Devil in the Detail A.J. Cross (read full novel .TXT) đ
- Author: A.J. Cross
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âTraynor, these are two ordinary people weâre talking about,â protested Watts. âWhat could they have done that attracted the attention of a hitman?â
âI donât know. Itâs also possibly the work of an antisocial, highly aggressive individual with zero empathy who came upon them at the right time for him but the wrong time for them.â
âThatâs more like it. Iâve met a lot over the years who would fit that description, whoâd sell their own mothers if the price was right.â
âBoth require consideration,â said Traynor.
Watts shook his head. âNot the executioner. My job is to be evidence-led not theory-driven. What else can you say about this other type?â
âDespite what Iâve suggested about his personality and attitudes to others, itâs also very likely that even the Lawrences themselves were unaware of the threat he represented to them.â Seeing Wattsâ face, he said, âIt doesnât necessarily have to be a motive which is understandable to other people. Once I start working with Mrs Lawrence, Iâll indirectly raise the possibility with her.â
Watts reached for an envelope lying on the table, opened it, read its contents, then passed the single sheet towards them. âHave a look at this.â
Judd sat up as Traynor took it, read it aloud: âForensic examination of the Lawrencesâ car engine: a loose electrical connection which could have resulted in a minor, intermittent problem.â
âThat,â said Watts, âcould explain why they came to a stop in Forge Street. To get away from the roadworks and heavy traffic.â
Traynor handed it to Judd, who quickly read it.
âHey-hey, weâre on the right track, Sarge. That whole attack was planned, start to finish. I think they were followed by somebody who knew them. Somebody who knew them well enough to be angry with them about something or be holding some kind of grudge. Someone who tampered with their car, say, in the hospital car park.â
âThose are suppositions,â said Traynor, âbut a gunman with a personal grudge better fits my thinking than an opportunist who shoots two people for a handful of jewellery.â
Watts eyed him. âWhat Iâve learned from thirty years on this job is that antisocial types who donât give a damn for anybody will do all manner of violence to get their paws on stuff we wouldnât consider worth the effort, let alone killing for. Open a newspaper any day of the week. Youâll see reports of muggings, hold-ups by types like that, grabbing peopleâs stuff, injuring them, even stabbing them and ending up with a phone, a few quid, for which theyâve created victims and traumatized families because they donât give a damn about anybody or anything.â
Traynor was at the door. âWhat I donât see is how an intermittent fault affecting the Lawrencesâ car would serve this gunmanâs plan or purpose. Iâm going to the incident room to look at what I think is hampering our understanding of and progress on the shootings.â
TWELVE
Tuesday 11 December. 11.38 a.m.
Traynor came into Wattsâ office. Without speaking he placed the six carjacking files on the table in front of Watts. Watts looked at them, then up at Traynor, who pointed at them.
âMy view at the outset was that these six carjackings have no relevance to the Lawrence shootings. That remains my view. They were quick attacks with zero contact between attacker and unknown victim. Whoever attacked Mike and Molly Lawrence got access to the inside of their car. He spent time in close proximity to them. He may even have talked to them. His attack is of a different order entirely. This investigation needs to focus solely on the Lawrence shootings.â
Watts looked at him, then down at the files. âYouâre wrong about zero contact by the carjacker. Ask the woman who had her hand smashed. Sheâll tell you exactly how she felt about his âproximityâ.â
Traynor went to the Smartboard, pulled up a screen of details and began adding to them. âAnybody intent on stopping the Lawrencesâ vehicle wouldnât have been helped by an intermittent fault. âIntermittentâ means that the car could have stopped anywhere on its journey to Forge Street. It could even have restarted, enabling them to drive on.â
Juddâs head dropped back. âEvery time we get what looks like a potential lead, thereâs an âAh, butâ.â She raked her hair. âThe Lawrences didnât choose to stop in that godawful place. How about this: if whatever was done to the Toyota caused it to merely slow down at times, is it possible that somebody was waiting at Forge Street, blocking the road with his own vehicle, waiting for them? We might not have any evidence, but you canât say thatâs not possible.â She looked from Watts to Traynor. âIt had to be something like that. His only alternative would have been to force them to stop, which would have been chancy. Even more to the point, it would probably have left damage to their car, but there isnât any.â
âThe flaw in what youâve said, Judd, is that whoever he was, he could have been left waiting, because, like Will suggested, the intermittent fault might not have occurred and they would have continued home as normal. He also couldnât have assumed theyâd get lost.â
Watts looked down at files and papers covering the table. âHe shot both of them. Guns give a shooter distance. Whatever the antecedents, once that Toyota was stationary, he could have threatened them through the window, reached inside, grabbed whatever he wanted. What makes no sense to me is that by getting inside he increased his personal risk by putting himself in close proximity to two frightened people.â
Juddâs brows slid together. âWhat if he didnât know they were both in the car? The Toyotaâs windows are tinted.â
âHe would know if he followed them to and from the hospital or wherever else he first saw them.â
Traynor paced, eyes focused on the floor, his voice low. âIâm also bothered by his placing himself inside that car in such close proximity to both victims. If he harboured an extreme resentment to one or both of
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