With echoes of The Adventure of the Solitary Cyclist, this is the real-life mystery that could have been taken from the memoirs of Sherlock Holmes.
Leicester, July 1919. A 21-year-old girl is found dead by her bicycle in a lonely country lane. The death is thought to be an accident, but the autopsy reveals that she was shot in the head. The only clues are that she was last seen with a man on a green bicycle, who seemingly vanishes into thin air, and bloodied bird tracks on a nearby wooden gate. Nearly a year later, the police find the suspect, and he is sent for trial but acquitted. The case remains unsolved to this day.
This quintessential English murder is the subject of my latest book The Green Bicycle Mystery. Three main theories have been adduced to account for Bella's death, including one that involves crows and those bird tracks! In researching my book, I was given access to dramatic evidence that has been hidden in a police safe for nearly a century. I am publishing it in full for the first time. Never seen by the original trial jury, it may affect the whole complexion of the case. What do you make of it? How will it affect your verdict? Please let me know.
But to the main question: how do you think Bella Wright died? Was it misadventure, manslaughter or murder? I am interested in hearing your thoughts.
Leicester, July 1919. A 21-year-old girl is found dead by her bicycle in a lonely country lane. The death is thought to be an accident, but the autopsy reveals that she was shot in the head. The only clues are that she was last seen with a man on a green bicycle, who seemingly vanishes into thin air, and bloodied bird tracks on a nearby wooden gate. Nearly a year later, the police find the suspect, and he is sent for trial but acquitted. The case remains unsolved to this day.
This quintessential English murder is the subject of my latest book The Green Bicycle Mystery. Three main theories have been adduced to account for Bella's death, including one that involves crows and those bird tracks! In researching my book, I was given access to dramatic evidence that has been hidden in a police safe for nearly a century. I am publishing it in full for the first time. Never seen by the original trial jury, it may affect the whole complexion of the case. What do you make of it? How will it affect your verdict? Please let me know.
But to the main question: how do you think Bella Wright died? Was it misadventure, manslaughter or murder? I am interested in hearing your thoughts.
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