statements, all the lies Iâd weaved and managed to convince them of, there in black and white. I wasnât sure if heâd come here because he saw something in my past that suggested I might be capable of killing a person and dumping them out to sea, or whether heâd come as some kind of warning.
We know who you are. We know what you do. Stay the hell away.
He leaned forward. âIâm going to level with you, Mr. Raker. I
do
know about you. Iâm not sure if whatâs in the database is everything. I guess only you andââhe glanced back over his shoulderââperhaps Mr. Healy know whether you were one hundred percent honest with the Met.â
He waited for an answer that didnât come.
âYou have a habit of getting involved in cases that donât seem to have a hell of a lot to do with you.â A pause. A shrug of the shoulders. He glanced at Healy again, as if giving him the chance to answer on my behalf. âMaybe you have a strong opinion on that, or maybe you donâtâbut ultimately I donât really care. For your opinion,
or
for those cases. Because those cases werenât here. I donât want to sound uncaring for my fellow boys in blue up north and in the Met, but I frankly couldnât give aratâs arse about their crime scenes. But I give a ratâs arse about mine. Are we both clear on that, David?â
David now. Trying to make himself seem like a good guy, someone reasonable. But it was clumsy psychology, the first amateurish thing heâd done since heâd arrived.
âMind if I ask you something?â I said.
The response took him by surprise, but he did a good job of disguising it. His eyes narrowed slightly and then he set his pen down next to his pad. Adjusted it. Looked up.
âDoes the name Carrie Ling ring any bells with you?â
âWho?â
âCarrie Ling. She and her family disappeared on January 7.â
A look on his face like he genuinely had no idea who I was talking about.
âShe used to live here in the village.â
He shook his head.
âHer sister arrives to find the front door unlocked and everything still on: TV, computer, food cooking on the stove, the whole thing. Except the family is missing.â
A flash of recognition.
âYou remember them now?â
He nodded. âYeah. I remember them. What about them?â
Apart from a momentary lapse, heâd conducted this whole thing perfectly. Given nothing away. Made his point. Now heâd turned the conversation around again: no longer on the defensive, but forcing me to reveal my hand. âDo you think thereâs any link?â
âBetween what?â
I smiled.
Heâs playing dumb
. âBetween the Lings and the body.â
He stared at me, shrugged. âWhy would there be a link?â
âI donât know. Iâm just thinking aloud.â
âAnythingâs possible. But weâre talking about a family that lived twenty miles from here. Does every case within a twenty-mile radius have to be linked to this one?â
âShe used to live here, in the village.â
âA long time ago, as I recall.â
âTrue.â
âAre you telling me youâre working for themâis that it?â
âNo oneâs working for themâtheyâve never been found.â
His eyes narrowed. âThat sounds like a sly dig, David.â
âIt was just interesting that you were involved in both cases.â
A smirk passed briefly across his face, and he leaned in toward me. âLook, youâre a clever guy. Thatâs probably why everyone at the Met hates you. But youâre barking up the wrong tree. Thereâs no link and thereâs no grand conspiracy. I donât care if youâre looking into that familyâs disappearance. I really donât. What I care about is closing my case, and if youâre getting in my wayâand given your history, you
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