Darkside

Free Darkside by Belinda Bauer Page B

Book: Darkside by Belinda Bauer Read Free Book Online
Authors: Belinda Bauer
while he still could.
    'Reeves?' he said. 'It's me.'
    Jos Reeves had obviously been asleep and Marvel glanced at his watch. It was only 11.10pm, the bloody stoner.
    'Yeah,' said Reeves. 'What?'
    'I found what looks like vomit outside the vic's back door.'
    'Vomit?' said Reeves through a yawn.
    'Yes. Your boys must've missed it.' Marvel didn't say he'd have missed it himself if he hadn't almost stepped in it.
    'OK, I'll send Mikey down in the morning.'
    'What's wrong with tonight?' said Marvel, uncomfortably aware that he'd forgotten all about it until this minute.
    Jos Reeves laughed as if he'd meant to make a joke and Marvel hoped this case never came to hang on the freshness or otherwise of said vomit, or he'd have to do some serious verbal sword-dancing to avoid the whole bloody thing collapsing around his ears. He knew that Jos Reeves wasn't going to send a man down at this time of night, and knew it was unreasonable to ask him to do so.
    'Well it's not getting any fresher,' he said petulantly, 'and it's pissing down.'
    'Yeah, it's raining here too,' said Reeves mildly in that conversational way that got under Marvel's skin so badly.
    'It's a lot wetter here,' he said, and hung up before Reeves could further irritate him with some eyebrow-arching clever remark about the wetness of water.
    Marvel wrinkled his nose and sniffed the air like a dog, before realizing that the reek came from his steaming shoes releasing pungent foot-smell into the room.
    Tomorrow he would get some wellington boots and put them on his expenses.
    *

    Jonas had cleaned the bathroom and kitchen, put on a load of washing, ironed a shirt for the morning and made supper of fake steak, oven chips and broccoli. The only real meat Lucy insisted on nowadays was bacon and the occasional McDonald's, which she craved as if pregnant. The nearest outlet was a forty-minute drive away in Minehead, but sometimes they'd make a day of it, laughing at their own bumpkin quest for what Jonas always called 'the fabled Golden Arches'.
    At least you could pick up a burger with your hands, thought Lucy ruefully as she struggled to cut her fake steak. Sometimes her hands could do these things and sometimes they just couldn't. Jonas leaned over and did it for her, without missing a beat and - somehow - without making her feel patronized or pathetic.
    He told her he was now involved in the investigation. He didn't tell her how it had come about, or that the Senior Investigating Officer apparently thought he was a moron. He also didn't tell her that his involvement would consist of standing on a freezing doorstep with the wholly spurious aim of spotting the killer as he sauntered compulsively back and forth past the scene of the crime.
    Basically he didn't tell her any of the details that he knew would get her so angry on his behalf.
    And although she knew he was hiding something, Lucy didn't ask. She just squeezed his hand as well as she could, told him she felt safer because he was on the case, and thanked him for bringing home the extra milk.

Nineteen Days

    Jonas was on Margaret Priddy's doorstep by 8am, which meant a trickle of schoolchildren had nearly an hour to stare and whisper and giggle at him on their way to school. The cordon of tape had been attraction enough; Jonas standing there like the policeman outside 10 Downing Street was a black hole of fascination that sucked kids in from all over the village.
    Linda Cobb from next door brought him a cup of tea at eight thirty. He accepted politely and then had to stand pointless guard while sipping now and then from a mug which read World's Best Mum . It was just fuel on the irritating little fire that was the Schadenfreude of the mocking children. They were nice children; Jonas knew all of them. And he knew too that it was only the odd alignment of the murder, the cordon and his sudden silly vigil that had made them bratty - but right now he wished the lot of them would quietly disappear. His wish came true when the

Similar Books

Tell Me

Ashe Barker

Belgrave Square

Anne Perry

Miracle Cure

Michael Palmer

I Can't Die Alone

Regina Bartley

Letter to Belinda

Tim Tingle

Playing Well With Others

Lee Harrington, Mollena Williams

Dead Drop

Carolyn Jewel

The Unknown Shore

Patrick O’Brian

Just Desserts

Jeannie Watt

The Doctor's Wife

Luis Jaramillo