Blood & Guts Ed James (book series for 10 year olds txt) đ
- Author: Ed James
Book online «Blood & Guts Ed James (book series for 10 year olds txt) đ». Author Ed James
Time was, that wouldâve been Vicky, dressed up for a night on the town. In years to come, it could be Bella. A shiver crawled up her spine, like the cold had got deep into her bones.
Jenny stabbed a finger off her phone and kicked the crime scene suit trousers up in the air. âJayâs found a Samsung smartphone nearby.â She caught the trousers and dumped them on the discard pile. âIâm going to head back to the station to work at it.â
Forrester scowled at her. âI need you here, though.â
âNo, you donât.â Jenny smiled. âYou need my team here, working on any forensics, not me. And there wonât be any, will there?â She looked around. âMeanwhile, Iâm going to get into that phone and see who your girl was meeting.â
âMeeting?â
âWell, you donât come here dressed like that if youâre out for a stroll, do you?â
âYouâre assuming she wasnât dumped?â
âSame difference. Sheâs probably been speaking to her killer. Happens all the time.â
Forrester looked desperate now, his eyes darting around the car park. âAre you cataloguing the cars?â
âNot my job, David. Youâve got a very big team who can handle that kind of malarkey.â
Forrester shut his eyes. âRight. Well. Off you bloody go.â
âCharming.â Jenny patted Vickyâs arm as she passed. âCatch you guys later.â
Forrester nodded at Karen. âConstable, see that stuff about cataloguing cars?â
âCanât you get DC Considine to do it?â
Forrester frowned, but it eased off when he spotted Considineâs eager bunny nodding. âAye, fine. Relieve him from Crime Scene Management.â
âThanks, sir.â
Forrester watched them go, easing off his suit trousers. âSwear she gets worse every day, Vicks.â
âKaren or Jenny?â
âTake your pick.â
The tent opened and Arbuthnott stormed out, lugging her medicine bag. âWell, David, Iâll check to see if she was raped when I get her back.â
Vicky felt like her gut was boiling now. âRaped?â
âItâs possible.â Arbuthnott grimaced. âSooner I get her into the lab, the soonerââ
âBut if you were a betting lady?â
Arbuthnott exhaled slowly, her breath misting in the air. âMy take is that the victim was strangled and then dumped here.â
Vicky looked around the car park again. âWhy would you dump a body here?â
âGood question.â Arbuthnott shrugged. âBut the bodyâs still warm, so I can give you a very accurate time of death.â She checked her watch. âEighty-two minutes ago.â
Forrester gave her a warmer smile than he gave Jenny. âAny danger we can get the PM fast tracked?â
Arbuthnott was nodding her head. âI mean, itâs Christmas Eve and all of my children are waiting on Santaâs visit, but this is a young girlâs life, snuffed out just like that.â She clicked her fingers. âAs soon as sheâs in the mortuary, Iâll fast-track a preliminary post-mortem.â
âI appreciate it, Shirley.â
âIâm not the one who has to break the news to her parents. Evening.â Arbuthnott hefted up her bag again and charged across the car park.
Vicky stood there, trying to process it all. A dead girl in the middle of a supermarket car park. âTake it we donât know who she is?â
âNo purse, no ID. Nothing.â Forrester folded up his trousers and put them on the discard pile. âHoping that, despite her general nippiness, Jenny can get us at least that from the phone.â
âAssuming itâs the victimâs.â
âRight.â
âWho found the body?â
âNight security lad.â Forrester was scratching at his seven oâclock shadow, rasping like a matchbox. âLad wasnât the full shilling. More excited about how heâs working all of Christmas Day too and how heâs coining it in at double time. Some nonsense about going to Barcelona in a week to watch the El ClĂĄsico and tour the stadium.â
âDavid, âtheâ is redundant.â
âEh?â
âItâs El ClĂĄsico, not the El ClĂĄsico.â
âEither way, I fancy Barca crushing Real.â
âDisplacement activity, right?â Vicky looked over at the supermarket, now emptying of staff. âHeâs just found a dead body. Canât process that, so he talks about football.â
âRight.â
She focused on him. âUnless he killed her.â
âAlready crossed my mind.â Forrester shot her a crafty wink, just the wrong side of creepy. âLad didnât see anybody turn up, though.â
âYou believe him?â
âI do. Young Buchan got hold of the CCTV.â Forrester pulled out a smartphone and pressed his finger to the sensor. âBastard thing neverâ Here we go.â He held out the screen to Vicky.
It was paused, showing a car driving over from the roundabout. A silver Skoda, but blurry. Vicky nudged the frame on but it disappeared. Back two, and it was over at the roundabout.
Forrester scowled. âTheyâve got the worldâs worst security system.â
âItâs 2015 â who only stores every five seconds?â
âAshworthâs is who. Cheap bastards.â Forrester shook his head. âHad a case over at their head office in Crieff a few years back. Bunch of clowns, I tell you. Had to threaten both brothers. Twins, would you believe?â
âBelieve anything. So, you think this Skoda dumped her body here?â
âPossible.â He took the phone back and held it out, on the frame of the car. âYou see both of our problems, though, aye?â
Vicky stared at the screen, but she couldnât see much else. Ah. She had it. âSo, thereâs no CCTV nearer the store?â
âNope. Itâs like Fort Knox, Doddsy.â Forrester shook his head. âCameras everywhere. And in glorious HD. Just not out there. Not their land, so no dice on the old cameras.â
âAnd that car doesnât show up?â
âCorrect.â
Vicky stared at the screen again. âNo, I donât see what the issues are.â
Forrester tapped the screen. âThe carâs got masked plates.â
âThatâs not just blur?â
âNo, that Jay gadgie in forensics ran it through his laptop, said itâs been sprayed with that shite that, you know, masks it.â
âItâs a Skoda, right?â
âRight. An Octavia. Why?â
âWell, my dadâs always joking about howââ
âAll taxis in Dundee are Skoda Octavias. Aye.â
âWhatâs the other one?â
âWell, if that car didnât dump her, then letâs say they were meeting here.
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