The Rosary Garden by Nicola White (best books to read now TXT) ๐
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- Author: Nicola White
Read book online ยซThe Rosary Garden by Nicola White (best books to read now TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Nicola White
The front section of the pub was growing noisy, the door opening and closing, letting in sweeps of sunshine. Three men in black suits came through and stood together at the bar. Glasnevin graveyard was next door, so funerals were a common part of the custom. He wondered whether the regular intrusion of mourning was one of the reasons he liked it here.
Enough wondering. Swan leaned back to root for coins in his trouser pocket. He picked up the evidence bag, walked over to the phone cupboard at the back and rang the office number. Declan Barrett, the newest recruit to the murder squad, answered.
โIโm on my way in.โ Swan pulled the folding door tighter to damp the background noise. โDid pathology call yet?โ
The babyโs body had been moved to the morgue late the previous evening. A tiny thing stranded on an adult-sized slab. No larger than a loaf of bread under the cloth. Full autopsy would take about a week to come in, if he was lucky, but heโd put in an urgent request for a rough estimate of the childโs age and time of death.
โJust a tick, boss,โ said Barrett, a slight stress of his voice managing to make the word โbossโ sound like a bit of a joke between them. The lad was giddy with his new posting. Heโd better settle down soon. โHere it is: estimated time of death between twenty and sixteen hours before forensics got to the scene at three p.m. yesterday. Newborn infant, female, approximately two to three days old, cord cut approximately five inches from the body and healing, body washed of vernix, some fibres present. Now Iโve looked up the medical dictionary, and apparently the vernix is waxy stuff that coats it when itโs bornโโ
โBarrett, I know what vernix is.โ
โSo I figure the baby was washed and cared for.โ
โDo you now? Have they checked the wounds?โ
โNo โ the pathologist canโt get to it yet. Backlog. Iโll call again: harry them a bit.โ
โIs Considine about?โ
โGina?โ
โSheโs not Gina to you, Barrett.โ
A pause. Swan could hear a muffled remark and someone laughing.
โSheโs on a call with Hannigan. Anything I can help with?โ
โNo.โ
Swan hung up on a wave of irritation. Barrettโs keenness needled him out of all proportion. And so did the fact that Sergeant Gina Considine was every detectiveโs preferred support these days, and not just his. She was smart and hard-working. The other detectives gradually overcame their chauvinistic prejudice once they realised how good she could make them look.
This was a case Swan wanted her opinion on. He shuffled the coins in his hand and thought for a moment. Seeing the child last night, and the fullness of its features, made him suspect this wasnโt a case of neonatal panic. There had been an incident last year, a baby left in a carrier bag under a bench by the Royal Canal. He had seen into the bag himself and could never forget the look of the poor scrap โ smeared with a mixture of what looked like wax and old blood, its froggy little body squashed into shrouds of newspaper and plastic bag. Suffocated at birth, they said. Hard to tell if the lungs had ever drawn air, the eyes ever registered light.
A bubble of hopelessness rose in him and all at once he was aware of the heat and claustrophobia of the booth. He lifted the receiver once more, put in a coin and dialled his home number. Across the square from the Gravediggers, in a terraced red-brick house, a phone rang and rang. He imagined the sound echoing round the hallway, ricocheting off the dark furniture salvaged from his fatherโs shop. He imagined Elizabeth walking downstairs towards the sound, or turning her head among the flowerbeds at the back, rising slowly to her feet. He let it ring until there was no hope of an answer. She hadnโt come back yet.
6
Ali looked up at a torch-bearing maiden poised on the balustrade of the Shelbourne Hotel, the thin copper drapery emphasising rather than veiling the statueโs voluptuous figure. She remembered staring at these figures when she was small, her attention caught by their prominent breasts; her father laughing when he saw what she was looking at, and sheโd got embarrassed, but heโd swung her hand back and forth, making her body twist, forcing her to smile.
If only she could remember more of him. At least she could still feel that sensation of her own small hand in his large one, the comfort of that.
When he was alive, the two of them would go into town on a Sunday morning. After mass in Clarendon Street theyโd buy Sunday papers from a man with blackened fingers and walk hand-in-hand to a nice hotel like the Hibernian or sometimes the Shelbourne, and Daddy would read his papers while she drank lemonade through a straw and ate her way through a little dish of salty, bitter-skinned peanuts. Often an acquaintance of her father would stop by to talk and she would try to look as well behaved as she could.
She hadnโt been in the Shelbourne since โ the days of expensive little treats long gone. The entrance hall was the same: high Georgian mirrors and walls the colour of mint ice-cream. And right in the middle of the hall stood Mary OโShea, surrounded by a gaggle of hotel staff, eager with laughter.
โOh, Mary, youโre killing us,โ said one, clutching his stomach.
โThatโs the best yet,โ said another, holding on to the edge of the reception desk for support.
Even the chandeliers seemed to favour Mary, the light haloing her bobbed golden hair and winking from her polished nails as she waved her hands around.
Ali stood outside the group for a moment, wondering how to make herself known. She thought about walking back out of the place, but just as she started to turn she heard โAlison?โ
Mary OโShea walked out of the circle of men to stand in
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