Death in the Black Wood Oliver Davies (i can read book club TXT) đ
- Author: Oliver Davies
Book online «Death in the Black Wood Oliver Davies (i can read book club TXT) đ». Author Oliver Davies
From the unhappy expression on Jamesâ face, I gathered that he had, and that it wasnât very helpful.
âOur man went in to inquire about room prices, didnât like what he was quoted and left again. He was only in there for three or four minutes. The night porter manning the desk said that he sounded local but he could have been faking the accent. They didnât get a good look at his face either because he didnât remove his scarf or put his hood down. Iâve opened up a new case folder and linked it to the âBlack Woodâ case. Youâll find all their reports in there.â He leaned back in his chair and steepled his hands. âNow that we have two connected murders Iâll have to run them as OIOC, so Philips will take over as the new SIO on the earlier murder and youâll be the appointed SIO on this one Conall.â
I just nodded. It made sense for James to become the Officer in Overall Command of the investigations now that we had two separate murders linked to the same killer, and it also made sense to give me, the most senior available officer, the fresher case.
âIâve granted you both Administrator access to both case files so you can generate permissions for your teams,â James continued. âAs there doesnât seem to be much else we can learn from the Chuol case at this point, Philipsâ team will be first in line to handle any tasks you need extra manpower for from now on. Just copy me in on any requests you make Conall, so I know if theyâre tied up or not, alright?â
âI will,â I assured him as I stood up again. âWeâll get cracking on those door-to-doors as soon as Iâve brought my team up to speed. Iâll call you if we stumble across anything.â
I left them to finish whatever business Iâd interrupted. My team should all be in by now and would doubtless have already heard about Chris Arnold. Once they were all caught up on developments, we could head out and start knocking on some doors.
Sixteen
Caitlin
The desk sergeant told me the news as soon as I got in on Wednesday morning, and I could see from the look on Mike and Maryâs faces when I walked into our office that theyâd both been informed too. Chris Arnoldâs death was a terrible thing to have happened, but weâd been waiting for that particular hammer to fall for the past few days without being able to do a damned thing to prevent it. You had to numb yourself to a certain extent, or at least maintain a good degree of detachment from cases like this one if you wanted to perform your job effectively. To be honest, it was actually something of a relief to have the ghastly business over with, awful as that may sound. Not that the poor manâs family could possibly feel that way.
If someone I loved had been in Chris Arnoldâs place, I couldnât even imagine the state Iâd be in right now.
Angela Arnold had finally been informed of our suspicions last Friday. James McKinnon had gone to speak with her in person and he wouldnât have compromised himself by making any empty promises. I was sure that heâd have held back a lot of the details surrounding Dominic Chuolâs murder, but that couldnât have been an easy or a pleasant conversation to have. Knowing that we were doing everything possible to find her husband would have been little consolation to Mrs Arnold once McKinnon had made the situation absolutely clear to her.
How would you even start with breaking news like that to a woman whose husband had been missing for four and a half days? âWe believe there is a strong possibility that your husband is being held captive by a mentally ill person who intends to kill him next Tuesday night. His captor, if our suspicions are correct, has already killed at least once and we have no idea who, or where, they are.â No, it wouldnât have been anything like that, but however you phrased the information, those facts did sum up the situation pretty accurately.
Darren Mills and Colum Bryce joined us a little before nine, but there was still no sign of Conall. He was probably up at Area HQ getting briefed. I didnât know any details of the second killing yet, only that Chris Arnoldâs severed head had been found mounted on display somewhere in Kinmylies.
Both of the facts in that little snippet had surprised me. Weâd all thought it likely that our culprit would strike in another remote spot outside of town and go through a similar ritual to the one heâd used with Dominic Chuol. The change in tactics, carrying no more than a severed head out into the open after making his kill, and then leaving it in a heavily populated residential area, was disturbing in many ways. It had increased the killerâs mobility, allowing him to move around easily on foot if he chose to. It had reduced our already low chances of being able to catch him in the act, and it also indicated that he was far less predictable than weâd thought.
What else could he change? The dates he chose to strike on? The time intervals between the abductions and the murders?
Conall came in at nine twenty, and we all stopped what we were doing to look up at him the moment he came through the door.
âYouâve all heard about last nightâs murder then.â It wasnât a question, he could see it in our expressions easily enough. âAlright, for now, please keep working on whatever you have open. Weâll all be going out to knock on some doors in a little while but Iâll be sending you an update email before then. Caitlin, can you give me ten minutes and then come in to see me please?â
Well, at least he looked a little better
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