Flesh and Blood (A DI Amy Winter Thriller) Caroline Mitchell (free ebooks romance novels txt) đ
- Author: Caroline Mitchell
Book online «Flesh and Blood (A DI Amy Winter Thriller) Caroline Mitchell (free ebooks romance novels txt) đ». Author Caroline Mitchell
Mo blinked as Ms Harkness brought her to the present day. She hated the sympathy she saw in her eyes. Hatred and rage raced through her, like fire in her bloodstream. Never again would she doubt herself. She knew what she had become as a result of her past, and she welcomed it.
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
Amy entered the station, the back of her legs aching from standing at the scene for so long. Donovan would be back in about an hour, but there was no time to rest up now. The deceased was George Tobias Shaw, according to ID found in the back pocket of his jeans. The young manâs body had been found washed up on the beach by an elderly man out walking his dog.
It grated on Amy that she had been socialising on the night another victim had died. She was here for work, not pleasure. Word of Georgeâs suicide had spread, and a team known for investigating killers were about as welcome as the horsemen of the apocalypse. Their office phones rang persistently as they were inundated with calls from concerned locals asking if it was safe to venture outside.
For now, the scene was cordoned off, although it was impossible to pitch a tent where the body had been found, partially submerged by the sea. It was a logistical nightmare, with onlookers at every turn, and she was grateful for CIDâs manpower as she returned to chase up the latest lead.
She headed into the witness interview room to speak to Alfie Johnson, who Shaw had sent his suicide text to. Like some of the previous victims, he had texted he was âdone with lifeâ. But was he? The case was a complex labyrinth and Amy would take her leads where she could.
Alfie was already seated, frowning as he picked at his nails. His unruly blond hair and bloodshot eyes suggested he was a little worse for wear.
âThanks for taking the time to speak to me in person.â Amy sat across from him, crossing her legs.
According to early accounts, George was in his early thirties and worked as a supervisor in a book-manufacturing plant. His short-term girlfriend, Ciara, had filled local police in on his lifestyle, telling them George had driven to Clacton for Alfieâs stag do last night. So why had he wandered away from the crowd? Estranged from his family, George had emigrated from Australia to live in the UK. He had been with his girlfriend for just three weeks. Through her grief, Ciara had spoken highly of him, although she had not yet met his friends. Amy wanted to pick the bones of her story, which was too vague for her liking. She needed another perspective.
âIâm sorry for your loss,â Amy said, as she and Alfie settled down in the interview room. She flipped open her notebook, ready to make notes. âWhen is the wedding?â
âNext week,â Alfie said, rubbing the back of his neck. âI didnât get home from my stag do until four this morning, but as soon as I heard what happened, I came straight here.â
âIt must have come as a shock when he texted you,â Amy said. âAccording to his girlfriendâs statement you were good friends.â Ciara also told police that Alfie had asked George to be his best man, but Alfieâs brother was stepping in instead. Amy didnât want to start their conversation on the back foot by mentioning family business. It had little to do with the case, after all.
âI didnât see the text until this morning. I didnât even know he had my number.â
âBut youâre friends, arenât you?â Amy replied.
âDepends on how you define âfriendsâ.â Alfie blew out his cheeks. âGeorge was a bullshitter. You couldnât believe a word he said.â
Now that Amy had not expected. âWhat do you mean?â
âHeâs not my friend, for a start,â Alfie replied. âI mean, he wasnât. Iâm sorry heâs dead and all, but the bloke was a compulsive liar. Mad as a box of frogs.â
As she absorbed his words, Amy surmised that Alfie wasnât that sorry at all. âWhy invite him to your stag night?â She clicked the top of her pen before writing the words âcompulsive liarâ on the pad.
âHe wasnât invited.â Alfie tensed. âAnd my stag do was in Southend last night, not Clacton.â
Amy sighed. It was bad enough that the crime scene was being engulfed by the rising tide, but now Ciaraâs story was being muddied by Alfieâs account.
âHis girlfriend messaged me on Facebook, and I played along,â Alfie explained. âI thought heâd used my stag night as an excuse because he was two-timing her. But Iâm not his alibi for what happened. His death has nothing to do with me.â
Amy scratched the side of her head with her pen. âAlibis are for suspects, not victims. Youâre not in any trouble.â
Alfieâs relief was evident. âGood. I got a fright when Mum told me the police wanted to speak to me, which is why I came straight here. What else has he been saying about me?â
Amy filled him in on what Ciara had said to local officers in her area.
âBullshit!â Alfie replied. âGeorge wasnât a supervisor, he was a caretaker â a rubbish one at that.â
âAnd you definitely didnât invite him to the stag night? There wasnât some kind of mix-up about the location?â
Alfie shook his head. âNo. He was weird. He would have been out of place.â
âAnd he didnât give you any inkling as to what he was doing in Clacton?â
âThe last time I spoke to George was to tell him the bogs werenât flushing properly. He didnât have
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