The Coldest Blood

The Coldest Blood by Jim Kelly Page A

Book: The Coldest Blood by Jim Kelly Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jim Kelly
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective, Crime
Ads: Link
silver leaded lantern tower. On the opposite side of the road was uninterrupted darkness: the next light going east probably a distant village outside Moscow.
    He walked twenty yards along the bank and surveyed the scene again. The dyke’s waters were still an unruffled silver to the west, but the darkness to the east had been dispelled by a farmhouse, now glimpsed between high poplars which must have shielded it from Dryden’s original vantage point. It looked welcoming: lights burnt in the four Georgian windows which faced the road, a Christmas tree in one. As he watched a security light came on, followed by another, and he saw Sley’s 4x4 sliding between the trees and round to the rear of the house.
    He ran back to the cab where Humph had wound down his window. ‘Wait here. If I’m not back in an hour get Interpol and a helicopter.’
    Humph grunted, wound the window up, and closed his eyes.
    Dryden walked down the centre of the road in the Capri’s headlights until he was level with the farm track. As he walked away from the main road and the comforting lightsof the cab he was aware for the first time that the temperature had dropped further – into unknown territory. Pressing a finger to his cheek he felt the skin, hard and numb, and a dull pain had begun to grip his throat. The farmland around him was open and featureless under the moon, except for a single magnolia, unseen from the road, bent over an oval of starlit pond. Soon he was amongst the poplars skirting the house, and he could see the 4x4 parked amongst farm buildings to the rear. By a security light Dryden could see Sley on his back on the trolley again, retrieving whatever he’d stashed beneath the car.
    This was the moment Dryden always dreaded: the tipping point between his life as an objective recorder and the less familiar role of active participant. Life for him often seemed to be something to watch. But now he knew he would learn nothing more unless he took an active role himself. The thought made his guts twist.
    He was within six feet of the 4x4 when the sound of his footfalls alerted Sley to his presence.
    ‘Joe?’ said the voice under the car, untroubled.
    ‘Don’t think so,’ said Dryden, dropping down on his haunches.
    Sley slid out without a smile, turning an oily rag in his hands like a garrotte.
    Dryden, aware he might have made an error of heroic proportions, glanced back at the main road where he feared Humph would now be sleeping soundly. He regretted the Interpol joke, like almost all his jokes.
    ‘Sorry. It’s me again. We were passing and I saw your 4x4. I’ve seen it before.’
    He’d said it quickly, crossing the line before he had a chance to retreat. Sley stood, one huge hand holding a metal box retrieved from under the chassis, which he folded intoa green baize cloth he held in the other. Dryden was struck by the odd contrast, between the bony mass of the man’s hands and the deft, almost delicate, precision of the fingers. Silence was clearly a medium he was happy with so Dryden carried on. ‘On police CCTV. Someone’s been peddling cannabis to the kids. How’s the dog?’ he asked, nodding at the meshed interior of the rear of the vehicle.
    ‘Hungry,’ said Sley, glancing at the house still lit up in the darkness. The lights on the Christmas tree in the window seemed to tremble. ‘Look…’ he said, shaking his head. ‘I’ve got no idea what this is about…’
    But Dryden knew he was lying. He’d have thrown him out if this didn’t make sense.
    ‘You grow it in the long shed at the allotments. Force it, I guess – then plant it out in the summer? That’d be it. I saw the red light – that’s sodium. And the blue? Mercury-iodide. There was case up in crown court last year. Very sophisticated. I’m just kinda interested in why, that’s all. To kids. How much you make?’
    Sley twisted the cloth again. ‘Look, I’ve got to get on…’
    Dryden turned again and with relief saw that Humph was out

Similar Books

A Disgraceful Miss

Elaine Golden

Sky Child

T. M. Brenner

CHERUB: Guardian Angel

Robert Muchamore

Playfair's Axiom

James Axler

Picture This

Jacqueline Sheehan