What Will Burn James Oswald (booksvooks txt) đ
- Author: James Oswald
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DS Harrison and DC Stringer were busy at one of the workstations when McLean entered the incident room. Harrisonâs sixth sense must have kicked in, as she looked up almost immediately. He crossed the room to join the two of them, not failing to notice how quiet everything was. Little point in having a briefing when there was no measurable progress.
âIâm guessing weâve nothing more on Cecily Slater,â McLean said. âYou dig up anything useful on our two dead men yet?â
Harrison glanced back at the screen. âNot a lot, sir. Plenty of calls made and messages left, but itâs not easy finding the right people to speak to. Whitakerâs wife confirmed Fielding was his lawyer for the divorce. She reckoned they were maybe planning an appeal or something, too.â
âRemind me what the grounds were for that one?â
âShe found child abuse photos on his computer, caught him doing something to his own daughter. Never got the full story of what, and I donât really want to know. The only reason he wasnât locked up was because Fielding managed to argue she could have planted the images herself. And the accusation of abuse was his word against hers. Still enough to deny him access, though.â
McLean compared Harrisonâs words with what theyâd learned about Galloway earlier. The parallels were striking. âWhat about the estate agent, Purefoy?â
âStill trying to track down the full details, sir.â Harrison shook her head slowly. âDivorced two years ago. Lost access to his kids. Ex-wife claimed heâd been mentally abusing her for years. Jay spoke to his current girlfriend who wasnât exactly sad heâd died. Said, and I quote, âHe could be lovely at times, but he also scared the crap out of me.â She also said she sometimes worried heâd hunt her down and kill her if she ever left him.â
McLean recalled the post-mortem report, Cadwalladerâs veiled suspicions. âCould she have killed him?â he asked.
âShe wasnât in town when it happened,â Stringer said. âNot sure she could have done something like that anyway. Sheâs a tiny thing.â
âWhat about Fielding? He have any connection to Purefoy?â
âNothing weâve managed to establish so far.â Harrison finally noticed she was fiddling with her phone, held it up and stared at the blank screen. âIâm still waiting on a couple of calls, but Fielding wasnât involved in Purefoyâs divorce. There was one thing, though.â
âAye?â
âIt was about Izzy DeVilliers, see? I was at the hotel not long after she and her fellow protesters were arrested. We had a complaint from Fielding. Me and Lofty landed the short straw of going to placate him.â Harrison looked down at her phone again, but only to avoid McLeanâs gaze this time. âThat might have had something to do with why I did my best to get Izzy off. Iâd have done the same for the rest of them if I could, but I heard the charges were dropped anyway.â
âIs this going somewhere?â McLean asked.
Harrisonâs head jerked up as if sheâd been poked. âSorry, sir. Aye. It was when we were at the hotel being lectured by Fielding. Fair made my skin crawl to be in the same room as him. Breathing the same air. Euch.â She shuddered. âBut he was with a bunch of blokes whoâd been at his conference or whatever the hell it was he was doing. A seminar? I donât know. Anyway, I didnât really pay that much attention to them at the time. But when I saw Purefoy at the building site? See, I was sure Iâd seen him somewhere before, and recently. Itâd been bugging me for days and then going over his file just now it suddenly clicked. He was there, at the hotel, with Fielding and a bunch of others.â
McLean was about to ask whether or not Harrison was sure, but he stopped himself. She was a trained detective, and good at it. She noticed things, remembered people. âWeâll need some kind of corroboration,â he said.
âIâve asked the hotel if theyâve still got CCTV from the event. You never know, might get lucky.â
âWhat are you thinking then? With these connections to Fielding.â
âThatâs what I canât work out, sir. These three deaths are weird but not obviously murder. Gallowayâs probably overdosed on his painkillers, Whitaker dropped a fag in his lap when he was pished, and Purefoy just got unlucky.â
âYou donât believe that any more than I do.â
âNo, youâre right. It stinks something rotten. We going to do something about it?â
âNot sure what we can, right now. Keep on the hotel for that footage. Maybe see if you can get hold of a guest list for the conference. If Galloway and Whitaker were there too, then Iâll take it up higher, see if McIntyre reckons itâs worth looking into. Meantime we need to concentrate on Cecily Slater, right?â McLean waved a hand at the general lack of busyness in the room. He was only half joking when he added, âAnd if you can find a link between her and Fielding, then weâre all set.â
40
It had been a while since McLean had visited Madame Rose at her house on Leith Walk. It wasnât as if he had been consciously avoiding her, or at least that was what he told himself. He didnât mind her company, if in small doses. But more often than not he preferred solitude to being swept into her powerful orbit.
The house seemed unchanged, much as it had probably been unchanged in over a century. A parking space became available opposite her front gate as he pulled into the street and approached it. No charging stations here, but Emmaâs little Renault still had enough electricity in it to take him to Fife, should madness possess him. Plenty to get home later.
As he crossed the small courtyard and climbed the stone steps to the door, he
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