The Inspector Walter Darriteau Murder Mysteries - Books 1-4 by David Carter (best finance books of all time .txt) π
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- Author: David Carter
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Karen glanced at Walter as if for confirmation. What Michael said was true, the old Criminal Records Bureau checks had been replaced by the DBS, and it was true too that not all cab drivers are checked at all.
βJust what we need,β muttered Walter. βConvicted criminals, even killers, driving around our vulnerable young women at the dead of night.β
βAnd young men,β added Karen.
βYeah, that too.β
βIβm not a killer! Iβm working hard. Iβm trying to get my life back together, get back on my feet. I want to see my son again. What would you have me do, sit on my backside all day, picking up the dole money? And anyway, Iβm not driving round young women and young men, rarely anyway, more likely ferrying all the old biddies home from the supermarket, or pensioners to the station, going off on their holidays to bloody Benidorm, or to and from the local bingo hall, thatβs far more likely.β
βDo you know where Marigold Lane is?β asked Walter.
βCourse I do. I am a cab driver; we have to learn all the roads. Part of the job.β
βHave you been down there?β asked Karen.
βOnce or twice.β
βRecently?β said Karen.
βLast week sometime.β
βWhen last week?β asked Walter.
βWednesday or Thursday I think it was.β
βHow far down Marigold Lane did you go?β asked Karen.
βAll the way.β
βTo the caravan, by the river?β asked Walter.
Michael nodded and looked uncomfortable.
βWho did you take down there?β asked Karen.
βSome guy. Didnβt give me his name. Customers tend not to.β
βDid you wait for him?β asked Walter.
βNope. Just left him there.β
βWhat time was this?β
βGot there about six, I couldnβt wait on, tag time coming up, and all that.β
βDid you see the person who lives there?β asked Karen.
βNo. Not a soul.β
βDid you know the young woman who lives there?β
Flanagan shook his head.
βDid you know she was a prostitute?β asked Walter.
βCertainly not! Look, what is this?β
βCan you describe the guy you took down there?β asked Karen.
βYeah, probably, though after a while all the punters tend to look the same.β
βTry,β said Walter.
βThirties, maybe, businessman type guy, suit shirt and tie, that kind of thing, didnβt say much, didnβt tip much either.β
βHeight?β
βSix feet maybe, about my height.β
βHair?β said Karen.
βDark, black or brown.β
βIs Tracey Day a friend of Ellie Wright?β
βWhoβs Ellie Wright?β
βThe woman who lived in the caravan,β said Karen.
βI have no idea. Youβd have to ask her.β
βDid you set fire to Ellie Wrightβs caravan?β asked Walter.
Before he could answer Karen waded in with, βDid you kill Ellie Wright?β
Mickey Flanagan pulled a face and said, βLeave it out. Why would I do that?β
βMaybe she didnβt want to know you,β suggested Karen.
βMaybe she turned you down flat,β added Walter. βYouβre in the market for an available young woman, we know that.β
βDonβt be crazy.β
Karen wasnβt to be so easily put off.
βMaybe you hit her because she wouldnβt give you what you wanted, and maybe she fell over and banged her head. Sound familiar?β
βNow youβre just being stupid.β
βDonβt think so,β said Walter. βWe are just trying to find out how Ellie Wright died.β
βSheβs really dead?β said Flanagan, sitting heavily in the sofa, looking genuinely surprised, either that or he was a bloody good actor.
βShe is dead,β confirmed Walter. βDo you know anything about that?β
βI do not, I wish I did.β
Walter glanced at his watch.
βItβs seven oβclock,β he said aloud.
βIt is,β said Michael. βAnd I am tag-tied to the bloody house for another day, and night.β
βSave you getting into any more trouble, Michael,β said Karen, smirking.
βWeβd better be off,β said Walter. βIf you think of anything else about Ellie and her little caravan Iβd appreciate it if youβd let us know,β and he set a card on the small hall cupboard.
βOkay, I will, but Iβd appreciate it if youβd not tell the charitable trust about, well you know, Tracey and all that.β
βThat could be arranged,β said Walter. βBut do yourself a favour and stay away from on-hire girls, get you into trouble every time.β
Michael nodded and muttered something about men having certain needs, and it was damned difficult meeting anyone when you had to be home by bloody 7pm every night.
IN THE CAR OUTSIDE Karen said, βBack to base, Guv?β
βYes. What did you make of that?β
βMichael Flanagan?β
βThe same.β
βHeβs certainly smartened himself up.β
βYes, looked a different man, didnβt he. Wonder when he did that.β
βDunno, but I think heβs a much more likely candidate than Derek Nesbitt. Flanaganβs got form, killed a woman, for heaven sake, and we know he went to the caravan, and frankly, I didnβt believe that he didnβt meet Ellie. He looked real cut up when you said she was dead.β
βYes he did. Check if heβs broken the seven to seven curfew, and get hold of the papers from his original case. See if thereβs anything in there about the wifeβs background.β
βYou mean you think she might have been a prostitute as well?β
βWho knows? No reason to think it, but he said she was messing around. Be interesting to know what messing around actually means.β
βHeβs been in prison for manslaughter, he patronises prostitutes, he admitted heβd visited the caravan site, and we both thought he knew Ellie, thatβs all pretty powerful stuff.β
βYes, it is, but entirely circumstantial. Weβll need a lot more than that.β
βTrue, Guv. I wonder who the guy was he took down Marigold Lane.β
βCould be anyone.β
βIf he took anyone at all. That could all be so much smoke-screening.β
βPossibly, though I thought he sounded quite convincing.β
βSo weβve now three in the frame, Derek Nesbitt, Michael Flanagan, and the guy Flanagan took down there.β
βAnd donβt forget Jimmy Crocker too. Heβs no angel.β
Karen pulled a face and muttered, βTrue, Guv,β and shook her head and drove back to the station, fast. She was always a quick driver, but this was different.
βYou in a hurry?β
βGot a date, Guv.β
βSorry if Iβve detained you.β
βNot a prob.β
βWith your pal, Greg?β
βNope. Iβm not seeing Greg anymore. Thought you knew.β
βSorry to hear that.β
βDonβt be. His complete lack of an adult sense of
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