The Gilded Madonna Garrick Jones (ebook reader online .txt) š
- Author: Garrick Jones
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āYou brought Harry with you too?ā
āHarry was in my bed when Tom phoned. What was I supposed to do? Leave him there? Itās Christmas night for fuckās sake. Heāll stay up near the car and wait for me. He wonāt get in the way, I promise you.ā
āDioliās nose will be so out of joint when he finds out you and Tom were here, Clyde, itāll point back over his shoulderāeven if you are here on the superās go-ahead. You know what heās like about his cases.ā
I patted his shoulder. āIām just here to help, Vince, and Dioli can take it up with the chief superintendent if heās got a problem. As far as Iām concerned, itās your crime scene. Iām just here as a reference tool because the previous Silent Cop murders happened on my watch. Now, letās go have a quick squiz at this body. I wonāt touch it. I promise. I simply want to see the arrangement of the corpse and where it is.ā
I stood in the darkened toilet and wrinkled my nose. It stank. Summer heat, unflushed urinals. It reminded me of piss tins in the desert in North Africa. At least weād shat in trenches and covered our business over with sand. Urine was collected. It had too many uses. Uses Iād never bothered investigating. Iād just lifted my toe to push open the cubicle door when Jack Lyme arrived.
āMerry Christmas, Jack,ā I said.
āHello, Clyde. Thought you might be here.ā
āYou did?ā
He smiled at me and waited for me to move to one side before he crouched down with his torch to give a preliminary once-over. āI rang the chief superintendent the moment the news came in, while they were still trying to track down Detective Sergeant Dioli. It was my suggestion to contact Vincenzo and to get you to help him, especially as you were so familiar with this series of killings.ā
āAh, so itās you I have to thank for the chief superintendent ruining the perfect end to my Christmas celebrations?ā
āWhenās a murder ever spoiled anything for you, Clyde?ā
We chuckled. Gallows humour.
āShall I start taking pictures now?ā The police photographer, a young woman who was new to me, hovered nervously behind. I guessed Vince had told her to wait until Iād arrived.
āFirst murder?ā I asked her with a smile, to put her a little at ease.
āYou can tell?ā
I nodded. āItās the smell isnāt it.ā
She turned her head and pressed her mouth and nose into the fabric of the shoulder of her coat. One never got used to itāeven in the warāthat metallic smell of blood combined with the stink of urine or faeces. Iād always thought there was another smell hanging around sometimes in the air. I defined it illogically as fear.
āHeāll only speak with you,ā Tom whispered from behind me.
āWho?ā
āThe witness, Clyde. He says heās a friend of D.S. Telfordās and he recognised you.ā
I caught Vinceās glance and rolled my eyes. āJust what I needed,ā I said.
āDid he give you his name, Tom?ā
āNo, Clyde. He asked me if you were the investigating officer, and when I told him you retired last year, he said he wanted to speak with you. I asked him if he wanted me to ring D.S. Telford, but he nearly went crazy. He said, āget Clyde, heāll know what to doā.ā
If someone knew me, but didnāt know Iād retired, it had to be someone from long ago. Why did he say he was a friend of Samās and not one of mine? It confused me. There was only one way to find out.
āTom, do us all a favour will you?ā
āSure, Clyde, what is it?ā
āThe bulbās missing from the light fitting above. I noticed the lights are still on in the ladiesā convenience on the other side of the football field. Itās going to be a benefit for everyone if they can see without torches.ā
āRighto, Clyde. Iāll be back in a jiffy.ā
No more than a few minutes later, Tom arrived breathless, holding the light bulb from the ladiesā lavatory in his handkerchief. I took it from him and reached up and twisted it into the light fitting. Bright, yellowish light flooded the area in which we were standing. The young photographer gagged. We were standing in a pool of vomit and blood.
āWhose vomit is this?ā I asked.
āMine,ā the young lady said, tears welling in her eyes. āIām sorry ā¦ before you got here. The smell ā¦ you know.ā
I patted her shoulder and gave her my handkerchief. She smiled at me wanly and pressed the square of linen to her face. I supposed her own had been soiled already and crammed into a pocket of her jacket, or thrown into the garbage can in the corner of the room. Sheād get used to it ā¦ well, as much as anyone ever could.
āIāll leave you to it, Vince,ā I said. āIāll go see what the witness has to say, all right?ā
Vince nodded, pressing a handkerchief of his own to his mouth. He gave me a thumbs up and then waved me away.
I made my way across to the large fig tree, under which the witness was sitting, accompanied by one of the junior constables, who I recognised. Heād been an office staff member during my time. Iād heard heād applied to join up.
āD.S. Smith,ā the young man said, holding his hand out to me as I approached.
āNot anymore, my friend. Been gone for over a year now. They keep you locked up in a cupboard without the latest news, do they?ā
āNah, itās just youāll always be the one and only detective sergeant at Randwick to me, Clyde.ā
āIāll have a word alone with the witness, son, if you
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