Head Shot

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Book: Head Shot by Quintin Jardine Read Free Book Online
Authors: Quintin Jardine
Tags: Mystery
apologise that it happened. It was one of the local guys, playing detective before we got here. Don't worry, he's had his balls fried.'
    'Well make sure he's kept out of my way, or I'l make him eat them.'
    He caught Smal gazing at him with an expression that he had seen once in the eyes of a police dog as it looked at its handler.
    'Okay, gentlemen,' he continued, 'if I can have a look at the house.
    Are your technicians finished up here?'
    'Yes, sir,' the lieutenant answered. 'They're all done. As you requested we've left the scene as close as we could to the way it was when we got here ... apart from the bodies, of course. They've been taken to the morgue in Loudonvil e, our regional headquarters. After we're done here, the coroner would like you to go there: he prefers for a family member to make a formal identification. We've put a hold on the autopsies til you've done that.'
    Skinner shivered inwardly; outwardly he nodded briskly, as he headed up the short flight of steps, on to the veranda. The New York detectives fol owed him up, but his Bureau escorts stayed below, anxious, he guessed, not to offend local sensibilities by intruding on to their scene.
    'How were they found?' the DCC asked Schultz. 'That part of the story was pretty vague.'
    The lieutenant pointed out towards the expanse of lake, which could be seen from where they stood. As he did so, Skinner noticed a jetty, with a small powerboat moored against it. 'A neighbour of Mr and Mrs Grace was out in his cruiser, getting set for some dawn fishing. He saw that the porch light was on, and that the front door was open. He came ashore to check the place out and found them. He called the nearest police office, in Edinburg.'
    Skinner's eyes screwed up as his momentary bewilderment registered on his face. 'Where?' he asked.
    'Edinburg,' Schultz repeated. 'It's the nearest township, although it's barely big enough to warrant a dot on the map.'
    He shook his head wondering whether it was simply coincidence, or whether it had been the name that had first attracted Leo to this remote place. 'I see,' he murmured. 'This fisherman guy: he's been checked out, has he?'
    'Yes, sir. We're satisfied that's how it really was. The guy's over seventy; even if he had a grudge against the Graces, he couldn't have kil ed them like that.'
    'No, I guess he couldn't. Time of death?'
    'Around 9 p.m., the coroner reckoned; give or take an hour, he said. It was very cold through that night.'
    Skinner looked down at the rocking chair, at rest now on the wide porch, to the left of the front door as he faced it. A chalk circle had been drawn around it. There was a cushion on the seat, untethered but stil in place, the shape of its occupant's buttocks stil showing clearly in it.
    'Nothing's been touched? That cushion's as it was found?'
    'Yes, sir. You'll see the crime scene photographs, but the old man was sat in his chair just as if he had died in his sleep. That's what Mr 58

    Southern, the neighbour, thought at first, til he went inside.'
    The DCC nodded and walked indoors, into a big living room, with a great hearth, filled with the grey ashes of a log fire. He looked around; the place looked as if it had been turned over by an expert in a hurry.
    Most of the cushions of the leather suite stood on end, left in those positions by whoever had searched under them. The drawers and doors of a big farmhouse sideboard lay open. Books had been stripped from their shelves, flipped open, he guessed, then thrown on the floor. His father-in-law's flap-front desk, which he remembered from the den in his Buffalo house, had been ripped open. The chisel which the kil er had used lay beside it. The whole scene, furniture, books, every loose object in the room was covered in white fingerprint powder. 'You've been thorough,' Skinner murmured.
    'Yes, sir,' the lieutenant agreed. 'We always are.'
    'Did you lift any prints?'
    'Nada. We got prints of Mr and Mrs Grace, Mr Southern, and the cleaning lady, plus one

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