The Chemistry of Death

Free The Chemistry of Death by Simon Beckett Page A

Book: The Chemistry of Death by Simon Beckett Read Free Book Online
Authors: Simon Beckett
blood began to pump. The woods were just ahead now, and as she looked at them some dark association stirred in her subconscious. At first, still distracted by the memory of what had happened at the chemist, she couldn't place it. Then it came to her. She'd forgotten about the dead hare she'd found on the path the day before until now. And the sense of being watched she'd felt when she'd entered the woods.
    Suddenly the prospect of going into them again -- especially in this mist -- was strangely unappealing.
Stupid,
she thought, doing her best to dismiss it. Still, she slowed a little as she approached them. When she realized what she was doing she clicked her tongue in irritation and picked up her speed. Only when she had almost reached the treeline did she think about the woman's body that had been found. But that hadn't been near here, she told herself. Besides, the killer would have to be some sort of masochist to be out this early, she thought wryly. And then the first of the trees closed around her.
    It was a relief when the foreboding she'd felt the day before failed to materialize. The woods were just woods again. The path was empty, the dead hare no doubt part of the food chain by now. Just nature, that was all. She glanced at the stopwatch on her wrist, saw she'd lost a minute or two on her usual time, and picked up her pace as she approached the clearing. The standing stone was in sight now, a dark shape ahead of her in the mist. She was almost on top of it before it registered that something about it was wrong. Then light and shadow resolved themselves, and all thoughts of running went out of her mind.
    A dead bird had been tied to the stone. It was a mallard, bound with wire around its neck and feet. Recovering, Lyn quickly looked around. But there was nothing to see. Only trees, and the dead mallard. She wiped sweat from her eyes and looked at it again. Blood darkened its feathers where the thin strand bit into it. Uncertain whether or not to untie it, she leaned forward to examine the wire more closely.
    The bird opened its eyes.
    Lyn cried out and stumbled backwards as it began to thrash about, head jerking against the wire pinning its neck. It was damaging itself even more, but she couldn't bring herself to go near the wildly beating wings. Her mind was beginning to function again, making the connection between this and the dead hare, laid on the path as though for her to find. And then that was swept away by a more urgent realization.
    If the bird was still alive it couldn't have been here long. Someone had done this recently.
    Someone who knew she'd find it.
    Part of her insisted that was just fantasy, but she was already sprinting back down the path. Branches whipped her as she pounded past, no thought of pacing herself now, just
get out get out get out
yelling again and again in her head. She didn't care if she was being stupid or not, wanted only to escape from the woods to the open landscape beyond. Only one more twist in the path and she'd be able to see it. Her breath rasped as she ran, eyes flitting to the trees at either side, expecting someone to appear out of them at any second. But no-one did. She gave a half-moan, half-sob as she neared the final bend.
Not far,
she thought, and as she felt the first stirrings of relief something snatched her foot out from under her.
    There was no time to react. She pitched forward onto the ground, the impact forcing the air from her lungs. She couldn't breathe, couldn't move. Stunned, she managed one breath, then another, sucking the damp scent of loam into her throat. Still dazed, she looked back at what had tripped her. At first what she saw made no sense. One leg was stretched out awkwardly, the foot twisted at an odd angle. There was a thin gleam of fishing line snagged around it. No, she realized, not fishing line.
    Wire.
    Understanding came too late. As she tried to scramble to her feet a shadow fell across her. Something pressed into her face, smothering

Similar Books

Apart From Love

Uvi Poznansky

Finding Infinity

Layne Harper

Breaking the Rules

Melinda Dozier

Coventina

Jamie Antonia Symonanis

Coven of Mercy

Deborah Cooke

Blushing Violet

Blushing Violet [EC Exotica] (mobi)

Rev It Up

Julie Ann Walker

A Deafening Silence In Heaven

Thomas E. Sniegoski

Michele Zurlo

Letting Go 2: Stepping Stones

Prison Baby: A Memoir

Deborah Jiang Stein