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
Read book online Β«The Inspector Walter Darriteau Murder Mysteries - Books 1-4 by David Carter (best finance books of all time .txt) πΒ». Author - David Carter
Twenty
It was a busy scene outside Belinda Cooperβs neat house. Doc Graylingβs Jaguar was there; heβd arrived quick, thought Walter. Behind that, a grey unmarked van, the trademark sign of the SOCO people, whoβd just arrived by the look of it, as they were busy taking equipment out of the vehicle and lugging it round the side of the house.
In front of the van, half on the pavement and half on the road, was another unmarked car that Karen recognised, almost certainly the transport that brought Gibbons and Browne to the scene, while behind that was a marked police car. One officer inside, busy on the radio, the other on the pavement talking to a man and a woman, and getting a hard time of it, by the look of things.
Walter opened the car door and heaved himself out. The woman spotted him immediately and rushed over to see him.
βAre you in charge here?β
βI am.β
βCan you please tell me what the hell is going on? Iβm Lena Freeman, Iβm Belindaβs best friend and workmate.β
βIβve just arrived, I know as much as you do,β he said, trying to get past her.
βSheβs all right, isnβt she? Please tell me sheβs alright.β
βWeβll let you know just as soon as we have something to say,β said Walter, squeezing past her, as the uniformed officer tried to hold her back, as Walter headed toward the side of the house, Karen hustling behind. He heard the neighbour muttering, βItβs always the same; they never say anything at all, in cases like this.β
βCases like what?β said Lena, though any reply was lost in the melee.
Walter and Karen glanced at the busted glass in the French doors, and the shards of glass on the carpet. They stepped gingerly around the debris and headed for the stairs. Hector Browne was at the top.
βUp here, Guv, Doc Graylingβs here,β and he pointed toward the front bedroom door.
Inside, Doc Grayling was kneeling down over the body. Gibbons was standing with his back to the window, taking everything in, for no matter how many dead people, and how many cases he had witnessed before, there was always something extra to be learnt, or some useful tip that the senior bods might impart. Give him his due; he soaked up expertise like blotting paper capturing ink. Never missed an opportunity.
Doc Grayling heard the coming of big black sized 10s and glanced back over his shoulder, expecting to see Walter Darriteau, and he was not disappointed.
βYou got here quick,β snorted Walter.
βPure luck! I had an appointment two streets away.β
βWhat have we got?β
βYoung woman dead, broken neck, and Iβd bet my pension on that being the murder weapon,β nodding at the vintage varnished baseball bat that lay on the bed, now ensconced inside a clear evidence bag.
βThatβs exactly where we found it, Guv,β cheeped up Gibbons.
βWho found her?β said Walter.
βI did.β
βTOD?β said Walter, switching back to Grayling.
βGive me a break, Walter, I have been here precisely five minutes.β
βA ballpark figure, man, a rough guess? Your best estimate, give me something.β
Doc Grayling sighed loudly and said, βSheβs been dead twenty-four, maybe thirty-six hours, rigor mortis well set in, as you can see, always starts from the head downwards, as you know, stiffening the body to this effect, allowing you guys to refer to dead people as βstiffsβ.β
βDo we ever refer to dead people as βstiffsβ, Sergeant Greenwood?β
βNo, never, Guv.β
βYou know what I mean, plenty of your people do.β
βIn films and TV programmes, maybe, but this isnβt a film or a TV programme, or a gruesome story, or a blockbusting novel, but someone who has sadly met a premature end. The body will receive every respect.β
βAll right, Walter. Keep your hair on.β
βAnything else you can tell me?β
βNot yet. Youβll get the full report just as soon as....β
βYou can possibly manage,β Walter mumbled, finishing off the sentence.
βThatβs correct, Darriteau.β
Walter nodded and glanced at Gibbons, and then at the mobile phone on the bedside table.
βBag that up. Hector!β
Hector appeared in the open doorway.
βFind any computer equipment, tablets, mobile phones, answering machines, diaries, notebooks, and anything else that could contain emails and messages and letters and other vital information. Bag them all up and get them to the station.β
βYou got it, Guv.β
βKaren, I want to know everything about the deceased. Marital status, sexual preferences, partners, blood relations, financial status, friends, workplace colleagues, last visitors, et cetera et cetera, and especially I want to know if she has any history of prostitution. Get Jenny on that to help you.β
Karen nodded and jumped on her mobile.
βYou think she might have been on the game, Guv?β said Gibbons.
βI have no idea, but we are going to find out.β
βDoesnβt look like a house of iniquity to me,β suggested Doc Grayling.
βIβll bow to your superior knowledge on that,β said Walter.
βWhat about the empty wine bottle?β said Gibbons.
βThatβll need bagging too, and the glass, you know the drill.β
βGive us a few minutes,β said the young SOCO guy who Walter recognised, and there was a pause, and photographing and filming and recording of everything in that bedroom, and eventually in the entire house, got under way in earnest.
Walter clapped his heavy hands together and yelled to anyone who was listening, βAnd I want more officers here now, pronto pronto, door-to-door, looking for sightings of visitors and callers, pedestrians and cars, and anything at all that could be described as unusual, get Nicky Barr on that, and donβt forget: Nothing is to be uttered outside this house about this case without my say so, and if anyone tips off the press they will have me to reckon with.β
βSure, Guv,β said Gibbons, enjoying every moment of his day. βKeeping it zipped!β
Strange phrase, thought Walter. Almost American. Keeping it zipped, Gibbons had obviously been watching far too much
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