The Inspector Walter Darriteau Murder Mysteries - Books 1-4 by David Carter (best finance books of all time .txt) π
Read free book Β«The Inspector Walter Darriteau Murder Mysteries - Books 1-4 by David Carter (best finance books of all time .txt) πΒ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- 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
βLucky guess maybe, or perhaps she could tell from my clothing and body language or haircut, how would I know?β
βThatβs the thing, Guv; sheβs a clever woman. Insightful.β
βYes, up to a point. It wouldnβt surprise me if she had claimed rewards before, fiddling the facts to fit the case. If sheβs doing that, in the end it wonβt stand up. In fact, when we get back to the station see what we have on her; see if sheβs claimed rewards before. If sheβs taking us for silly Charlies sheβs in for a big surprise. Weβll charge her with wasting police time.β
βI think sheβs kosher.β
βI donβt know what to think, but hopefully weβre a little further forward than we were this morning.β
βBack to the station, Guv?β
Walter nodded, still thinking about something.
βIβll take a bet now that sheβs made any number of claims against insurance companies, Iβll bet she knows every trick going, anything to make a quick buck, and if we think that and can see that, imagine what a smart-arsed defending barrister would do. Theyβd rip her a new one. Geez, that doesnβt bear thinking about. Makes me shiver, just the thought of it.β
βA tenner,β she said, starting the car.
βA tenner what?β
βA tenner says she hasnβt claimed a reward before.β
βYouβre on, and donβt forget.β
Thirty-Two
Back in the office, Mrs West was missing. She had some kind of quarterly update meeting with the local city councillors, something that Walter would do anything to avoid. Walter glanced at Karen and said, βLetβs have a chat in private; thereβs an interview room free, thereβs something I want to talk to you about.β
Karen stiffened and glanced at him. He didnβt notice for he was looking away toward the interview room door. They went across the office and into the room and closed the door and sat down.
Karen jumped in first, fearing the worst.
βWhat do you want to talk about?β
βThe ID parade.β
βWhat about it?β
βIβm thinking of doing something a bit off the wall.β
You and me both, thought Karen, though she didnβt say. Instead she found herself saying, βI presume itβs Ronald Speight you want to put up?β
βThatβs just the thing,β he said. βI donβt want to have to do eight or nine bloody ID parades.β
βSo?β
βSo, I thought Iβd just do the one, have them all in the same line-up.β
βBut you canβt do that!β
βWhy not?β
βOh come on, Guv. You know why. For a start, if you tried to use the result in a court of law any judge would almost certainly throw it out, and for two, surely itβs against the rules.β
βAt this stage I donβt want to use the result as evidence, I just want to get a positive ID on the killer. And as for rules, if by bending one a little it saved another woman from being murdered, Iβd say it was worth bending, wouldnβt you?β
βOf course,β she said, thinking of her own rule bending.
βIf we know who it is, we can concentrate all our resources on nailing the bastard.β
βIβm all for that, but itβs a risky strategy.β
βOkay, your objection is noted, DS Greenwood, that will be in my report, youβll be in the clear.β
βThat wasnβt what worried me, Guv, you know I always support you where I can. So who do you want in the line?β
βSpeight, Miro, Donaldson, Nesbitt, Flanagan, and Williams. Crockerβs out of the frame, good head of hair, not. Weβll tell them all theyβre not the prime suspect; they are there to make up the numbers, due to their similarity to the description we now have of a man leaving Belindaβs place at the dead of night. All we are trying to do is finally eliminate them from our inquiry. Itβs in their interests, blah-blah.β
βI donβt think theyβll buy that, especially that solicitor bloke, Mr Bouffant. Heβll see through it straight away.β
βMaybe, but weβll appeal to his community spirit, helping with the police in such a tragic case, et cetera, and weβll throw in two ringers as well, just as token bodies, nothing to do with the case.β
Karen shook her head and grinned and said, βThis is one crazy idea.β
βYes, it is, but it might just work.β
βMrs West wonβt like it.β
βMrs West wonβt know about it, until itβs all set up. Look, I know itβs a bit.... well, very unusual, but sometimes, occasionally, unusual tactics pay big dividends.β
βItβs not like you, Guv, but okay, if thatβs what you want. Iβm with you all the way, but I did think you might have used VIPER.β
Walter thought about that for a second and scratched his head. VIPER, the new digital recognition system: Video Identification Parade Electronic Recording, to give it its overlong and rather pompous title. VIPER had itβs place, showing witnesses in the comfort of their own home video line-ups of suspects, but surely it was better in the flesh, where you could smell the fear on the guilty, see the twitchiness in their eyes, and closely monitor their body language. You couldnβt beat up close and personal.
βVIPER has a place, but not here, not now, especially with a woman who supposedly possesses superhuman powers.β
βThought you didnβt believe in all that tosh.β
βI donβt, but if thereβs anything in it at all, I want to have her up close to the killer, to be able to look into his eyes.β
βIf heβs among them.β
βYes, Karen, there is that, but at least weβll know if we are looking in the right place, or the wrong one.β
βActually, Guv, talking about doing things a little off the wall....β
A heavy knock came to the door and Gibbons barged in. He didnβt wait to be invited, or to speak; he was straight in there.
βDid you know, Guv, whoβs put up the reward in the Belinda Cooper case?β
βNo. Who?β
βOnly Gareth Bloody Williams!β
βHe canβt do that!β
βWhy not?β asked Karen.
βBecause heβs a suspect, without an alibi,β said Walter, βwhen I last looked, and no matter how unlikely a suspect he might be, heβs still in the frame, and he canβt be putting up financial inducements to put someone
Comments (0)