Murder Most Royal — читать онлайн бесплатно полностью

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She had half hoped to speak to an underling such as herself who could pass on the grisly details, but it was the Right Honourable the Lord Mundy himself (she had looked it up to make sure of his title) who answered the phone. He was silent for a long time, pondering the news. Having said her piece as gently as she could, Rozie wondered if he was still on the line.
‘Are you all right, My Lord?’
‘Goodness me.’ He sounded breathless. ‘I need to sit down. Oh, my goodness.’
‘I’m sorry to be the one to—’
‘Oh, no, my dear, don’t apologise.
‘No, I didn’t,’ Rozie admitted. Sir Simon probably did.
‘It’s early days,’ Rozie explained. ‘The police don’t really know anything yet.’
‘Well, you’re very kind to inform me.
‘The hand was found near Sandringham. The police told us as a courtesy.’
Rozie took a breath. ‘It was the ring, My Lord.’ She couldn’t call him Hugh. She hadn’t yet developed Sir Simon’s ease at hobnobbing with the aristocracy.
‘My goodness . . . The ring . . . I have one myself, just like it . . .’
He tailed off again and Rozie pictured him staring at his own left hand.
‘Don’t be.
‘I’ll tell her,’ she assured him, but she wouldn’t. The last thing the Boss would want was people outside the family circle remarking on her ill health.
Afterwards, she went back to her laptop and typed in ‘Edward St Cyr’.
Wikipedia informed her that he was born in 1946, the only grandson of the tenth Baron Mundy. After growing up at the St Cyr family seat and brief sojourns in Greece, London and California in the 1970s, where he had managed two failed rock bands, he had joined his mother at a small estate called Abbottswood, south of King’s Lynn, where he hosted a couple of controversial rock concerts and, later, what was briefly the second-most popular literary festival in Norfolk.





