Caught in the Web Emmy Ellis (best ereader for textbooks txt) đ
- Author: Emmy Ellis
Book online «Caught in the Web Emmy Ellis (best ereader for textbooks txt) đ». Author Emmy Ellis
âHmm.â Marla raised a waving hand and glanced behind him. âCamera, please?â
A forensic-suited man appeared, and Marla stood then stepped back while he snapped images.
âCan you hang around with me now and take more as I go along?â she asked the photographer. âIâm going to have to turn her over in a bit, but first I need to check her eyes and mouth.â
Burgess hated this part. Seeing the cloudy sheen over a dead personâs eyes wrenched his stomach every time. Eyes that had once taken in the joys of life. Eyes someone had gazed into with love. And probably hate at some point.
And I donât do emotions?
Marla pulled back the stiffening eyelids with some kind of tool and leant in to take a good gander.
âNo sign of asphyxiation,â she said. âBut Iâm not surprisedâher neck is clear of any handprints, rope, or whatever else these nutters use. But she wasnât suffocated either. Hmm. Anyway, onto the mouth.â
She placed her thumb on the womanâs chin and gently parted the lips about an inch. Something was in there. Something dark.
âUmâŠ?â Burgess crouched, dangling his hands between his splayed knees. The click of the camera echoed, the shuffle of the snapperâs feet grating. âIs that a black sock in there? Something fluffy at any rate. Material?â
âIâm not sure.â Marla tilted the victimâs head back, enabling her to open the mouth some more. She jerked a thumb towards her silver medical case. âGet my blunt-ended large tweezers out of there, will you, darling? In the lid. Next to the scalpel. In the elastic holder thingies.â
Burgess rose and did as sheâd asked. He handed the tool to Marla, and she took it, glancing up at him, frown firmly in place.
âIf this turns out to be what I now suspect,â she whispered, âyou might want to look away. Phobiasâtheyâre a bitch for some people.â She widened her eyes.
Trying to tell him something so that the photographer didnât have a clue?
Phobias. Shit. Right.
âSo you have a sock phobia, too?â Burgess asked, playing along with her game. He remained standing, not curious at all to see what Marla would pull out.
She laughed softly. âItâs an insect of some kind. A bloody big one. I canât tell for sure but, if you want to get closer, you can see what Iâm sure is an abdomen.â
Did he want to? Fuck, no. He coached himself to act professionally, though. Took a deep breath as if staring his phobia in the eye was something he could do. He cautiously peered into the mouth. âFuck me. Okay. UmâŠyeah.â
Heâd seen some strange things in his time, had even read about insects and whatnot being put into victimsâ mouthsâhis friend, Bethany Smith, once a DI, now a private investigator, had encountered such a thingâbut in one of his own cases? Never, thank God. But it appeared he owed God no thanks this time. The arse end of the abdomen resembled that of a wasp, only bigger. Much bigger.
Burgess controlled himself enough to keep his shudder to a minimum while the photographer took more pictures. âIâll justâŠstep away while you, um, take it out.â
Turning his back on Marla, he pulled out his phone to see if his partner, Shaw, had bothered responding to his earlier text message.
Nothing.
For Godâs sake.
âBurge, can you get an evidence bag out of my case, please?â
He slid his phone away. Picked out a bag and opened it to make it easier for her to pop the âsockâ inside. He held it out behind him, relieved that she took it and he could take another step or two forwards. He was level with the victimâs feet now, and he stared down at her red-painted toenails. Theyâd been cut nicely, and she either had exceptionally good skin or she had enjoyed pedicures. So sheâd taken care of herself. Had wanted to be pretty?
âOh, fucking hellâŠâ Marla said. âWould you look at that?â
âIâm not sure I want to. Socks and all thatâŠâ
âI know what you mean,â she said. âI thought Iâd shit myself, butâŠwow, itâs large and ugly, butâŠwow. Iâm surprised it even fitted in her mouth, but then again, the legs are all scrunched up soâŠâ
Burgess closed his eyes for a second and blew out through pursed lips. He needed to get himself in order and turn around. The âsockâ would be dead anyway, wouldnât it? Couldnât hurt him. But the sight of those things justâ
He spun round. Marla was standing now, holding out a tarantula secured in her tweezers, which were more like barbeque cooking tongs. The beast appeared smaller than it would have in life, its legs pulled up in death, but that abdomen, that other endâits torso and face or whatever?âwas still too large for his liking. Just being in its presence was enough to bring on the urge to scream.
âAll right, put it in the sodding bag.â Burgess shuddered, a cold sweat breaking out all over his body, and he focused on the victimâs knees. âAside from the thing itself being fucking creepy, who the hell would put that in someoneâs mouth?â
âThe killer, maybe?â Marla carefully put the thing in the bag.
âYour sarcasm is on point, as usual.â He wiped a hand over his forehead, not surprised that moisture came away on his fingers. âYouâre a braver person than me, I can tell you.â
Marla closed the bag and wrote out an information sticker for it. âBelieve me, I had to tell myself it was a toy.â
âSo it wasnât?â He knew it wasnât, but there was no harm in asking. No harm in pretending. Whatever got him through it would work.
âOh, no. Real thing. Makes this case more interesting, doesnât it? More challenging for you?â she asked.
He didnât need
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