need for full accounting and proper procedure; he just wished someone else could do it for him.
It was mind-numbing work, requiring just too much concentration for him to mull things over in his mind whilst he was doing it. And all the while, out of the corner of his eye, he could see the dress. Finally when he had reached a point optimistically halfway down the pile, he took out his notebook, pushed his chair back from the desk and flicked through the pages.
He came almost immediately to the strange swirling patterns he had seen in the basement room, or at least had thought he had seen. They had suggested that the murder was some form of ritual sacrifice, but the hidden alcoves had revealed far more obvious and tempting clues. So he had concentrated on the names, the preserved organs and the personal items. But as his old mentor had always told him, it was usually the least obvious things that were the key. McLean glanced at his watch; it was half-past nine. He logged off the computer, grabbed the dress and headed back down to the tiny incident room. Grumpy Bob was there, reading the paper again. Constable MacBride concentrated on the screen of his laptop, tapping furiously at the keys.
‘Morning, sir,’ Grumpy Bob folded his paper and stuck it in a box under the table.
‘Morning, Bob. You got the photos from the murder scene?’
Grumpy Bob looked over at MacBride but got no response, and so had to fetch the box from the corner himself. He sat it down on the table and pulled out a handful of glossy prints.
‘What were you looking for, sir?’
‘There should be a series of pictures of the floor about a foot or so in from the wall.’
‘Aye, I wondered why the photographer took those.’ Grumpy Bob guddled around some more, coming out with a handful of sheets. He started to lay them out on the table, occasionally referring to numbers printed on the backs.
‘I asked him to.’ McLean studied the first of the photos, then the next and the next. They all looked the same; washed-out with the flash, the floor was smooth, featureless wood with absolutely no markings on it at all. He pulled out his notebook and looked at the shapes he had drawn. The shapes he was certain he had seen.
‘Is this all of them?’ he asked Bob when he had studied every picture and come up with nothing.
‘Far as I know.’
‘Well get onto the SOC team and double-check will you, Bob? I’m looking for pictures of the floor that show markings like this.’ He showed the images in his notebook to the sergeant.
‘Can’t Constable MacBride do it?’ Bob complained. ‘You know he’s much better at all this technical stuff than me.’
‘Sorry, Bob. He’s coming with me.’ He turned to the constable. ‘You finished there?’
‘Just about, sir. One moment.’ MacBride tapped a couple of keys, then folded the notebook flat. ‘I’ll run past the printer and pick that up on our way out. Unless you’d prefer Sergeant Laird to go with you to the post-mortem, sir?’ There was hope in his voice.
McLean smiled. ‘I suspect Bob’s only just had his breakfast, constable. And I for one have no desire to know what it was.’
13
‘That’s three times in forty-eight hours, inspector. If I didn’t know better I’d say you were stalking me.’ Dr Sharp was waiting for them as they walked into the mortuary. ‘Who’s your handsome sidekick?’
‘This is Detective Constable MacBride. Go easy on him, it’s his first time.’ McLean ignored MacBride’s reddening face. ‘Is the doctor in?’ he asked.
‘Just getting prepped,’ Tracy said. ‘Go right ahead.’
The examination room was not much changed from the day before. Only the body laid out on the slab was different. The pathologist greeted them as they walked in.
‘Ah, Tony. I can see you’ve not got the hang of delegation yet. Normally when you send a junior officer to do something for you, it’s because you’re not intending to come along yourself. Why’d you think
Kassanna
Maggie Helwig
marianne morea
Jason Denaro
Jean G. Goodhind
Rowena Cory Daniells
Tina Leonard
Lawrence Kelter
Peg Kehret
Abigail Keam