which often stri… Read More
  • Rejection slips, or form letters, however tactfully phrased, are lacerations of the soul, if not quite inventions of the devil - but there is no way around them.- Isaac Asimov… Read More
  • Writers Can't be Wimps The countdown is almost over...any day now my book should be shipping to over six thousand members of the Heartsong Presents: Mysteries club. While I'm excited by the thought, I'm also a wee bit apprehensive. Very soon the r… Read More

1 comments :

Karen Kincel said...

Maggie Dunham, Astorbilt’s private secretary, had a brother who was a real loser, both at gambling and at life. Maggie loved her brother dearly and willingly supported his habits, until he got in over his head and was being blackmailed for $50,000 in casino gambling debts. Maggie asked Astorbilt for loan to cover her brother’s losses, but he flatly turned her down. So Maggie devised a plan to get the money.

During their weekly after-dinner check-signing session at his penthouse. Maggie waited for astorbilt to sign his last check – a weekly expense check made out to cash for $1,000. Just as he was finishing his signature, Maggie plunged her ballpoint pen into his neck. She then altered the check to read $51,000.

At the bank the next morning, Maggie was arrested. Unbeknownst to her, Astorbilt had standing instructions to the bank to question any check on which he didn’t not place his trademark star as the dot on the ‘I’ in his last name. Fittingly, Maggie ended up spending time in the pen.

Newsletter Subscribe

* indicates required
Email Format

Followers

Powered by Blogger.

Historical Romantic Suspense

Historical Romance

Popular Posts

Recent Posts