Dead Cold Mysteries Box Set #4: Books 13-16 (A Dead Cold Box Set) Blake Banner (ereader iphone txt) đ
- Author: Blake Banner
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âUp in her room.â He shook his head. âWe havenât had the heart to go in and do anything. I know we should, but my angina and my blood pressure, anytime I think aboutâŠâ His face crumpled and he started to cry. âI canât. I canât just kick her out like that, chuck her out with the trash. I canât do thatâŠâ
âOf course not, nobody would expect you to do that. You should treasure her memory.â
He nodded at her, with his mouth open under wet cheeks. âThank you.â
âSean,â she went on, frowning. âAre you saying that Celesteâs room is pretty much as it was that Sunday, when she walked out?â
He blew his nose and wiped his eyes. âHasnât been touched.â
âLenny didnât go up there?â
âHe said he didnât need to. âNo need to go upsetting you, old friend,â thatâs what he said.â
I nodded a few times. âWell, Lenny is a good man, but I am afraid we are going to need to go up and have a look around, Mr. Reynolds. We need Celesteâs computer.â
âI understand. Just makes me cry every time I think⊠Donât break anything, or throw anything away, will you?â
âWe wouldnât dream of it, Sean. And we wonât take anything without your permission. But we do need her computer.â
âOKâŠâ
We climbed the stairs again and found the door unlocked. I pulled some latex gloves from my pocket and saw that Dehan was doing the same. I pulled them on, pushed open the door and switched on the light. The room was large, and tidier than I had expected. A window at the far end overlooked the street. The drapes were closed and I went over and pulled them open. The bed was made, but under the duvet, the sheets were rumpled and not fresh. The pillows still had indentations, as of a head. There was a desk with very little on it. I looked at Dehan. âCall dispatch, get them to send a forensics team out.â
She frowned as she pulled out her cell. âForensics? What are you expecting to find?â
âSomething. Iâm not sure what.â
She made the call while I went through the desk and found nothing there. She had boxes below the desk. An exploration of them revealed stuff from when she was a kid. There was no laptop, no cable, no box a laptop once came in.
Dehan hung up. âTheyâre on their way.â She moved to a pine bookcase and started going through the books. âMostly chic-lit,â she said. âWomen complain that they are stereotyped, then they read chic-lit and dress up as vaginas.â I laughed. âSeriously, Stone. How many guys read guy-lit and dress up as penises?â
âNone many that I know of.â
âExactly. This looks like a diary.â She took it over and leaned on the windowsill, started leafing through it. âItâs from a few years back. Twenty thirteen, sheâs what? Fifteen?â
âMm-hm.â
I looked around. There were no posters on the walls. The books on the bookcase were, as Dehan had said, mainly chic-lit, but adolescent, as though she had bought it at the time of the diary. There was absolutely nothing in the room to suggest an eighteen year-old Celeste had ever occupied it.
Dehan spoke again, while reading, âThis is just page after page of complaint about Samuel, her sister and her dad. She doesnât talk about any boys she likes, friends at school, bands⊠nada. Her whole damn life seems to revolve around her frustration with her family.â
She snapped it closed, pulled an evidence bag from her pocket and bagged the diary.
âStone, how can Lenny believe that he can get away with this? A murder investigation where it is clear that the victim received a call from somebody she probably knew, using a burner, minutes before her death, and he neglects to search her room. What the hell is he playing at? The phone records, the witnesses⊠He could not possibly believe that he could get away with that.â
âI know.â I went and stood next to her, she looking into the room with her elbows on the windowsill, I looking out at the damp, gray road. âAnd the weirdest thing of all is that he is too good a cop not to realize itâs just a matter of time.â
Outside, the forensics van pulled up. I sighed as I watched them climb out. âThe computer isnât here, Dehan. But I think I might know where it is.â
We went down and opened the door. Bob was approaching across the sidewalk, dressed in plastic and grinning among his beard. Behind him was his team.
âHey guys, howâs married life?â
âHell, but you should know that, Bob. Youâve been happily divorced for years.â
He laughed like Santa and asked, âWhatâs it about? What are we looking for?â
I hesitated a moment. âWe are looking for fingerprints that do not belong to the family. If Iâm right, youâre going to find overwhelmingly Celesteâs prints and very few others, maybe Samuel, her brother. But there may be one other, a man, and if you run him through the system, youâll get a hit. Let me know immediately, Bob. Itâs important.
âAlso, check the bed for DNA. Again, if Iâm right, youâll find Celesteâs and a man.â
He frowned. âOK.â
âIt could be a delicate matter. Go on up, room opposite the bathroom. Iâll tell Mr. Reynolds youâre here.â
I found Dehan sitting on the hood of the Jag with her long legs stuck out in front of her. Dusk was gathering and she watched me approach with frowning eyes. âYou think Lenny was having an affair with Celeste?â
I stopped in my tracks and thought about my answer. Finally, I said, âSomebody was. If not Lenny, somebody.â
EIGHT
It was a short drive down Gleason Avenue in the gathering gloom to Chadâs place. He had the drapes closed, but warm light
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