The Blood Detective

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Book: The Blood Detective by Dan Waddell Read Free Book Online
Authors: Dan Waddell
Tags: Fiction, Mystery & Detective, Police Procedural
Does that mean he or she could only have ordered it from the Family Records Centre?’
    ‘Not necessarily,’ Nigel replied. ‘There are several websites where you can browse the indexes online, though it costs you; or you can order online from the GRO.’
    ‘Anywhere else?’
    ‘There’s always a possibility they already owned the death certificate.’
    ‘What do you mean?’
    ‘It’s in the family; they could be related to the dead man. Or it could simply have fallen into their possession.’
    ‘Let’s discount that for now. For all the other possibilities, the person would have had to order it and get it sent to an address?’
    ‘Unless they paid for it at the FRC and collected it a few days later.’
    Foster went back to scanning the document, as if it would yield more secrets the longer he stared at it.
    ‘Well, that gives us something to work on,’ he said to his two officers. ‘We need to get someone along to the FRC, get hold of any CCTV footage, find out if anyone else has ordered this certificate, who they were, OK?’
    Drinkwater left the room.
    Foster looked at Nigel. ‘There is something else you can do for us, which sort of relates to your last theory about how the killer got hold of the certificate.
    Is it possible to trace someone’s family going forwards?
    Not their ancestors but their descendants?’
    Nigel nodded. ‘It’s called the “bounceback technique”.
    You go back in time to trace the path of
    someone’s family to the present day.’
    ‘So you could trace the living descendants of Albert Beck?’
    ‘No problem.’
     
    ‘Will you go and do that?’
    Nigel had his bag and coat in his hand before
    Foster finished his request.
     
    The last train chased into the night. He could hear the great clank and wheeze of its infernal engine while he stood, waiting at the dark secluded end of the street, his eyes fixed on the Elgin.
    The warm orange glow of its light poured out, illuminating the dark wall of the convent across the street. The door occasionally flapped open and the drunken chatter and laughter would waft its way towards him. He jerked his head sharply to the right, feeling his neck click. He’d watched them come and go, many of them, but not yet the perfect one.
    The one that strayed.
    The sulphur stink of the underground train was in his nostrils. He shuddered. Out of curiosity, he had ridden it once.
    It was worse than he imagined: Hades on wheels. It had been the previous summer. The weather intolerably warm, barely a cough of wind to chase away the heat and smoke. He descended the stairs at Baker Street with fear in his heart. The first rush and roar of the train, the hot blast as it steamed in, all of it damn near had him running back up the wooden steps; but he ventured on.
    Underground, in that coffin on tracks, he knew the devil was with him. The decadent, the godless, the drunks and the whores; it was their chosen chariot. Around him men smoked their pipes, the smoke billowing through the airless carriage, mingling with the foul odour of the gas lamps. As they passed west they were plunged alternately into bright, eye-blasting light and profound darkness. He lasted two stops in the fetid atmosphere before he thought asphyxiation would claim him.
    At Paddington he emerged, gulping in great lungfuls of air.
    I’ll go to Hell when the Lord tells me and not before, he vowed, and had not been anywhere near it since. He wasn’t alone in his fear, most people he knew hated the thing.
    Then he saw him leave. The perfect one. He stepped out of the pub, staggered forwards, righted himself, and then lurched to the side. He kept out of sight as the man stuttered across the Grove. Great drunken fool could barely lift his head. The drunk reeled towards the station; he stepped from the shadows to follow. He wondered where the chase would lead; north of the station, into the farmlands and fields of Notting Barn?
    That would be perfect: they were building streets there, rows and

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