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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Gross! Look at that. Yuck! Iβll just take a few more, perhaps from over there, a better angle. You never know when youβll get another chance!
The sight of the remains of the person formerly known as Desiree Holloway would affect the minds of the unfortunate souls summoned to clear up the mess for years to come.
Didnβt seem to affect the passengers much.
Belatedly, the station closed.
Services were suspended.
Police summoned, and cleaners too.
Passengers were still arriving.
It was nothing to do with them.
What the hellβs going on?
Railways of today, eh? Waste of space! I remember when... blah blah blah.
Tempers flared.
They simply had to get where they were going. Had to!
But they wouldnβt. And they couldnβt. And they didnβt.
Not for several hours afterwards.
It was an hour later before anyone noticed the fancy maroon suitcase, still sitting unattended on the platform, close to the edge where Desiree had placed it. Could it be a bomb, someone said. It contained her expensive dinner outfit, culled from the Manchester bazaars, never worn before, never worn again, not by Desiree Holloway, not by anyone.
THE SCIENTISTSβ SOCIETY Annual Dinner and Presentation went ahead as planned, oblivious to the bloody events up at Crewe. The committee were furious with the young woman for not turning up, but most particularly, for failing to return the much loved Sir Fred Berrington Memorial Trophy. No one had ever done that before. One crusty old sod said, βThatβs what you get for giving it to a woman in the first place. We might have known!β
βShut up, Lionel!β
The winner of the silver cup was a gawky tall girl wearing dreadful black specs. She was assured it would be hers, just as soon as it could be located. It had gone missing in transit. Nothing to worry about. Sorry about that. Youβll have it in a few days. In the meantime, the committee went into emergency session.
Later, the Gold Shield was presented to the scientist of the year, Michael Fixington of Allied Chemical Industries, for his innovative work in non-drip paints. Michael was amazed, as was everyone else.
THREE DAYS LATER WHEN the Society discovered the truth, the committee met in emergency session.
βIβd like to apologise,β muttered Lionel.
βI should think so,β sniffed three of the others.
βWell? What are we going to do about it?β
Many ideas were mooted.
A posthumous award. A special award. A citation. A press release. What exactly?
Then Lionel said, βMaybe we shouldnβt make such a big fuss about it. There is a rumour she committed suicide, after all.β
βDid she? I didnβt know that.β
Doubts and rumours filled the room.
Much nodding and muttering.
The committee pondered for an hour and did nothing.
Desiree Mitford Holloway would soon be forgotten. There would always be a bigger, brighter star next year. There always was.
Nothing ever changed, not really.
There wouldnβt be a Sir Fred Berrington Memorial Trophy though, leastways, not the original. They didnβt even get back the few mutilated pieces of scrap metal that were found. A month later the gawky girl in the glasses was delighted to receive a gleaming replica.
It didnβt bother her for a second. Why should it?
Chapter Forty-Five
Walter glanced back at the coffee table. At the bottles. Three full bottles, different coloured caps. They looked like spent indigestion relief bottles. They werenβt spent any longer. They were full of scarlet liquid. Looked like blood to him, and he had seen plenty of that in the previous thirty years.
There was another smaller container too, a phial, heβd guess thatβs what youβd called it. Clear glass, clear liquid inside, tiny white label, tiny white print. He squinted, but couldnβt read a thing.
He knew his best chance was to engage the man in black in conversation, to play for time. Walterβs hostage dealing training kicked in. Heβd been on a refresher course only six months before. Mrs Westβs idea, and for once she might have been right. Cresta Raddish would have loved it, been in her element, trying to read the mind of the hostage taker, concentrating on the central issue of having the hostage released in one piece. It was the only thing that mattered, except in this case, Walter was the hostage.
βSo,β said Walter, βhow did you get into cross-dressing?β
The man was busy putting out another item on the table like a stallholder setting up at an antique fair.
Walter didnβt like the look of that one either.
It was a large syringe.
The man in black let slip a sarcastic little laugh. A girlish laugh.
βWell?β persisted Walter. βDid you get your rocks off on it? Was it Desiree Holloway? Was it her idea? Was she into all that kinky stuff?β
βYou donβt know anything!β
βYouβre right, I donβt, but Iβd like to. If you are going to kill me, whatβs the harm in telling me, you might as well, youβre not ashamed of it, are you?β
βCourse not!β
βSo how did you get into it? And what do I call you, by the way? You must have a name.β
βSam, you can call me Sam.β
βSo, how did it happen, Sam, your idea or hers?β
βI know what you are after!β
βIβm not after anything. Iβm hardly in a position to be after anything, am I?β said Walter, glancing down at the hand ties.
βYes, well, just so long as you understand that. If I were in your position, Iβd be saying a few prayers to your God, if I were you, if you believe in that kind of thing. You havenβt much time left.β
βDo you believe in God, Sam?β
He thought about that for a second.
βYes, maybe, sometimes.β
βAnd youβre ready to meet him, knowing what you have done?β
βGod will be merciful. And anyway, I have a sneaking suspicion that God is a woman.β
βThatβs a novel take.β
βLetβs face it, Walter; none of us has any idea what God is like. God could be a gigantic chicken for all we know, and imagine how angry that great Cock in the sky will be when we meet it. Had chicken for dinner, did you? Thatβs not
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