The Whole Truth Hunter, Cara (motivational novels for students TXT) đ
Book online «The Whole Truth Hunter, Cara (motivational novels for students TXT) đ». Author Hunter, Cara
I glance at Asante, who raises an eyebrow, but she forestalls us.
âLook, I know that probably looks dodgy or something, but I spilt some wine on it, OK? Thatâs all. And I was going past the cleanerâs on my way to college anyway.â She shrugs. âIt was just convenient, all right? If I donât do it now Iâll forget, and by the time I drag it out of the wardrobe for the next shindig itâll be too bloody late.â
It might make sense, it might not; but either way itâs going to have to wait. Iâm not having this conversation here.
âSo,â I say, âcould you speak to Beatriz now? And our CSI team will also need access to the premises to conduct a forensic search. DC Asante will stay here until they arrive.â
She holds my gaze for a moment and then nods. âOK. Iâll tell her.â
She seems on the verge of tears.
* * *
* * *
The dry cleanerâs is on the Woodstock Road, and it is, indeed, in a direct line between St Luke Street and Edith Launceleve. But the affluent of North Oxford clearly have better things to do on a hot July afternoon than dirty laundry, so Asante isnât at all surprised to find heâs the only person in the shop. In fact, he suspects the not-much-more-than-a-lad behind the counter was hoping to bunk off early, given the aggrieved look he shoots at Asante when he pushes open the door. Though he cheers up considerably when he discovers itâs the police. And not just police, CID. This is better than the footie.
Asante does his best to rise above it. âI believe you took in an evening dress for cleaning earlier today?â He checks his tablet. âFull-length red satin gown with a sequinned bodice and chiffon sleeves. It would have been booked in under the name Marina Fisher.â
The lad drags the order book towards him and flicks back through the pages.
âYeah,â he says after a moment. âLooks like it.â
âCould I see it, please? The dress?â
The lad makes a face and flips the book shut. âNah, sorry, mate.â
Asante frowns; they must clean on-site, he can smell the chemicals. âWhat do you mean, ânoâ?â
âShe asked for an express job, didnât she â two-hour turnaround. Itâs been done already.â
Asante sighs. RIP any chance of forensics. Sometimes luck is on your side; sometimes it just isnât.
âCan I take it anyway?â
The lad shakes his head. âNo, sorry, mate. Like I said.â
Asante grits his teeth; frankly, it would be easier pulling them. âWhy not, if youâve finished doing it? Look, if itâs paperwork you need ââ
The lad grins. âNo, it ainât that, mate. Itâs been cleaned, yeah. But itâs not here. The van picked it up an hour ago.â
âIâm not with you.â
âWe clean here, but alterations â hems, that sort of stuff â thatâs done off-site. And according to the docket, this one was a repair job.â
Asanteâs eyes narrow. âExactly what kind of a ârepair jobâ are we talking about?â
* * *
Adam Fawley
7 July 2018
18.43
Iâm not in the room when CSI process Marina Fisher, but I am waiting at the coffee machine when Nina Mukerjee comes out. She doesnât look surprised to see me.
âWaiting for an update?â she says, going over to the water cooler. She sticks a paper cup under the dispenser and presses the button. âWeâve taken all the usual swabs, but the only thing visible to the naked eye was the slight bruising on her right wrist.â
I frown â I donât remember seeing that. And the sundress was sleeveless â
But then it comes to me. She had a heavy silver cuff bracelet on one wrist. A bracelet big enough to cover any damage. And it was her right wrist.
âWhat did she say about it? The bruising?â
âClaimed it was probably her kid, but couldnât remember exactly how it happened. If you ask me, the marks were too big for a small child, but thereâs no way to prove it one way or the other.â
âAnd it couldnât have happened at another time? Earlier that day, say?â
âImpossible to say for sure. It might be worth trying to get hold of any photos taken at the dinner, see if they show anything.â
âIs there likely to be any DNA?â
She raises an eyebrow. âI wouldnât bet on it. I took fingernail scrapings though I doubt theyâll yield much. But you said Morgan hadnât showered, so if there are marks on him and she made them, weâve got a pretty good chance of proving it.â
âAnd how did she seem to you, in general?â
Mukerjee considers. âSurprisingly composed, actually. She was a bit stressed when she first came in, and the lawyer fidgeting about like a mother hen probably didnât help, but as soon as we got into it she calmed down at once.â
âI guess sheâs a scientist. Of sorts, anyway.â
âFunnily enough, thatâs exactly what she said. That she found the environment soothing, because itâs what sheâs used to.â
Mukerjee picks up her water. âOne thingâs for sure â she was a lot more composed than most people in her position. The lawyer couldnât wait to get out of there but Fisher made a point of stopping and thanking me. She said that when it came down to it my job was the same as hers: it was all about the facts. And the facts would prove sheâs telling the truth.â
* * *
When Clive Conway gets to the St Luke Street house itâs a uniformed PC who opens the door.
âAfternoon, Puttergill. Some sort of rave round here last night, was there?â he says, scraping his shoes on the mat. âThereâs bits of glass all over the step.â
Puttergill looks blank, then ducks his head outside to look. âIs there? I canât see anything.â
âCurse of CSI,â says Conway with a sigh. âEvery random bit of crap looks like trace evidence.â He unloads his forensic case in the hall and closes the door behind him. âSo you got dumped on too, did you?â
Puttergill grins. âI was on
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