Death in the Black Wood Oliver Davies (i can read book club TXT) š
- Author: Oliver Davies
Book online Ā«Death in the Black Wood Oliver Davies (i can read book club TXT) šĀ». Author Oliver Davies
I had no idea. Whatever had happened there, Daniel had remained committedly single ever since. The entire subject, if not taboo, certainly wasnāt discussed in company.
The arrival of cousin Shay, eighteen months after Conall, didnāt seem to have changed the adult family dynamic at all. The boys had been a package deal throughout most of their childhoods, whichever relatives they happened to be staying with. Shay had chosen not to attend school, and if heād missed out on the chance to develop his social skills by opting for an elective home education, heād more than made up for it in time not wasted. There wasnāt a local authority in existence that could argue that Shay hadnāt received the finest education possible, even if it had been self-regulated. There had never been any question of a School Attendance Order being issued. After all, the boy had passed a barrage of GCSE examinations by the time he was ten, which had certainly āserved its purpose and kept them off our backsā as Conall chose to phrase it. Conallās own school years, although often interrupted by travel, had been far more conventional. Despite regular periods of absence, I gathered that heād consistently managed to achieve high marks with little apparent effort.
āI suppose I must have missed between three and four years of school over the years,ā heād admitted once, with a deprecatory shrug, āwhich just goes to show what a total waste of time a lot of it is.ā I donāt think any of the Keanes realised how much an average student struggled and sweated to get by, or the kind of pressure weād all felt subjected to as examinations loomed.
Conall certainly didnāt seem to think he was anything out of the ordinary. Above average, yes, but nothing special. Once you realised the standards heād spent his whole life measuring himself by, that attitude began to make some kind of sense.
By five fifteen, weād visited every house on our list, finding thirteen of the people we wished to speak with at home and seven out. Weād left calling cards for those. Eight had willingly given us permission to look around and we were satisfied that none of those were viable suspects. Of the other five, three remained of interest. All of those had been healthy, fit men between the ages of twenty five and forty and one of them had displayed noticeable uncontrolled muscle spasms or ānervous ticsā as well as restless eye movements. Like the other four people whoād refused us entry, heād merely informed us that heād willingly comply with a search warrant but did not welcome our presence on his property. Heād spoken quite calmly, despite the outward signs of agitation.
āHe was probably just highly strung. Police officers make a lot of people uncomfortable at the best of times,ā Conall commented as we drove back towards our station. āSome because they break the odd little law themselves now and then and others because theyāre worried we might decide to try to frame them for something.ā
āWell we canāt pretend that never happens. Weāve got our share of bad apples, just like every other profession.ā
āLess, Iād hope, although our screening processes could do with some improvement.ā
I couldnāt disagree with that statement.
āWhat do you think McKinnon will do once heās got all the results from these visits?ā
āI imagine heāll run some background checks on the people who wouldnāt allow a search and then maybe send out an officer with a mental health nurse next time to get their professional assessment. Hopefully, the list will be a lot shorter by then. Eight out of thirteen isnāt a bad success rate, letās just hope everyone else has done at least as well.ā
No doubt the shortened list would go back to Shay too. And weād certainly be keeping an eye on those properties if we hadnāt found Chris Arnold before next Tuesday. Unless we caught a lucky break, somehow, our chances of doing that werenāt looking good.
āAre you going to head home or write this lot up first?ā I asked as we parked up at Old Perth Road.
āI think Iāll do that at home. Iām just going to pop in and see how the others got on first. If you want to grab your stuff and hang on, I can drop you off at your place after. Iāll only be a few minutes.ā It wasnāt raining particularly hard, but it was cold, windy and already dark. A lift would be welcome.
āThatād be great, thanks.ā
Inside, we discovered that Walker and Mills hadnāt had quite as uneventful an afternoon of it as the rest of us. They were both fine and seemed to be in good spirits but someone had managed to bruise Darrenās jaw and cut his lip for him.
āOur fifteenth stop,ā DC Walker explained. āOur man was rather the worse for drink when we arrived and so were the two pals he had with him.ā
āThey were trying to get a barbecue going under the carport when we pulled up, the daft buggers,ā Darren added. āWe showed them our warrant cards and started asking our questions, but it was clear that they werenāt in a cooperative mood. We were invited to piss off several times.ā
āDid the owner of the house clearly request that you remove yourselves from the property, or allow you ample time to do so?ā Conall asked. Withdrawal of consent to remain was a perfectly legitimate right that anyone could exercise if we entered their property without a warrant, or without good reason to believe that a crime was being committed on the premises.
āHe did not, Sir,ā Walker assured him. āAs I said, they were all very drunk. Then one of them decided that it might be funny to attempt to engage with me in an inappropriate manner so I put him
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